See Metro Pepsi W aterfront Vi 11 age offers fun Tiger W oods cleans up at the M em orial See Metro Bulk Rate U J . Postage IFCC gallery and fam ous w orks PAID Portland, OR Permit No. 1«10 See Metro University of Oregon Knight Library Newspaper Section Eugene OR 97403 Volume XXX. Num ber 22 wwvv.portlandobserver.com Committed to Cultural Diversity Established in 1970 Wednesday BELFAST, N orthern Ireland - N orthern Ireland regained a m easure o f self-rule, giv in g th e p ro v in c e ’s P rotestan t and Catholic leaders another chance to achieve a lasting peace. B ritain handed back pow ers to the four-party C abinet and the A ssem bly created as part o f a landm ark 1998 peace agreem ent that envisioned a C atholic-Protestant adm inistration. P utin W an ts to R ein in R egions H ija ck er S u sp e c t’s B ody Found M A N ILA , Philippines - A crying man tried to hijack a Philippine A irlines je t carrying 291 people, then robbed everyone and jum ped out o f the plane w earing a hom em ade parachute. He died in thejum p and his body w as found later in the day in the town o f Real, Q uezon province, about 40 m iles east o f M anila, radio reports said. A rm ed with a grenade and a pistol, the man - w ho had d o n n ed a ski m ask and sw im m ing goggles - ordered the pilot o f PAL Flight P R 8 12 to return to D avao City in the southern Philippines. AssflciAitiiPBtss U.S. Suprem e Court Justice Sandra D ay O ’C onnor rejected an em ergency request to delay O reg o n ’s 1998 adoption records law from going into effect, clearing the w ay for th o u sa n d s o f a d o p tee s to find o u t th e identities o f their birth parents. T he law took effect at 5:01 p.m. Tuesday. O ’C o n n o r’s decision not to intervene was w elcom ed by O regon adoptees w ho have spent years trying to track down their birth parents but have been thw arted because their birth records have been kept sealed under state law. “ 1 was so frustrated by thejudicial system and w hat I perceived as the unfairness o f the law,” said 56-year-old Barry Price o f Albany. But Frank Hunsaker, attorney for a group o f six anonym ous birth mothers who had fought the law in court over the past tw o years, was not pleased. "M y clients are extrem ely dissappointed and scared and even angry that their rights have b een ig n o re d by O re g o n ’s v o te rs and O re g o n ’s c o u rts,” H u n sak er said in an interview on K X L-A M radio in Portland. The anonym ous birth mothers had argued the 1998 law violates their privacy, and is a breach o f w hat they had assum ed w ere guarantees o f confidentiality w hen they gave their children up for adoption. "1 think it’s a sad day that this m easure is E. coli O utbreak in Canada Kills Four MF.TULLA, Israel the last Israeli troops and tanks rolled out o f Lebanon at dawn, com pleting a sw ift and dram atic pullout from the southern zone Israel occupied for nearly tw o decades and closing one o f the m ost bitterly divisive chapters in the nation's history. In Israel, relief over the safecom pletion o f the hasty and hazardous w ithdraw al was tem pered by sadness over the long conflict, w hich had cost the lives o f more than 950 Israeli soldiers since 1982. (Please see 'A doption' page 6) The unveiling o f the fin a l stage o f interpretive signage commemorating Vanport, Oregon's second-largest city in 1944, which was destroyed by the Memorial Day flo o d o f 1948 was held on May 30, 2000 at Heron Lakes G olf Course Clubhouse. This project was a collaborative effort by Portland Parks & Recreation, Portland State University, and Kaiser-Permanente. The fo u r signs which were unveiled trace the history o f Vanport City and mark two specific sites: where the dike broke and the location o f the infirmary'. Presentations were made by PP&R Director Charles Jordan, Commissioner Jim Francesconi, Barbe West, Regional President o f Kaiser-Permanente, Meg Merrick, Portland State University, and two o f the PSU students who worked on the project. M O SCO W - Russian legislators approved an am nesty for about 120,000 inmates in an e ffo rt to im p ro v e c o n d itio n s in an o v e rc ro w d e d , d is e a s e -rid d e n p riso n system . T he State D um a unanim ously approved the m easure, w hich applies to people w ho com m itted m inor offenses. A m ong those to be released wi 11 be inmates w ith tuberculosis - about one-tenth o f the prison population as well as w ar veterans, invalids, elderly people and pregnant wom en. Inm ates are to be released after prison adm inistrators decide w ho fits the requirem ents and process the paperw ork. Is r a e l W ith d r a w s from Lebanon going into effect,” said Hunsacker. But m any adoptees are elated. G eena Stonum , 41, o f Portland has searched for her birth parents on and o ff for 20 years. “ It’s a really difficult thing to do, especially with the limited inform ation— which is pretty m uch no inform ation — that I had,” Stonum said. “ I’m a single mom, so I d o n ’t have