. Ç . ; •* ' •< k*. -A «<’•. , S9Ì ■ --• ’ *f ‘ ■'••TT . - ä tß iS ’ > < ? . £ * $ 7 À'* ¥ * '/* 7 • #-.**• w ’4òS/ r a ì ì J X J ü & 2 ^ á *.s Volum e X X V I, N um ber 15 C om m itted to ç 02226630 B • JàJLÌi-' A p ril 10, 1996 Annie Pearl Franz Week Mark Twain Cedric Walker s restaurant finding its nitch. Bakery culminates its 90th anniversary. Hal Holbrook returns in award winning role. See page A3. 6 ‘r, * i : tS K See Metro, page BI. See Entertainment, Page B3. CL lie IjJartlatth turner HHHIIflHHHHI H I 11 I Budget Cuts Leave Schools Decimated I ee P ehlman .. . m L « ■ —— _ . ______________ orth and northeast Portland res­ idents will have to take over from decimated public school staff if they want their children to have the same services and quality of educa­ tion. N Officials say Kaczynski Is Unabomber Federal officers say they are 99 percent sure that John Kaczynski is the Unabomber. The mathematical genius turned Montana loner is being held on possession of bomb components, but officers say evidence is mounting against him. A grand jury will hear evidence April 17. The jury will only consider offenses committed in Montana. Because the bombings occurred in other states, officials are considering where he should be tried. Three persons were killed in a string of bombings that began in 1978. Hispanic Beatings Reveal Police History The two deputies videotaped beating two Mexican nationals have had previous complaints against them. Kurtis Franklin was disciplined once for beating a person he had already arrested and was sued for ramming his patrol car into another vehicle while driving at high speeds on a Riverside street. The other deputy, Tracy Watson, vas transferred to court duty after report­ edly being part of a group that was sued unsuccessfully, for beating a Hispanic youth. People are likening the incident to the beating of Rodney King in 1991. Hood River Man Charged In Blast Ray Hamblin of Hood River was charged with one count of possession of a Hand grenade after a series of explosions de­ stroyed a truck and a shed last Wednesday on his property near Mosier. Alcohol To­ bacco and Firearms officers said the site contained registered and unregistered fire­ arms and more explosives than it took to destroy the Oklahoma Federal Building. Military and survivalist literature was also found in the rubble. Hamblin, whom neigh bors call a survivalist, had a permit to sell firearms and to possess the explosives Carl Stokes Dies Former Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes died o f Cancer April 3. He was 68-years old. Stokes was praised as a pioneer and a life-long role model for all citizens. The two-term mayor took office in 1968, be­ coming the first elected black mayor o f a major US city. “As mayor, Stokes inspired 14-year-old Mike White’s dream to be come mayor of Cleveland,” said Cleve land mayor Michael White. UO Letter A Hoax A letter stating that the University of Oregon was cancelingall race based schol arships was mailed to minority student leaders at the college over spring break Typed on UO letterhead, it announced a public meeting April I. University offi cials called it a malicious April Fools Day prank. Minority students called it another example of the hostility directed towards students of color on university campuses. "W e're being targeted," said Jan Harada o f the Asian/Pacific Islanders Student Union. “They're letting us know they know who we are and they know were we live.” US West Threaten Rate Increase Last week US West was sanctioned for excessive customer complaints. This week the utility says it want to raise its rates 55 percent from $12.80 for an average phone bill to $20 to $25. No request for an in crease has been filed with the Public Util­ ity Commission, but after customer com­ plaints rose 250 percent in two years, their chances convincing the PUC are consid ered slim. FRONT S E C T IO N EDITORIAL A2 That was the story from three area princi­ pals last week after handing out termination notices to firs, and second-year teachers and “re-assignment" notices to veteran staff. The older staff will continue to work for the district, but not at their present posts Jefferson High School principal Alcena Boozer says. Jefferson lost five rookie teachers, two from the science department and one each from English as a second language, music and art. It also lost a half-time counselor, one of its two vice-principals, two teachers in both the business and math departments, one and three- quarter positions in English, and one each in computer science, family and consumer