News Digest Zoo officials head for Malaysia to pick up new elephant 1 PORTLAND — Two Oregon Zoo officials left for Malaysia Wednesday to pick up a new ele phant they hope will help diver sify the gene pool of Asian pachy derms in the United States. As things are planned, elephant keeper Ray Hopper and Steve Coven, the zoo’s public relations director, will fly back to San Fran cisco with Cheddar, a 6-year-old female, on Nov. 19. Cheddar then will be trucked to Portland. The acquisition is expected to cost about $100,000, with most of the money coming from Enron Corp., which had pledged to help the zoo acquire an elephant when it took over Portland General Electric in 1997. Though Enron has since agreed to sell PGE to Nevada-based Sier ra Pacific, the company has fol lowed through on its promise to the zoo. Cheddar will become the zoo’s fourth female elephant. Zoolo gists will be watching carefully in hopes that she will be able to as similate easily with the zoo’s six other elephants. Former first lady admitted to hospital after fainting 2 AUSTIN, Texas — Former first lady Lady Bird Johnson was admitted to a hospital in fair con dition Thursday after fainting at her home. Liz Carpenter, her former White House spokeswoman, said Mrs. Johnson, 86, “has periodic faint ing spells” and was transported to Seton Medical Center. Mrs. Johnson was awake and alert and will stay overnight for observation, hospital spokes woman Stephanie Elsea said. “Because of her age they want ed to check her over,” said Shirley James, Mrs. Johnson’s executive secretary. “When she left here she went by ambulance and was talk ing and not wanting to go to the hospital. She was in good spirits.” Mrs. Johnson underwent cataract surgery a couple of days ago in Houston, Carpenter said. Her daughter, Luci Baines John son, accompanied her. “I think she is doing very well,” she told KEYE-TV, saying her mother has traveled a lot lately. “She may just have been exhausted.” Mrs. Johnson, the nation’s old est living former first lady, was married to former President Lyn don B. Johnson for almost 39 years. They were in the White House from 1963 to 1969. Airport bus crashes through U.S. border 3 BELLINGHAM, Wash. — The driver of an airport shuttle bus was jailed Thursday after the ve hicle sped away from Vancouver, British Columbia, crashed through the U.S. border and raced the wrong way down Interstate 5, police in pursuit. Whatcom County sheriffs deputies say that when the bus fi nally was stopped Wednesday night by a State Patrol trooper, the driver had choked his only pas senger, a woman, almost to un consciousness. Vancouver police Constable Anne Drennan said the driver ap parently told his bus dispatcher he had been hijacked by men car rying machine guns. The driver, Vikram M. Menon, 37, of the Vancouver suburb of Surrey, was booked into the coun ty jail here for investigation of four counts of first-degree assault — three involving cars that were run off the road — and one of kid napping. The sheriff s department gave the following account: The Vancouver Airporter dri ver picked up a man and a woman in downtown Vancouver, stopped before reaching Vancou ver International Airport and asked the man to get out and check for a flat tire. He then sped away with the woman. The bus raced through the Peace Arch border crossing at Blaine, Wash., without stopping and sped a brief distance south ward in the northbound lanes of Interstate 5. The Associated Press ':x. Calendar Friday, Nov. 12 ■ Pacifica Forum: “Elections Past and Prospective.” 11:45 a.m. to 1:15 a.m. Wesley Center, 1236 Kincaid St. Sponsored by the Fel lowship of Reconciliation, Friends Meeting and the Wesley Foundation. For more informa tion call Orval Utter at 344-0483 or call The Wesely Center at 344 0483. ■" Architecture Lecture: Thom Hacker speaks. 4:30-7 p.m. Room 177, Lawrence Hall, 1190 Franklin Blvd. Free. For informa tion, browse laz.uoregon.edu/cal endar/calendar.cgi or call 346 3656. ■ Applying to Graduate School. 3:30 p.m. Metolius Room, Erb Memorial Union 1222 E. 13th. For more information call Academic Advising at 346-3211. ■ Cultural Forum Film Series: “The Day the Sun Turned Cold,” a 1994 Chinese film noir, with subtitles by Hong Kong director Yim Ho. 8 p.m. Room 180, Prince Lucien Campbell Hall, 1415 Kin caid St. $3 general, $2 students. For information, see darkwing. uoregon.edu/~cultural/film.html or call 346-4373. ■ Ancient Athens Lecture: “The Uses of the Past on the Acropolis in Athens,” Jeffrey Hurwitwill de liver a free public lecture and slide presentation on ancient Greece as the first of three events from “A Touch of Knowlege - UO Public Lecture Series.” 7:30 p.m. Room 100, Willamette Hall, 1371 E. 13th Ave. For more informa tion call 346-4510. ■ Saturday: “Taiwan Food Festi val” 5:30 p.m.-9:30p.m. Fir Room, EMU. $7 per ticket. E-mail tso@gladstone.uoregon.edu or see gladstone. uoregon. edu/~tso/. She wanted it. I could tell. What’s the truth? * s I Justus: A Question of Conduct • Sexual Assault Hearing November 15,1999 • Erb Memorial Union Ballroom • 7p.m. Sponsored by the University Health Center, Office of Student Life, SASS, Greek Life and University Housing