thousands o f dollars to throw aw ay with no guarantees I’d get anything back.” She w ants to know her history. “ I have a w onderful family, but th ere’s still that piece th at’s missing. W hen you see people w ho m aybe look like you, you w onder if they ’re m aybe related to you,” Stonum said. In 1998, Oregon voters passed a new law that w ould allow O regonians age 21 and older access to their original birth certificates. But the law was challenged by attorneys for six birth mothers who claim ed the law violates the privacy o f people who give their children up for adoption. T he Oregon C ourt o f A ppeals in D ecem ber rejected their constitutional challenges to the ad o p tio n rec o rd s law , and th e O regon Suprem e Court has tw ice refused to review that ruling. T he O regon Court o f A ppeals refused to extend a stay blocking the law from taking effect, leaving the U .S. Suprem e Court as the only option for the group o f six birth mothers, w ho filed their challenge anonym ously. O 'Connor, who fields emergency matters from Oregon forthe nation’s highest court, rejected their em ergency request to stay the law. In 1997, the U.S. Suprem e Court refused to review a sim ilar open adoption records law from Tennessee. Tennessee and ju st three other states — A laska, D elaw are and K ansas — allow adult adoptees access to original birth certificates. A n adoption records bill in A labam a has been signed by that sta te ’s governor, and it takes Unveiling of Vanport Interpretive Signage Am nesty o f 120,000 Inmates Approved W A L K E R T O N , O ntario - E. coli bacteria in a southern O ntario tow n’s w ater supply has kil led three elderly adults and an infant and sick en ed h undreds m ore. Seven people were in critical condition and dozens o f other victim s w ere hospitalized and officials w arned that m ore infections w ere likely in com ing days. It w as unclear how the bacteria, often spread by fecal m atter, got into the w ater supply in W alkerton, 80 m iles northw est o f Toronto. 50* May 31,2000 N. Ireland R egains Som e G overning A uthority K A ZA N , R ussia - Since the collapse o f the Soviet Union in 1991, many o f R ussia’s 89 regions have turned into mini-kingdoms w ith their ow n law s, a repressive attitude tow ard the m edia and disdain for fair elections. But in his first m ajor policy initiative as president, V ladim ir Putin announced m easures to reinstate federal control from Moscow. One-fifth ofregional legislation conflicts with federal law, Putin noted. He called upon Russia’s State Duma to consider three bills that, am ong other things, would give him the pow er to dismiss regional leaders. I Left: Kathy Schnider, Vanport Cartographer Sabin CDC Housing Our Families to move T w o n o n -p ro fit h o u s in g d e v e lo p m e n t agencies. Housing O ur Families and the Sabin C om m unity Developm ent Corporation, plan to enter into an active partnership. The new “collaborative venture” w i II be cal led theC om m unity H ousing Partnership, the tw o organizations said in an executive sum m ary released to the O bserver. A cco rd in g to the release. H ousing O ur Fam ilies will provide property m anagem ent services to Sabin CD C, w hile that agency w ill assist HOF in property developm ent. The governing body o ft he new ageney will eonsist o f the com bined boards o f its parent bodies, plus additional recruits, m eeting quarterly. “CHP links the two CD C s together in a substantial business alliance," the release said. "It is cem ented through a w eb o f eollaborativecontracts o f three years duration to provide specific services.” The tw o organizations plus tw o others. Franciscan Enterprises and the N ortheast C om m unity D evelopm ent Corporation, had been in d iscu ssio n s for several m onths exploring ways to more efficiently use their joint resources. The discussions were brought on in part by the increasing scarcity o f available affo rd a b le land in north and n o rth east Portland, and the loss o f funding sources such as the N ehem iah program. H ousing ( )ur l am ilies was created by a group o f professional w om en seeking to aid low income single women and families in the inner city. They now m anage more than 400 units in north and northeast Portland. S abin C D C w as cre ate d by th e S abin C om m unity A ssociation to help retain a supply o f affordable housing in Sabin and other inner northeast neighborhoods. They began with rental housing restoration and developm ent, but later launched into a “ land lease” program U nder this arrangem ent houses are sold at low cost, but the agency has the right at tim e o f resale to repurchase the house at a price based upon an agreed-upon formula. In theirdiscussions the two agencies identified “sim ilar core com ponents," the release said. They will henceforth “share infrastructure costs, specifically office space and staffing alignment, rather than continuing to m aintain separate organizational infrastructure." *