^ o rtlan Ò ©bserUCr April 15. 2009 PaSeA3 Five Rose Court Schools Put on Notice After falling short on applicants B\ J ake T homas T he P or i land O ksekv er The Rose Festival Court has been a Hie hallmark tradition in Portland for decades. Girls clamored to be selected as their high school's representative to the court and for a chance to win scholarship money, a new wardrobe, anu connections that could help them excel in life. However, this year has been differ­ ent on a number of fronts. The Rose Festival revamped the ap­ plication process, which has hit some schools off guard. As a result, five Portland schools were placed on no­ tice this year for failing to muster up five qualified applicants. The schools are M adison, M arshall, Jefferson, Benson and Lincoln. If any of these schools can't come up with five qualified applicants next year, the school will lose its automatic spot on the court and individuals from those schools will have to compete in a new at-large metro position. The at-large spot grew the number of princesses to 15 this year. It also generated 69 qualified applications from 18 suburban schools. So why such little interest in the Princesses on the Rose Festival Court line up Saturday during a dance practice and court orientation session. five Portland schools. "The reasons varied,” said Matt Shelby, spokesperson for Portland Public Schools. Shelby said that many students have part-time jobs and other activi­ ties that made them shy away from the big commitment that comes with competing in the court system. "Be­ ing a Rose Festival princess wasn’t all that relevant in their lives,” he said. However, changes in the applica­ tion process itself caused the schools to stumble, according to the girls rep­ resenting them. Last year, the Rose Festival as­ sembled a taskforce to overhaul how princesses were selected and it resulted in sweeping changes. Girls are no longer selected by a stu­ dent vote, but by a panel of judges. It also upped the grade point average to a 3.0, required 20 hours of community service, and an essay, among other re-, quirements. The program is now largely administered by the festival not the schools. Alisha Moreland-Capuia, who rep­ resented Jefferson over a decade ago, expressed concern about the changes, telling the Portland Observer a year ago that by expanding the court to subur­ ban schools it would diminish its im­ portance, and that the program’s suc­ cess would hinge too much on how well school administrators promoted the program. She also felt that widening the pool to metro schools suggested to Port­ land schools "that they're not good enough." Moreland-Capuia is now shocked that so many schools were placed on notice. Although she couldn't quite put her finger on souce of declineing inter­ est, she said that the new require­ ments may have had something to do with it. The girls representing the schools on notice said that this year's princess selection process was poorly promoted and slowed by snow days, while at the same time applicants were caught off guard by the new rules. "It was more of a popularity contest, and now it's who could really present themselves," said Mataya McNeil, the current princess from Madison. She said about 20 girls at her school were interested in the court, but many had forgotten about the deadline right after winter break and didn't scramble quick enough to get all their materials in by the Jan. 9 deadline. Cynthia Hams, principal of Jefferson, agrees that the snow days slowed down the promotion of the court. The fact that the program is now largely run outside of the school also caught Jefferson off guard. Leslie Goodlow-Baldwin, this year's Rose Festival Court chair who helped institute the new rules, said “Never in a million years would I have thought we'd have five schools that didn't make the cut." She said that she tried to get the schools to get the ball rolling in Octo­ ber, and is now encouraging schools to hold an assembly the year before so that they have ample time. She also stated that the program is not going to renegotiate the standards, fb u t wants to work better with schools in the future. Surrender Means Second Chance for a Clean Slate of their record and helps reha­ bilitate them. T he P ortland O bserver “I feel like I’ve been in jail on A n th o n y D eW ayne Cunningham walked what might the outside,” said Cunningham, have been the longest one and as he stepped from a parking garage, downtown. “It’s not fun a half block of his life. For