— — . . •t - - . « »>>*»' . ' - .SÄ®» z -.•1 '# » ' ’. t. q w 1 « f î • . . - ■ •;& ft-: » ' See Focus The Mighty Clouds of Joy release new album Billy Davis jr. and Marylin McCoo perform Chinook Winds > • Bulk Rate U.S. Postage Look for Popeye's Special Inside! PAID Portland, OR Permit No. 1610 See Religion 2« (The itflriiattfr 0)h$mier JQQ Sección en Español Hurricane Irene HAVANA, CUBA - Hurricane Irene had dumped rain across western Cuba, forcing at least 130,000 people to evacuate. Irene had sustained winds o f 75 mph - was centered about 65 miles southwest o f Havana, and was moving north-northwest at 7 mph. The edge o f the storm battered Miami with rain. A hurricane watch was issued for parts o f the Florida Keys as well as 140 miles o f southwest Florida coastline to just south o f Tampa, Fla. New Pakistani Leader ISLAMBAD, PAKISTAN - The head of Pakistan’s military had declared himselfthe country’s leader. Gen. Pervaiz M usharraf issued an order for a state o f emergency, d isso lv in g and su sp e n d in g the constitution. The proclamation dismissed all cabinet m inisters and the Senate chairman, as well as the governors o f P a k ista n ’s four p ro v in ces and their ministers. Troups had ousted Prime Minster Nawaz Sharif. World governments - worried at the prospect o f military rule in a nuclear- arm ed nation - have been pressing M usharraf to reinstate democracy, even if he does not bring back Sharif. P rosecu tor A dm its JonBenet Mistakes BOULDER, CO. - District Attorney Alex Hunter acknowledged that “mistakes were made” in the investigation into the slaying o f JonBenet Ramsey but fiercely defended his office and said he is by no means done searching for the 6-year-old beauty queen’s killer. He also said the girl’s parents, John and Patsy Ramsey, remain under suspicion. Doctor Wins Nobel Prize OSLO, NORW AY - Doctors Without Borders, a volunteer organization which asserts a right to intervene in any country to treat the wounded, sick and starving, won the 1999 Nobel Peace Prize. The group, officially called by its French name Medicins Sans Frontières, has played a major role in African and other war zones thorughout the world. Unlike the Red Cross, Doctors Without Borders places blame - on armed groups and governments the suffering it finds. Nazi Looting WASHINGTON - U.S. officials allowed Nazi loot from a train out o f Hungary to be sold, taken by American generals or turned over to Austria instead o f returned to the Jews form whom it was confiscated during World War II, a presidential commission concluded. The report listed five generals who took valuables. The items were seized shortly afterth eM ay 7 ,1945, Allied victory in Europe, the commission said. Clinton Urges Students on Violence WASHINGTON - President Clinton told high school students they can be the key to lessening violence in their schools and in society at large, and asked for their help in passing new civil rights protections for homosexuals. Violence, fear and alienation lead to schoolhouse killings, and also represent age-old fears arising from ethnic and religious differences. X .f; University o f Oregon Knight Library Newspaper Section Eugene OR 97403 •H ; A . 'S k -. ■y-. Tí<> Margaret Carter secures New Party endorsement CONTRIBUTED STORY eor T he P ortland O bserver Former chair of the Oregon Democratic Party, Margaret Carter has linked up with the New Party in her run for State Senate, District 8, in North/Northeast Portland. New Party members voted last week to target volunteers and funds to Carter’s race for the Democratic Party nomination. The election is in May, 2000. The Portland New Party, based in North and Northeast Portland, is an independent political organization which operates within and outside of the Democratic Party. Margaret Carter joins Serena Cruz, Geri W ashington, Jo Ann Bowman, Joseph Tam and Martin Gonzalez in the growing list of elected officials and candidates who have joined up to help build the New Party (NP). Carter is a long-time friend o f the Portland Rainbow Coalition, which recently merged with the NP. She sees her membership in the NP as an obvious outgrowth o f her commitment to that rainbow of voters and potential voters who are fed up and left out o f the political m ainstream .'Tm ready to help the New Party’s drive to bui Id people power