stud­ ies, health, physical education and social studies. The Financial Services Academy, which helped students get temporary job experi­ ence in their future careers, lost 20 percent of its staff. One entire department - the television production magnet program - was eliminated because, ironically, it served the local com­ munity too well. Since only eight of its stu­ dents come from outside the Jefferson dis­ trict, it was deemed to be failing its purpose as a magnet. None o f these things are really accept­ able to this administration, but you do what Alcena Boozer Principal Jefferson High School you have to do,” Boozer says. She remembers receiving layoff notices herself during her first three years of,each ing in the 1970s, and she can identify with the probationary staff being eliminated “You need a mix of young and experienced teach­ ers," she says. “The probationaries are eager, young, enthusiastic, and bring spirit and in­ spiration. They'll very likely move to another district, and some may even rethink whether they want to remain in education.” As for Jefferson she says, "It will take a long time to rebuild a system as excellent as this one was ’ She adds that if community members want to volunteer their services through the district’s volunteer coordinator, “We could use them.” King principal Joseph Malone couldn’t just use volunteers, he’s counting on then, His casualties include a fourth-grade teacher, an outreach coordinator, a half-time physical education instructor, a secretary, foureduca- tion assistants and a basic skills teacher. This last teacher was able to "pull students who were having trouble out of their classroom and give them some one-on-one instruction.” I his had a lot to do with King meeting its Polk Test score goals Despite these losses, Malone temains sur­ prisingly upbeat. “ We have volunteer tutors and we’ll continue to have them,” he says. “Parents are already calling to ask what they can do for us. The last two days have been a very difficult time, but we’re not going to give up. We still have high expectations of our students.” Laverne Davis of Humboldt is also seek­ ing help ■ in desperation to keep some basic programs and services going They have lost all their music staff and half of their library services The first means that “the rest of our teachers, whether they’re musically inclined or not, will have to teach some music.” The library cuts hit particularly hard, since the Humboldt library has ju s, been up­ graded to a "state o f the a rt” facility with books catalogued by bar codes, and new com puters with CD Rom programs. “Just when we have the system in place, th ere’s no one left to teach the children to use it,” she says. At least not unless community volunteers step forward. Humboldt also lost four classroom teach­ ing positions. For the fifth grade, this will mean 3 1 students per classroom. "It's devastating for Humboldt School," Davis says. “We’re losing some of our best teachers. Our morale is way down in the dumps.” No Leads Yet On Wyden Tours Portland Homicides YouthBuilders' Site bs P romise K ing Iggee Jermaine was inside her house when a haze of assail­ ant’s bullets cracked through the window killing her. The date. March 6, 1993. And still there are no clues on who fired the shots that Killed Jermaine. Her case represents thirty other homicide puzzles that Portland Police are still grap­ pling with. Sgt. Frank Shipley o f Portland police ho­ micide unit, said the police are relentless in finding clues to the pending heinous crimes. Out of 38 murders committed in Portland in 1994, police have been able to clear 26 cases. Fifteen homicides were solved last year. There are still no clues on who killed thirteen others. In 1993 alone about 34 lives were brutally taken in the North/Northeast area o f Port­ land, so far the police have been able to clear all but six cases. The majority of the unsolved cases are those that occured in the inner-city, accord­ ing to official figures. Police sources say that without good leads or information leading to suspects, these cas­ es would be hard nuts to crack. The city police are asking citizens with information to come foward. There are re­ wards for any useful leads according to Crime Stoppers. You cannot stop homicides because no one can predict when it’s going to happen, but you can take precautionary measures and that's what we are doing,” says Commander Alan Orr, Northeast Precinct. Pending unsolved homicides in 1994/’95: 6316 N. W illiam s. Thomas, Dan M. Shot during a residential robbery. 