liHere comes the MOB \'Wuture entrepreneurs go door to door selling bath products ?1? 8J.COURTNEY GA1LLARD 1M? CHRONICLE fc ???They call themselves the 3faiing MOB and the next time jm spot them in your neighbor Wed they may be armed with bath pniducts. to sell that is. These Inring entrepreneurs are making good use of their free time during lljysummer vacation and they will JoC leave your doorstep until you Jse*sold their product. ?^?Young MOB (Minds On Busi ness) is a youth economic {i$owerment program made up otjO high school students deter mined to become "job makers ipslead of job takers ." Profit is not th'e-only concern of these young sters. who want to be certain that clients are genuinely sold on mer chandise the youths say they're "selling from the heart." After hundreds of area youths were faced with a long and hot jobless summer due to state budg etary cuts. Toby Hunter and Faith Johnson, both of Third Eye Con sultant Group, decided to take matters into their own hands. Hunter and Johnson teamed up with Joe Dudley of Dudley's Products to create a successful summer job opportunity that would provide investment, sales and leadership training to adoles cents. ? "We didn't want to give them (teens) a job ...We decided to give them an opportunity to earn money the same way that every one else earned money, which was through sales." said Hunter, who explained that most corporate pro fessionals he has encountered made money through sales posi tions of some kind. Dudley's packaged up a bath set - complete with body lotion, body spray and shower gel - for the Young MOB to sell to generate a profit. Clients can choose either a cocoa butter or peach scented bath set to purchase. Neighbor It o o d s , churches, conven tions and expos are all areas i lit Knilrl itc ? e r ?" ""frwv"*t ~ clientele list. Hunter said that he participat ed in a program similar to Young MOB when he was in high school until it was cut once area busi nesses decided that it was not profitable. "1 wanted to re-create the pro gram to give the same experiences that I had." said Hunter, who explained he had no plans to organize a business opportunity for area youths when he started his consulting company. The Young MOB is not look ing for handouts either, explained Hunter, who said the group pur chased the bath sets from Dudley Products to develop a "self-sus taining" tvork ethic in the young entrepreneurs. Hunter said the group has even turned down grants to support the program so that group members might main tain the philosophy of being "self reliant" business people. "We want people to know that these are some kids that are about business," said Hunter, who is known for his discipline and no nonsense training tactics with the teen-agers. "We don't want any one to give abundantly to the pro gram because then they may think they have some type of leverage on the program....We are not a charity." Gerard Orie is a student at Parkland High School and once he signed up to become a part of the Young MOB. Orie assumed that selling Dudley Products would be a piece of cake. At first Orie expected clients to approach him for the product, but he quick ly realized it would take a little more footwork, literally. "It's not easy....I learned a lot. I learned that things (do not) come easy in life; you have to work for them." said Orie, who is spending his summer break knocking on doors, making daily sales pitches by foot in neighborhoods. La Tonya Panky said that Young MOB has taught partici pants. like herself, a solid work ethic that is critical to becoming a successful bttiness tycoon. Panky is a student at Reynolds High School. "In the fust couple of weeks you really see how much work it takes to be an entrepreneur. As of now, everybody's work ethic has changed, and that is what the pro gram is really about," Panky said. John Raye has joined on to help get the young business group started and acts as a corporate liai son between Dudley Products and Young MOB. Raye assured the teens that Joe Dudley is ecstatic about the business venture and neither has ruled out the possibili ty of this program becoming a national initiative for teen-agers everywhere. "I predict that this is going to spread rapidly because it is going to show that this is our future. Fourteen- to 17-year-olds, nobody wants to give them a shot, and now they know they don't have to go beg for a job." said Raye. who appreciates the many positive traits - such as public speaking skills, self-confidence, economic awareness - that the teens are developing along the way. Joshua Garrett had his sights on becoming a professional ath lete until he joined Young MOB. The entrepreneur program has caused him to broaden his hori zons on what he not only wants to do. but what he can do after he completes college. Garrett attends school in Greensboro. "(Becoming) an entrepreneur never came to mind....Going around and selling the products really made me think about what else I want to