- T - '. . V.’’ ' ' «X TdFùa ? ^ X 5 a T a î \ • ♦**■< * t * é '■- *?¿r • IfVIVv* « » « T 1 w w V olum e X X V II, N um ber 24 • a • * , • a , C om m itted to cultural diversity. June I I , • • -i 1997 Jefferson dancer excels She's college bound for the arts with a presidential merit scholarship. Jortkmh (Ohsewer Hiring outburst atP S U McVeigh defense continues case Lawyers for convicted Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh Tuesday re­ sume their effort to save him from execu­ tion S o far, McVeigh’s lawyers have called 21 witnesses in the penalty phase of his trial. With testimony from a succession of witnesses Monday. McVeigh was por­ trayed as a cheerful teenager, a good stu­ dent and a model soldier. The defense is trying to convince the jury to send McVeigh to prison for life. Uproar doesn't shake new president, peers call imaginative and innovative W isconsin law school dean who brings a reputation as an advocate for diversity and an easygoing management style has been named the new president of Portland State University. A Fourth Kevorkian trial set Jury selection began Tuesday in the fourth trial against Dr. Jack Kevorkian. The crusader for assisted suicide is going to trial in the small town of Ionia, Mich. He’s accused of four felonies for his role in the death o f a woman who suffered from multiple sclerosis. The retired pathologist also faces a charge of practicing medicine without a license. Penalty phase in Megan case The penalty phase of the trial against the killer of 7-year-oM Megan Kanka continues Tuesday. Prosecutors in Tren­ ton, N .J., said M onday that Jesse Timmendequas should die for the rape- murder of Kanka, a killing that led to the so-called Megan’s Law for convicted sex offenders. Ex-Black Panther due In court Former Black Panther leader Elmer "Geronimo” Pratt is due in a Santa Ana, Calif., court Tuesday in his effort to win his freedom after 25 years in prison. The Los Angeles County district attorney says it will appeal a judge's ruling granting a new trial for Pratt. Pratt was imprisoned after being convicted of the 1968 murder of a woman in Santa Monica. Pratt has campaigned for years for a new trial, arguing that he was 400 miles away in Oakland when the murder took place and that the FBI knew it because he was under surveillance. Tobacco settlement talks proceed Tobacco settlement negotiators are mak­ ing a last-ditch effort to reach a deal this’ week, but several sources close to the talks warn their efforts could unravel in the next few days. A large meeting of attor­ neys general that had been scheduled for Tuesday in Dallas has been canceled. Instead, core negotiators arc now in Wash­ ington. They are still struggling to solve several critical civil liability problems that may prove to be unsurmountable. At issue is whether the parties can devise a plan that would give cigarette companies some certainty about damages they would have to pay without depriving individuals of ih e ii l i g h t to sue the industry. EDITORIAL..................... A2 HOUSING....................... A4 FAMILY............................ A5 EDUCATION................... A6 HEALTH...........................A8 ARTS & ENT...................A9 METRO............................B I SPORTS......................... B3 CAREERS....................... B5 CLASSIFIEDS................ B7 Sweet smell of success ‘I'm just it little ruse hud. But / will grow into a beautiful ruse,' is just one ofth e themes at Humboldt Elementary in north Portland as kindergarten children dun cup and gowns and receive congratulations from principal l.averne Davis on their promotion to the first grade. (Photos by Mark Washington) | Betty Campbell building dedicated Housing ready for new tenants in historic Mississippi District by L ef . P erlm an o n g tim e B o is e -E lio t School p rin c ip a l B e tty Campbell received a living me­ morial last week, as Housing Our Fami­ lies dedicated its newest building in her name. L The Betty Campbell Apart­ ments, 3987 N. Mississippi Ave., contains one one-bed- room handicapped-accessible apartment, four two-bedroom and four three-bedroom units, with the larger units having bed­ rooms on both the second and third floors of the building. The one and three-bedrooms, tar­ geted to those earning 50 per­ cent or less of median income, rent for $335 and $495 a month respectively, while the two-bed­ rooms, slated for tenants earn­ ing up to 60 percent o f median, are $525 a month. Two o f the two-bedroom units are still available, HOF executive di­ rector Gretchen Dursch says. The ground floor contains the non-profit agency’s own offices and those of Total Staffing Solutions, an employment and train­ ing agency. As part of its rental agreement, TSS will provide training for HOF tenants, Dursch says. The arrangement represents HOF’s first