Volume XXX. Number 4 Committed to Cultural Diversity See inside www.theportlandobserver.eom January 26, 2000 Black History Month approaches Pastor joins races with gospel See inside . 50* Bulk Rate U.S. Postage PAID Look fo r P o p e ye 's S p e c ia l In s id e ! ortlanò ffib Portland, OR Permit No. 1610 University of Oregon Knight Library Newspaper Section Eugene OR 97403 Gorewins, Bush leads Longshots make it to Superbowl Game raises in Iowa caucus vote S U P E R B O W L A ssocialeil E ress By D ash Cut Vice President Al Gore won Iowa’s Democratic caucuses Monday night, opening the 2000 presidential election season with a comfortable victory over Bill Bradley. In the Republican race, George W. Bush led conservative publisher Steve Forbes in results that left four other candidates far behind. T he v icto ry blunted B ra d le y ’s challenge and validated G ore's status as front-runner going into the New H am pshire prim ary next week. Bradley has polled even with Gore, or ahead, in New Hampshire. In the Iowa Republican race, Forbes was running close to Bush with Alan Keyes, John McCai n, Gary Bauer and Orrin Hatch trailing. Bush was about 10 points ahead o f Forbes in interviews conducted by Voter News Service as voters entered th e ir c a u c u s sites. V N S is a consortium o f The Associated Press and the nation's principal television outlets. VNS projected that Gore would win by a wide margin. The caucuses, where citizens have to attend neighborhood meetings to Vice President AI Gore make their choice, were expected to draw no more than 100,000 voters from each party, concluding months o f debates, fund raising and grass-roots campaigning here. Iowa launches the presidential race into a frantic six-week stretch, with the New Hampshire primary a week away. Bradley, once an internationally known professional basketball star, had hoped to sustain his challenge to Gore on the Democratic side. McCain, who spent more than five years as a prisonerofthe North Vietnamese, declined to campaign here, but the Arizona Republican was still listed on ballots. The Iowa process will yield 47 ________________________ d e le g a te s to th e D em o cratic convention and 25 delegates to the Republican convention, where the parties formally pick theircandidates. It is a tiny fraction o f the total a c a n d id a te n eed s to w in the nomination. The true rewards o f Iowa are momentum or a validation o f the candidate’s campaign. En route to the early contests. Republicans squabbled over taxes and abortion, with international issues only on the sidelines. Courting religious conservatives who make up a third o f the caucus-going population. Bush carefully calibrated his anti-abortion views to make clear George IT. Bush his opposition to a Supreme Court ruling allowing abortions. Democrats were poised to campaign on the issue if Bush were to win the Republican nomination. Gore and Bradley di tiered intone more than substance. They wrestled primarily over alternative approaehes to federal health insurance policy. While Bradley promised to provide big ideas to solve a few big problems. Gore said the next president should not limit himself to a handful o f issues. A string o f setbacks for Bradley, including recurrence o f a minor heart condition, threw him offtrack in Iowa even as pol Is showed a tight race in New Hampshire. Despite McCain's failure to campaign in Iowa, except for participation in two debates, he and Bradley have emerged as the significant challengers for 2000. lowans attended caueuses at 2,100 sites across the sprawling farm state. Ina display of basic grass-roots politics, voters here braved the winter weather and visit classrooms, libraries, fire stations, church basements, grain co-ops and even a few private homes to play their unique role in the American political system. It was one o f the most expensive caucuses in history, with millions spent on TV alone. Forbes spent far more than anyone_ about $3.2 million, according to aides from the Forbes and Bush campaigns. Bush spent at least a million dollars less The Democrats spent about $1.5 million each_closerto$2 million for Bradley, according to the Gore camp. Friday Weather Occaisonal shower Through the weekend Today / f ïiW Cloudy Thursday Partially sunny « money for scholarships I OBTHJLE o K J I V\|)QltShBYO IULASSOClAIttt£stSS There is no Steel Curtain in Atlanta this week. No Silver and Black, Doomsday Defense or last hurrah for Joh.« Elway. Those are the kind ofbig-name images the Super Bowl has been built around, the kind that w on't be around come this Super Sunday. “Maybe some people still want Green Bay and Denver,” Titans tight end Frank Wycheck said. “But to me, this is a refreshing game. It’s two great teams who have been through some tough times and deserve to be here. For people to say this is not a glamorous game doesn ’ t make sense. These are the two best teams left.” Those two teams are Tennessee and St. Louis. It’s a small-market, middle-America game that offers plenty o f compelling stories, most o f them dealing with underdogs overcoming long odds to finally play for a title. But whether those stories and those teams are enough to hold the nation’s interest through a w eek’s worth o f hype, a day full o f pregame shows and four hours o f football has yet to be seen. After a slow start in the television ratings, the playoffs got a boost last week in the conference title games. The so-called Grits Bowl, a small- m arket Southeastern show dow n between Jacksonville and Tennessee, drew an