¿The February 22. 2006 ■JJortlanò (©hserucr Page A9 BLACK HISTORY MONTH and the American Experience It all started on a bus ■^^■1 f \ n December 1,1955, in Montgomery, i , a Rosa Parks 1 Alabama, Rosa Parks took w tbe first step toward bus desegregation. This African- American woman chose arrest rather than relin­ The Ethnic Heritage Ensemble performs Tuesday. Feb. 28 at Reed College in celebration o f Black History Month. quishing her bus seat African Ensemble Concludes Series simply because of the Reed College ends its Black History Month event series on Tuesday, Feb. 28. with a perfor­ mance by The Ethnic Heritage Ensemble, a group that has been breaking the habits of boredom and pushing beyond nostalgia into the present for almost 20 color other skin. Her stand years. The ensemble’s music fuses traditional African rhythmic and melodic sensibilities with popu­ lar African American musical expression. Kahil El’Zabar plays drums, percussion and African thumb piano, Joseph Bowie plays trom­ bone, and Ernest Dawkins is alto and tenor saxophonist. The performance begins at 7 p.m, with 15-minute intermission between sets, at Reed College’s Eliot Hall Chapel. For more infor­ mation, call 503-771 -1112. against racism inspired a boycott which has improved all our lives. Learn to Trace Your History Free genealogy program Saturday The North Portland Library, 512 N. Killingsworth St., will host a free Jump-Start Your African-American Genealogy program on Saturday, Feb. 25 from 3:30-5:30 p.m. Local genealogists and li­ brary staff will present infor­ mation to help researchers find information on family histo­ ries. Participants will have an opportunity to practice re­ searching techniques and will be entered in a drawing for a free DNA test. Local genealogist O. B. Hill will discuss his experience c o n d u c tin g g e n e a lo g y r e ­ search; author Stephen Hanks will discuss his book, “Akee Tree: A D escendant’s Search fo r his A n c e sto rs on the Eskridge Plantations;" librar­ ian Janet Irwin will offer tips on using library resources, in­ cluding the specialized gene­ alogy collection a, Central Li­ brary and other genealogy databases; and Emily Aucilino of the Genealogical Forum of Oregon and the International Society of Genetic Genealo­ gists will introduce the basics of DNA genealogy. For more information, call 503- 988-4810. T R I@ M E T See where it takes you. 503-238-RIDE • trimet.org Civil Rights Activists Urge Look Forward continued from 45 Alito's “selection represents the culmination of a 20-year strategy by conservatives to retake the courts and a turning away from the civil rights agenda represented by the (Earl) War­ ren court," Henderson said. "This carries some symbolism." Many mourned King's death even as they worried about how to keep her mission alive. "I'm concerned that people don't take her passing as an opportunity to further antique the causes that she and her husband and others stood for," said Theodore M. Shaw, presi­ dent of the NAACP Legal De­ fense and Education Fund. “Anybody who thinks that work is over iseither terribly ignorant or willfully blind.” Henderson agreed: "I think she would be disappointed if the tributes ended with her being elevated to some god-like status without also recommitting our­ selves to a social justice agenda that she very much helped sym­ bolize." A Great Defender of Civil Rights continued from A6 versity of Mississippi. In 1964, Motley was elected to the New York Senate, the first African-American woman to achieve this honor. The fol­ lowing year she was chosen to be Manhattan's Borough Presi­ dent. No woman of any color and no African American of either sex had this distinction until her stunning victory. In 1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson selected Motley to be­ come a federal judge. The ap­ pointment was another firs,. She kept this position for almost 40 years, until Sept. 14, 2005, the day she died. 1 T oday, w hile w atching Samuel Alito become a Su­ prem e C ourt Ju stic e a fte r Sandra Day O 'C onnor’s retire­ ment, we are once again re­ minded of the need for out­ standing women and minorities as high-ranking judges. Motley stood elbow to elbow with Dr. King and others in the tight forequality. Her spirit and what she accomplished will serve us well into the future. Ron Weber is a local writer and speaker on African Ameri­ can history and a regular con­ tributor,o the Portland Observer. I