experiment in retail space rental. The new building brings the agency’s inventory of rental housing units for low- income women and families in north and northeast Portland to 161. It began in 1993 with the renovation of a four-plex, now the Vesia Loving Complex, at 4529 N. Missis­ sippi Ave. It is now planning to build a 74- unit structure with ground floor retail on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard at Dekum St. Scott Burns, co-chair of the Boise Neigh­ borhood Association, feels the new structure is “an exciting turning point in the revitaliza­ tion of the Mississippi Corridor. It’s an im­ portant cornerstone." HOF and the Boise Association have co-sponsored projects such as neighborhood cleanups and "paint-a-thons” for low-income owner-occu­ pants, and Burns says he hopes this continues in the future HOF board member Brenda Jackson first proposed naming the building for Betty Campbell, but the idea was strongly sup­ ported by people throughout the community, Dursch says. She retires this year after 30 years with the Portland School Dis­ trict. At the dedication, Campbell said that twoof her students have told her. “We’re moving into your house, Betty!” Characteris­ tically, she urged those present to lobby the state legislature for better school funding. The apartment site, once a pool hall had been vacant for eight years, and seized by Multnomah County for non-payment of taxes, before it was donated to HOF as part of its affordable housing program. The project was financed in part by three loans. Clinic founder honored ariah Taylor, founder of the north Portland clinic known as "The Clinic of Last Re­ sort," for its help to largely uninsured and poor patients, will be honored Sun­ day in Portland duirng the convention of the National League for Nursing. M Taylor has lived in Portland for 50 years She is a former welfare recipient and single mother of three who worked her way though college, earning a Masters degree in Nursing in 1979. It serves about 2,000 patients per year, providing vaccinations, screening, re­ ferrals, prescriptions, emergency care, pan­ try services and, when possible, house calls. Rose festival fun Lead marcher for the flag and drill team at northeast Portland's Sabin Elementary keeps balance as one of many school entries in Portland’s Junior Rose Festival Parade. (Photo by Yvonne Lerch) Daniel O. Bernstine, currently dean and professor of law at the University of Wiscon­ sin Law School in Madison, Wisconsin be­ comes PSU’s seventh president. “Daniel Bernstine brings to Portland State University a sense of acceptance and toler­ ance,” said Oregon Board of Education Chan­ cellor Joseph Cox. “He is entrepreneurial, imaginative and innovative, and has a record and reputation as an excellent fundraiser, Cox said “He recognized the fact that higher education must be responsive to the social and eco­ nomic needs of the local community and society as a whole and he is a staunch advo­ cate for achieving excellence through diver­ sity.” A 4 9 -y ear-o ld A frican A m erican, Bernstine will become the first minority to head an Oregon university when he comes to Daniel Bernstine brings to Portland State University a sense o f acceptance and tolerance,' - Oregon Board o f Education Chancellor Joseph Cox. PSU later th's summer. His appointment was a surprise to many on the PSU campus. He wasn’tthetopchoice of a panel of faculty and student leaders who had endorsed another candidate When the selection was announced before a expectant crowd Thursday there was a moment of stunned silence and then protests. Some people walked out of the room Later, faculty and student leaders said they would work with the new president. Before working at the University of Wis­ consin, Bernstine served as general counsel for Howard University and Howard Univer­ sity Hospital in Washington, D C. He has served as a visiting professor at the University of South Carolina School of Law and the University of Bridgeport School of Law; a faculty participant at the Intcr-Ameri- can Comparative Giessen in the Federal Re­ public of Germany; and a lecturer at the Inter­ national Customs Academy in Taipei, Taiwan He holds a bachelor’s degree in political science and sociology from the University of California, Berkeley in 1969 and earned his law degree from Northwestern University School of Law in 1972. Bernstine and three other finalists for the position, Michael A. Baer of Northeastern University; Lindsay Ann Desrochers of the University System of Georgia; and Peggy Gordon Elliott ofthe American Association of State Colleges and Universities visited the campus and met with faculty, administrators, students and community and alumni members before the board met with each candidate The selection of a new president capped a four-month search process which drew 76 applicants.