^lortlanò ffibseruer P age A 2 lu n e 2 2 . 2 0 0 5 Preacher Guilty in ‘Mississippi Burning’ Case the three manslaughter charges is punishable by up to 20 years. Judge Marcus Gordon scheduled sentenc­ ing for Thursday. Civil rights volunteers Andrew Goodman and Michael - two white New Yorkers - and James Chaney, a black Mississippian, were intercepted by Klansmen in their station wagon on June 21, 1964. Their bodies were found 44 days later buried in an earthen dam, in acase that was drama­ tized in the 1988 movie “Mississippi Burning.” Prosecutors said Killen - a part- time preacher and sawmill operator - organized the carloads of Klansmen who hunted down and killed the three young men. On Tuesday, cheers could be heard outside the two-story, red brick court­ Blamed for 1964 murders of 3 civil rights workers (A P) — Forty-one years to the day after three civil rights w orkers w ere beaten and shot to death, an 80-year-old preacher and form er Ku Klux K lansm an was found guilty of m anslaughter Tuesday in a trial that m arked M ississippi's latest attem pt to atone for its bloodstained, racist past. The jury of nine whites and three blacks took nearly six hours to clear Edgar Ray Killen of murder but con­ vict him of the lesser charges in the 1964 killings that galvanized the struggle for equality and helped bring about passage of the 1964 Civil Rights A d v e r tis e in Act. Killen, a bald figure with owlish bifocals, sat impassively in his wheel­ chair, an oxygen tube up his nose, as he listened to the verdict. "Forty-one years after the tragic murders ... justice finally arrives in Philadelphia, Miss,” said Rep. Bennie Thompson. Mississippi’s only black congressman. "Yet, the state of Mis­ sissippi must see to it that the wrongs of yesterday do not become the alba­ trosses o f today.” The murder charge carried up to life in prison. But Killen could still spend the rest of his life behind bars; each of J J o r t la n b ( O b s c n w r 503 Cold, Broken or Drafty Windows? Edgar Ray Killen 2ss 0033 house in this small to\yn after Killen was convicted. Passers-by patted Chaney’s brother, Ben, on the back, and a woman slowed her vehicle and yelled, "Hey, Mr. Chaney, all right!” Ben Chaney thanked prosecutors and “the white people who walked up to me and said things are changing. I think there’s hope.” S c h w e rn e r’s w id o w , R ita Schwemer Bender, hugged District Attorney Mark Duncan and called it “a day of great importance to all of us.” But she said others also should be held responsible for the slayings. "Preacher Killen didn’t act in a vacuum,” she said. "The state of Mississippi was complicit in these crimes and all the crimes that oc­ curred, and that has to be opened up.” Democrats Urge Inquiry on Bush, Iraq One Day Installs Don’t spend 10,000 - s20,000 -30,000! on windows |F Z | C-j Q INSTALLED I A M Compare at $600 AN Y SIZE W H ITE V IN Y L DOUBLE-HUNG W INDOW 1 Call Today! Artlwdttatls Oregon 503-289-2949 Washington 360-891 -2949 Toll Free 1-866-301-2949 TOP QUALITY • NO GIMMICKS • NO HIGH PRESSURE • NO M IN IM U M 1 Welded Frame & Saslt • Glass Breakage Warranty I o pt.) • Full Lifetime Warranty (opt.) • DP 50 Rated-173 mphWind • Call Us Before You Buy As a trade ally ot the Ener Trust eTOr«««n tan. “Simply the Best for Less www w'?dowwT ^ .<"v;cl m 2511 N Hayden Island Drive • Next to Jantzen Beach Supercenter Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich. (center), Rep. Sheilia Jackson Lee, D-Texas, (left) and Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif.deliver petitions to the White House Thursday demanding an official inquiry to determine if President Bush intentionally misled Congress in his march toward war in Iraq. (AP photo) Memo exposes tainted motives (AP) - A mid new questions about President Bush’s drive to topple Saddam Hussein, several House Democrats urged Congress Thurs­ day toconduct an official inquiry to determine whether the president intentionally misled Congress. At a public forum where the word “impeachment” loomed large, Ex­ hibit A was the so-called Downing Street memo, a prewar document leaked from inside the British gov­ ernment. Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, organized the event. Recounting a meeting of Prime Minister Tony Blair’s national se­ curity team, the memo says the Bush administration believed that war was inevitable and was determined to use intelligence about weapons of mass destruction to justify the ouster of Saddam. “The intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy,” one of the participants was quoted as saying at the meeting, which took place just after British officials re­ turned from Washington. Conyers and a half-dozen other m e m b e rs o f C o n g re s s w ere stopped at the W hite House gate later T hursday when they hand- deliv ered p e titio n s signed by 560,000 A m ericans who want Bush to provide a detailed re­ sponse to the D ow ning Street memo. W hen C onyers couldn’t get in, an anti-w ar dem onstrator