The Motion Picture ’’Ride" Is Coming To A Theater Near You to**"0***' Aquatic Staff Sought March 2 7th Get ready to go fo r a "Ride” you'll never fo rg et. $ee Entertainment, page ll For Rayne Haughton, life is not meant to he dry, the ! 9 year old finds himself teaching young children how to swim on their own. BULK RATE 11.5. POSTAGE PAID See Metro, inside. Coupon's Inside! PORTLAND, OR PERMIT NO. 1610 (Obse New Buyer for Rosemont Site Bv L ee P eari . man he Portland Development Com­ mission plans to purchase the old Rosemont School site in the Pied­ mont neighborhood and draw up a master plan for its future use. Steve Rudman, director o f the Bureau of HousingandCommunity Development, said the development commission will con­ sider allocating funds for the purchase o f the 7.6 acre former Catholic school at 597 N. Dekum St. He adds that if the com m is­ sion does not vote the money the city may make other arrangements to acquire the property. In January the city acquired an option to purchase the land from Central City Concern, a non-profit corporation, good until April 14. C C C ’s own option to purchase from the Sisters o f the Good Shepherd expires May 14. CCC has been try i ng to develop the property since 1995. Its first proposal included building upto75unitsofhousingtorrecoveringalcohol- ics and drug abusers and their families. This drew opposition from the Piedmont Neighbor­ hood Association, which said that putting such a large "fragile population” so close together would defeat their efforts to stabilize the area. Last year CCC and developer Brian McCarl proposed to convert the property’s historic former convent to 60 units o f as­ sisted living housing, construct another building with 50 more units o f elderly housing, and devote most o f the site to Old Rosemont School site in the Piedmont Neighborhood. owner-occupied housing. For this last element CCC approached (Photo By M. Washington) HOST Community Development, another pied housing development. HOST consid­ citing financial com m itm ents to o th er non-profit whose specialty is ow ner-occu­ ered the proposal but backed out in January, projects, CCC executive director Richard T Clinton Praises U.N. Chief Annan President Clinton praised U.N. chief Kofi A nnan’s deal with Iraq and said the Secretary-G eneral deserves praise for helping avoid an armed conflict. Annan met with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein last month and hammered out a deal giv­ ing unfettered access for U.N. inspectors to Iraqi palaces. The agreem ent averted a possible U.S.-led military strike against Baghdad after Iraq refused to allow weap­ ons inspectors check certain sites. Inspec­ tors have been back at work and have reported no difficulties gaining access. Annan also was expected to appeal forthe United States to pay the $ 1.3 billion dol­ lars in back dues it owes the United Na­ tions. Floods Drive Thousands From Homes The entire town o f Elba may be moved after two levee breaks and two floods since 1990. Jam es Lee Witt, the director o f the Federal Emergency Management Agency, toured the area today and he said moving Elba is a possibility. He said it would be up to the residents. The latest flood came Sunday when a Depression- era levee tailed. About 2,000 people were left homeless. Senate: Try Saddam As War Criminal T he S en ate w an ts Iraqi p re sid e n t S addam H u sse in to be tried as an in te rn a tio n a l w ar c rim in a l. T h e S en ­ ate voted 9 3 -0 to u rg e th e c re a tio n o f a U n ited N a tio n s trib u n a l “ fo r the p u rp o se o f in d ic tin g , p ro se c u tin g and im p riso n in g S addam H u sse in .” Sen. B yron L. D o rg an , D -N .D ., to ld the S en ate that S addam had u sed c h e m i­ cal w e a p o n s on his e n e m ie s, b o th in ­ sid e and o u tsid e Iraq , had w ag ed w ar ag ain st Iran and K u w ait, had attack ed Israel and had p lo tte d th e a s s a s s in a ­ tio n o f fo rm e r P re sid e n t B ush. What’s the track like now for north-south light rail? B y N eil H eilpern Rep. Joseph Kennedy To Retire R ep. Jo se p h P. K en n ed y II a n ­ n o u n c e d he w ill not run for re -e le c ­ tion and p lan s to le a v e p o litic s to run the n o n p ro fit a g en cy fo rm erly headed by his late b ro th e r, M ichael. K ennedy is the e ld e st son o f th e late Sen. R o b ­ ert F. K en n ed y and is a six -te rm c o n ­ g ressm an . T h e aid e said th at th e death o f M ichael K en n ed y in a sk iin g a c c i­ dent in D ec e m b e r w as a big fa c to r in the decision. K ennedy last A ugust said he w ould not run fo r g o v e rn o r, a l­ th o u g h he w as v iew ed as a h e av y fa ­ v o rite . K e n n ed y , 45, w ill lead the C itiz e n s E n erg y C o rp ., a n o n p ro fit h eating a ssista n c e c o rp o ratio n he took o v e r a fte r M ic h a e l’s d eath . Harris says. The agency approached other housing providers, but was unable to come up with a satisfactory arrangement, Harris says. He adds, “Owner-occupied housing is