See Focus Bulk Rate Portland Art Museum to entertain stands out in his community U.S. Postage PAID Portland, OR Permit No. 1610 University o f Oregon Knight Library Newspaper Section Eugene OR 97403 (The ^Jortlanò ©fas H Volume XXX. Number 28 www.portlandobserver.com «.«< * Committed to Cultural Diversity Wednesday Established in 1970 July 12,2000 Portland receives gift reminiscent of China’s Ming dynasty 50e Mugabe says agitators behind soccer stampede in Zimbabwe Scientists Uncover Archimedes’ Lost Words , ROCHESTER, N.Y. - Scientists at Rochester Institute o f Technology are restoring a 10lh century manuscript - the only known copy o f the writings o f Greek mathematician Archimedes. The text was erased by a monk 200 years after it was written, was purchased anonymously at a 1998 auction for $2 million. The manuscript is the only copy in the original Greek o f Archimedes ’ theory o f flotation o f bodies. Barak Vows to March Ahead On Peace Talks JERUSALEM - His coalition in tatters hours before his departure for the Camp David summit, a defiant Prime Minister Ehud Barak said that he carries the will o f the people with him as he works for peace with the Palestinians. “I am not going alone. Withmearealmost2millionvoters,” Barak said. The prime minister was constantly heckled by right-wing on two n o -confidence m otions b rought by parties aimed at toppling him. 12 Dead in Zimbabwe Soccer Stampede HA FA RE, Zimbabwe - Police fired tear gas at unruly fans during a W orld Cup q u a lify in g so c c e r g am e b e tw e e n Zimbabwe and South Africa, setting o ff a stampede that killed 12 people. At Parirenyatwa hospital, a spokesman said four stampede victims were in critical condition, and “many” were injured. Coup Leader, Military Sign Agreement SUVA, Fiji -C o u p leader George Speight and military commander Commodore Frank Bainimarama signed an agreement to end Fiji’s seven-week hostage crisis. Under the deal, 27 hostages, including deposed Prim e M in ister M ahendra Chaudhry, will be released before a meeting o f tribal chiefs. Rebels will also turn in their weapons. - Floods Maroon Thousands in Bangladesh DHAKA, B angladesh-T orrential rains trig g e re d flash floods in n o rth ern Bangladesh, marooning 34,000 people, authorities said. The monsoon rain also demolished at least 135 mud and thatched houses, leaving nearly 680 people homeless in Kurigram district, 150 miles north o f Dhaka, the Bangladeshi capital. The state-run W ater Development Board said all major rivers were overflowing in the northern district and were expected to submerge more areas. G-7 to Discuss Japan’s Recovery FUKUOKA, Japan - As finance chiefs from the world’s richest nations arrived for summit talks, Japan’s Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawacalled for greater efforts to stabilize international capital flow and currency fluctuations. Reforming the intemaitonal financial system is one o f the top items on the agenda o f the finance ministers from the Group of Seven leading industrialized nations. Fijian Rebels Want Government Resignation SUVA, F iji- Rebels holding 27 hostages in Fiji’s Parliament said they would release the captives in return for the resignation o f the new civilian government. The rebels also demanded that the military hand over power to tribal chiefs - something the army has refused to do. Rebel leader, G eorge Speight and m ilitary leader Commodore Frank Bainimarama failed to take place but lower-level delegations discussed the latest rebel demands.------ by L orraine -M ichelle F al si or T he P ortland O bserver A portal nearing the end o f construction in downtown Portland will soon transport you into 500-year-old Ming Dynasty art and culture. Guarded by traditional lion gates and dragon figures on the rooftops, this portal will be called Lan Su Yuan. In English, its translation is the Garden o f Awakening Orchid, more commonly known as the new Portland Classical Chinese Garden. On September 14, Mayor Vera Katz will cut the ribbon in the grand opening ceremonies, opening the largest urban Suzhou-style garden outside o f China. The garden, which sprang up. out o f our sister city relationship with Suzhou, China, is being assembled by several partnerships o f American and Chinese designers, architects and artisans. “Once you enter into the garden you [will] transport yourself way back in time, at least 500 years and really feel like you are part of something that happened a long time ago,” said Ben Ngan, landscape architect and member o f the Board o f the Classical Chinese Garden Society. The garden will inhabit an entire city block between Second and Third avenues and Everett and Flanders streets. The garden’s design uniquely maximizes space. It is sectioned o ff into various courtyards each designed in its own distinct way. Cheryl Tonkin, Executive Director o f the Classical Chinese Garden, called each section “a new experience.” “I think the most important [aspect] is the spatial experience,” said ProjectCoordinator Jin Chen. Chen explained that there are five key components to a Suzhou-style garden: architecture, landscaping, rocks, water and cultural elements. Most o f the architecture is the compilation o f eight pavilions. Each pavilion is built in the Ming tradition and carries its own theme. Painted Boat in Misty Rain, one o f the largest pavilions, looks like a boat on the lake. It symbolizes the friendship between Suzhou and Portland. Weeping willows near the boat correspond to the Chinese tradi tionof offering a willow branch to a friend for planting at their new destination. “No other gardens have such an emphasis on rocks, and the appreciation o f rocks,” said Chen. The garden is filled with wrinkled, holey Lake Tai rocks, some weighing seven tons. Symbolic o f mountains, these rocks are considered beautiful and have an important place in C hinese tradition. Em perors surrounded theirpalaces with them. In 1997, Suzhou Mayor, Zhang Xinsheng, gave Vera Katz a Lake Tai rock, which is now adjacent to city hall on Terry D. Schrunk Plaza. Water is another important component in classical Chinese gardens. W ater engulfs 30 (Please see 'G a rd e n s' page 6) Wyden speaks