50/ Area All Stars Appeal Riverside Little League disqualification called unjust See story in Sports, Page B6 #33nrtlanh © itv n of f P rtc o c ’ ‘City Roses _____i In « 1970 it o Established ^pQ rtlandobserver.cQ iïi Committed to Cultural Diversity Volume XXXIII • Number 29 Wednesday • July 16. 2003 TlWeekin TheReview Global Hotspots on Agenda President Bush, mulling whether to send U.S. troops to enforce a fragile cease-fire in Liberia, met Monday with the world leader who has pushed most aggres­ sively for American intervention in the strife-tom West African nation. Bush and U.N. Secre­ tary-General Kofi Annan sat down to an agenda jammed with global hotspots and seemingly intractable problems. Like Bush, who returned late Saturday from a tour of five sub-Saharan na­ tions, Annan is just back from Africa, where he attended the ’ A frican U nion sum m it in Mozambique. Students study math and engineering to prepare for their freshman year at Jefferson High School. Bastille Day Gets Political French leaders used their tra­ ditional Bastille Day interviews to press for the return o f U.N. weapons inspectors to Iraq, saying such a move could help settle the doubts over Saddam Hussein’s weapons o f mass murder. After watching French and European troops march side-by-side in a show o f unity down the Cham ps-Elysees, President Jacques Chirac criti­ cized the United States and Britain for refusing to allow U.N. inspectors to complete their job in Iraq before going to war. New York Times Editor Replaced The New York Times on Mon­ day named Bill Keller as execu­ tive editor, more than a month after the newspaper’s top edi­ tors resigned following a plagia­ rism scandal. Kel ler, 54, a former Times managing editor and Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign correspondent, was chosen as the permanent replacement for Howell Raines. Ringleader Files for Senate Jerry Springer, the talk show host whose nationally syndi­ cated program often sp o t­ lig h te d strip p e rs and skinheads, officially filed pa­ pers on Monday to run for the U.S. Senate from Ohio. £3 on £ 9 £ ■J > o c 5 2P 2! 5 Passing over Maurice Lucus as general manager sparks protest B y J aymee R. C uti T he P ortland O bserver Candidates Ditch NAACP Convention NAACP President K w eisi Mfume criticized Democratic presidential candidates Dick Gephardt, Joe Lieberman and Dennis Kucinich for skipping the group’s presidential forum, saying the three have become “persona non grata” among black voters. Mfume lashed out at the three during a speech to the thousands gathered for the NAACP’sconvention. Each time Mfume mentioned their name an organ masterplayedadeath knell chord. Blazers Warned of Boycott P hoto by M ark W ashington / T he P ortland O bserver Freshman Ready Incoming students prepare for success in math and science BY JAYM EE R. C t 'T I T he P ortland O bserver The first day o f high school can conjure many anxieties, from getting lost to feeling alone in a much larger school, with much older kids. New students may also be nervous about study skills dulled by a summer of intense sprinkler sprinting and video gaming. High school can be particularly challenging for kids who never grasped basic math and science con­ cepts, such as fractions and multipli­ cation. MESA, the Mathematics Engineer­ ing Science Achievement Program has designed a summer camp for incoming freshman at Jefferson High School, to quell some worries about their upcoming year. The Jefferson Summer Scholars Pro­ gram, which wrapped up last month, was designed to help minority kids get exposure to math and science fields, where minorities are still under-repre­ sented. Kids also learned their way around the campus and met students from other middle schools. Jefferson High School upperclassmen assisted the program as student mentors. “What students love the most is they get to meet kids coming from other schools so when they walk the halls, it’s not all new, and they have older faces to look up to from meet­ ing our five mentors,” said Phoebe Tyeskey, Jefferson’s MESA advi­ sor. Camp projects were hands-on. Stu­ dents had group projects, field trips and even constructed towers using straws, toothpicks and marshmal­ lows. The purpose o f that project, ac­ cording to Tyeskey, was to build the highest free-standing towers while spending the least amount o f mate­ rial, keeping “building costs” low. The group took a trip to an engi­ neering firm to learn how their fresh­ man year will affect their futures in college and beyond. If the Portland Trail Blazers don’t hire some African-American decision makers in the Oregon Arena’s front office, a former professional athlete and 29,000 o f his friends have vowed to boycott the team. Portland resident R.C. Burke, a former football pro, started a petition two weeks ago, recommending former Blazer great Maurice Lucas, as general manager o f the team. He said they have 29,000 signatures to date. W hile the petition soared through the h an d s o f p ro m in en t A frican Am erican leaders and former NBA and NFL stars, the Blazers were re­ ported to have offered John Nash the position on Monday. W ednesday, the team is expected to announce Nash as the new general m anager o f the team, a position that has been vacant for three months, since Bob W hitsitt resigned. Nash com es to Portland as a former general m anager in Philadelphia, W ashington and New Jersey. According to Burke, both W hitsitt and team owner Paul Allen knew that Lucas was interested in the GM post. He said Lucas’ interest in the posi­ tion came during a conversation about ‘relationships that the current Blazers do not have with the black com m u­ nity.” “It’s appalling that there are no black employees in the Oregon Arena front office,” Burke said. W e’re going to boycott the Blazers and ask African Americans to impose economic sanc­ tions against any away game that they play until they are more inclusionary to minorities.” The spokesperson for the Trail Blaz­ ers did not reply to repeated requests for comment on the complaints. Tosign the petition or reach Burke, e-mail MaurioeLucasFoiBlazEreGMarhutmail.oom Aiming High at Summer Camp Program director Lavon Van poses with his campers in north­ east Portland from Successful Choices. The nonprofit hosts free summer camps, with activities includ­ ing Bible study, basketball and field trips. The organiza­ tion also sponsors after-school pro­ grams. For registra­ tion information and other questions, call 503-735-3156. photo by M ark W ashington / T he P ortland O bserver O' 4