M ARCH 25, I99X Committed to cultural diversity Volume X X V II, Number 64 BULK RATE See M t. Hood Jazz Festival Coming Soon! H.S. POSTAGE J J o r tla n h © h s e r u e r ’e High School All Star Players in The PIL S ports , P age B2 Come Join The Mt. Hood Festival O f Jazz Celebrate with some o f the Top Names In Jazz. See Entertainment, page B3. See Popeye s Coupon's Inside! PAID PORTLAND, OR PERMIT NO. 1610 (File JJ u r i la nil (I)bsvnnv . V ■ y.-' Tri-Met’s General Manager announces departure om W alsh, T ri-M et’s G eneral M anager for the past seven years, announced today his departure from the agency follow ing com pletion o f the W estside MAX project in Septem ber, he has inform ed the Board o f D irectors o f his intention to leave. During his tenure, W alsh led the final design and con­ struction o f W estside MAX, em phasized a com m itm ent to custom er service, expanded transit service throughout the region resulting in record ridership, advanced the South/ North light rail project and worked w ith regional partners to bring the opportunity o f an A irport MAX extension. “ For seven years, I’ve had the privilege o f w orking with im m ensely talented O regonians to com plete an o th er seg ­ ment o f this re g io n ’s light rail system , and to advance an ethic o f outstanding custom er service in all that we do daily. This opportunity has left me truly grateful-and filled w ith pride at the cap abilities o f our public and private citizen s.” W alsh will continue doing what he has had fun doing for nearly 35 years— help shape this com m unity as private citizen. He will also chair the planning com m ittee for the Lewis & C lark B i-C entennial in 2005. Board President Phil Bogue will chair the B o ard ’s search com m ittee. They will begin their search im m edi­ ately. The new General M anager is expected to be on board S eptem ber I . The follow ing is C ongressm an Earl B lum enauer’s state­ ment regarding the announced departure o f Tom W alsh, T ri-M et’s G eneral Manager: T Clinton Asks Senate To OK NATO Plan President Clinton made a renewed pitch for the Senate to approve NATO’s expan­ sion next year into Central Europe. “The admission o f Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic will be a very important milestone in building the kind of world we want for the 2 1 st century,” Clinton said.The vote would be a historic affirmation of the United States’ commitment to Europe. The Senate is expected to approve the NATO expansion in a vote. King Family: Let Ray Die at Home A son of Martin Luther King Jr. says the state would be cruel to deny a medical furlough to James Earl Ray for his final days on earth. “Here’s a man who’s close to death,” Dexter King said of his father’s convicted assassin. “The humanitarian as­ pect is not being considered.” Ray, who suffers from a serious liver disease and was briefly in a coma, was in fair condition today at a hospital. His lawyer has been talking to prosecutors about a possible furlough after 30 years in prison. "Tom W alsh ’s tenure at the helm o f Tri-M et is perhaps the m ost im portant chapter in his illustrious career. W hile d elivering the W estside light rail project on time and on budget, he set standards for land use and transportation planning that have shaped the future o f Portland, the region, and the state. No one has done more for O regon in the last 30 years, and I look forw ard to w orking with him as he begins the next c h a p te r in his c a re e r,” said C on g ressm an Earl Blum enauer. Boeing To Cut 20,000 Jobs by 2000 Boeing, the w o rld ’s biggest com ­ m ercial aircraft m aker, is cutting more jo b s. Boeing w ill cut 8,200 jo b s in the next two years because it will stop building two M cDonnell Douglas je t­ liner m odels. The jo b cuts are in addi­ tion to a 12,000-person reduction in com m ercial airplane em ploym ent an­ nounced in m id-D ecem ber. Boeing also said it w ould close several plants and laboratories by 2000 as it cuts costs and stream lines production fol­ lo w in g its re c e n t m e rg e r w ith M cD onnell D ouglas. Study: Surgery Costly for Smokers R esea rch e rs h ave found hidden costs o f sm oking in a place patients m ight not norm ally expect: jo in t re­ placem ent surgery. In a new study, surgery cost m ore, took longer and was m ore com plicated for sm okers g ettin g new hips and knees even though the group was younger and outw ardly h ealthier than nonsm okers, concluded Dr. C arlos Lavernia, an or­ thopedic surgeon. The sm okers also took longer to recover from anesthe­ sia and healed slow er, Lavernia said. Yeltsin Fires Entire Government R ussian President Boris Yeltsin said that he needs a new team to focus on econom ic reform s and lead the country to a pow erful b re ak ­ through in the econom y. Yeltsin fired his entire governm ent because he believes m em bers have lacked initia­ tive and fresh ideas. Many Russians blam e reform s for the n atio n ’s eco­ nomic woes and believe their lives w ere better in the C om m unist