V -- * »' * W Ww Hitru i*. '*V:j J? -.*7*¿í**a * -- s 2222 I, N uni bei 44 Halloween and the Dia de los Muertos Portland Obser & Observador Picks Ghosts, goblins, skeletons (calaveras) and witches blow into town this week. Stroll to the polls with our handy Election recommendations. See Metro, page BI. S c h o e n -N e w ^ D ' L ib r M rs. F ra n c o f O re g o n Un i v e r s i t ' E u g e n e . 0» » n o n 97403 ( nm mi tied to cultural di' See Special Election Edition, page B5. October 30. 1996 wMinpdiiy ax Clinton Theater Janice Scroggins. Theresa Demarest. Chata Addy and friends play the funky folk blues jazz thing. See Arts & Entertainment, page B3. (The ^ a rtín n h (©bsœrtteE« if Hispanics, Blacks will vote together bi Dole ends California swing With just a week left before the election, Bob D ole’s campaign is struggling to put together a travel schedule for the stretch run The Republican presidential nominee completed four days o f campaigning in California today and promised to return over the weekend. Polls showing Dole trailing in many key states. Clinton addresses colleges President Clinton addressed college au­ diences today as he solidified his lead in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Clinton spoke at the University o f Pennsylvania after ear­ lier addressing students at Ohio State Uni­ versity. At Ohio State, Clinton outlined his ideas to raise standards in public schools. Testimony undercuts O.J. Defense Testimony today in the O.J. Simpson murder trial appeared to undercut Simp­ son's strategy o f claiming a police frame- up. A Los Angeles police detective said his partner, Mark Fuhrman, was never alone with the evidence in the early morning hours following the killings. Detective Ron Phillips also testified that he inspected the crime scene and saw only one bloody glove. Simpson’s lawyers have claimed Fuhrman planted one o f two bloody gloves found at the murder scene at Simpson’s residence to falsely implicate the former football star. Two GM plants strike The United Auto Workers union is turn­ ing up the heat in its contract negotiations with General Motors. The automaker says about 7,500 unionized workers at plants in Indianapolis and Janesville, Wis., have gone on strike. GM has had no formal response to the walkouts, which threaten to paralyze much o f G M ’s highly profitable light truck production. The strikes come as GM and the UAW are locked in negotia­ tions over a new national labor contract covering 2 15,000 hourly workers. Koop: Obesity a disease Former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop today urged American doctors to view obesity as a dangerous and chronic disease that can be treated with diet, exer­ cise and drugs. Koop called obesity the second leading cause o f preventable death in the United States. Obesity has been linked to heart disease, diabetes, hyperten­ sion, gall bladder disease, arthritis and certain cancers. Investigating Jewell probe The FBI says it is investigating the “propriety" o f the manner in which agents questioned former Olympic bombing sus­ pect Richard Jewell. The FBI brought Jewell to its Atlanta office three days after the bombing under the false pretense o f participating in a training film on how to question a witness. Without telling him he was a suspect in the bombing, Jewell was then pressured to sign a waiver o f his right to remain silent and to have a lawyer present. Jewell was cleared of any role in the bomb­ ing Saturday. Women pulled from Cairo Collapse A Los Angeles woman and her Egyp­ tian friend were found alive today, 36 hours after they were buried in the col­ lapse o f a Cairo apartment building. The ll-sto ry building caved in on Sunday, killing at least 20 people Authorities say the rescued women suffered minor abra­ sions. S eas C m /. otivated by Republican attacks on Affirmative Action programs and legal immigration, African- American and Hispanic citizens are pre­ paring to vote in record numbers on November 5th. M The nation’s two largest minority ethnic groups are finding that they have a great deal in common as Election Day approaches. The Black example Hispanics are determined to close the rep­ resentation gap that separates their historical political presence from their actual numbers, and the example o f African-Americans who successfully organized themselves in voter registration drives in the Civil Rights Move­ ment o f the 1960s is a key part o f Hispanic strategy. It was a scant 30 years ago that African- Americans were even more disenfranchised than Latinos are today, and many Black cit­ izens were murdered simply because they wanted to exercise their right to vote. Latinos are more often deported than lynched. California's Proposition 2 0 9 California continues its role as the nation’s ideological testing ground with Proposition 209, which will end affirmative action in the state. Previously, California’s Proposition 13 (predecessor to O regon’s Measure 5) gut­ ted what was once the nation’s finest public education system Prop 209 has the support o f Republican Senator Bob Dole and former head Ku Klux Klansman David Duke. The Projects Earlier this year, the Southwest Voter Registration Project (SVRP) declared a goal o f registering I million new Latino voters for this year’s election. SVRP served as an umbrella organization for a number o f state­ s'ide registration drives, such as the Oregon African A m erican O utreach sta ffe rs react to Bob Dole s s ta n d against Affirm ative Action. Dole called su c h program s a bl a lle y ." Latino Voter Regisrf,. j ,, i Education Project (OLVRLP) in Oregon. 