Officials adding quake damage PORTLAND (AP) — State emergency officials hope to have u heller assessment of the dam age caused by Iasi Thursday’s earthquake early next weak when Clackamas and Marion counties plan lo submit their damage re|K»rts Damage from the r>:!M a m. quake, which measured between 5.3 and 5.7 on the Richter si-ale, occurred mostly in the Willamette Valley south of Port land A team from the Federal Kmergency Management Agency in Bothell. Wash., took a quick look Friday at the damage, but team leader l.arrv Moon; said detailed inspections needed by FKMA will begin next week estimates of damage were to have been submitted to the Ore gon Kmergem y Management Division on Friday morning, but many localities had not finished surveying the damage, spokesman Tom Worden said Clackamas County on Friday dot lared a stale of emergency and asked for assistance from Gov. Barbara Roberts The damage to Molnlln Union High School alone was about $2 million, according to Clackamas County commissioners The gables beneath the roof of tha throe-story brick building col lapsed in tha quaktt. School roprosentatives mat Friday morning with Interior Set rotary Bruce Babbitt. who is in Oregon on a fact-finding mis sion in preparation for President Dill Clinton's forest conference Friday. "Wo told him we are facing the loss of housing for two thirds of our high school popu lation — and that’s a disaster for any community regardless of the sine whether it lie Molalla. Port land or Washington. D C..’’ said Steve Barsby. chairman of the Molalla School Board Babbitt said he would try to expedite the pro) ess of getting federal assistant available to the area, but he wasn't any mom sjmi ifn Worden said 19 jurisdictions submitted earthquake reports on Friday They included Polk County, with $200; the city of Gresham. $10,000; Washington County. $900,000, and Yamhill We are facing the loss of housing for two-thirds of our high school population.' Steve Barsby. chairman of the Moiaila School Board County. $616,000 to $717,000 Most of the estimated cost in Washington County involved damage to the Forest Grove Fire Hall. The fire hall was in poor shape hefore the quake, but now must tel rebuilt entirely, said Washington County sheriff's spokeswoman Arlene Whomev er. In Yamhill County, much of the damage involved buildings on Newberg's main street Four teen buildings were damaged, four of them structurally The city of Gresham estimated damage at $10,000. most of it to private homes QUAKE Continued from Page 1A Arl work in tin* building Ixilow iIns domi' camplh nil's the repair work "Some of tin* damage threatens the historic mural* in ilu* rotun da Wo don't know if wo'll havo to romovo Ihom to do repairs. Those typos of olomonts poten tially add i.ost to the repair work," ho said. leach estimated it would cost anywhere from Slot).0011 to $1 million to do all of the repair work. Molalla Union High School, a three-story hrii k building built in 1925. sustained major damage. Crews were securing walls and 11 earing a pile of hrii ks and mor tar from the si bool's main entrance John Rogers, superintendent ol the school district, said the s< bool board was Irving to deter mine how it would house its stu dents following spring break Meanwhile, a series of after slim ks continued to shake West ern Oregon Hu k Henson, a research s< lentisl at the Univer sity of Washington in Seattle, said more than 45 aftershocks were rei ordeil by late Friday. Most of the aftershoi ks were below 3.0 on the Richter scale. In Mount Angel. St. Mary’s 1A lot of people are saddened by the damage. A lot of people are grateful there were not injuries.’ Sharon Walsh, Settlomier House Caretaker Catholic Chun h will be dosed for at least two wueks because of quake damage, the Koman Cat hoi i< Archdiocese of Portland said. Dirge ( rm ks were found in the fiell tower and the fiell was jolt ed off of its cradle in the HI-year old structure. The church and street in front of it were dosed to the public because of the unstable church steeple, said Elaine Fennimore. a bookkeeper at St Mary’s "It’s a safety precaution," she said. "We have a lot of farm traf fic out here, we’re afraid that any kind of rumbling could cause something to full For now. all services at the church will lie at the Parish Cen ter next door to the church. Fen nimore said. "It's going to have to ho our church for an indefinite period of time." she said. Bricks fell from the church's facade and cracks appeared on the church's interior during the quake. Daylight (>eeked through