era. 2 Rafters Killed in Ore. High W ater A surge o f w ater turned the al­ read y tre a c h e ro u s Illin o is R iver deadly, killing at least two rafters, stranding four and leaving as many as 25 unaccounted for. A helicopter search for the rafters was delayed by fog and rain but got underw ay. The rising w aters prevented a boat search. The severe w eather and snow melt caused the w ater volum e to more than double in a day and a h a lf and depu­ ties say it could be 10 tim es higher before the w ater crests. Tom Walsh, Tri-Met’s General Manager "Workers’ Center" For Migrant Laborers Bv L ee P eri . man The Central East Side Industrial Council says that putting up a “workers’ center” and hiring hall for migrant laborers in the inner southeast would encourage illegal hiring of illegal aliens. The Workers Organizing Committee, and city commissioner Erik Sten’s office, dispute this, and further say that CEIC is missing the point. WOC, a non-profit corporation, proposed setting up such a facility, and Sten’s aide Serena Cruz suggested allocating city funds for it. Currently such workers hang out at the intersection of Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and East Burnside Street, wait­ ing to be hired. They are sometimes cheated out of their money and sometimes recruited to deal drugs. WOC says a workers center could screen out both problems. Such plans fell through when CEIC an­ nounced that they would oppose any such proposal. CEIC says that according to the federal Immigration and Naturalization Ser­ vice, 75 to 80 percent of those on the comer are in this country illegally. John Kuechler, a district police officer who works with CEIC, asks, “Do we get to ignore the federal laws we disagree with? Does the city get to support a place where illegal activity takes place?” Cruz doesn’t see it that way. “If that were so, the INS could handle it,” she says. “The reason they can’t is either that most of these people are documented, or that the problem is much biggerthan that littlecorner. IfCEIC has a solution to the flow of immigrants to this country, legal and illegal, they should put it on the table. To focus on the INS is to see that the problem isn’t addressed.” Teresa Enrico of WOC adds, “CEIC can ignore the fact that those people are doing work that is in demand, that other people are unwilling to do, and they’re doing it to feed their families.” Both know from first-hand experience. Cruz’s mother was an undocumented alien before becoming acitizen. Enrico, the daugh­ ter of a Phillipino father and Native Ameri­ can mother, saw her parents work multiple low-wage jobs to make ends meet. She her­ self encountered bad working conditions in the food services trade. “I determined early on that something was wrong," she said. Im m igrants, who make up a substan­ tial part o f the work force, often wind up in low -paying jobs with poor working conditions and few benefits, she says. (W OC helped bring a lawsuit against a hotel that hired w orkers to do asbestos rem oval w ithout proper p ro tectio n .) They often move from job to job fre­ quently, not staying at one place long enough to acquire seniority or move up the ladder. A workers center, if funded, eould be used to educate workers about their rights and how to defend them, Enrico says. “This is about people’s fundamental right to eat,” she says. Oregon Number two In Nation Safety Belt Use O regon now ranks second in the nation for safety belt use with 85% o f vehicle occupants buckled up, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety A dm in­ istration. Dr. R icardo M artinez, NHTSA adm inistrator, made the announcem ent at a recent Portland event. C alifornia ranks first with a reported use rate o f 88%, w hile the nationw ide rate is 69%. Urban League's “Career Connections ’98’’ Urban League o f Portland President Lawrence J. Dark with Career Connections volunteers, Helloise Hill (Left) and Myrtle Carr. Career Connections '98 is April 2. Thousands of job seekers and employ­ ment recruiters will go prospecting at the fifth annual “Career Connections” job fair sponsored by the Urban League of Port­ land and its Employer partners. The event takes place Thursday, April 2, 1998 at the Memorial Coliseum Exhibit Hall. Exhibit hours are 9 a m. to 8 p.m. Career Connections attracts job seekers and employers from throughout the Pacific Northwest. The event showcases employ­ ment opportunities in Oregon and South­ west Washington, with a special emphasis on recruiting a diverse work force. Anyone looking for a new job or employee is in­ vited. “We want to give employers a chance to recruit the best job candidates from Port­ land beyond,” said Urban League President Lawrence J. Dark. “And we expect employ­ ers to come with more than 2,500job open­ ings to fill." A full house of 90 employers, including many of the region’s largest com­ panies and those with a strong commitment to diversity, are reserving booths a, the job fair. Employers represented include Bank of C ontinue T o P ace A 7