PageA2 îlie ^îortlanb © b sertier_________________________ APnl 27.200s School Board Cuts 250 Jobs Advertile with diversity in c hl |¡Jort latti* (©bsertu'v ( all 503-2SS ou33 ads 6' portlandob s c ia c i Minority schools hit hardest com erful job resources/ ÄMQ Tuesday May 3 d 11 am ■ 3:30 pm PCC C ascade Cam pus Gym 7 0 5 N. K illin g s w o rth , 1-5 e x it 3 0 4 The Portland School Board ac­ cepted a $375 million budget M on­ day, which includes $25 million in cuts and the elimination 250 teach­ ers and staff across the board. Although $2 million was given back for under-perform ing and schools with high populations of minority students, a loss of $8 mil­ lion in state desegregation money will mean the cuts are more severe in north and northeast Portland. The district is also facing a $33 Board Hopefuls Meet Public in Forums The Portland Schools Founda­ tion will join theCity Club of Port­ land and the Portland Business Alliance to host a forum with Portland’s school board candi­ dates on Thursday, May 5 at 7:30 a.m. at the Governor Hotel. Later the same day, a second forum at the Portland Public School Headquarters will be held at 6:30 p.m „ sponsored by the schools foundation. Community Parents for Public Schools, the Latino Network, the League of W omen Voters, the Oregon PT A and the Urban League of Portland. The election to replace three retiring school board members will take place on May 17th. Ballots will be mailed on Friday, April 29. School board members Julie Brim Edwards, Lolenzo Poe and Derry Jackson, all have decided not to seek re-election. million cut from local property tax revenue. Jefferson High School will have 18 teachers cut from its 60-member staff. Franklin High School, on the other hand, will lose only one teacher from its 73-m em ber staff. All of this equals about 10 per­ c e n t o f th e sc h o o l d is tr ic t workforce. Programs saved include out­ door school for sixth graders, and tennis, golf and dance activities, but only with increased fees and fund-raising. The rest of the budget will go toward closure o f five schools, repairs on existing schools and hiring o f new adm inistrators. During the 2006-07 school year, even more cuts are expected with the loss of the Multnomah County tem porary incom e tax, w hich brings in $50 million a year. School districts across the state of Oregon are feeling the heat as well. The state has gone down from ranking 20th in the nation in per-student spending and is now in 31 “ place. T ri-M e t Bus #4 and # 72 N K illin g s w o rth M A X s ta tio n Girl Raped at Columbia Park More than 6 0 great employers. Bring your resum e! All Job S e e k e rs W e lc o m e . Free a d m issio n and p a rkin g . For more information, go to our web site: w w w .p c c .e d u /c a s c a d e jo b fa ir or can (503) 978-5600 It 0 XEROX 'a® P n w K trn r* | Health System Oregon) tup com • X ■— 1 % w A c a rin g d if f e r e n c e y o u cen f e e l A special thank you to N ik e an • K a is e r P e r m a n e n t e for their supporting sponsorship A P o rtla n d « ö > C om m unity Collet»« V' Suspect at large, reward offered Last month, a 12-year-old girl told police she was dragged by knifepoint into a bathroom at Co­ lumbia Park in north Portland. The girl was walking home from school through the park when the man asked her for the time, said Portland police Sgt. Kim Keist. She told police her attacker had a folding knife with a five-inch blade and raped her inside the brick Co­ lumbia Cottage bathrooms at the south end o f the park, near the intersection of North Lombard and Russet streets. S he w as ta k e n to L egacy Emanuel Hospital and Health Cen­ ter for an examination. The suspect was described as a thin black man, age 20 to 25, and about six feet tall and a thin "peach fuzz” type mustache on his upper lip. He was wearing a black baseball cap, with a “do-rag,” a white tank top “wife beater,” a fur lined black puffy jacket and dark baggy jeans. Anyone with information about this case or who can identify the suspect is asked tocall Crime Stop­ pers. Crime Stopper is offering cash reward of up to $ 1,000 for informa­ tion reported that leads to an arrest in this case or any other unsolved felony. As always those with infor­ mation can remain anonymous and can be reached at 503-823-4357 Portland police released this sketch o f a rape suspect. ‘No Child Left Behind’ Suit Filed £ 5 A Piece of Downtown Twenty retailers and restaurants invite you to visit downtown Portland April 12 May 29, 2005 for the Win a Piece of Downtown contest. Enter at any business listed below fora chance to w in . Apple Music • 22S SWlst • Samit k Dreadnaught Acoustic Guitar Bunn Giorno Italian Imports • his NWGlisan and Mama Mia I rattnria 439 SW2nd • Imported Deruta Rooster PitcherK Lunch (or l our Cal Skate Skateboards -210 NW 6th-Skull Skates Old School Deck Columbia Sportswear • 911SW Broadway • $250After I lours Shopping