PaseAfe_________________________ î,!C|J n r tla n b © b a e r u e r __________________________ November 2.200s Ball Elementary Principal Tamala Newsome leads her students in Monday's ceremony celebrating the construction o f a new school to replace the outdated and aging Ball school site. Q Reality forNew Columbia School continued fro m Front “I’m excited to see us m ove for­ ward with this investm ent for fam i­ lies in this north Portland neighbor­ hood, said Dan Ryan, a Roosevelt alum nus serving his first term on the School Board. “The children will have a state-of-the-art facility that will build on the school’s aca­ dem ic achievem ent created by Prin­ cipal T amala Newsome and her staff. The presence o f the Boys & Girls Club on-site will also benefit a num ­ ber o f the surrounding schools in the Roosevelt cluster.” The project, w hich is supported by private fundraising and a sig­ nificant contribution from the Hous­ ing A uthority o f Portland, incorpo­ rates shared space with the Boys & G irls Club o f Portland, and a new gym being constructed by P ort­ land Parks and Recreation at the U niversity Park center. Slated toopen in Septem ber2006, the entire project is valued at more than $20 m illion but will cost the school district less than $9 million Civil Rights Era Women fro m A 3 “A fter the bus boycott got go­ ing and (M artin Luther) King got involved, they w o u ld n ’t even let Rosa Parks speak at the first mass m eeting,” she said. “She asked to speak, and one o f the m inisters said he thought she had done enough.” O lson added that Parks is often depicted as a deferential w om an w ho defied segregation law s at the urging o f m ovem ent leaders, but in fact she had foryears quietly pushed for racial ju stice — and she had carefully planned the actions that led to her arrest. “She w as not ju st a sym bol,” Olson said. “She w as an agent.” Septim a Poinsette C lark, often called the “queen m other” o f civil rights, w as an educator and N a­ tional A ssociation for the A dvance­ ment o f C olored People activist M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver Brew er N unn, C h a iro f the H ousing A uthority o f Portland. “H ow ever, as a result o f the partnership with w e live in a new day and age. This HAP, the Boys & G irls C lub and co m b in ed facility both co m p le­ the use o f New M arket Tax Credits. m ents our core goal o f providing The district sees the new school new , affordable housing at New as a dem onstration o f its com m it­ C o lu m b ia an d r e in f o r c e s th a t ment to stretching available tax dol­ strengthening children and their lars to meet current and future stu­ fam ilies ultim ately benefits the im ­ dent achievement needs, create part­ m ed iate n e ig h b o rh o o d an d the nerships to advance com m unity and larger com m unity beyond.” district goals, and attract families Construction will begin im m edi­ back into Portland Public Schools. ately. E ighty p ercent o f the new “T his w onderful partnership has residents o f N ew Colum bia, a neigh­ draw n together public, private and borhood forged from the destruc­ non-profit organizations to build a tion o f the old C olum bia V illa hous­ new neighborhood school for the ing project, w ill have m oved into benefit o f our com m unity” said new housing units by next y e a r's S chool B oard C o -C h a ir D avid fall opening. O ther children living I____ W ynde. “W ith capital dollars so in the su rro u n d in g P o rtsm o u th An artist's rendering shows the look o f the new Boys and Girls Club which is slated to be built scarce, w e w ant to use this ex p eri­ neighborhood will also attend the next to the new Ball Elementary School in north Portland's New Columbia community and adjacent ence as a model to com e up with new Ball Elem entary. to the current University Park Community Center. creative solutions for im portant projects in o th e r n e ig h b o rh o o d s in o u r school district.” “This is not the type o f project that housing authorities typically have undertaken,” added K andis Bertha Gilbert, 22, is led away by police after she tried to enter a segregated lunch counter in Nashville, Tenn., in this May 6, 1964, file photo. con tin u ed photo by decades before the nation’s atten­ tion turned to racial equality. F annie L ou H am er, a M is sis­ sippi sh a re cro p p er, w as b eaten and ja ile d in 1962 fo r try in g to reg ister to vote. S he c o -fo u n d e d the M ississip p i F reed o m D em o ­ c ra tic P arty an d g av e a fie ry sp eech at th e 1964 D em o c ratic N atio n al C o n v en tio n . Vivian M alone Jones defied seg­ regationist A labam a G ov. G eorge C. W allace to enroll in the U niver­ sity o f A labam a in 1963 and later worked i n the ci vi I rights di vision o f the U.S. Justice D epartm ent. Even today, Bond said m ost N A A C P m em bers and m ost local branch presidents are w om en. “T h e r e ’s a C h in e se s a y in g , ’W om en hold up h alf the w orld,” ’ Bond said. “ In the case o f the civil rig h ts m o v e m en t it’s p ro b ab ly three-quarters o f the w orld.”