the opening left when the south wall separated from the ceiling, she said. The earthquake damaged a bridge on Highway 1H near Day ton and repairs on it could take anywhere from a few days to more than a week, said state Department of Transportation spokesman Prod Ghamiierlm. He said them wen* adequate detours available for motorists in the area. The 102-year-old Settlemier House in Woodburn lost three chimneys in the quake Hut Sharon Walsh. the historic, man sions caretaker, said every thing's bat k to normal. "I think the mood of the peo ple is a little more cautious." she said "A lot of people are sad dened by the damage A lot of |x*ople are grateful there were not injuries." The Oregon Department of Geology ami Mineral Industries said it was "as large as any his toric earthquake to occur in northwestern Oregon." “I'm terrified," Walsh said. Jurors see sides in LA beating trial LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jurors in the Rodney King beating tri al were warned early on that the black motorist is not on trial. Yet they have heard King compared to a "monster, a Tas manian devil” and a man with "hulk-like strength. The jurors have also seen a California Highway Patrol officer dissolve in tears on the witness stand as she described a smil ing. dancing King having his head smashed by the baton of Offi cer Laurence Powell Which picture was the real Rodney King7 The answer is essential to the outcome of the federal civil rights trial of four police officers. But oddly enough, the wit ness stand appearance of King himself, ballyhooed ns a turning point in the caste may not in* the deciding factor. His testimony disagrees with some details in most other wit ness accounts, and jurors could decide that King s memory is too fuzzy to rely upon. Now, after four and-a-half weeks of testimony, jurors have seen both sides. They can balance Sgt. Stacey Koon's image of an "incredible hulk” against CHP officer Melanie Singer's por trait of a smiling if bizarre suspect who might have been hand cuffed peacefully if Koon had not exerted his authority and told her to get track. The most threatening gesture Singer could remember Fri day was King shaking his buttocks at her. But to Koon. King was a "a monster-like figure akin to a Tas manian devil" that he hud seen in u cartoon of a PCP suspect in a police training bulletin. Koon said the image was with him as ho ordered officers to tieat King repeatedly after Koon had fired an electronic Taser stun gun at the black motorist. "I believed he had thrown approximately 800 pounds of offi cers off his back." said Koon. who described King as "buffed out." the muscular look convicts get from lifting weights in prison. Koon rememljored King as having a glassy stare, a sign of PCP intoxication. ' I he look that ho gave mo was that he looks al you and looks right through you," he recalled "It's a bizarre look. On the street I had seen it many times Ik;fore in drug suspects." Although toxicological tests showed no trace of PCP in King's system, the defense has made the drug the centerpiece of its case Defense lawyers claim that a person on PCP has super human strength and officers have been killed in fights with such suspects. The defense says just the suspicion of PCP was justification enough for (renting King into submission. One witness, school police Officer Paul Beauregard, said, “The baton was used several times. He was still standing. It didn’t seem to have too much effect on him. Ho was just stand ing there as if he didn't know he was Ireing hit." Koon is on trial along with officers Laurence Powell, 'Iheodore Briseno and former officer Timothy Wind in the March 3, 1091, treating that became a national cause colebre when an amateur’s videotape of the scene was broadcast worldwide. The officers were tried on assault charges in state court at Sum Valley exactly a year ago and were ucquitted on most charges At week's end. the defense effort to paint King as a fearsome aggressor had suffered a severe setback. Singer, who stands over six feet tall, acknowledged King’s behavior was bizarre. But she burst into tears when she recalled the moment that she saw Powell’s metal baton strike King’s head. "I saw the blood come out of the side of his cheek," she said "I heard the driver scream the driver then clasped both hands over his face as Officer Powell came forward and took anoth er pow'er swing." Singer said King’s face was split from temple to chin and recalled Powell continued to flail away. 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