1 .4 7 million new Latino voters The outreach campaigns that these organi­ zations conducted resulted in 1.47 million new Hispanic registered voters, a surge of 28.7°0 from the 1992 presidential election. The registration drives' successful cam­ paigns depended upon a threefold strategy o f registering previously unregistered citizens. encouraging eligible legal immigrants to be­ come citizens and then registering to vote, and educating one and all on the importance o f voting. Battle focuses on Congress Now that the Republican Party has all but conceded defeat in the presidential race, strat­ egists are focusing on congressional and sen­ atorial races, particularly on close ones like the Senate contest between Democrat Tom Bruggere and Republican Gordon Smith and the House contest between Democra Elizabeth Furse and Republican Bill Witt. File closeness o f these races and the widt chasms that separate the views o f the candi dates make these two contests ones whert literally every vote will count. On issue; important to Hispanics and African-Ameri ▼ Continued to M etro, page B l 300 welcome new MHCC president crowd of 3 0 0 turned out to greet Dr. Joel Vela October 1 5 at a reception to welcome him as M t. Hood Community College's new pres­ A ident. Vela, the fourth president in the college’s 30-year history, was hired by the MHCC District Board o f Education in mid-August. He previously was president o f Palo Alto College in San Antonio, Texas. Vela was joined at the reception by college leaders, current and past MHCCD Board members, several legislators, faculty and staff, local school superintendents, Gresham city councilors, members o f the Hispanic Metro­ politan Chamber o f Commerce and local business leaders. Current MHCCD Board Chairman Greg Lutje spoke o f how Vela has performed in the time since he took over the previous presi­ dent, Dr. Paul Kreider. “Now that two months have passed since Dr. Vela cam e...I'm proud to report that he has exceeded our expectations,” Lutje said. “ We have successfully negotiated a two-year labor agreement.” “We have formulated a bond proposal to be presented to the public in March that has obtained unanimous board approval and goes a long way toward providing the college with technological improvements to usher us into the 2 1 st century' and protect the investment in the plant infrastructure o f the 30-year-old Dr. Joel Vela (left) is g r e e te d by Kim Freem an o f MHCC's S te p s to S u c c e s s . facility. “But most important, Dr. Vela has provid­ ed us all with a leader who instills the willing­ ness to recommit to education as the product o f this college.” Vela is a native o f Kerrville, Texas, and the first generation o f his family to attend college His parents left school in the first and fifth grades, but later completed their GEDs. His heartfelt motto is “Education should be a right, not a privilege.” He brings to the college a proven trac record o f innovation and bridge-building. The MHCCD Board hired Vela for hi leadership qualities and vision, and ha charged him w ith raisin g enrollm ent passing a bond measure, and strengthen ing the college’s connections to the commu nity. Under his leadership, Palo Alto Collegi experienced phenomenal growth. Vela initi ated several innovative projects to expant the college’s service area, including dual credit classes with surrounding school dis tricts, tech-prcp courses with local higl schools, an Agribusiness Institute, and ; Mariachi Curriculum with Campanas dt America. I le also served on the faculty, teach ing history. At each ofthe institutions he has served, ht created new programs and partnerships, and worked to build bridges to the Hispanic com ­ munity. Vela holds a doctorate in education, a master o f arts in education an history, and a bachelor o f arts in social studies. His wife, Maria, is a Reading Recovery teacher. They are the parents o f a son and daughter. ( urrently. Vela is active in the Hispanic Metropolitan Chamber o f Commerce, the Mt Hood Festival o f Jazz Board, the Private Industry- Council Board and the Region 2 Workforce Quality Committee. Democratic Congress could see historic gains S everal members o fth e Congres­ sional Black Caucus (CBC) are Inline for senior positions if the Democrats win back the House this election year. Representative John Conyers (D -M I), the dean o f the Congressional Black Caucus, said “ If the Democratic party regains control o f the Congress, African American legisla­ tive power will be at an all time high. African Americans would have a strong hand in shap­ EDITORIAL EDUCATION FAMILY 42 A3 A4 . i ing the nation’s policies. That’s why Newt Gingrich is trying to scare voters away from electing a Democratic Congress.” Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), who himself would be in line to become Chairman o f the Judiciary Committee, the committee which oversees all civil rights matters, added, “The Republicans are try ing to paint all the black members into Willie Hortons. They want voters to think black leadership is somehow a dangerous thing, but people can see through their demagogucr? .” Conyers said a Democratic Congress would not be as extreme as the Republican Congress has been. “The Republicans shut the govern­ ment down twice and led attacks on our cities, education. Medicare and working people T hat's what voters are afraid o f They don’t want to see Gingrich in power next year." The following African Americans would be selected as a chairmen in a Democratic Congress, while other would be selected for HOUSING BUSINESS RELIGION A5 A6 B2 ARTS & ENT. r j L>J host ot other leadership positions Rep. John Conyers (D-M I), Judiciary Committee; Rep Charles Rangel (D-NY), Ways and Means Committee; Rep William Clay (D-MG), Education & Labor Commit­ tee; Rep Ronald Dellums (D-CA). Armed Services Committee The CBC has 40 members from all over the country, counting Sen Carol Mosley Braun, the only African American to serve in the U.S. Senate ELECTION CLASSIFIEDS B4 B7