Committed to Cultural Diversity Volume XXX. Number 2 See inside wwwjheportlandobserver.com M -N et’s Faces o f A frica com petition True history o f Coca Cola in Mexico 50* January 12, 2000 Bulk Rate U.S. Postage PAID L o o k fo r P o p e y e 's S p e c ia l In s id e ! Portland, OR Permit No. 1610 See inside ízSFÍ lií K ZiÍXi CL lie f J o r i l a t i a 0 University of Oregon Knight Library N KX LX i o n » W l w < I H AOL, Time Warner merger worries nation M erger raises concerns o f giant m onopolies $145 billion m erger betw een AOL, and Time Warner sends s to c k p ric e s skyrocketing Asso t I < how they should proceed. Part o f the reason, o f course, w as that A O L w as a unique anim al. Not only w as it the larges, Internet service provider in the nation, but it also had a clear brand im age as a w holesom e, e a s y - to - u s e e n try w a y in to th e Internet. AOL a ls o h ad to p - c a lib e r m anagem ent and m ore credibility on W all Street than m any o f its peers, m aking it a m ore viable m arriage partner for a venerable institution like T im e Warner. B u t a n o th e r f a c to r c a u s in g u n c e r ta in ty fo r th e b ig m e d ia com panies is that there is still som e disagreem ent over the necessity o f a head it up. Until then, it had been taking piecemeal stakes in a variety o f s ta rtu p c o m p a n ie s lik e C B S M arketW atch.com . C B S ’ m erger partner, V iacom Inc., has also dabbled a bit in cyberspace w ith its M TV and N ick elo d eo n (Please see 'M e rg e r' p ag e 6) (Please see 'Worry' page 6) g £ a t i | 5 “ > AC g = America Online 's chairman and chief executive, Steve Case, center, and Time Warner's chairman and chief executive, Gerald Levin, speaks to the media, Monday, Jan. 10, 2000, in New York. Time Warner, the world’s largest media and entertainment company, is being acquired by America Online fo r about $166 billion in stock in what would be the biggest corporate merger ever. , m edia com pany o w n in g its ow n distribution channels, especially in the rapidly evolving w orld o f the Internet and online m edia. “ I d o n ’t think anyone know s w hat the Internet is going to look like over tim e,” said M errill Lynch analyst Jessica R e if C ohen. “T rad itio n al m edia com p an ies w ill d efin itely participate in the Internet, bu, it’s uncertain w hether th e y ’ll buy their w ay in o r d e v e lo p th e ir o w n ” operations. For Tim e W arner, the deal provides top online expertise, a custom er base and a direction forward. The company has been rolling up its earlier Net project. Pathfinder, w hich proved to be a flop, and in June nam ed its chief financial officer Richard Bressler to head up a new Internet charge. O ther m edia com panies are still just getting their feet wet. Just one week prior to the AOL announcement, CBS took its first m ajor step in forming an Internet strategy, form ing an online division and nam ing an executive to P ress T he nation may get its news from m ore places than ever these days. But the blockbuster m erger o f Time W arner and Am erica Online, as well as big media com binations expected in the future, are raising concerns about homogenized and diluted news. “ W hat this m erger invites is the possibility o f a new era in American com m unications that sees the end o f an independent press," said Tom Rosenstiel, d irectorofthe Project for Excellence in Journalism. Not everyone is as alarmed. Richard E pstein, a law p ro fe sso r at the U niversity o f C h icag o , said the I ntemet sti 11 offers a worldwide venue for dissenting voices. He added the industry is still diverse enough to keep itself in check. “ If there are just two new spapers in town, one will happily dum p on the other,” he said. T h e $ 1 4 5 b illio n sto c k d ea l announced Monday allies AOL s 22 mi Ilion online subscribers with a news and entertainm ent conglom erate that includes CNN, Tim e magazine, TBS, TNT, Fortune, Sports Illustrated and Entertainm ent Weekly. Scott Miller, communications director at Tim e W arner Inc., said the m erger will enhance, not limit, the flow o f inform ation by creating new w ays to com m unicate. He added the Internet m akes it im possible for one group to stifle the news. “The Internet is the first limitless medium, and by its very nature, no single com pany or group can hope to control it," he said. AssatiAitJiERths Like m ost m ajor m edia com panies, Tim e W arner Inc. did not h av ea firm, publicly articulated Internet strategy. Until M onday. Now, thanks to its massi ve$ 145 billion merger with America Online Inc., Time W arner has a com m itted, strong p a r tn e r fo r its v o y a g e in to cyberspace. So far the other main conglom