12/6/94 • 600 block N orth H um bolt Jansson, Sven. Shot while making a drug purchase. 12/7/94 1430 NF. Cleveland/NE Beech. Taylor, Cory. Died during a possible gang related shooting. 4/29/94 705 N.E Skidmore. Johnson, Raymond. Multiple stab wounds, possible burglary. 5/8/94 • 5811 NE K illingsw orth. Hayes, Tyrone. Gun down in a drive by shooting. 5/11/94 • 6435N.Gay. Hill, Brian. Shot while stand­ ing in his driveway. 5/19/94 • SW 2ND / Burnside. Thomas, Eavell. Stabbed after selling drugs to the suspects. 6/27/94 • 4200 block N. Albina. Broadnax, Dou­ glas. Found shot in the street. 6/29/94 • 2329 NE I5TH/NF. Going. English, Darryl. Killed during a drive by shooting 11/11/94. • NE 42nd/NF. Alberta. Morgan, Eddie Shot while standing on sidewalk. • 420 SF, G rand. Stevens, Roderick. Died through stab wounds. 12/28/94 • 3543 N. Missouri. Taffolla-Sanchez, M. Shot by acquaintances. 11/7/95 • 5000 NE 9th. Cordova, Federico Shot in parking lots after an argument. 4/3/95 • 1624 N. Jessup/N. Albina. Hedgmon, Bennie. Bludgeoned to death. 5/15/95 • 3330 SF. 143rd. Jordan, Erik. Shot at his residence. 6/14/95 • 526 NF. Ivy. Martin, Toya. Shot while asleep. 6/22/95 • 1200 Block NE Failing. Curry, Patrick. Gunned after an argument. 6/27/95 • 2330 N. Williams/N. Weidler. Wilson, Kenneth. Shot during a robbery. 9/9/95 ■ 20 NW Fourth. Joe. Bing. Shot during a robbery. 9/15/95 ’ 2025 SF. Ash. Branch, Anthony. Shot dur­ ing a residential robbery. 9/18/95 ’ 4801 N. Interstate. Forillo, Anthony. Was shot io <» pai king lol after an argument. 9/24/95 1805 Block NF. 13th. Tacker, Jesse. Shot while walking by a park. 11/3/95 4345 NF. Hazelfcrn Place. Mitchell, Brian. Shot multiple times as he exits his car. 11/14/95 SE 2/SE Oak. Rios, Jose. Beaten to death after a large fight. 12/2/95 9339 SE Ramona. Ezell, Darrin. Shot during a residential robbery. 12/20/95 EDUCATION HOUSING FAMILY A4 A6 A7 enator Ron Wyden and local community members of the Portland YouthBuilders pro­ gram led a tour Monday through one of the two homes currently under con­ struction. Once complete, the home, located at 5125 NE 14th PI., will pro­ vide affordable rental housing for a Portland family. S Portland YouthBuilders, a non-profit or­ ganization, offers education, leadership de­ velopment and vocational training to young people ages 16-24. Most o f the participants are high school dropouts and teen parents who have had previous contact with the criminal justice system and have chosen to make changes in their lives. The program, that started in January, is funded by a grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. It inte­ grates basic education with vocational train­ ing and employment related to housing con­ struction. During the first year, 30 partici­ pants will rehabilitate and construct eight units of affordable housing in their commu­ nity. Participants work in crews spending half of their time in the classroom working to­ wards a high school diploma and GED and the other half at the construction sites. The construction projects are in partner­ ships with Franciscan Enterprise, NE Com­ munity Development Corporation, Hous­ ing Authority of Portland, and Portland Community Reinvestment initiatives. The students receive skill training, a wage stipend and the opportunity to partic­ ipate in decision making. It is affiliated with AmericaCorps and they are eligible receive an education award. Secretary Brown Dead ommerce Secretary Ron Brown he was the consummate broker.” and 34 others on a Balkan trade “I don't consider myself to be colorblind mission died last Wednesday but race isnot something I’ve been obsessed when their plane crashed into a Croatian with,” Brown said in an interview for Wash­ hillside during heavy storms. ingtonian Magazine. C Brown came from the hard streets of Harlem and rose to the top of political and corporate power. He made it clear he aspired to the post of Secretary of State in a second Clinton administration. He was a black man who stepped beyond the bounds of race. “He was able to walk between both worlds: progressive black pol­ itics and party politics,” said Howard Uni­ versity professor Ronald Walters "Inasense METRO S E C T IO N Senator Ron Wyden SPORTS B2 I le was an aggressive proponent o f free trade; practicing a form of commercial di­ plomacy. He influenced US policy toward China, Russia and South Africa He encour­ aged business to invest in those hot spots and was doing the same in Bosnia. Brown believed that the United States had to take risks so that its workers could Continued to page A3 ARTS &. ENT. RELIGION B3 B4 CLASSIFIEDS B7