Volume X X V II, Number 26 Committed toeultural diversity. June 25, 1997 Joining in tradition Pow wow keeps history alive Warm up to summer sounds Young and old alike enjoy a old fashioned Juneteenth celebration. < Two kids from different worlds meet at Portland gathering o f Indian tribes. See Metro, inside. Curtis Salgado joins the ' Lou Rawls at *** nt See Metro, inside. ye B4. (The ^Jorilan ò COhseruer ‘Good in th e Hood’ fa re w e ll Administrators at north/northeast Portland school will be missed by L ee P erlman White House appeal rejected The White House will have to surrender notes from a discussion of the Whitewater affair with Hillary Rodham Clinton. Su­ preme Court justices let stand a federal appeals court ruling that said Mrs. Clinton’s talks with White House lawyers were not protected by attorney-client privilege. Tobacco deal under fire A congressional critic of the tobacco industry is predicting that Congress will rewrite the $368.5 billion tobacco settle­ ment. but the chief negotiator for the states is warning the deal will be scrapped if lawmakers "muck it up.” US paid millions for Kansi The U.S. reportedly paid $3.5 million to informants to capture the man accused of a deadly shooting at CIA headquarters four years ago. Newsweek magazine says the FBI and CIA spent a year laying the groundwork for capturing Mir Aimal Kansi, who was arrested last week at a seedy hotel in Pakistan. US wants Pol Pot tried The United States is already moving to have notorious Cambodian strongman Pol Pot tried for genocide by an international tribunal. The New York Times reports that Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has asked Canada to request Pol Pot’s extradi­ tion under Canada’s law against genocide. If Canada agrees, the United States report­ edly is ready to coordinate sending a mili­ tary team to Cambodia to remove Pol Pot. More troops to Hong Kong Britain bowed to Beijing’s demands to send 500 more Chinese troops into Hong Kong just before British colonial rule ends next week. London had at first staunchly resisted the move but yielded after pro­ tracted negotiations. The agreement de­ fused one of the last major diplomatic dis­ putes before the June 30 handover. M cNam ara discusses war Former U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, a key architect of the V ietnam War, now says the conflict could have been halted more than a decade before it ended, or avoided altogether. McNamara, 8 1, told Reuters in an interview following a weekend conference with former top Viet­ namese policymakers in Hanoi that it was clear both Hanoi and Washington had missed chances to halt a war, which cost morethan3.6million lives. Dying guidelines given The American Medical Association has issued guidelines intended to prod doctors into allowing patients at the end of their life to die with dignity. The guidelines list a number of "elements of quality care” rang­ ing from giving patients the right todiscuss their end-of-life care to making sure that physicians are skilled in detecting and managing pain, fatigue, depression and other symptoms of terminal illness. EDITORIAL....................A2 EDUCATION..................A5 FAMILY...........................A7 VANCOUVER................ A8 METRO.......................... B I SPORTS........................ B2 ARTS & ENT............... B3 RELIGION......................B6 CAREERS......................B7 CLASSIFIEDS...............B9 ister Rose and Sister Jane will supervise their last Good in the Hood th is w e ek en d . They are moving on, satisfied that th e y ’re leav­ ing Holy Redeemer Catholic School In healthy condition. S Roswitha Frawley will be teaching at Lewis and Clark College, while Jane Hibbard will take a year’s sabatical and spiritual study. The two Sisters of the Holy Name nuns have been at Holy Redeemer for a combined 30 years, the last five as co-prin­ cipals. Frawley had primary responsibility for the school’s day to day operations, while Hibbard pursued grants and fund-raising. I, was a necessary change, as other inner city Catholic schools closed and Holy Re­ deemer switched from a parish to a regional institution. It attracts students from Lake Oswego and West Linn because it offers a quality, religious education. At the same time, Frawley says, the administration doesn't want the school to be a place where “only people of means can come,’’ and it offers a variety of scholarships. They have been successful on both counts. The school is on sound financial footing. This year also, for the first time, Caucasian students made up less than half the enroll­ ment and non-Catholics an increasing part of it, making the school more reflective of the surrounding neighborhood than it has ever been. One venture that started as a fundraiser, a substitute for bingo, became the school’s Sister Jane Hibbard (left) and Sister Rose' Frawley bother prepare for new assignments. (Photo by Mark Washington) most successful outreach effort: its Good in the Hood festival. Now in its fifth year, the festival runs from June 27th through 29th in the school parking lot at 127 N. Portland Blvd Enter­ tainers include jazz and bluegrass stars such as Boka Marimba. Tall Jazz, Obo Addy, Norman Sylvester, the Michael Allen Harrison Quartet, and the Swingline Cubs. There will also be Irish and Laotian Mien dancers, Hawaiian and Mariachi music, wres­ tling and Brazilian-African martial artsdem- onstrations. For children there will be face painting, reptile exhibits and crafts. For ev­ eryone there will be barbecued ribs by Czaba's, Mexican food by Mazatlan I aqueria, Hawaiian food by Local Boys, Caribbean and Vietnamese dishes, and desserts by Bridges Soup and Sandwich Full Sale Ale and McMenamin Brothers will operate a beer and wine garden. Admission is $5. I he