. ■e . '£->-«• ’.' : &v¡¡& Ä iü iä ijt i v i« 3> ¿J Volume XXVI, N um ber?? ■ Committed to cultural diversity. May ?9, 1996 Tri-Met Tunnel Blues Barbecue Tri-Met bored-through the last o f the tunnel at the Washington Park Zoo. Officials say the project is on schedule. Rookie Of The Year Alvin Youngblood Hart will be one o f the performers at the Father's Day Blues Barbecue. Bobby Blue Bland will head the line-up. Portland native Damon Staudamire o f the Toronto Raptors was named rookie o f the year. See Metro, page BI. eil See Entertainment, page B3. (Lbe ;}jÍoxtíanh TUB WEEK In c in REVIEW See Sports, page B5. ra n c e s S c h o e n -N e w s p a p e r s i t y o f O re g o n L i b r E u g e n e , O re g o n 37403 Rose Festival Roc r 25¿ Underway Clinton Lawyer Changes Tactic President Cl inton’s lawyer plans to drop the claim that the president’s status as commander in chief means he is on active military duty. Robert Bennett, who is de fending the president in a sexual harass ment suit dating to his time as governor of Arkansas, said he would make a new filing with the Supreme Court today that does not include a reference to the 1940 Soldiers and Sailors Civil Relief Act, which pro­ tects active-duty military personnel from having to defend themselves in civil suits. Clinton is trying to have the harassment suit by Paula Jones delayed until he is out of office. ValuJet Search Progresses A 50-ton backhoe is to begin excavating the ValuJet Flight 592 crash site in the Florida Everglades, weather permitting The backhoe has been creeping across the swamp on a half dozen pontoon platforms slowly making its way to the crash scene where heavy rain and the holiday weekend slowed the search effort for the first time since the fatal crash. In Washington, the cockpit voice recorder continues to under go analysis by experts. They have been able to determine that a fire broke out in the passenger cabin about six minutes into the flight and that the passengers apparently were having trouble breathing. New JFK Film Unearthed Kennedy assassination buffs have some new material to study. The Dallas Morning News says no major questions are an swered but new insights might be provided by 45 minutes of newly unearthed film shot by a local television station on the day President John Kennedy was assassinated in 1963. While there are no pictures o f the president’s motorcade coming under fire, the discovery includes footage o f the Kennedys getting into their limousine and accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald short­ ly after his arrest. Jack Ruby also can be seen at a news conference with Oswald two days before he shot him. The film is being transferred to videotape for use by the public. Election Eve In Israel Israel’s political rivals are in their last day o f campaigning as Israelis prepare to vote tomorrow. Prime Minister Shimon Peres and his right-wing rival, Benjamin Netanyahu, both plan to visit several towns in southern and central Israel before clos­ ing their campaigning tonight in Tel Aviv. The election has been getting closer by the day. The latest opinion polls give Peres a th ree-p ercen tag e point lead over Netanyahu. Soldiers have already started to vote but for most Israelis, the polls will open at 7 a m. tomorrow. North Korea Ready for War North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has drawn up plans for war on South Korea and North Korean pilots are training for a ightning strike, according to a pilot who defected to Seoul. Li Chol-su, 30, a North Korean air force captain who flew his MiG-19 to the south last week, confirmed reports that hundreds of planes are massed along the border. “Kim Jong-il is devoting everything to prepare for war,” Li told reporters today. About 270 planes are in forward areas, ready for a three-stage strike to capture Seoul, the central city of Taejon and the southern city of Pusan within seven days, Li said. FRONT S E C T IO N EDITORIAL A2 7 n ^ thf R°S h Festi^ ' ^ ts unde™ay in Thursday with the coronation o f this year's Rose Queen. With the theme, The Winning Spirit, the event boasts over 70 sanctioned events. The annual festival atttacts more ttipn 2 million people to the Portland area. FESTIVAL SCHEDULE OF EVENTS The Incredible Universe Q ueen's C oro­ nation; Thursday, May 30, at 8 p.m. at Civic Auditorium. It will be televised on KOIN-TV, Channel 6. The Festival C enter featuring the U S. Bank Main Stage, Fox 49 Kids’ Stage, U.S. W est C ellu la r M arketplace, Budwiser Clydesdales, Festival Commu­ nity Center, Butler Amusement’s Super- Fantastic Fun Rides, Rose Festival Fleet Visitation; Friday, May 3 1 - Sunday, June 9 from 11 a.in.toM idnightatTomM cCall Waterfront Park. STAR SYSTEM Fireworks Spectacu­ lar; Friday, May 31, at 9:45 p.m. Bank O f America Starlight Run. Satur­ day, June 1, at 8 p.m. Downtown Portland General Electric SOLV Starlight Parade; Saturday, June I at 8:30 p.m. Downtown. Alpenrose Milk C arton Boat Races; Sun­ day, June 2, at I p.m. Westmorland Park. Pacific Power Ju n io r Parade; Wednes­ day, June 5, at I p.m. Hollywood District. Rose Festival Fleet. Tuesday, June 4 - Monday, June I Oat the Westside Seawall ofthe Willamette River. General Visits are I p.m. to 4 p.m. from Wednesday, June 5 through Sunday, June 9. Southwest Ail lines G rand Floral Parade Saturday, June 8, 10 a m. Downtown. Mervin’s and Target Showcase of Floats, Saturday, June 8 from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday, June 9 from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. at the Rose Quarter Commons. Rose Festival Air Show Presented by Intel; Friday, July 12 through Sunday, July 14. Northwest Afrikan American Ballet in Concert - Under the Baobob free; Friday, May 31 at 8 p.m. at the Portland Center for the Performing Arts - Intermediate Theater. Tradewest Resorts Rose Cup Races; Fri­ day, June 14-Sunday,June 16th from8:30 a m. to 6 p.m. Portland International Race­ way, West Delta Park, Rose Cup Race is Sunday at I p.m. Eighth Annual De Paul Duck Derby Sat­ urday, June 15, festivities start at 9 a.m. race time