from the bottom up, to register voters and to motivate the non­ voting majority,” says Carter. Living wage job and excellent education: “ M argaret C a rte r has p roven her leadership in fighting for the training and living wage jobs necessary to bring our people out o f poverty,” states NP leader Josiah Hill.Carter, a seven term State Representative, was chief sponsor of the ¿A Photo by Bette Lee Margaret Carter (w i£ oaby) and supporters at State Senate Campaign Kick Off. getting economic development assistance Workforce 2000 Act to create Skill must be accountable to our community. Centers at community colleges. She was They must hire locally, pay living wages, chief sponsor o f the Oregon Minority and and contract with local businesses for Women’s Business Act and had a key goods and services,” declares Carter. role in legislation creating Enterprise The New Party expects to work closely Zones in Oregon. with Carter in local living wage campaigns “N/NE Enterprise Zone com panies Fist, Stick, Knife, Gun: Author confronts violence Geoffrey Canada to speak at forum CONTRIBUTED STORY eor T he P ortland O bserver Geoffrey Canada, recipient ofthe 1994 Heinz Award for his work as president and chief executive officer o f Rheedlen Centers for Children and Families in New York City, will present a free public lecture, “Violence in America: Slaying the Dragons That Threaten OurChildren,” Friday, Nov. 5,7 p.m., in Agnes Flanagan Chapel, Lewis&ClarkCollege,0615 S. W. Palatine Hill Road. Described by the Boston Globe as “the brother who never left the hood because he keeps looking into the faces o f the children and seeing him self there,” Canada also received the Robin Hood Foundation’s Heroes o f the Year Award and Bowdoin College’s Common Good Award. Preceding the lecture, Friday, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m., Sophie Freud, professorofclinical social work at Simmons School ofSocial Work for 30 years and granddaughter o f Sigmund Freud, will moderate a Prevention and Intervention Programs Showcase, in Stamm Dining Room, Templeton Student Center. Oral and poster presentations will describe local programs and initiatives that support youth and families. The showcase is also free and open to the public. In addition to speaking Friday night, Canada will speak and participate in a town hall discussion on youth violence prevention and intervention with selected community leaders on Saturday, Nov. 6,8:30 a m. to noon in the Council Chamber, Templeton Student Center. Town hall participants include I .inda Erwin in conjunction with Multnomah Commission on Children and Families; Tony Hopson, president and chief executive officer o f Self- Enhancement, Inc.; and Sgt. Kevin Modica, western region training officer for Gang Resistance Education and Training program (G.R E.A T.); Marion County Sheriff Raul Ramirez; Heather Brown, Outside In youth program manager; Debra Slover, director of Oregon Student Safety on the Move and of Oregon Teen Leadership in Prevention Institute; Dean Westwood, Think First— - - . . V . . . »i»--’-“ ' j íb í T í ,x j ‘ Oregon Health Sciences University; Nan Waller, circuit court judge pro te m p o re , M ultnom ah C o unty Juvenile C ourt. Y vonne K atz, su p e rin te n d e n t o f B ea v e rto n Schools, will facilitate. Geoffrey Canada gained national acclaim outside his hometown of New Y ork after the publication ofhis first book. Fist, Stick, Knife, Gun: A Personal History o f Violence in America, (Beacon Press, 1995). In this stunning m em oir, C anada weaves his memories o f violence as a child growing up in the South Bronx in the ’50s and ’60s into his experiences with today’s youth struggling to survive in a world where fighting is done with guns rather than fists. In his new book. Reaching Up for Manhood, Canada offers powerful insights into the lives o f boys in America. While Canada diagnoses the sources o f child violence in America, he also shares stories o f hope about the simple actions citizens can take to support youth in p o sitiv e w ays and stre n g th e n our communities. Canada has dedicated his life to helping at- risk children and their families secure both educational and economic opportunities. His newest initiative is the Harlem Children’s Zone, which involves the families o f a 23- block area in Central Harlem . Canada holds a bachelor’s degree from Bowdoin College and a master’s degree from Harvard Graduate School o f Education. The events are part of a two-day Rebuilding OurFamiliesandCommunities Forum Other events: • Lisbeth Schorr. authorofCommon Purpose: Strengthening Families and neighborhoods to Rebuild America and director ofthe Harvard University Project on Effective Inters entions, will give a keynote address, “Strategies That AchieveCommon Purposes." Friday, Nov. 5, 8:30a.m.