out on prescription drugs, assisted suicide and gas prices ai_L££_EERL£MAS 0lTlltTORlLAM>_QBStRYtR Ron Wyden had a word or two about assisted suicide, prescription drug benefits and gas prices for the Lloyd District Community Association on a stopover last week. The senator addressed the neighborhood group’s monthly luncheon meeting for 45 m inutes before taking o ff for a similar appearance in Hood River. The frantic pace is necessary, he said, to keep a pledge from his first campaign: to hold at least one open town hall meeting a year in every municipality in Oregon. At one such function a constituent once told him, “ I thought I’d have to pay $ 1,000 for a chance to speak to a U. S. senator.” Three issues are currently occupying his time, Wyden said. The disproportionately high price of gas in Oregon is caused by the fact that “the big oil companies have been s y ste m a tic a lly s trip p in g the sta te o f competition through mergers and pressure on independents." This is a state where “folks drive a lot," with rural areas where cars are the only available transportation and a sizable senior population, and high gas prices “take a great toll on the quality o f life," he said. A second issue is public assistance for purchase o f prescription drugs by the elderly, a step we “can’t afford not to take,” he said. It has reached the point where low-income seniors have had to check into hospitals to Senator Ron Wvden receive needed drugs because the former are covered by medical assistance and the latter are not, he said. A third issue is O regon's assisted suicide law, and the attempts by congressional republicans to weaken or kill it. While saying that he personally voted against the law, Wyden said. “The people o f Oregon have spoken. This goes beyond assisted suicide. It’s a matter o f whether a small state can be bullied by lawmakers 3,000 miles away based on their personal beliefs. If they can throw out this law, people will say, ‘W hat’s the point of voting.’” To combat the effort, Wyden said, “I’m taking kidney strengthening exercises. 1 may talk for a long. long, long time." In answer to a question, Wyden said he was concerned about proposed electrical utility deregulation and the termination o f the Bonneville Power Administration. "There are lots o f folks back east who would love to collapse our system into a national power grid, where their bills would go down and ours would go right into the stratosphere," he said. He favors initiatives to increase international trade, including the deepening of the Columbia River channel. "W e do a lot of things well in this state, but what we do best is grow things," Wyden said. “The China market could be really lucrative for us. Dredging the channel could be an opportunity to accomplish this and also sponsor“world class environmental protection initiatives." He is currently trying to increase the federal appropriation for the proposed Interstate Light Rail line, which congress recently reduced from $40 million to $5 million. To take the next step and extend the line to Vancouver, he said, “There is no substitute for grass roots support." To achieve it in Washington, he said, "W e need to show we re driving down the per-mile cost.” P resident R obert M ugabe accused political opponents o f provoking the stampede that left 13 soccer fans dead in the nation’s worst sports tragedy. Mugabe said Monday that agitators had been planted at National Sports Stadium to shout slogans and display opposition party symbols before throwing bottles and other things on the field, Zimbabwe's official news agency reported. “Sport should never turn into warfare,” Mugabe said. W elshman Ncube, the third ranking official in the main opposition party, assailed Mugabe for attempting to defend “criminal overreaction” by police on Sunday. “Even if people shouted slogans, it was sp o n tan eo u s and this w as clearly unjustifiable action by the police,” he said. Police fired tear gas at unruly soccer fans during a World Cup qualifying game between Zimbabwe and South Africa, triggering a stadium stampede. Tear gas was fired “not at just where the trouble was, but everywhere,” said Obert Muranga, a spectator. Twelve fans were killed Sunday and another died the following day, hospital authorities said. Players from both teams choked and writhed on the field as tear gas spread. British soccer star John Fashanu, a commentator at the game and a U.N. goodwill ambassador, will advise the police in its investigation. “Let the nation be assured nothing is going to be swept under the carpet,” police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena said Monday. FIFA, soccer governing body, also said it would look into the violence, which began when fans tossed bottles following South Africa’s second goal late in the game. The game was stopped 10 minutes early, and South Africa’s 2-0 lead was declared official. FIFA expressed its "sincere condolences to the bereaved families.” The Zimbabwe Football Association will report on the tragedy to FIF A on Tuesday. The Zimbabwe group is led by M ugabe’s nephew, Leo Mugabe. W itnesses said many o f the 50,000 in the crowd made the opposition party’s salute d u rin g the n a tio n a l anthem and throughout the game. The Movement for Democratic Change slogan "chinja,” or “change,” was heard throughout the stadium. Fans say police first fired teargas at those in the crowd who raised the open-hand salute. The opposition party made sweeping gains in parliamentary elections in June, posing the biggest challenge to M ugabe's hold on power since he led the nation to independence in 1980. During campaigning, the opposition used so c c e r-sty le slogans in c ritic iz in g Mugabe. Violence during the campaign left at least 31 people dead, most o f them opposition supporters. Witnesses said fans' taunts Sunday were directed against Leo Mugabe. Fans demanded change in the association and the management o f the national team, which has repeatedly failed to qualify for recent international and African soccer tournaments. The association has been accused o f mismanagement and graft under Leo M ugabe. S im ilar accusations have plagued his uncle's government