JUNE 8, 2016 Portland and Seattle Volume XXXVIII No. 36 25 CENTS News ................................ 3,8,9 A & E .....................................6-7 Opinion ...................................2 Rose Festival Court .........9 Calendars ........................... 4-5 Bids/Classiieds ...............10-11 CHALLENGING PEOPLE TO SHAPE A BETTER FUTURE NOW PHOTO BY ARASHI YOUNG CLINTON’S IN Bri Williams and her son Samir, 8, sit as Samir’s blood is drawn during a lead testing clinic Monday afternoon. By Arashi Young Of The Skanner News S tudents and parents line up inside the Rose City Park school gym. The children wander and play, mak- ing jokes about being “poisoned” while their parents sit, concerned and somber. They wait until their number gets called and then walk past a partition to meet with Multnomah County health oicials to test their children for lead exposure. The lead testing clinic is one of two large-scale testing events facili- tated by the county in response to the recent public outcry regarding Port- land Public School facilities. See LEAD on page 3 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton greets supporters as she arrives to speak during a presidential primary election night rally Tuesday in New York. Hillary Clinton declared victory in her yearlong battle for the heart of the Democratic party, seizing her place in history as the irst female candidate of a major party and setting out on the diicult task of fusing a fractured party to confront Donald Trump. Clinton cruised to easy victories in three of the six state contests on Tuesday — including delegate-rich New Jersey. She had already secured the delegates needed for the nomination before Tuesday's contests, according to an Associated Press tally. Still, Sanders had hoped to use a victory in California to persuade party insiders to switch their allegiances. Washington May Drop ‘Jim Crow’ From Maps Committee accepting comment on proposed landmark name changes By Christen McCurdy Of The Skanner News I On May 25, 1965, Muhammad Ali 206 lbs, in his irst professional title ight, beat Sonny Liston 215¼ lbs by KO at 2:12 in round 1 of 15. Ali: The Champ Who Made a Diference page 8 Rose Festival Princesses page 9 t’s not clear how Jim Crow Point, Jim Crow Creek and Jim Crow Hill got their names. The three landmarks are nestled close together out- side Brookield, Wash., a Columbia River ghost town northwest of Portland. Joe Budnick grew up in the area, which was the home of the J.G. Megler Compa- ny, a salmon cannery, until 1931. When the town’s post oice closed in 1954, just three families remained in the area, and Budnick’s was one of them. When a newspaper in the area ran a series of stories asking how the landmarks got their name, Budnick decided to act. Budnick has proposed changing the names of the places in question to Beare Hill, Brookield Point and Harlows Creek — taking these names from the de- funct community and the surnames of people who lived in the area. Caleb Maki, executive secretary for the Wash- ington Committee on Geo- graphic Names, said name changes don’t happen as a result of a complaint alone. Instead, citizens seeking to change the way a place reads on oicial maps must propose an alternative. Now Washington’s Department of Natural Resources has begun ac- cepting comments on a proposal to change the names, and will receive public comments in the coming months, then make a decision at its next meet- ing Oct. 13. According to Maki, the U.S. Geographic Survey didn’t create a digital data- base of geographic names until 1979, and documenta- tion on the origins of many place names is spotty. Sometimes what’s writ- ten on a map isn’t neces- sarily consistent with what locals call a place, or what signs say. “Jim Crow Point, every- body always called Jim Crow Point,” Budnick said. See NAMES on page 3 Portland Summer Programs for Kids Summer movies, open swim, meals, day camps and more available to youth in Portland The Skanner News Staf T oday is the last day of school for students in Portland Public Schools. The Skanner News has compiled a list of free and low- cost programs throughout the city to keep children and teenagers busy. Portland Parks & Recreation Programs Portland Parks & Recreation’s Sum- mer Free For All includes 55  Con- certs in the Park, 41  Movies in the Park, 27  Summer Playgrounds & Lunch  sites, 20 Mobile Playgrounds sites, Free Swim sessions at all of PP&R’s indoor  and  outdoor pools, and the Washington Park Summer Festival.  In addition, a Children’s Concert Series at Unthank Park is new this year.  To view Summer Free for All schedules, visit https://www. See SUMMER on page 3 PHOTO COURTESY OF PORTLAND PARKS & REC revelation of high lead levels in PPS water AP PHOTO/JULIE JACOBSON County Tests for Lead Levels Parents worry after Portland Parks & Recreation will provide a wide variety of free and low-cost programs for children and teens this summer, including free movies, summer meals and daily play programs.