-l 1:30. Council Chamber, Templeton Student Center, Lewis & Clark College. • James Vollbracht, senior associate at the Search Institute, a national organization defining and researching the 40 developmental assets essential for healthy and struggles against corporate welfare. Academic success for all students, keeping our children in school and effective school-to-work programs have long been concerns for Margaret Carter. As a teacher and counselor for 27 years, she has helped thousands of young people. B irth record u n lock s p ast for adoptee A ssociated P ress youth development, will head a workshop titled “ E v e ry o n e ’s A n A sset B uilder: Integrating Developmental Assets Into Your Life,” Friday, Nov. 5,12:30 to 4 p.m., Stamm Dining Room, Templeton Student Center. The Prevention and Intervention Showcase and Geoffrey Canada's F r lay night lecture are free to the public. Sea.ing for Canada’s lecture is on a first-come first-served basis. Doors open at 6:45 p.m. Cost o f the conference is $ 160 for both days, $105 for Friday only, and $60 for Saturday only. Graduate credit is available for an additional $34. Group rate for four or more before Oct. 22 is $140, per person, for both days. To register, call Center for Professional Development, (503) 768-7720. Lewis & Clark C o lle g e ’s C e n te r fo r P ro fe ssio n a l Development offers Rebuilding Our Families andCommunities Forum 1999 in partnership with Think First-OHSU, a statewide program offering injury prevention curricula and school-based programs for grades 1-12. Other funding partners in clu d e G .R .E .A .T ., Multnomah County Girls’ Initiative Network, Oregon Commission on Children and Families. Oregon Youth Authority, Portland Public Schools, Beaverton School D istrict and Tigard-Tualatin School District. Mary Inselman, a 77-year-old grandmother, feared she might die before discovering who her mother was. But on Friday, under a judge’s order, the adoptee finally got a copy ofher original birth certificate, and she learned her mother’s maiden name. Now she hopes to live long enough to find her older sister. The birth certificate confirmed that she has a sister, something she suspected but couldn’t be sure o f based on information given to her by the agency that handled her adoption. The certificate also confirmed that her mother, Elizabeth, who was bom in New York, was married in 1918 to George Smith. Her father, who was bom in Montreal, died in Nelson, British Columbia, o f pneumonia three years after the marriage — just six months before Inselman was bom Dec. 29,1921, in Portland’s Good Samaritan Hospital. Her mother “probably couldn’t provide for either one o f us,” Inselman said. “A 21 -year- old woman by herself. What could she do?” Inselman's discoveries offer a preview o f what thousands o f other Oregon adoptees hope to leam under Measure 58, a law approved by voters last November that allows adult adoptees to see their original birth certi ficates, which often reveal the names of their parents. Six anonymous birth mothers challenged the law , arg uing it betray s p ro m ise s o f confidentiality made to them when they put their children up for adoption decades ago. The law has been put on hold while the court considers the case. The Oregon Court o f Appeals plans to hear arguments next month and to rule by the end o f January. Helen Hill, chief sponsor o f Measure 58, got an order from a Multnomah County judge to get Inselman’s birth certificate from Oregon Health D ivision’s vital records section. Inselman argued she should have access to her records because she was adopted before adoption records were sealed, because her mother probably was not still alive and because her mother’s medical history could be important to her, her children and her grandchildren, one o f whom has had one kidney transplant and needs another.