become." Garrett said. 0 Tamika Hayes, another mem ber of the Young MOB and a stu dent at Parkland High School, said. "I didn't think I could do it...but now 1 know I can do it because I have faith." Young MOB members are also receiving some lessons in spiritual welfare to assist them with their business venture. Mar garet Johnson, pastor at Rhema Triumphant Ministries in Greens boro. volunteers with Young MOB as a spiritual director of sorts by leading a weekly motiva tional devotional with the young capitalists. "It's important that we devel op their spirits, not just their busi ness (side), because what we're looking at is future millionaires who are going to do things in this city," Johnson said. Young MOB plans to continue selling the bath sets year-round and are even looking ahead to next summer when they can serve as instructors to a new band of young entrepreneurs like themselves. To tmler u bath set from the ! Young MOB, call I.U6) 918-5X88. Hunter th?* urniin iv t;irot>(inii Photo, by Courtney (iaillard Gerald One, Joshua Garrett, La Tonya Panky and Tamika Hayes display some of the prod- C acts they will be trying to sell to city residents this summer. q Fate of black high school topic at upcoming meeting SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE The Winston Salem/Forsyth County Board of Education has scheduled two action meetings near the end of July. The board will meet on July 23 at 6 p.m. for a regular action meeting. On July 30, the board will meet at 4 p.m. It will go into closed session to discuss a personnel matter, then return to open session at 6 p.m. Dur ing the open session, the board will consider site locations for the new southeast high school and vote on the location. A public hearing to consid er names for the southeast high school and the new northwest high school will be held Aug. 13 at 6 p.m. before the board's regularly sched uled meeting. Action on the names is scheduled for Aug. 27. Anyone wishing to submit a name for either school before Aug. 13 should send it in writing to Pan Briles, Win ston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools. P.O. Box 2513. Win ston-Salem. N.C. 27102. All meetings will be held in the school system's third floor auditorium at 1605 Miller Street. AG makes grants available for domestic abuse agencies Funds from Nine West shoe settlement will go to shelters and programs 8H C1A1 lo IIII CHRONICLE GREENSBORO - Attor ney General Roy Cooper announced last week that domestic violence and sexual assault programs across North Carolina will receive $360,000 in grants as the result of a con sumer settlement with Nine West, a major manufacturer of women's shoes. "Thanks to domestic vio lence and sexual assault shel ters. women in North Carolina who suffer from these terrible crimes have a safe place to go," Cooper said. "With this extra help, these programs will be able to help even more vic tims become survivors." Grants averaging nearly $3,000 each will go to 112 community programs that serve victims of sexual assault and domestic violence in North Carolina. Cooper worked with the N.C. Coali tion Against Domestic Vio lence. the N.C. Coalition Against Sexual Assault, and the N.C: Council for Women/Domestic Violence Commission to identify the grant recipients. "We are thankful for Attor ney General Roy Cooper's continued commitment to end ing violence against women. This unexpected funding dur ing difficult financial times will help domestic violence programs continue their vital work," said Mary Beth I r> ii /?lr c _ Sorrell of the N.C. Coalition Against i Domestic Violence. 1 "This m o nVy ; will allow ; a d v o - i cates to I provide ; clothing, emergency housing ; and transportation for victims i of sexual violence," said Monika Johnson Hostler, who works with the N.C. Coalition i Against Sexual Assault. j The funds are the result of i a multi-state antitrust settle- i ment with Nine West. North Carolina and 55 other states and territories alleged that from Jan. I, 1988, through July 31, 1999, Nine West pressured retailers not to discount shoes it sold under the following brand names: Nine West, Enzo Angiolini, Easy Spirit, Ban dolino. Calico, Capezio. Pap pagallo. Evan-Picone. Joyce, Amalfi, 9 & Co.. Selby, West ies and CK/Calvin Klein. Nine West did not admit that it engaged in price fixing but did agree to pay the states $34 million on behalf of con sumers who purchased Nine West shoes. According to the court-approved agreement, states must use the fund to benefit health, educational, vocational, and/or safety pro grams for women. Nine West also agreed to abide by antitrust laws and to notify shoe stores that they are free to sell Nine West shoes at any price they choose, not just at the company's suggested retail price.' Information about the 122 -(immunity organizations receiving grants (listed by aunty) is available on the Web ?it www.jus.state.nc.us under "Important News." 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