overnight 24.2 rating, down just 6 percent from the early game between Atlanta and Minnesota the year before. The St. Louis-Tampa Bay game got a 26.9 rating, a 3 percent jum p the previous year’s Broncos- Jets matchup in the late game. It was the highest-rated show since the Academy Awards last March. Still. ABC Sports president Howard Katz seems to be approaching the Super Bowl with a sense o f resigned inevitability. “People have asked how we feel about the teams," Katz said. “W e’re here to cover the game. We hope it’s a great game.” So does the NFL. “Could there be a small difference in ratings because these teams are from smaller markets and not larger ones? Sure, I’d be stupid if I said differently,” NFL network executive Dennis Lewin said. “That said, I think the market size o f the teams is going to barely be a blip on the radar screen.” But clearly, Tennessee-St. Louis is a far cry from Pittsburgh-Dallas. The core o f the problem is that there is no history, tradition or significant fan following for these teams on either coast, or in many places in between. “These are not teams that interest me,” Atlanta resident Ted Kloster said. “It’s the Super Bowl, so you feel like you should watch it. But if the game isn’t good, it’s not too difficult to turn it off.” Jackson asks players to protest Georgia flag A SSIHI VI H i P r ESS The NFL will prohibit players from heeding the Rev. Jesse Jackson’s request to wear the American flag on their helmets as a sign o f protest over Georgia’s state flag. Jackson announced a cam paign Monday to protest the state flag, which incorporates the Confederate battle flag, which many blacks and other minorities consider a symbol of slavery and racial supremacy. “ W e 're in the aw kw ard and disgraceful position o f playing the Super Bowl game - the most watched event in A m erica - under the Confederate flag,” Jackson said from Chicago, the headquarters o f his 50°F /l0°C 39°F /3°C Rainbow-PUSH Coalition. “W e’re calling for the flag to come down,” he said. Inside-A Jackson said the organization does (Please see ’Georgia’ page3) Metro-B Ina benefit game to raise funds for the Joyce Washington Memorial Scholarship, former Trailblazers battled the Cory Cougars, which is a group o f former high school and college standouts. The game was held at the Self- Enhancem ent Inc. facility on Sunday evening and raised $ 1,300. M ore than 200 com m unity attended the game. They also attended the game to honor the life work of Joyce Washington, former p u b lish e r o f T he P o rtlan d Observer. Joyce Washington died o f a heart attack in 1996. In addition to the basketball game, there was an auction o f donated items from area companies. It was a nice family affair where children indulged in hot dogs sodas and cotton candy. And adults enjoyed the humor o f the game and announcer Billy Moore During the game, many adults also talked among each other about Joyce Washington and her love for this community. An angel. That’s how Paul Knaulsdescribed Joyce Washington, “She was just an angel,” said Knauls, co-owner o f G eneva’s Shear Perfection “Everyone respected her. The number o f people here shows that.” In honor of Joyce Washington The Portland Observ er established two aw ards. Charles Washington, publisherofthe Observer, received an award. And Gary Ann Taylor, business manager for the Observer, received an award, too. As for the game itself, although the Cory Cougars were at a heightened disadvantage, they made up for it with hustle and determination. The score was tied late into the fourth quarter at 53-53 when M ark W ashington scored with four minutes and 19 seconds left on the clock. Trailblazer alumnus Michael Harper made two free throws with four minutes and four seconds left and Blazeralumnus Mark Radford scored another basket 30 seconds later. Intheend.theBlazeralumni’s height and skill adv antage was too much for the gutsy, but over matched Cougars. The Blazers won the gam 63-59. But Dr. Billy Flowers, who was the coach for the Cory Cougars, said his team was a great one. “I didn’t dream that I would work with so much talent," Flowers said. The Joyce W ashington M em orial Scholarship Fund is designed to a ssist m in o rity high school students who plan to major in business. English, journalism or athletics. The deadline for the scholarship is Aug. I . Scholarship applications will be availableat the Portland Observer, located at 4949 N.F.. Martin 1 uther King Blvd. This Week in History V 46°F/7°C F /r c Saturday Showers 49°F/9°C 36°F/2°C 45°F /7°C 36°F /2°C Sunday 48°F /8°C 35°F /2°C Showers Week in Review....................2 Community court to open in SE Community panel and police Portland.................................... 2 abuse......................................... 3 Accident leaves Chiefs William Temple House and linebackerpartially paralyzcd.,,5 Legacy..................................... 5 Evangelist uses gospel to More African-Americans in unite........................................ 6 undergraduate programs..........6 El O bservador........................4 4 January 26, 1950. India o ffic ia lly proclaimed itself a republic as Rajendra Prasad took the oath o f office as president January 28, 1986. the space shuttle Challenger exploded 73 seconds after lifto ff from Cape Canaveral, killing all seven crew members January 30, 1948, Indian po litica l and sp iritua l leader Mahatma Gandhi was murdered by a Hindu extremist January 31, 1865, the House o f Representatives passed a Constitutional Amendment to Abolish Slavery I