Volume X X V II, Number 75 Committed to cultural diversity. htlpr'/w\v\\ poitlant Summer's Almost Here! ft Children swarmed trying to cool off from this summer like weather, at the Rose Quarter Fountain. Come see this year's act Linda Hornhuckle at this year's I Oth Anniversary! The Taste of Beaverton" See Metro,inside. (Ehe THE® REVIE Gun V io le n c e A s ix te e n m e m b e r y o u th gun ta s k fo r c e is b e in g o r g a n iz e d by M a y o r V e ra K a tz . T h e o rg a n iz e d g ro u p w ill in c lu d e f e d e r a l, s ta te an d c ity law e n f o rc e m e n t o f f i c ­ e rs w h ic h w ill tra c e g u n s u se d by j u v e n i l e s , ta r g e t re p e a t o f f e n d ­ e rs an d b la n k e t h o tb e d s o f c rim e . D ance Program T h e P o rtla n d S c h o o l B o a rd has in s tr u c te d d i s t r i c t s t a f f to h e lp fin d $ 1 7 5 ,0 0 0 n e e d e d to re s c u e J e f f e r s o n H ig h S c h o o l ’s d a n c e p ro g ra m . T h e b o a rd m ad e th o s e d e c is io n s a f te r a c o n te n tio u s 4 1/ 2 h o u r m e e tin g at th e s c h o o l. C o u n tin g M e th o d P r e s id e n t C lin to n is p ro p o s in g a m o re a c c u r a te m e th o d fo r c o u n t i n g th e p o p u l a t i o n . T h e P r e s id e n t an d o th e r a u th o r itie s h a v e d e te r m in e d th a t th e 1990 C e n s u s m isse d w h o le s e g m e n ts o f th e p o p u la tio n , la rg e ly m e m b e rs o f m in o rity g ro u p s , th e re b y th ro w in g o f f d e c is io n s by g o v ­ e rn m e n t an d b u s in e s s on e v e r y ­ th in g from h e a lth c a re to a d v e r ­ tis in g . H e a lth C are C o sts H e a lth C a re C o s ts a re e x p e c te d to ris e d o u b le - d ig it n e x t y e a r due to e v e n ts su c h as c o s tly m e rg e rs , p ric e y li f e s t y l e d ru g s and an a g ­ in g p o p u la tio n . It m e a n s m o re r e ­ s t r i c t i v e h e a lth p la n s th a t o f f e r fe w e r c h o ic e s . H e a lth c o s ts w ill r is e th e m o st by 1 2 to 15 p e rc e n t in tr a d itio n a l p la n s th a t le t th e p a tie n t c h o o s e th e d o c to r. S p rin t's V ision S p r in t C o r p o r a ti o n u n v e ile d w h a t it c a lls a r e v o lu tio n a r y $2 b illio n u p g ra d e to its p h o n e n e t ­ w o rk . It w ill be c a lle d th e I n t e ­ g ra te d on D e m a n d N e tw o rk . By la te 1 9 9 9 , th e u p g ra d e w ill let b u s in e s s e s an d c o n s u m e r s c o n ­ d u c t m u ltip le p h o n e c a lls , re c e iv e fa x e s , run new a d v a n c e d a p p l i c a ­ t i o n s a n d u se th e I n t e r n e t at s p e e d s up to I 00 tim e s f a s te r than t o d a y ’s c o n v e n tio n a l m o d e m s. S u ic id e Law U .S . A tto rn e y J a n e t R eno a n ­ n o u n c e d th a t fe d e ra l law d o e s not p r o h ib it p h y s ic ia n - a s s is te d s u i ­ c id e in O re g o n - e n d in g se v e n m o n th s o f le g a l lim b o fo r t e r m i ­ n a lly ill p a tie n ts and th e ir d o c ­ to rs . R en o a ls o s ta te d th a t the f e d e r a l C o n t r o l le d S u b s ta n c e s A ct d o e s n o t fo rb id d o c to rs from p r e s c r ib in g le th a l d o s e s o f m e d i­ c in e . N e u trin o s An in te rn a tio n a l team o f p h y s i­ c is ts h as fo u n d th e firs t firm e v i­ d en c e th at su b a to m ic p a rtic le s call n e u trin o s h av e m ass. T h is d is c o v ­ ery co u ld p ro v id e c lu e s to th e o r i ­ gin and fu tu re o f th e u n iv e rs e . T he fin d in g c o u ld re v is e th e o rie s a b o u t th e b a s ic n a tu re o f th e c o s ­ m os an d th e s tr u c tu r e o f m a tte r. C o m p u te r L ite ra c y P r e s id e n t C lin to n c h a lle n g e d ta te s to m ak e c o m p u te r lite ra c y r e q u ir e m e n t fo r e n te r in g hig h s c h o o l. He p le d g e d to p ro v id e 180 m illio n o v e r th re e y e a rs to ra in m id d le - s c h o o l te a c h e r s in ta te I ID, 199X See Entertainment, page B3. oee Popeye s Coupon's Inside! ILK RA I E L.S. POSTAGE PAID POR I LAND, OR PERMIT NO. 1610 (Ob se ruer Concordia University prospers, grows with N.E. Neighborhood B y L ee P erlman oncordia University is alive, well and growing with the times in northeast Portland, and it will soon have three new on-campus residences