Murrayhlll Celebrates 5()< F years of * community service li Wrecking Ball Coming Little Leaguers third in World Series ■■ ■■IBB See Sports, page B6 Whitaker-Adams school demolition is expected to begin See story, page A3 Z Un rt lanh ©bseruer î t v n of f Roses' Pncpc ‘Citv in - r n Volume XXXVI, Number 34 .. . .1 i Established in 1970 www.portlandobserver.com Committed to Cultural Diversity Wednesday • August 30. 2006 J TLWeek ¡n The Review Bells Toll 1 Year after Katrina Bells tolled in the shattered city of New O rleans Tuesday m orn­ ing, marking the moment one year earlier when New Orleans' levees buckled and unleashed a to rren t o f w ater that ripped homes from their foundations and sent tens o f thousands of residents into an uncertain ex­ ile. See sto ry , page A2. Links to Success Storm Moves into Florida Tropical Storm Ernesto's lead­ ing edge drenched Miami and the rest of southern Florida on Tuesday as it steam ed toward the Sunshine State with a po­ tential for more than a foot of rain. But forecasters said there was only an outside chance it would strengthen into a hurri­ cane. DNA Clears Confessor B o u ld e r Colo, pros- e c u t o r s d ro p p e d th e ir case against John M ark K arr M onday in the slaying on JonBenet Ramsey, saying DNA evidence failed to put him at the scene of the crime despite his insistence that he se x u a lly a ssa u lte d and strangled the 6-year-old beauty queen. Women from the Portland Chapter o f the Links, Inc., team up with the Portland Observer to distribute hundreds o f schools supplies to local children. The distribu­ tion was held Saturday in the parking lot o f the Portland Observer offices in northeast Portland. See additional photo, page A6. COLOM HUUO I ■ photo by I saiah i B ouik / T he P ortean » O bserver Youth Gatherings Poverty Rate Finally Slows The n ation’s poverty rate was essentially unchanged last year, the first year it hasn’t increased since before President Bush took office. The Census Bureau reported Tuesday that 37 m il­ lion A m ericans were living un­ der the poverty line last year Turn Violent Regena Williams, an advocate for area youth with her non-profit Northwest Country Community Outreach program, confers with a local resident passing by her offices on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Advocates try to turn tide after a few serious incidents Apple Laptops Recalled Apple Com puter Inc. on T hurs­ day recalled 1.8 million Sony- built laptop batteries that could overheat and catch fire. The recall cam e 10 days after Dell Inc.'s recall o f 4 . 1 million faulty laptop batteries, also made by Sony. Morning-after Pill Approved W omen may buy the morning- after pill without a prescription — but only with proof they’re 18 or older, federal health offi­ cials decided Thursday. Girls 17 and younger still will need a docto r’s note to buy the pills, called Plan B. SAT Scores Drop Big The high school class of 2006 got stuck with a new, longer version o f the SAT and didn’t fare well on it. Average reading and math scores fell a total of seven points - the sharpest de­ cline in 3 1 years. by S arah B e o in t T he P ortean » O bserver About 150 kids wreaked havoc in a north Portland neighborhood by throwing chunks of concrete at police officers, jumping on and cav­ ing in the hoods of at least two cars and severely beating a man who tried to intervene. The Aug. 19 gathering of Afri­ can American teenagers was in­ dicative of a new trend that has brought authorities, parents and youth advocates to Friday’s regu­ larly scheduled Gang Violence Task Force meeting at the Northeast Po- lice Precinct. The packed room agreed that the young people involved in these gatherings aren't entirely gang-re­ lated. The groups form with the rapid-fire technique of using cell phones and MySpace to send out exponential invites. What makes the sudden events dangerous is the mob mentality they conjure. Some of the participants are as young as 12, and now neighbors are upset. Until the midnight curlew, police have little authority over the gath­ erings at public events, private piloro by S araii B i . o in t Z T he P ortean » O bserver parties, neighborhood streets and city parks. But they are forced to take an aggressive approach be­ fore innocent bystanders become the centerpiece of unruly behavior. “W e’ve been herding them around, dealing with the same prob­ lems all summer long,” said police Ft. MikeStradley. But with just one person run­ ning the city's Youth Gang Out­ reach Program, it has become clear that police officers and city agen- continued y^ on page A6 Clothesline Swollen with Tears from Abuse Unspoken truths bring pain and hope by C harity P rater T he P orti . and O bserver Lines of tattered, multi-colored shirts hang swollen with heavy tears from the painful memories of violence against women. Each brightly-colored shirt has a story of rape, torture, kidnap­ ping and domestic or sexual at­ tacks. The words haunt passerbys who gaze at the unspoken truths. They are memories of hope, loss and sadness for the Portland Clothesline Project. “I’m not going to cry," one anonymous woman writes in red print. Another writes, "The silence was killing me,” and yet another, “I wore red that day”. Saturday's event was held in photo by C harity P rater /T he P ortland O bserver Messages o f hope, sadness and pain are expressed by survivors o f domestic violence in words painted on shirts in the Portland Clothesline Project. conjunction with the 86th anniver­ lion, giving women the right to vote. land. sary of the ratification of the 19th It also marked the 15h anniversary Rachel Carey-Harper, now 55. Amendment to the U.S. Constitu- of the Clothesline Project in Port­ created the project 16 years ago in Cape Cod. Mass. The idea came to her when a very distraught woman approached her at the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial Wall in Wash­ ington, D.C. with the statistic that the number of women who have been murdered by their intimate partners is greater than the num- berof soldiers killed in the Vietnam War. Although lucky enough to not have had a personal history with violent crime herself, as other women have, Carey-Harper be­ lieves that all women arc connected by domestic violence. “One person 'sex perience is my experience,” she says. The Clothesline Project was brought to Portland by three women, Fran Petschek, 76, Pat Hollingsworth, 83, and Yvonne Simmons. 59. Simmons is a survivor of vio­ lent crime and was empowered by continued y^ on page A 6