Bulk Rate U.S. Postage PAID Portland, OR Permit No. 1610 (Che Volume XXX. Number 21 kwh (0bs Committed to Cultural Diversity Established in 1970 www.portlandobserver.com Wednesday __________________________________ V 50* May 24, 2000 ; ■ Blazers triumph despite Laker homecourt advantage A s « X L \|T |] l B u .SS Shaq, Kobe and the rest o f the Los A ngeles Lakers w on 67 regular-season gam es to earn hom ecourt advantage throughout the NBA playoffs. The Portland Trail Blazers took it aw ay with a 20-0 third-quarter run that negated any reason fo ra Hack-a-Shaq repeat. “ I’ve never seen anything like that,” the Prime Minister’s Daughter to Run for Office TO K Y O - The daughter o f Japanese Prime M inister K eizoObuchi, w ho fell into coma w hile in office and died this m onth, announced that she w ould run for her father’s seat in the com ing elections. Yuko Obuchi, 26, said she w as eager to finish the w ork o f the late leader, w ho filled his own father’s seat in the pow erful low er house o f parliam ent also at 26. Public sym pathy for Obuchi is expected to give an electoral boost to the ruling Liberal D em ocratic Party and probably will help Yuko Obuchi carry on her fam ily’s political dynasty. U.N. Investigates Corpses in Sierra Leone ROGBERI JUNCTION, Sierra L eone-T he United N ations is trying to determ ine w hether several m utilated corpses found in the bush w ere also m em bers o f the U.N. co n tin g en t. S ierra L eonean sold iers, how ever, buried the decaying bodies before U.N. officials arrived at Rogberi Junction, 50 m iles northeast o f the capital, Freetow n. The soldiers believed they buried eight bodies but said they w ere not sure because the corpses had been hacked into pieces. Church Rules Out Shroud of Turin Exams V A TICA N C IT Y -C ity officials said that they have ruled out for the m om ent any new scientific tests on the Shroud o f rurin, which many believe is C hrist’s burial cloth. T he shroud bears a faded im age o f a bearded man and w hat app ear to be bloodstains that coincide w ith C h rist’s crucifixion wounds. But C arbon-14 testing has suggested that the cloth dates to the 13'h or 14lh century. Som e argue that the test results may have been skew ed by contam ination. Portland Trail Blazers' Rasheed Wallace (30) finds an outlet over Los Angeles Lakerss A.C. Green, left, and Kobe Bryant during the third quarter. L akers' Robert Horrv said. "Y ou d o n ’t know w hat happened, w here it cam e from ." W ith Rasheed W allace on his best behavior, and at his best on the court, the Blazers routed the Lakers 106-77 M onday night to even the best-of-seven W estern C onference finals 1- 1. The series d o esn 't resum e until Friday in Portland. “No one said it was going to be easy,” Shaquille O 'N eal said. "Now w e’ve got our hands full.” W allace, thrown out ofG am e 1 forgetting two technical fouls, had play offcareer highs o f 29 points and 12 rebounds. A graceful, powerful 6 -fo o t-11 handful around the basket, he also has range. He m ade three 3-pointers in the decisive run. “ I think everybody realizes how much o f a key he is to us,” P ortland's Steve Smith said. “ W e’ve got to have him on the floor, and 1 think if you look at the w ay he played, w e're real ly going to struggle without him out there.” The w ay the Blazers played the third quarter there w as no reason for the "H ack-a-Shaq” strategy that sent O ’Neal to the line a playoff- record 25 tim es in the fourth quarter o fG am e 1. O ’Neal was 5-for-17 from the line, but it was academic. O ’Neal, averaging 30.8 points in the playoffs, had 23 points and 12 rebounds, but 14 o f his points cam e in the fourth quarter, w hen the Lakers never got closer than 18. “ D efensively, w e did a lot o f good things out there,” Portland coach M ike D unleavy said. “W e w ere aggressive, much m ore so than w e w ere last gam e.” K obe Bryant w as the only oth er Los A ngeles player in double figures w ith 12 points, but he w as only 2-for-9 from the field. * The Lakers lost at hom e for the first tim e in eight p lay o ff gam es and the second tim e in 26 gam es since losing to the B lazers on Jan. 22. ( Please see ’Trail Blazers' page B3 ) w ifm tm w itiw China, EU Reach WTO Deal B E IJIN G -C hina and the European Union reached a m arket-opening trade deal after the C hinese prem ier intervened, clearing Beijing’s largest remaining hurdle tojoining