Spree Diamond Dogs • 722SWTaylor i.mily the St range Wish You Werent Here Vacation Essentials DLish at Pioneer Plate • 7oo SW5th • I landmade Bath and Body Products Finnegans • 922 SWYamhill and Daily (¡rill • '750 SW Akter s2(M) Shopping Spree and Dinner for Five Kathleens o f Dublin • 860 SW Broadway • The I airway Bronze Stat ne Made In Oregon • 921 SW Morrison ■ Myrtlevwxxl clot k Mercantile • 735 SW Park • Baby Blue Burlxvry Plaid Rain Hat I he Monkey & the Rat BI NW Second • I hai Spirit Monkey Portland Saturday Market bob W Burnside-Gift Basket filled with Unique Hems Leading the fight is the National ( AP) - The nation’s largest teach­ Education Association, a union of ers union and school districts in 2.7 million members. Its objections three states are suing the Bush to Bush’s law prompted former administration over the No Child Education Secretary Rod Paige to Left Behind law, aiming to free call the NEA a “terrorist organiza­ schools from complying with any part not paid for by the federal tion.” The other plaintiffs are nine government. school districts in Michigan, Ver­ The lawsuit, filed April 20 in the mont and Bush’s home state of U.S. District Court for eastern Michi­ Texas, plus 10 NEA chapters in gan, is the first major challenge to those states and Connecticut, Illi­ President Bush’s signature educa­ nois, Indiana, New Ham pshire, tion policy. Ohio, Pennsylvania and Utah. The law is widely considered the most significant federal education act in decades. It puts particular emphasis on ensuring that schools give attention to minorities and poor children who have long fallen be­ hind on achievement. But the government is accused of shortchanging schools by at least $27 billion, the difference between the amount Congress authorized and what it has spent. Moussaoui Pleads Guilty Admits role in terrorist attacks (A P) - Z acarias M oussaoui which he som etim es ranted at pleaded guilty Friday to helping al- Brinkema, answered her questions Q aida carry out the Sept. 11 politely. “How do you plead?” she asked hijackings and said he understood him for each of the six felony counts he could be put to death for his role against him. Each time, Moussaoui in the deadliest terror attack in answered, “Guilty.” American history. At one point, he said, “I was “I expect no leniency,” he said. being trained" on a Boeing 747 “to U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema accepted the plea in fed­ use this plane to strike the White eral court in Alexandria, Va., mak­ House.” He said the training was ing the French citizen the lone per­ for a different attack that was to son convicted in a U.S. court for the come later. Brinkema asked defense lawyer 2001 attacks that killed nearly 3,000 Alan Yamamoto, the only lawyer people. Moussaoui, more subdued than Moussaoui would talk to in recent in earlier court appearances during weeks, if he was satisfied the defen- Zacarias Moussaoui dant understood what he was do­ ing. “When I have spoken to him, we have disagreed,” Yamamoto said. “He is facing the possibility of death or life in prison. He has told me that he understands that.” Something Silver at Pioneer Place 7(X) SW Yamhill One of a kind Necklaceand Bracelet Set Minorities Buy More Homes Swatch • 617 SW Morrison • The Paparazzi Smart Watch The Fossil Cartel • 340 SW Morrison • Meteorite Pendant The livin g Quarters at Pioneer Plate 3H5 SW Yamhill Hand Blown (.lass (ianlen Votive on a 5 f t Iron Rod The Real M other Goose -901 SWYamhill St. and Mother's Bistro • 409 SW 2nd Art Deco I Itxir ( lockK Dinner for Two WWW.nD3iOrtlandOtlline.COm The C ensus B ureau released data M onday show ing that m i­ nority hom eow nership hit an all- time high during the first quarter of 2005. The new quarterly record rate o f 51.6 percent m eans that 15.7 million minority families now own th e ir ow n hom es in the U nited States. Overall homeownership was also at an all-time high in the first quar­ D evelopm ent Secretary A lph- ter, with 74.5 million American fami­ onso Jackson. Tw o years ago. President Bush lies now owning their own homes. challenged the nation to create 5.5 “T hese new num bers, com ­ million new minority homeowners bined with news that sales o f pre­ by the end of this decade. To date, viously-ow ned homes w ere near there has been a net increase of 2.3 record levels last m onth, show m illion m inority hom eow ners, that housing is still a leader as which represents 43 percent of the our econom y continues to im ­ prove,” said Housing and Urban 5.5 million goal. Subscribe! 503-288-0033 P o r t la n d O ^ b s e ru e r Established 1970 USPS 9 5 9 -6 8 0 .................... ... 4 7 4 7 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, OR 9 7 2 1 1 Send address changes to Portland Observer, P 0 B o x 3 1 3 7 , Portland, OR 9 7 2 0 8 Subscriptions are $60.00 per year C h a rles H. 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