shouted, ’’Send Bush out!” “Quite frankly, evidence that appears to be building up points to whether or not the president has deliberately misled Congress to make the most important decision a president has to make, going to war,” Rep. Charles Rangel of New York, senior Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, said earlier at the event on Capitol Hill. M isleading C ongress is an im ­ peachable offense, a point that Rangel underscored by saying h e’s already been through two im peachm ents. He referred to the impeachment of President Clinton for an affair w ith a W hite House intern and o f President Nixon for W atergate, even though Nixon resigned to avoid im peachm ent. Conyers pointed to statements by Bush in the run-up to invasion that war would be a last resort. “The veracity of those statements has - to put it mildly - come into ques­ tion,” he said. Bias Found in Media Coverage Victims who are male, black get ignored (AP) - Most of the missing adults reetor of the W ashington-based tracked by the FBI are men. More Project for Excellence in Journalism. On its website, the National Cen­ than one-in-five of those abducted ter for Missing Adults profiles more or kidnapped are black. But you might not get that im­ than 1,000 individuals, including pression from the news media, and photos, physical descriptions and some journalism watchdogs are short narratives o f when they were now taking the industry to task for last seen. They are young and old, what they see as a disproportion­ working-class and professional, of ate emphasis on cases in which all ethnic backgrounds. Most are white girls and women — over­ average-looking. whelmingly upper-middle class and attractive— dis­ appear. Television executives, who receive much o f the criticism, defend theircov- erage. They stress that eases such as the recent disappearance in A rubaof 18 -y ear-o ld N a ta le e Holloway of Alabama are -Tom Rosenstiel, director of extraordinary, and would Excellence in Journalism be newsworthy no matter And most never receive a men­ her background. But some insist that media atten­ tion in their local newspapers or tion on so few people overshad­ television broadcasts, said Erin ows the more than 1OO,(XX) active Bruno, a ease ma nager at the center files on missing adults and children who tries to interest media outlets currently tracked by the Federal in publicizing missing adults. Many consider women more Bureau of Investigation. “To be blunt, blond white chicks sympathetic potential victims than who go missing get covered and men— and white women even more poor, black, Hispanic or other people so, said Kristal Brent Zook, a pro­ of color who go missing do not get fessor at Columbia University’s covered," said Tom Rosenstiel, di- journalism school who wrote an article published in this month’s Essence magazine about missing black women who are largely ig­ nored. “ W h o ’s a p p e a lin g ? W h o ’s sexy?” she asked. “The virginal, pure, blond princess is m issing.... It has a lot to do with class and sexuality and ageism, not just race.” Maynard said many news direc­ tors, editors and everyday people stereotype men and minori­ ties who turn up missing and assume “it’s drugs or crimi­ nal activity or some sort of pathology." If journalists — c o n sc io u sly o r u n c o n ­ sciously — expect men and minorities to be crime victims, she said, few will consider it newsworthy if that actually happens. Dan Shelley, chairman of the Radio-Television News Directors Association, said that un­ conscious bias is possible. But “to the extent that we as an industry have created a perception in some that w e're ignoring missing person cases involving men or people of certain ethnicities, it’s unfortunate," he said. “The more diverse our work forces are and newsrooms are, the greater the chances our stories wi 11 truly reflect our communities." To be blunt, blond white chicks who go missing get covered and poor, black, Hispanic or other people o f color. ..do not get covered. Smith Late on Lynching Apology continued to W O R K + to P L A Y + to L IV E See where it takes you. i 1 from Front Senator, Democrat Ron Wyden, be­ came a co-sponsoreither the day or the evening of the voting, after it had become clear the resolution enjoyed widespread support. By Friday, four days after pas­ sage, the m issin g sig n a tu re s dwindled to eight Republicans. Absent were Lamar Alexander of Tennessee; Thad C ochran and Trent Lott o f Mississippi; John Cornyn of Texas; Mike Enzi and Craig Thomas of Wyoming; and Judd Gregg and John Sununu of New Hampshire. African American leaders have criticized senators who didn't sign the resolution. “They are worried about votes, or they lack values if they don’t recognize the significance of issu­ ing an apology,” said Dan Duster, the great grandson of Ida B. Wells. Wells, an African-American jour­ nalist. was the first person to sug­ gest anti-lynching legislation in the late 1800s. Shefoughtforalawagainst lynching until her death in 1931.