six years, Cunningham at all. It’s tiring.” “ You know I’m proud o f had been on the run from drug and weapons charges, as well you,” said Jay, who flanked him as probation violations. But on while speaking to reporters. Jay explained that Clean Slate Monday, sick of never being able to see his family and sleep­ receives inquires from thou­ ing on couches, he turned him­ sands o f people w anting to self in to authorities with the clear up non-violent criminal and civil records. He said that help of Project Clean Slate. The initiative founded by lo­ there are plenty of people like cal African-American business­ Cunningham who made some man Roy Jay seeks to get people bad decisions or ended up at like Cunningham back on track. the wrong place at the wrong It’s run in conjunction with the time. “We’re not talking about a M ultnom ah C ounty D istrict Attorney’s office among others, Bernard Madoff here," said Jay, and helps people get their driv­ re fe re n c in g the d isg ra c e d ers license back, expunge parts banker. “We’re talking about a by J ake T homas photo bv J ake T homas /T he P ortland O bserver Project Clean Slate founder Roy Jay (left) accompanies Anthony DeWayne Cunningham to the Multnomah County Courthouse on Monday as Cunningham turns him self in to clear up several outstanding warrants. kid that really wants to change his life.” Jay stressed that the DA and the courts will ultimately deter­ mine what happens to people like Cunningham, but said that they will take it into account his U rb a n L eag u e W ELCOM ' V Bienvenidos Workshops 12-2pm • Resume Writing and Interviewing: What Hiring areer Managers Look For • Women If Color In the sponsibility and do com m u­ nity service. “Don’t be scared. I’m going to g e t a sm ile out o f you,” laughed Jay in his booming voice before turning southward to w alk to the M ultnom ah C ounty C o u rth o u se. “ You don’t want to be doing no mug shot.” On the way. Jay laughed and joked while slowly walking up through the crow ded street. Cunningham nervously fidg­ eted with his cell phone before disappearing into the court­ house. EAST PORTLAND HOMEOWNERSHIP FAIR ■ I of Portland v o lu n te e r su rrender, and pointed out that there is no pro­ gram like it anywhere else in the country. “T hat’s because we live in Portland, Oregon and think dif­ ferent," he said. Jay also em phasized that people in program aren’t going to have it easy. , “This is not the I’m going to be your homey and you’re going to get a drivers license and everything’s going to be fin e,” said Jay. People who enroll in the program must take a class on personal re­ ' C h à o D ö n Q ui VP flo 6 p o noxanoea i b ! Saturday, April 18th, 2009 10:00 am to 2:00 pm Kelly Elementary School 9030 SE Cooper St., Portland workplace, surviving and thriving • Careers in Transportation • Job Hunting In a Free raffle for a $4,000 home buyer's assistance grant (day-of workshop required,see below*) down market • Energy Jobs onnections Bridges to Sustainable Jobs Tuesday, April 21st, 10-4pm Portland General Electric World Trade Center 2 Find that New Job or New Career at the Urban League of Portland’s 17th Annual Career Connections Fair. Don’t miss this opportunity to meet face to face with recruiters from Oregon and Washington's best companies. Participating Companies Include: Health Care, High Tech, Banking, City Agen­ cies, State & Federal government. Education, Legal, Nonprofit, SkilledTTechnical, Retail, Fire/Rescue/Law Enforcement, and more. DIRECTIONS: 121 SW Salmon St, on Bus (4 Fessenden from N. Portland, 9 Powell from SE Powell, 14 Hawthorne from SE Hawthorne) & Max line (Yamhill District Max Station) For more information call: 503-280-2600 preregister ONLINE at http://ulpdx.org/jobfair FREE ADMISSION Home Buyer, Home Owner, & Foreclosure Prevention Workshops (Vietnamese. Russian, Spanish, Cantonese, & Mandarin interpreters available) Free Burgerville lunch, youth activities, and raffle for prizes Information on community organizations & resources Realtors, lenders, home buying counselors, & businesses sharing their products & services ‘For grant rules & more information, visit www.rosecdc.org or call Amie Diffenauer at 503-788-8052 x 105 » Hosted by the Lents Homeownership Initiative Partners: ROSE Community Development & Kelly SUN Community School Top Sponsors: Portland Development Commission, Bureau of Housing and Community Development, Standard TV & Appliance, Burgerville, Univision, and Tracy Brophy RE/MAX Equity Group, Inc