M a r iin L uther K ing J r . January 9, 2008 Page B 19 L U t - —>--------------------------- — Gateway to College Follows King Dream Providing opportunity to achieve by C hari i y P rater T iii P ortland O bserver Port land Community College is fol­ lowing in the footsteps of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. by providing all stu­ dents regardless o f race and eco­ nomic background an opportunity to achieve success through education. The PCC Gateway to College Pro­ gram has been successful in offering high-risk, high-school dropouts and young adults an opportunity to earn their high-school diploma through earn­ ing college credits. Students are required to take classes at any o f P C C ’s college campuses that satisfy their missing high-school require­ ments, and since the pro­ gram is considered to be a fix for missing high school, students do not have to pay for tuition or books. On Jan. 7, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. mentioned to the public what he had toldhischildren: “'I'm going to work and do everything that I can do to see that you get a good education. I d o n 't ever want you to forget that there are millions o f G o d 's children who will not and cannot get a good education, and I d o n 't want you feeling that you are better than they are. For you will never be what you ought to be until they are what they ought to be.” The PCC Gateway program gives all students an opportunity to live pro­ ductive lives. “The program allows kids to get the benefit of taking college classes at an accredited college and the program does not discriminate but benefits kids o f m inority g ro u p s,” says Linda Huddle, director o f alternative pro­ grams at PCC. Huddle says many o f the students are kids in poverty. More than half of the students live with single parents and about 38-percent of them have been on public assistance in the past. About a quarter of the students are in / haven't fought since high school. You don't need to fight in the program. You appreciate the importance of education and your classes. - Raniece Hardy high school but are about to drop out, while another 38-percent no longer attend high school. About 44-percent are o f a race or ethnicity other than Caucasian. The gateway program was launched photo by C harity P ra ter /T he P ortland O bserver Raniece Hardy is putting herself back on track to achieve a suc­ cessful life by her enrollment in Portland Community College's Gateway to College program. Courage is the power of the mind to overcome fear. in 2(MX) as a model to serve out-of­ school youth between the ages o f 16- 20. The program is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and has grown from its original site in Portland to over 13 sites around the country. “ I work with Gateway because I wanted to help on a deeper level by helping to build strategic programs that help start and launch an acces­ sible route to college,” says Huddle, “Education really isacivil-rights issue. All students should have structured, supported access to college.” The program helps kids like 18- year-old Raniece Hardy who started the program over a year ago when she was kicked out o f her high school for fighting, socializing and struggling with her grades. “1 haven't fought since high school," says Hardy, "You do n 't need to fight in the program. You appreciate the im portance o f education and your classes.” Dr. King has always fought for equal rights in the opportunity for edu­ cation saying, "It is precisely because education is the road to equality and citizenship, that it has been made more elusive for Negroes than many other rights. The walling o ff of Negroes from equal education is part of the historical design to subm erge him in second-class status. T herefore, as Negroes have struggles to be free they have had to fight for the opportu­ nity for a decent education." Programs like P C C s Gateway to College exceed the hopes of Dr. Mar- continued on page H21 B ig C ity P roduce — Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. We salute Martin Luther King Jr. Mamie Glover peers with granddaughter Jeannette from the flap of their "tent city" home, early in 1966. Big City Produce COMMUNITY MARKET 4632 N. 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