I I Volume X X IV Number 45 Serving the community through cultural diversity 9, A New Era For Cable TV Access November 9, 1994 Election Day ‘94 Deborah Luppold resigns from Portland Cable Access after 11 years and is honored at a reception. See Metro, inside. Don Lincoln o f Northeast Portland defied the rain to make his way to vote Tuesday. Oregonians elected a new governor and decided the fate o f 20 ballot measures in the election. OF * (LI tc THEi™ REVIEW Tri-Met Rider Advocates Conference On Race Held from the Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods are poised to ride the buses in North and Northeast Portland. The advocates will board the buses Nov. 14, working full-time shifts from 2:30 p.m. - 11:30 p.m., helping Tri-Met passengers with customer service and augmenting security. Hundreds o f African Americans from across the nation will gather in Baltimore at the N ational State o f the Race Confer­ ence Nov. 17-20 for a series o f grassroots meetings, planning sessions and workshops to discuss the plight o f African Americans, the destiny o f the race and reconstruction o f the black community. Dance Pioneer Dead a t 74 One o f this nation’s pioneering black dancers and choreographers died last week at her home in New Rochelle, N Y. Pearl Primus was 74. She was a powerful per­ former and played a role similar to that o f Katherine Dunham in establishing dance by and about blacks as a leading com po­ nent o f American culture. Primus was a native o f Trinidad. She is survived by a son. Zimbabwe Ambassador Nominated P re sid e n t C lin to n w ill n o m in ate Johnnie Carson o f Illinois to be U.S. A m ­ bassador o f Zimbabwe. Carson has ju st completed a three-year assignment as U.S. Ambassador to the Republic o f Uganda. Prior to that he served as Deputy C hief o f M ission at the A m erican Em bassy in Baborone, Botswana. Before entering the Foreign Service, Carson served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Tanzania. M ortgages For M inorities Increase A federal agency reported last week that efforts to end mortgage loan discrimina­ tion against minorities appears to be produc­ ing positive results. According to the report, conventional home loans to blacks rose 36 percent last year. The increase for Hispanics was 25 percent. The improvement results from more financial institutions providing home loan programs for low and moderate income households. However, the report found that the mortgage rejection rate is still much larger for blacks and Hispanics than for whites and Asians. Recent Female Grads Earn More An analysis o f Census Bureau data by researchers at Queens College in New York has found that among recent college graduates black females are earning more than black males. College graduates 25 years old and younger were studied and the findings showed the median income for white males was $18,000 a year. Black females came in second with a median income o f $17,000. They were followed by white females at $16,800 and black males at $16,400. Appeals Court Rejects Scholarship The president o f the University o f M aryland pledged last week to fight “all the way to the U.S. Supreme C ourt” to continue a popular scholarship program for black students. His comments came in the wake o f a federal appeals court ruling which in effect declared that scholarship funds set aside just for black students were unconstitutional. The case was brought by a Hispanic student who applied for the Benjamin Banneker academic scholarship but was rejected even though he had the third highest test scores Speed Bumps, Graffiti Line To Fight Crime Speed bum ps have been installed at Jefferso n H igh School to a d d re ss tra ffic an d crim e related problem s and a graffiti hotline is now o p e ra tin g to prev en t g ra ffiti an d to c o o rd in a te v o lu n te e r efforts. Three speed bumps were added to North Commercial Avenue between North Alberta and Killingsworth streets. The Bureau o f Traffic M anagement, Portland Police and Fire Bureau and the Northeast N eighborhood Coalition Office recommended the traffic devices after Alcena Boozer, principal o f the school, requested additional support to address problems expe­ rienced in the area. The speed bumps cost the city $1,500 and will be evaluated in a year for their effectiveness, officials said. The Portland Police Bureau Graffiti Hotline at 823-4T AG (4824) was created for city residents to report graffiti for clean-up, receive information on preventing graffiti and to volunteer in clean-up efforts. Police information and referral staff'will handle the hotline from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. A voice message mail system will be available after hours. To report graffiti, people will be asked for the exact address o f the vandalism and how much o f the property is affected. The information wi 11 be forwarded to agenc ies for clean-up o rto Neighborhood Coalition offic­ es for clean-up by volunteers. The graffiti handbook describes resourc­ es and information on