The Oklahoman

Northeast High School alumni honor 1970 march to the Capitol

- Nuria Martinez-Keel

From one generation to another, through 52 years worth of change, a spirit of activism persists at the former home of Northeast High School.

Alumni returned to 3100 N Kelley, now Classen High School of Advanced Studies at Northeast, to commemorat­e the school’s history and their 1970 march to the state Capitol.

Alumni who attended were among the first Oklahoma City Public Schools students to racially integrate in 1968. Northeast desegregat­ed after optometris­t A.L. Dowell sued to contest the denial of his son’s transfer into the school, which was majority white in the 1960s.

Social issues have bled into the schoolhous­e ever since.

Class of 1971 graduate Terry Fife said bomb scares and death threats were a weekly occurrence.

“I don’t even know how to communicat­e the level of pushback that this overall community gave, and by community, I mean the ‘majorityra­ce’ community,” Fife said. “They did everything in their power to sink desegregat­ion, as we called it at the time.”

A 1970 school bond election became a target for opponents of integratio­n. For the first time in the district’s history, a routine school bond proposal faced organized opposition.

The stakes hardly could have been higher. The $16 million bond decided half of the district’s $35 million operating budget. Without the revenue, Oklahoma City schools would have had to cut the following school year four months short, district leaders at the time said.

High school students across the district feared the bond’s failure would prevent them from graduating on time. To gather support for the bond levy, Northeast students marched from their school to the state Capitol, passing out flyers and

knocking on doors along the way.

“The marches all over the country, the civil rights activities that were happening everywhere, we were feeling that here,” Class of 1970 graduate Carl Wamble said. “When (students) got here, we just came together so well. We were really a consolidat­ed organizati­on of students that when the time came to do the march we said, ‘Yeah, let’s go.’”

About 400 students participat­ed. Many carried signs urging residents to vote in favor of the bond.

“My mom’s driving me to school. I’m 16. There’s snow on the ground. It’s Jan. 26, 1970, and we come up over the hill and the whole student body is out on the campus,” Fife said. “Next thing you know, we’re marching to the Capitol.”

The mill levy passed the following day amid dramatical­ly high voter turnout.

Friday’s festivitie­s took place a month before the largest bond issue in OKC district history appears on the Nov. 8 general election ballot. The $955 million package, promising improvemen­ts at every district school, needs at least 60% support to pass.

Classen SAS students carry on Northeast legacy

Northeast closed during sweeping school consolidat­ions in 2019, and Classen SAS High School at Northeast moved into the building.

Renaming the school after Classen SAS stirred significant controvers­y, culminatin­g in a lawsuit from the Northeast High School Alumni Associatio­n against the school district. An Oklahoma County district judge dismissed the case in January.

Despite frustratio­n in the not-so-distant past, alumni, students and district officials gathered Friday for a festive unveiling of the Northeast Legacy Plaza in front of the school. The school district unveiled a monument depicting Northeast’s Viking logo and fight songs.

“I feel the loss (of Northeast) because it wasn’t as it was, but it’s also an improvemen­t. It’s moving forward,” Class of 1970 alumna Doris Johnson said. “I can appreciate the controvers­y, and I’m glad that the legacy still stands that people speak their mind and they come out and lobby in a positive way for what they want and what we want our legacy to be.”

1970s alumni then passed a baton, literally, to student leaders at Classen SAS, handing down the school’s spirit of advocacy to the latest generation.

Classen SAS students seem up to the challenge. In November, dozens of them held a march to the Capitol to protest the death sentence of Julius Jones. The governor ultimately commuted Jones’ sentence to life in prison.

“We are taking a legacy and spreading it all over the world because a legacy doesn’t stop whenever students graduate,” junior Nazgol Missaghi said in an address to the alumni. “We are the future, and I hope that we make you proud.”

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