beyond the scope o f our mission. With the decision to pursue this kind o f housing. Central City’s role in the project was greatly diminished, and so was our interest in it." This, plus the cost of pursuing the project, convinced him that turning the property over to the city was the best way to ensure that it is used for low­ cost housing, he said. Rudman says the city plans to conv ene a task force of city and community representatives to create a master plan forthe property’s use. It will be similarto the process thecity pursued with the former Kennedy School, later converted toa bed and break fast and brew pub by the McMenamin brothers, but will be less "open-ended," he said. With Kennedy School the task force considered al I possible uses for its future use. At Rosemont the city is committed to housing ofsome sort he said. Betsy Radigan o f the Piedmont Associa­ tion says the process could clarify “some unanswered questions w e’ve had all along, such as whether the old (convent) building can be saved.” However, after talking to Rudman, she says the process "will reopen some old issues we thought we had re­ solved, such as the place o f low-income rental housing in the plans. Rudman says the process will not begin with a “blank slate - we understand the desire to preserve the convent.” However, he added, “W e aren’t bound by the previous agreement." Providing low-cost housing is a city priority, he said. Light rail stations like this one at LLoyd Center will become part o f the landscape between Clackamas Town Center and North Portland in the future. (Photo by Neil Heilpern). A map of alternative routes and stations for the planned South-North Light Rail sys­ tem looks like a connect-the-dots mass tran­ sit spider web designed to serve Portland’s growing transportation needs. I he ultimate shape of that web depends on a public input process, started last week with a series of open houses for public review of the recently released Draft Environmental Impact Statement. The document gives an overview of benefits, costs and impacts o f extending existing light rail system toa South/ North corridor between Clackamas Town ( enter and North Portland. The line would travel from Clackamas I own Center, through Milwaukie and con­ tinue over one o f two possible Willamette River crossing routes to the west side. One would travel on current railroad right of way, stop at OMSI and cross a new bridge south o f the Marquam Bridge. A different span goes over Ross Island, heading downtown via Johns Landing. Routing considerations include displace­ ment comparisons, costs, and decisions about serving existing populations on the east side or encouraging new development in Johns Landing as an alternative to extending urban growth boundaries. After joining the downtown transit hub, light rail would cross back over the river to the Rose Quarter where two more alternate routes are being considered to North Port­ land. One would follow the 1-5 corridor, acces­ sible to pedestrians along current streets east o f the existing freeway. The other would be carved out o f a portion of Wheeler/Russell Streets, Interstate Ave and North Lombard. Open houses for people to review the options were held Saturday at the Oregon Convention Center and Monday at the Kaiser Town Hall Ballroom on N. Interstate and the Portland Building. Upcoming open houses included 4-8 pm, Thursday, at New Hope Community Church (Interstate 20 and SE Stevens Road), and 5- 8 pm, Monday, March 23, at the Public Safety Building in Milwaukie. FDA OKs Cheaper Osteoporosis Test T e sts for c rip p lin g o ste o p o ro sis are g e ttin g e a sie r and c h e a p e r. The Food and D rug A d m in istra tio n a p ­ pro v ed H o lo g ic ’s S ah ara b one test, the first o ste o p o ro sis te st th at does not use X -ray s. W om en can ju s t slide a foot into a little m a c h in e and learn m in u te s la te r if th e ir b o n es a re d a n ­ g e ro u sly th in . T he d e v ic e uses high- fre q u e n c y so u n d w av es to asse ss a w o m a n 's b o n es by m easu rin g the d e n ­ sity o f h er heel. P a tie n ts w ill pay about $40 a test. T y p ic a lly w ith an X- ray, p a tie n ts a re c h a rg e d $127 per test. O ste o p o ro sis a fflic ts an e s ti­ m ated 10 m illio n A m e ric a n s, m o stly eld e rly w om en. 4 Breakfast at the Portland Marriott Hotel with Hugh B. Price. President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Urban League. Mr. Price was in Portland for the awards banquet of the Portland Urban League, that was held on March 12. 1998. And to promote the 8 7 year-old organization's annual convention, which begins on August 4 in Washington, D.C. and the theme of this year's gathering is Economic Power: The Next Civil Rights Frontier. Right Picture: From left: Gary Ann Taylor of The Portland Observer Newspaper and Hugh B. Price President and CEO of the National Urban League. Left Picture: From Left: James Winters and Lawrence J. Dark President and CEO o f The Urban League of Portland.