the W orld Trade O rganization. T he d ea l's most imm ediate impact would likely be on a contentious debate in the U.S. C ongress o n g r a n tin g C h in a m u c h -s o u g h t p e rm a n e n t lo w - ta r if f a c c e ss to th e American market. Gunmen Claim to Seize Power in Fiji SUV A , Fiji - A fter m onths o f sim m ering ethnic tensions, seven m asked gunm en storm ed parliam ent and took the prim e m inister and his C abinet hostage, saying th e y w e re se iz in g p o w e r fro m th e dem ocratically elected governm ent on behalfon indigenous Fijians. The gunmen fired at least tw o shots inside parliam ent and then locked up P rim e M in ister Mahendra Chaudhry, his Cabi net m misters and lawmakers o f the rul ing coali tion in the legislature’s upper chamber. W orld Bank A pproves Loans to Iran W A S H IN G T O N - T he W orld Bank approved the first international loans to Iran in seven years, despite strong U.S. opposition and com plaints that Iran is r a ilro d in g 13 Je w s on tru m p e d -u p espionage charges. The $232 m illion in loans had been on hold since 1993 because o f concern over hum an-rights abuses in Iran. Plaque dedicated to honor Mt. St. Helens victims AsSCCIAIEftPRISS Tears w ere shed at the dedication o f a plaque bearing the nam es o f those w ho died in the m ost destructive volcanic eruption in U.S. history. T he reading o f the 57 nam es Thursday at Hoffstadt Bluffs, overlookingtheToutle River 27 m iles east o f Interstate 5, w as the first formal com m em oration o f the victim s o f the cataclysm ic blast from M ount St. H elens on M ay 18,1980. Follow ing the cerm ony at a Cow litz County visitor center, Sheryl Bales, 23, and her mother, M adelin Varner, 60, both o f Longview , said eruption anniversaries have been hard on those who lost loved ones in the eruption. T hey lost Karen V arner, their sister and daughter, respectively, and her boyfriend, Terry Crall, w ho were both 21 and planning to be married.. “ It’s nice that they put them together” on the plaque, Bales said. “It’s nice that th ey 're rem em bered. It w o n ’t take aw ay the pain.” W ith in the M ount St. H elens N ational V olcanic M onument, h alf a dozen past and present forest w orkers gathered at the David A. Johnston Ridge O bservatory, nam ed fo ra U.S. G eological Survey observ er w ho died in the eruption. K risty Sum m ers o f Sheridan. O re., a former G ifford Pinchot N ational Forest interpreter and m em ber o f the C onfederated Tribes o f G rand Ronde, gave the group bits o f tobaeeo to scatter at 8:32 a m., the tim e when the m ountain blew its top. 1 P hotos com i rsv ot Associ i i i nPm ss “W e c a n ’t control nature and this is what brings people here," she said. “ M ankind can try to control M other Earth, but in her own w ay she holds the last card, the trump. She can take, but she can give." Paul N iekell. 45. lost his mother and stepfather Ellen and Robert W illiam Dill, o f Kirkland, who were believed to have camped somewhere near the volcano. Their rem ains have never been found. “T h ere's not a day that goes by that I d o n ’t (Top) Blown-down trees, still pointing away from the blast where they felt 20 years ago, fram e the north side o f Mount St. Helens at Loowit Viewpoint. (Left) At 8:32 Sunday morning, May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens' summit and much o f its north flank crumbled in a hugh landslide, triggering massive explosions that ripped through the sliding debris. think o f them ." s; id Nickell, a new spaper reporter in G rants Pass. Ore . at the tim e o fth e eruption. “ I w as at a softball gam e and I d id n ’t even occur to me there would be a personal connection." Most o f the 350 people who attended the ceremony were public officials who responded to the volcanic disaster. Nickell said many surv iv ors remain bitter about co m m en ts by au th o rities w h o in itially portrayed those who died as thrill-seeking law breakers who ignored w arnings to stay away. As it turned out. only three o f the victim s are known to hav e been in restricted- access zones. Still, he said after the ceremony at Hoffstadt Bluffs, "I feel good about being here." The explosion, w hich flattened 230 square m iles o f forest and destroyed 200 hom es with a force estim ated to be equal to that o f a 24- m egaton nuclear bomb, was much bigger than anyone predicted. N ickell conceded.