to prove it. By mid-August, the Lutheran Church- affiliated school located at 2811 N.E. Holman St. will be ready to dedieate the new facilities. East Hall, at Northeast 29th Avenue and Holman Street, will have three buildings and offer a variety o f housing options from single rooms to triple rooms to independent apartments. “With decreasing family size, many of our students are used to having their own rooms," John Dillin, assistant vice presi­ dent for development o f the Concordia Foundation says. “We have to play to the market.” That has been a theme o f the school's development over the last 20 years. Nearly half of its 1,000 member student body now comes from other Pacific Northwest C “ II ith decreasing family size, many of our students are used to having their own rooms, ” states. To accommodate them, East Hall will boost on-campus housing from a cur­ rent 205 to 450 beds. The school has come a long way in the last 20 years. In the mid-1970s it was a two-year junior college offering 50 ma­ jors to 300 students and, Dillin admits, “trying to figure out if we could go on.” Assuming it could, it had what it was then considered the ideal place to do it - a tract o f land in the suburbs donated to the church and offering three times the ex­ pansion opportunities as the school's ex­ isting 13-acre campus, without the atten­ dant zoning restrictions. Instead, the school sold the land to finance its mod­ ernization. I.i 1977 it became a four-year univer­ sity. Beginning in 1983, with the presi­ dency of Charles Schlimpert, it began its modernization by, ironically, cutting more than halfits majors-recognizing, as Dillin says, that it “couldn’t be all things to all people.” It was reorganized into five semi- autonomous programs: arts and science, business, education, health and social studies, and theological studies. Its edu­ cation program is now one o f the stron- gest in Oregon, and it offers continuing education programs for working adults. Its arts and science program offers courses in Environmental Remediation and Hazard­ ous Materials Management. “Our theme has been listen to the com­ munity, find out what its needs are, try to till them,” Dillin says.Concordia recently offered a continuing education course for Ireightliner Corporation that was held at the com pany's Swan Island facilities. It has a working partnership with nine other Concordia Universities in other parts o f the country that allows transfers of student credits and national broadcast and elec­ tronic interaction for lectures and semi­ nars. Through it all, the school has tried to be a good neighbor to those closest to it. One o f its faculty. Dr. Arthur Wählers, was the first president of the Concordia Neighbor­ hood Association when the latter w as orga­ nized in the mid-1970s, and at times the university has provided meeting space to the group. Its security services help make the immediate area, as well as the campus, safer, and neighbors expressed strong appreciation for this in a recent survey. Concordia has also consciously tried to lessen the two most common impacts o f an institution on its neighbors: traffic and park­ ing. It has added parking facilities. More­ over, Dillin points out, for those living on campus, “ Everything they need is within walking distance - there’s no need to drive except for weekend excursions.” The new M cM enam in’s Kennedy School pub/the- ater three blocks away puts a social rc- source close at hand, he points out. Par­ tially for these reasons, less than half of resident students own cars, he says. So far Concordia has expanded within its existing campus, adding 50,000 square feet of space to Luther Hall five years ago. However, its master plan does include residential properties that it doesn’t own to the west and north. Dillin says expan­ sion here will come through “charitable giving” and “waiting for properties to come on the market.” He adds, “Most o f our neighbors have worked with us and are aware o f our plans.” Outgoing Concordia Association presi­ dent Pat Messinger says that as a neighbor he rates the school as “good to excellent. T hey’ve been very responsive to our con­ cerns.” Is Portland’s Water Supply In Trouble? Conclusion B y P rof . M ( kinley B urt ater, water, everywhere, but not a drop to drink” was of