50/ N ew Fred M eyer C om ing Battle to save Head Start Retailer to expand Interstate store with new shopping center Local activist lobbies Congress on reaathorization See story. Page A3 ‘City of Roses See story, Metro section, inside Established in 1970 Volume XXXIII • Number 26 www,portlandQbscrvc.L£QiD Committed to Cultural Diversity Wednesday • lune 25, 2003 T, Week in North Portland Church Chosen for Kendra James Forum TheReview Meeting to address b v J avmee R, C lti T he P ortland O bserver Powell Asks Africans to Support Zimbabwe Secretary of State C o lin Powell urged South Africa, and other countries in the region to pres- sureZimbabwe’s President Rob­ ert Mugabe to enter a dialogue with political opponents, warn­ ing his continued rule posed a threat to regional stability. In a commentary in Tuesday’s New York Times, Powell said the United States and the European Union have taken several steps “to assist directly the brave men and women of Zimbabwe who are resisting tyranny.” issues in fatal shooting with public officials A location has been finalized for the first community forum to address issues in the police shooting o f Kendra James, the 2 1 - year-old African American mother killed while trying to flee from a traffic stop. The forum w illtakeplaceonJuly 1 ffom5 p m. to 10 p.m. at the Mount Olivet Baptist C h u rch C om m u n ity Center, 8725 N. Chautauqua Blvd. one of Portland's oldest African American congregations. Staff from the mayor’s office announced that the location was selected partly be­ cause it can hold as many as 450 people. The meeting, which w ill give area resi­ dents a chance to ask Portland Police De­ partment officials many unanswered ques­ tions, was delayed to give the bureau time to finish an internal investigation of the May 5 shooting by North Precinct Police Officer Scott McCollister. continued on page .46 Living the Dream Serena Williams Game is Back at Wimbledon Serena W illiam s regained her Grand Slam grin Tuesday. Eager to put Paris in the past, W illiam s began her bid for a second con­ secutive Wimbledon title by beating fellow American Jill Craybas6-3,6-3. Freedom’s electrifying spirit rings true from the voice and keyboards of Rev. Mark Hardy at Portland's Juneteenth celebration Saturday on the grounds o f Legacy Emanuel Hospital. The annual celebration marks the end o f American slavery. See additional photos on Page A6, inside. Vatican Treasures go Online Th e Sistine Chapel is now online. The V atican put its enormous art collection on the W eb on Tuesday, launching a new site for the Vatican Muse­ ums that it hopes w ill attract more tourists w hile also d is­ seminating the church’s mes­ sage around the globe. The site allow s visitors to take a virtual reality tour o f some o f ] the dozen museums and gal­ leries that make up the Vatican collection. TNN Files Papers In ‘Spike’ Case Lawyers for television network T N N filed court papers Monday by Spike Jones Jr., son o f the legendary music satirist, saying it is “frightening” that filmmaker Spike Lee is trying to claim exclu­ sive ownership o f the name “Spike.” Lee won a court injunc­ tion June 13 that stopped V iacom, the nation's third-biggest media company, from changing T N N ’s name to Spike T V . photo bv M ark W ashington / T he P o r il a n d O bsf . rver Pom Access at Libraries Blocked The Supreme Court says public libraries must make it harder for Internet surfers to look at por­ nography — or they w ill lose government funding. Justices ruled Monday that the federal government can withhold money from libraries that won’t install blocking devices. Libraries had complained that the law turned them into censors, but they lost their First Amendment chal­ lenge. More than 14 m illion people a year use public library computers, including many chil­ dren, and the court said patrons o f al 1 ages were being exposed to unseemly sex sites on the Web. Affirmative Action Stands Narrow decision sites support for diverse classrooms (A P )— In its most significant statement about race in a generation, a divided Su­ preme Court allowed the nation’s colleges and universities to select students based in part on race, ruling Monday that diverse classrooms mold good citizens and strong leaders. The court emphasized that race cannot be the overriding factor, but a majority ac­ knowledged a broad social value from affir­ mative action - in encouraging all races to learn and work together. “In order to cultivate a set of leaders with legitimacy in the eyes o f the citizenry, it is necessary that the path to leadership be visibly open to talented and qualified indi­ viduals o f every race and ethnicity," Justice Sandra Day O ’Connor wrote for the 5-4 majority. At issue was whether admissions poli­ cies that give one racial group an edge unconstitutionally discriminate against other groups. In two decisions involving the Univer­ sity of Michigan, the court underscored that racial quotas are unconstitutional but left room for the nation's public universities - and by extension other public and private institutions - to seek ways to take race into account. “The court has in essence provided the trown vs. Board of Education Chief Charles Moose L JR S i « ’,* M eans N ecessari Supporters o f affirmative action rally in front the Supreme Court Monday after the court ruled on the use o f affirmative action In college admissions. (AP photo) nation with a road map on how to construct affirmative action programs in higher educa­ tion that are constitutionally acceptable,” said N A A C P President Kweisi Mfume. The court preserved the rules outlined 25 years ago in a landmark ruling that underpin the consideration o f race at institutions or gatherings as diverse as military academies, corporate boardrooms and campus leader­ ship retreats. In the earlier ruling a different group of justices struck down a quota system that had excluded a white student from medical school, but they allowed less structured forms o f affirmative action. On Monday, the court struck down a point-based screening system for applicants that automatically gave minorities a 20-point con tin ued on page .46 Moose Moves On Former Portland chief steps down over book deal (A P) — Montgomery County, M ary­ land Police C h ie f Charles Moose, who led the three-week hunt for the Washington, D .C.-area sniper, resigned last Wednes­ day after a clash with county politicians over his upcoming book on the investiga­ tion. Moose, 49, said he had worked to make continued y f on page 46 6