erates -W alt Disney Co., Viacom Inc.,CB S Corp, and N ew s Corp. - have been m ainly going it alone or are still in the process o f feeling their w ay in the online w orld. T heA O L -T im eW am erdealcertainly raised a lot o f questions about how the other big players will address the issues o f the Internet and online distribution o f m edia in the future. But it d id n ’t supply clear answ ers for ivied David Bragdon takes over position of the Metro Council V oters p u t D a v id B ra g d o n in h e a d o f f ic e o f M e tro Council CONTBIBl(W HOM ior T he T oki lasd Q bserv er Councilor David Bragdon will take over as the new presiding officer o f the M etro Council as the regional agency heads into a year filled with challenging issues and decisions. V oters put Bragdon, w ho is 40, on the M etro Counc i I a year ago to represent District 7, w hich includes parts o f Southeast and Southw est Portland as w ell as M ilw au k ie. B rag d o n pledges that he will use his term to m ove the agency forward to benefit and serve people throughout the region. B ragdon nam ed C o u n c ilo r Ed W ashington as d ep u ty p resid in g officer. W ashington outlined three priorities for M etro in the com ing year: land use planning that w orks w ith local ju ris d ic tio n s ' needs, a transportation financing plan that is reasonable and program s to help citizens get involved and to help them understand M etro. “ For the past 2 1 years, M etro has spent much o f its tim e and resources planning for the future,” Bragdon Friday W eather A few show ers said. “ W ell, the future is here, and it is tim e that we m oved from theory to reality. Itistim eth atw etu m p ro m ises into products.” In the com ing year, M etro plans to finish work related to the Urban G row th Boundary, w hich is the line that surrounds the region and divides urban areas from farm /forest areas Bragdon said he w ants that work com pleted as quickly as possible. “ We need to focus on the 236,000 acres inside the boundary - not the few hundred acres around the edge," h e s a id . " In s id e is w h e re th e overw helm ing majority o f our people live and w ork. We cannot continue to ignore their concerns and their needs to satisfy special interests who want 43°F /6°C 38°F/3°C Through the weekend Today Snow and rain Thursday Snow and rain t 39°F/4°C 32°F/0°C Saturday 40°F/4°C 35°F/1°C Sunday Cloudy with rain O ccaisonal Rain 43°F/6°C 35°F /1°C 41°F /4°C 3I°F/O °C us to give priority to their concerns and their w ell-being.” A s M etro co n tin u es its w ork, Bragdon said he believes it is critical that the citizens feel involved and respected. “ W e k n o w th a t M e tro is a w o rld w id e m o d e l fo r re g io n a l governance. But how are we doing at hom e? Do the people in M ilwaukie andG resham and Hillsboro and North Portland al I feel a part o f our regional com m unity?” said Bragdon. "The answ ers to these questions are up to us. W e must get our own financial house in order. We must continue to act resp o n sib ly . W e m ust m ake changes where changes are needed.” T he Council also m ade some key Inside-A Week in Review....................2 Central Catholic soccer team wins national award.................3 Local poet honored.................................. 3 Portland Housing Center awarded grant..........................6 appointm ents to regional groups. Councilors Rod Park. Susan McLain, and Rod M onroe will serve on the Metro Policy A dvisory Com mittee - a group m ade up o f representatives from the 24 cities. 3 counties and the m any special districts o f the region. This group advises M etro on land- use issues. C ouncilor Jon Kvistad will chair the Joint Policy Advisory C om m ittee on Transportation, and Councilors Rod M onroe and Susan McL ain will serve with him on that com mittee. JPA C T is a groupoflocal e le c te d o f f ic ia ls w h o m a k e r e c o m m e n d a tio n s about transportation planning and allocate millions ofdollars in state and federal funds for transportation. Metro-B McCoy Academy becomes charter school..........................1 Stellar Gospel Awards honors Martin Luther King Jr.............. 3 The true history of Coca Cola in Mexico............................... 4 El Observador......................... 4 David Bragdon This Week in History On Jan. 13, 1794, President Washington approved a measure adding two stars and two stripes to the American flag, follow ing the admission o f Vermont and Kentucky to the union. The number o f stripes was later reduced to 13. O nJan 14, l900,Puccini’sopera“Tosca" got a mixed recep, ion at its world premiere in Rome. O nJan 1 5 ,1929,civilnghts leader Martin Luther King Jr. was bom in Atlanta.