ten the plaintive cry of con­ cerned seamen in the days of sail. And so cried Captain Ahab’s becalmed and thirsty crew, thwarted in their search for “Moby Dick.” It appears that those busy with proactive activities to ensure a safe, quality water supply for our region may also have found themselves becalmed - in a sea of contro­ versy as their announced options excite fearand apprehension in many minds. Sug­ gesting the Willamette River as a primary source of drinking water is as about a frightening circumstance as that pictured for Captain Ahab and his crew, “like a painted ship upon a painted sea “(Moby Dick; Henry Melville). My comment on the telemarketing of numerous devices for washing trash, oil, paints, etc. into storm drains elicited nu­ merous accounts ofequally dangerous pol­ lution by governmental agencies. A reader protests, “how in the world can we even begin to design a comprehensive enough organization to properly police every com- W ponent of the system.” The caller said. “ I though about it. but all I came up with was another giant bureau­ cracy - and we already have the E P.A. (En­ vironmental Protection Agency). Then, there's the Clean Rivers Act.” This chemist was concerned with the Port of Portland's “attitude” toward runoff of the chemical used to deice planes and. again, was concerned about an “offhand dismissal” of a complaint to city officials. His complaint was about the chemical, metam sodium, a very potent herbicide used to kill roots in the city’s sewers. This 'soil disinfectant’ is also used to kill potato fungi and is approved by both the U.S. Environ­ mental Protection Agency and the Oregon Department of Agriculture. “Tree root con­ trol prevents the opening up of sewer joints and raw sewage entering homes.” A number of citizens are really upset over the lack o f supervision exercised by W illamette Basin governmental agencies over the recreational vehicle waste dumped into rest-stop holding tanks. Readers report line­ ups of scores of recreational vehicles waiting to dump their toilet tanks, the final destina­ tion of this mess being the Willamette River - treated or no,. The problem is that RV toile, tanks are treated with a chemical solution containing formaldehyde to keep down the smell. When the roadside holding tanks are dumped into the sewer treatment plants o f the smaller municipalities, the formaldehyde kills the digesters in the treatment plant. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to determine that dangerous amounts o f contaminated water Hows in to the W’illamette from all over the basin. Do you swim in this bacteria pot­ pourri? Now, if you aren’t aware of this organiza­ tion, let me introduce “CIIBRI” (Citizens In Bull Run, Inc.). It was during my member­ ship on Portland’s “Water Quality Advisory Committee that I first became aware of this group’s long-term advocacy for a relatively pure source of our drinking water eg . “Bull Run.” Beginning with my very first meeting in full, 1990. I was thoroughly impressed with the time, dedication and the research contributed by this unpaid group o f commit­ ted citizens. I, is a very, very small organization but it gets big things done — important and successful interactions with government, industry and public which, more often than not, received little or no media at­ tention. But, believe me, the level o f purity of our drinking water supply may in large part be attributed to the vigilance and intercessions o f this citizens group. So often officials and politicians take credit. They have taken on the Water Bureau itself, the U.S. Forest Service, the E.P.A., the farmers and ranchers, the loggers, etc. Surprising to many, “C11 BRI” has included the electronic chip industry in its listings of heavy, clean water users (their clean rooms' require millions o f gallons o f extra clean water, which, then, is not available for drink­ ing). C orvallis and A dair V illage are the only towns, in Oregon that currently d ra w th e ir d rin k in g w a te r from W illa m e tte . O b v io u s ly , “ C IIB R I” would keep it that way. Why not get on the m ailing list for their new sletter. P O. Box 3426, G resham , OR 97030. Also, rem em ber those “ W ater Q uality A dvisory C om m ittee m eetings the firs, Tuesday, each month (a) 5:30 Portland Bldg.