May 9, 2018 Page 5 Engineering Major Finds Success Mt. Hood Community College student Victor Ogelle has long had a fascination with computers and robotics, stemming back to his secondary school days in La- gos, Nigeria. However, attending school in Nigeria also meant he needed to “make hay while the sun shined,” as he put it. Or, in other words, he and his classmates at Lagos’ Debiruss School used their time wisely as regular roll- ing blackouts could quickly shut down their computers and robot- ics engineering activities. “I learned to be independent at a fairly young age,” Ogelle said. “There weren’t a lot of amenities and you learned to really appreci- ate what you had.” The Portland-born Ogelle spent his first year in the United States and the next 15 years in Nigeria, where most of his family lives to- day. In 2016, he returned to Oregon to attend college while living with relatives. He enrolled in MHCC and settled into college life while adjusting to the new culture. Ogelle reactivated the college’s Victor Ogelle is from the Class of 2018 at Mt. Hood Community College. dormant Engineering club and built up membership. He served as a work-study student became a tutor. As Ogelle finishes his final term at MHCC and begins look- ing at four-year and graduate pro- grams in electrical engineering and economics, he has a plan in mind. His goal: to help establish stable, efficient energy sources in his home-nation of Nigeria and in countries like it. “It’s part of why I came here to the United States,” he says. “To pursue a career in these fields and to one day support my community back in Nigeria and communities struggling with similar issues.” And he credits MHCC – with its affordable tuition, variety of degree programs, supportive cam- pus community and diversity of student activities – as better pre- paring him to achieve that goal. Learn more at mhcc.edu Activists Form Mother’s Day Bail Out The activist group Portland’s Resistance started a crowd funding campaign Sunday to bail out moms so they can reunite with their children on Mother’s Day. The group is hoping to raise $25,000 by Moth- er’s Day, which is Sunday, to secure the release of at least five black women from jail. By Tuesday, they had raised almost $9,000. “Our focus is on Black women and mothers trapped in the unjust system of pay-to-play civil liberties. Women should have the opportunity to be free from jail and in the company of their families on Mother’s Day, and every day,” a message from Portland Resistance’s campaign website stated. As the freed women appear for their future court dates, their bail amounts would be released and plans call for the monies to be returned to Portland’s Re- sistance. The group has vowed to apply 100 percent of the funds to their next bail out campaign sched- uled for Father’s Day on June 17 and on June 19 for Juneteenth, the festival held by African Americans to celebrate emancipation from slavery. More information can be found at fundly.com/ black-mama-bail-out-portland-or-area.