festival's organizers and supporters include Peninsula Park wrestling coach Roy Pittman. Northeast Community Develop- ment Corporation director Jaki Walker, Norman Sylvester (who says his service is penance for the trouble he caused the nuns as a student), and Alanna Schlicting of the Piedm ont N eighborhood A ssociation Frawley calls her relations with the sur- rounding community and its leaders'^ model of collaboration." The school inspires such loy alty that "People take time off from pay­ ing jobs to volunteer here.” Possibly because Holy Redeemer is sup­ portive of the larger community. Through a Pennies for the Poor campaign, its students and nearby businesses raise $10,000 a year for services to the homeless. The children deliver the money themselves, meeting those in need and "creating such a sense of compassion" among the children, Hibbard says. They have played host to the Piedmont Association's meetings for 20 years, and have supported their programs for crime prevention, traffic control and neighbor­ hood stability. Former Piedmont president lorn Markgraf, a Holy Redeemer parent, say s, "Residents here, people who are Prot­ estants and don't have children, have told m e.' Holy Redeemer has held this neighbor­ hood together.’” As a school, Markgraf says, “ It is the most loving, caring community for children I’ve ever seen At commencement I saw Black, white, Asian kids and parents hugging and kissing each other. With every option avail­ able to me, anywhere in this country, there’s nowhere else I'd rather send my kids.” Tasty and refreshing Enjoying Ainsley's Hawaiian Snow in Grant Park. (Photo by Mark Washington) Shift on integration debated acing continued white resistance to busing to achieve school deseg regatlon, an Increasingly conserva­ tive judiciary and now criticism from side and outside its ranks, the NAACP is rethinking one of its fundamental prin­ ciples: advocacy of public school integra­ tion. F At its national convention next month in Pittsburgh the NAACP is expected to have a formal debate on its school-integration policy for the first time in more than a decade. The NAACP has always supported school in­ integration as a way to improve educational opportunities for black students, but oppo­ nents have begun voicing doubts about that goal. They say the organization should focus more heavily on seeking the improvement of majority-black schools. Keith Goodman brings contemporary Brazilian dance to Portland, during a series o f dance workshops at Portland State University. The events will celebrate a bridge that is building between cultures of the Black Atlantic, says Kimberly Mullen, coordinator o f PSU's World Dance Office. For information, call 725-5670. Shabazz death brings many tributes over 80 percent of her body intheJune I blaze at her Yonkers apartment. She had been in extremely critical condition since the day of the fire, and underwent five operations to replace burned tissue with artificial skin AlongwithC'oretta Scott Kingand Myrlie Evers-Williams - whose husbands were also e tty Shabazz, who witnessed the assassinated during the civil rights move­ assassination of her husband, ment - Mrs. Shabazz emerged as a powerful M alcolm X, and became a civil rights figure herself, died Monday of bums symbol in her right. "M illions of people look to her for suffered in a fire allegedly set by her 12- some kind of understanding of the history of year-old grandson. She was 6 1 . the struggle," said black activist and poet National Urban League President Hug B Price expressed sorrow upon learning of the Amiri Baraka. She’s the wife of one of the greatest African-American leaders of his­ death “She was an icon in our community, a tory." In 1965, pregnant with twins, she was in revered figure whose dignity and commit­ the audience at Harlem’s Audubon Ball­ ment to our people was beyond measure. room with her four children when gunmen Her departure leaves a huge void no one can pumped 16 shots into her husband as he fill," Price said preached on tage Sister Betty came Mrs. Shabazz suffered third-degree burns Widow of Malcom X remembered as icon in civil rights struggle B through the people, herself a nurse, and people recognizing her moved back, she fell on her knees looking down on his bare, bullet-pocked chest, sobbing. They killed him!’” Alex Haley wrote in The Autobiogra­ phy of Malcolm X .” Mrs. Shabazz went on to become a university administrator and spokeswoman for civil rights, and raised the couple's six daughters She made headlines in recent years by accusing Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan of orchestrating the assassina­ tion. She later reconciled with him, and defended her daughter Qubilah Shabazz against charges that she plotted a revenge attack on Farrakhan It was Qubilah s son - named for Malcolm X - who was arrested in the fire Malcolm Shabazz was said to be unhappy that he had been sent to live with his grandmother and wanted to return to his mother in Texas He is being held in juvenile custody. Burned skin is prone to infection and causes severe loss of fluids. Patients with Mrs. Shabazz’s injuries have a less than 10 percent rate of survival A steady stream of dignitaries had visited the Shabazz family at the hospital, including the Rev Jesse Jackson, poet Maya Angelou, Mrs King, Dick Gregory and former Mayor David Dinkins Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said he wanted to express my sympathy, my condolences to her family that's with her and all the people who work with her, know her and love her so much." Bom in Detroit, Betty Shabazz studied at the Tuskegee Institute, Brooklyn State Hospital School of Nursing and Jersey City State College. She met her husband through the Nation of Islam; she called her­ self Sister Betty X at the time