is 11 a.m. The “ Good In The Hood” Mulitcultural Music and Food Festival; Friday June, 28 through Sunday, June 30. Times are Friday from 6 to 10 p.m., Saturday, Noon to 10 Youth Need More Attention he P o rtla n d M u lt ­ nomah Progress Board, co-chaired by Portland M ayor Vera Katz and Bev Stein, Multnom ah County Chairwom­ an, unveiled a report that shows things are looking up for the Portland Area. M ore people have confidence in local gov­ ernm ent, the economy contin­ ue to enjoy dynamic growth, and the crime rate remains fair­ ly steady. in 1994 in 1994 crimes have been prop­ erty crimes like auto theft. We have a great opportunity here to work together across jurisdictions to make a real impact through partnership agreements such as the Auto Theft TasJ< Force." The report noted that drug and alcohol abuse among adults is rising and firearms deaths rose. Portland is doing better on reporting and reducing drug and alcohol abuse among adults is rising. Intheareaoffamiliesand education, the report showed that an increasing percent­ Mayor Vera Katz On the down side, the “ 1996 age of students reach normal skill levels. Benchmarks Report" also showed that the region faces signif­ The percentage of people above the federal poverty line icant challenges from rapid growth, and that the status of has been rising but teen pregnancies is up. Children are using children continues to suffer. Benchmarks are quantifiable drugs and alcohol earlier. There is a shortage of more than standards on community conditions that can be tracked year 13,000 day care slots. Too few younger kids are getting to year. immunization. The number of young adults going beyond a One of the Progress Board’s most urgent benchmarks - high school education seems to be declining. increasing the average wage - showed a steady increase. The Katz and Stein also reinforced the need to plan wisely as county’s income growth managed to outpace inflation by Portland and Multnomah County prepare for rapid growth. about 5 percent. “We must continue to be vigilant in meeting the standards The report also showed that while the crime rate has of Metro 2040 and working with our regional partners to remained fairly steady over the past five years in the county, ensure that the metro area doesn’t go the way o f other more people are feeling better about their neighborhood decaying urban centers like Detroit and Los Angeles," said livability and they also feel safer walking alone at night in Stein. It ’s disappointing that this report showed fewer of us their neighborhoods. are using mass transit. If we are to preserve our quality of life, Crime continues to be one of our most critical challenges, we must work together more on crating less congestion, less said Katz. “We have put 1,000 more officers on our streets, pollution, and we will have a better environment for all o f us.” and we will add another 42 in the coming year. But that alone Katz said she was pleased to sec that the Benchmark Report cannot make the difference. I applaud efforts of citizens confirmed that more and more people think local government who’ve taken the initiative to start foot patrols in their is doing a good job “We have continued to work on involving neighborhoods, and partner with police to make people feel citizens and showing them clear goals for what we re trying safer where they live." to do And this report shows that that’s having an impact on “ I think it’s significant," said Stein, “that the driving force your confidence in us." said Katz. T HEALTH EDUCATION A5 A7 METRO S E C T IO N FAMILY B2 p.m., and Sunday, noon to 6 p.m. at Holy Redeemer Area School Campus, Port­ land Blvd and Vancouver Ace. Tri-Met urges festival goers to take ad­ vantage of the park and ride locations and plans extra service on major lines for the Starlight and Grand Floral Parades. Call the Tri-Met Rose Festival hotline, 231-3197, for more information. Clark County resi­ dents will have a one stop, free trip to the Floral Parade on C-Tran from park and ride locations. Downtown bridges will be periodically closed to vehicular traffic Tuesday, June 4 and Wednesday, June 5 for ship arrivals and Rose Festival Ships will leave Portland on the morning o f June 10 at II a m at Tom McCall Waterfront Park. Keisling Calls For Mail In Vote O regonians have sent a clear message to state leaders in Salem with the record low voter turnout; move quickly to expand vote- by-mall. According to Secretary of State Phil Keisling, “My goal is simple. I want the vote-by-mail to be the first one Governor Kitzhaber signs in 1 9 9 7 . Keisling went on to say, “I hope this election is an exclamation point at the end of the vote-by-mail debate. When a spring election with many close and controversial races cannot draw voters at even close to the rate that a single U.S. Senate race did in the dead of winter, then voters are sending a clear message - hold elections the way they prefer and open the process to as many people as possible. I Inofficial participating in the May 2 1 biennial primary contest was approximately 37 percent in the May 1994 polling place primary election and 59 percent on the December 1995 vo,e-by-mail special U.S. Senate election primary election.A record number of absentee ballots slowed the vote count, absentees represent 20 percent ofall registered voters, but accounted for more than one-third of ballots actually cast. “Even voter fatigue can't account for this abysmal turnout," noted Keisling, “and democracy is the big loos­ er " Turnout was nigh in Oregon's two other recent state­ wide mail-in elections; the January 30 special U.S. Senate election with 67 percent and the March 12 presidential primary with 54 percent Keisling wen, on to declare “The debate ought to be over It’s time - pas, time -- to move permanently to voting by mail so we can then focus on other opportunities to revitalize democracy in Oregon such as opening the prima­ ries to Independent voters continuing to make campaign finance reform work, and getting ridofnegative advertizing ARTS & ENT. EDUCATION B3 SPORTS B4 CLASSIFIEDS B5 B7