graffiti and is available at police precincts and coalition offices. It contains information on cleanup resources and graffiti prevention tips. Portland Parks Director Charles Jordan, House of Umoja Education Coordinator Anthony Bradley, House of Umoja Outreach Coordinator Marcus Branch, and City Commissioner Charles Hales at Monday's dedication of a basketball court at the house on the corner of Northeast 17th and Alberta. The court was made possible by the use of in-kind donations and will serve as one of many positive alternatives for youth. The House of Umoja is a community-based residential program to help address the needs of young men needs and offer a change to leave gang activity. M llth llt Investigators Move In For Clues by M ichael L eighton Murder. When it occurs in Portland a team o f law enforcement specialists move into full gear to hunt forcluesand arrest the killer. The unit includes a p a iro f investigators and a sergeant from the Portland Police Bureau’s homicide unit, two special evi­ dence investigators, a deputy district attor­ ney, a medical examiner and the police on the beat. The law enforcment assault is strong, a counter to a crime people find as most repugnant. But despite the police work, murder cases remain unsolved. On average over past few years, no arrests have been made in about 20 percent o f the slayings in Portland. This year, about 10 cases remain un­ cracked after 46 people killed by the hands o f others. The rate was about 21 percent last year for the nearly the same amount o f EDITORIAL NATIONAL HOUSING A2 A3 A6 kfpM nA M fe t -«41 1 . « , < Xiì murders. It was about 22 percent the two previous years and at the beginning o f this decade was only 1 1 to 14 percent. Homicide Unit Sgt. Van Steam s says a lot can be read into the statistics. He cautions against thinking you can get away with mur­ der in the city. “The solve rate for murder is still higher than almost any other crime and the vast majority are solved,” Steams said. Some o f the present cases are tied to a higher incidence o f drug-related crime. For example, in a shooting last January on the 600 block o f North Humboldt Street, police believe the victim was from outside the community and was in town to buy drugs. He was a stranger to the area, nobody knew him. “ We were left with an em pty,” Steams said. “There was not a relationship, we had a void.” Drug-related murders can occur when the purchaser or seller is shortchanged or drugs are sold that are considered bunk grade. Too often, one o f the parties reacts violently. When there are no witness or clues, murder cases often require someone talking to crack To the advantage o f law enforce­ ment, history shows most people can t keep quiet when it comes to murder. In gang killings, it sometimes break­ METRO BI Police Look For Suspects downs to a “macho thing,” where the gang mem ber who committed the crime likes to talk about it. Steam s said people who commit murder just have to tell somebody, sometimes its somebody they love. But a lover can fall out o f love and put “the dim e” on his or her former partner. The first course o f action in the murder investigation is draw ing a history o f the vic­ tim, who their friends were, their relatives and any acquaintances. It’s not unusual for police in the homi­ cide unit to work a m urder case 20 straight hours after a death, when the evidence is most available. This is the “hot tim e,” when people are shook up, haven't had time to get rid o f evidence, alibies are not set, and memories are fresh. Steam s said detectives will keep work­ ing as long as th ere’s any information to pursue. Cases never close. Currently, the departm ent is reviewing all o f its open hom icide cases. The informa­ tion from the files are being fed into a new com puter database. There are 10 detectives in the homicide unit. With the average o f 4 to 5 murders each month, that gives each officer an average o f tw o cases to investigate each month T he follow ing 1994 hom icides re ­ m ain unsolved in N orth an d N o rth e a st P o rtla n d : J a n . 2 6 - 5616 N. W illiams. Victim: Dan Thomas. Died o f gunshot wound. Possible residential robbery. J a n . 27 - 600 block o f N orth Humboldt. Victim: Sven Jansson. Died o f gunshot wound. Possible drug-related robbery'. M ay 8 - 705 N.E. Skidmore. V ic­ tim: Raymond Johnson Died o f stab wounds. M ay 11-5811 N.E. Killingsworth. Victim: Tyrone Hayes. Shot while inside his residence. M ay 29 - Northeast 42nd and A lber­ ta. Victim: Eddie Morgan. Died o f gun­ shot wound during a drive-by shooting. M ay 19 - 6435 N. Gay. Victim: Brian Hill was shot in his driveway. J u n e 29 - 4200 block o f North Albi­ na Victim: Douglas Broadnax was found lying in parking strip with gunshot wounds. Possible street robbery, drug-related. Sept. 16 - Columbia Boulevard and North Peninsular. Victim: Isaiah Bing was hanging onto the side o f his car and the driver slammed him into a utility pole. Possible carjacking or other crime ENTERTAINMENT SPORTS CLASSIFIEDS B2 B3 B6