(Elte Jîortkinô (Obseruer___________________________Pa&e BS
October 30.2002
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Hip-Hop Fans
Fight for Turf
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Anaheim Angels pitcher Troy Percival reacts as the Angels beat the San Fran
cisco Giants to win the World Series in Anaheim, Calif., Sunday, Oct. 27, 2002.
(AP photo)
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Angels Savor World Series Win
•
(REMET
How we get th ere m atters
T n M f t ¡I 111 r i j l u l l o p p o r t u n i t y
zm/./ffl*''
I can't imagine
going anywhere
else as a patient
or a nurse.'
Rodrigo, RN
ICU East
Legacy Emanuel Hospital
(AP) — Tim Salmon hoisted the World
Series trophy and took a victory lap around
Edison Field. H e’d always imagined what
the trip would be like, and it was harder than
he thought.
“ It was pretty heavy,” he said.
And well worth it, for the Anaheim An
gels and all their fans who wondered whether
this day would ever come.
Behind rookie starter John Lackey and a
big hit by Garret Anderson, the Angels
became one o f the more improbable cham
pions in baseball history, beating Barry
Bonds and the San Francisco Giants 4-1
Sunday night in Game 7.
“These fans have been waiting a long,
long time for this,” MVP Troy Glaus said.
“And I know w e’re all happy to be part o f the
However. Hendricks said police reports o f vio
lence at clubs have a lot o f pull.
He agreed that at least one o f the issues in
northeast Portland is a lot o f people moving in to the
area that don’t necessarily understand the cultural
history o f black establishments.
But he also put much o f the responsibility for
civility on the young African Americans that fre
quent the clubs.
“We have a lot o f issues with crime in the black
community right now. I'm not gonna sugar coat
that.” Hendricks said.
But Hendricks said distinctions must he made
between reports o f serious crimes at clubs and
complaints that derive from neighbors annoyed
with noise.
“Neighbors complaining about noise is not the
same thing as shots fired,” he said.
Parks said club goers need to work together to
make sure the environment within the hip-hop
scene is safe.
“It’s embarrassing when people don’t want to
come out because they feel they’re going to be
punched in the face,” he said.
"W e’ve had gang members in (clubs) from both
sides o f the fence, and nothing has happened,”
Parks said.
O.G. One, a DJ for the Love Jones nightclub while
it existed, said some people are afraid o f play ing too
much hip-hop because they are scared the OLCC
will shut them down because o f it.
"Its a very unbalanced situation as it relates to
hip-hop being targeted as something violent,” he
said. “And its not just hip hop being targeted, it’s
our people.”
Local rap artist “E Bro” said he does not think the
police understand black culture.
“A lot o f young officers have never been around
people o f color,” E Bro said.
He argues that hip hop clubs have almost be
come a scapegoat for any crime that occurs down
town during club hours.
The proponents o f the hip-hop scene also
argued that clubs are discrim inating against
blacks by issuing unreasonable dress codes.
“Its a shame when I go to a club and can’t get in
because my pants aren’t tight enough,” Parks said.
At the conclusion o f the meeting Parks reminded
the crowd o f musicians and hip-hop defenders of
its own responsibility.
“The real w ork com es after this,” he said.
“The m ission is to go out o f this room and say
w e 're m aking steps to change. They do n ’t know
how im portant our m usic is to us.”
team to bring it to them.”
The Angels took 42 years to win their
first title, but with the help of their mascot,
the Rally Monkey, they clinched it.
Bonds, meanwhile, is still hoping.
“You want the results to be different,”
Bonds said. "They outplayed us, they de
serve it. They beat us. They’re worldcham-
pions.”
A fter w atching the A n g els party,
B onds w alked down the dugout and
picked up his glove. He w alked back,
tapped his son on the back and w alked
dow n the runway.
“I went 1 -for-3 with a walk, that's a good
day. Am 1 supposed to go 3-for-3 with three
home runs?” Bonds said. “What do you
want from me?”
Emmitt Smith Breaks Rushing Record
LEGACY
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(A P)— Emmitt Smith never considered
leaving Texas Stadium without the N FL’s
career rushing record. He even dressed for
the occasion.
Smith went through four No. 22 jerseys
during his historic game Sunday. But under
them all he kept on the same white T-shirt,
one with his image on the Dallas Cowboys
star logo, the phrase “All Tim e” and the
number 16,727 - a yard more than the late
W alter Payton had.
*
With an 11-yard run in the fourth quarter
against the Seattle Seahawks that was clas
sic Emmitt, he became No. 1.
“Trust me, I knew what I needed,” Smith
said. “Once 1 broke the line o f scrimmage I
knew that would have to be the one.”
Jrum Metro
Dallas Cowboys running back Emmitt
Smith goes through the Seattle
Seahawk line Sunday in Irving, Texas.
Seattle won, 17-14. Smith set an all-
time NFL rushing record and picked up
109 yards in the game. (AP photo)
Providence | Health System
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