37 years 50fé 31 li e Black Special Coverage Issue Of " “J Month Super Bowl XU Bears vs. Colts g W' S e e P a Re B 6 ’ i n s i d e B* iB n ril& ttu Q t/ns^rltcr Ê n cp c’ ‘City n of f R Roses C r lr ik h r k û J Committed to Cultural Diversity Volume XXXVII, Number 4 .Week ¡n The Review Brandy May Get Charged T he C alifornia H ighw ay Patrol recom m ended M onday that ac­ tress-singer Brandy be charged w ith m isd e­ m e a n o r ve- hicular man- slaughter in a freeway crash that killed a w om an m o­ to r is t la st m o n th . See story, page A2 Brown Not Buried Yet A full month after Jam es B row n’s d e a th , th e G odfather o f S o u l's g o ld casket re ­ m ains at an u n d isc lo se d location after s p e n d in g m ostofJanu- ary in a cli­ m a te -c o n ­ trolled room at his hom e in Beech Island, S.C. See story, page A2 Shiite Worshipers Killed A ssailants struck Shiite w orship­ pers in three Iraqi cities Tuesday, killing at least 36 people in bom b­ ings and am bushes during the clim ax o f cerem onies m arking A shoura, the holiest day in the Shiite calendar. B.B. King Recovers Legendary bluesm an B.B. King, 81 w as hospitalized Friday for a low -grade fever follow ing the flu but was in good condition. Tram Opens to Public T h e P o r tla n d A e r ia l T ra m o p ened for routine service M on­ day a fte ra grand o p en in g w ee k ­ en d d u rin g w hich an e stim a ted 10,000 people w ere trea ted to free in tro d u cto ry "flig h ts" on the c ity 's n ew est p ublic c o n ­ v ey a n ce . Oregon No. 2 Destination O regon is the N o. 2 d estin atio n n atio n ally fo r p eo p le m oving from o th e r states, ac co rd in g to a study by U nited V an Lines. T h e com pany found that 4 ,600 p eo p le headed fo r O regon in 2 0 0 6, ranking the state ju s t b e ­ h ind No. 1 N orth C a ro lin a. Freightllner Lays Off Jobs F rie g h tlin e r an n o u n c ed F riday it w ill lay o ff as m any as 8(X) w o rk e rs from its Sw an Island p lan t in north P o rtlan d , c lo se to h alf o f its local w orkforce. Plant o p era tio n s w ill be scaled back to a single shift p er day. s o T-1 . Phillips chose D udley because o f his track record at urban schools sim ilar in photo by S ean O ’C onnor /T he P ortland O bserver student body size, dem ographics and sub­ Jefferson Principal Leon Dudley interacts with students and staff in the hallways o f the north Portland school. sequent difficulties. By accepting Jefferso n 's top jo b . D udley D udley claim s he never reads w hat is hovers around 570, dow n from around I .(MX) tered image o f the school. Bud press began to overshadow S eptem ber's optim istic a r­ written about him. He also freely admits he inherited one o f the toughest - and most in the late 1990s. scrutinized - positions in Portland. He ap ­ But before the first bell had rung, media ticles and a Portland Tribune reporter d e­ must still work to earn the trust o f his staff. proached the school year with a focus on reports exposed enough dirt to com plem ent tailed D udley as the subject o f a sexual and continued on page A 6 rebuilding the student population, which D udley’s professional history with their tat- racial harassm entclaim . Movement Lives on in Photo Exhibit Black Panther photos at Reflections by S arah B lount T he P ortland O bserver P ortland photo jo u rn alist Eve Crane once spent a year with her cam era in Los A ngeles and San Francisco, chronicling the Black Panther Party during a revolution­ ary time o f sw eeping social change. For a project m ore than 40 years in the making, C rane has archived hundreds o f her photographs taken during the 1960s. A collection o f these photos from 1967 and 1968 h av e been ch o sen fo r e x h ib it throughout February for Black H is­ tory Month at Reflcctions/Talking Drum Coffee and Books, 446 N.E. Killingsworth St. Through her intim ate perspec­ tive o f the Black Panthers, Crane captured som e o f the most pow er­ ful m om ents o f the Civil Rights m ovem ent. Her photographs o f continued on page A3 photo by S arah Bi.ot nt /T iie P ortland O bserv er Portland photojournalist Eve Crane shows one of her historical photographs of the Black Panthers. Her collection o f photos from the 1960s Black Panthers era will be on exhibit at Reflections/ Talking Drum Bookstore throughout February in honor o f Black History Month. Focus on Civil Rights, Art and Jazz Julian Bond kicks off local events Civil rights leader and N A ACP chairman Julian Bond kick offs Black History M onth at Reed College this w eekend with a lecture on "Civil Rights: In the Day, T oday, and Tomorrow." Also included in the southeast Portland college celebration is an exhibit from the late African Ameri­ can photographer Jacob I^iwrence. a jazz perform ance by the Randy W eston Q u a rte t, a le c tu re on T h elo n io u s M onk by historian Robin D.G. Kelley, and a presenta­ tion o f "The Incredible Journey o f Jazz" in cooperation with the P ort­ land Jazz Festival. Julian Bond will speak on Friday, Feb. 2 at 8 p.m. a, R eed 's Kaul Auditorium. A leader for social change for five decades. Bond helped to found the Student Nonviolent C oordinat­ ing C om m ittee w hile a student at historically black M orehouse C o l­ lege during the early 1960s. He was co-chair o f a successful challenge delegation to the 1968 D em ocratic Convention and served in the G eo r­ gia Legislature. Julian Bond Since 1998, he has served as ch a irm an o f th e b o ard o f the 2002. he received the prestigious NAACP, the oldest and larges,civil N ational Freedom A w ard. The rights organization in the U. S. In holder o f 23 honorary degrees. Bond is a distinguished adjunct ing hours, call 503-517-7935. O th e r re p r o d u c tio n s of professor at A merican University in W ashington, D.C. and a profes­ Law rence's w ork— including mu­ sor o f history at the University o f seum ex h ib itio n p osters o f his "Migration o f the American N e­ Virginia. “Confrontation at the Bridge." gro” series and tw ochildren's fxxtks an original silkscreen print by Jacob that he illustrated will also be on Law rence will be on view at Reed display. The Randy W eston Quartet will from T hursday, Feb. I through perform Saturday. Feb. 3 at 8 p.m. at W ednesday, Feb. 15. The print depicts the civil rights Kaul A uditorium. For six decades, W eston has march from Selma to M ontgomery, Ala. on March 7. 1965, when pro­ rem ained one o f the w orld's fore­ testers met with brutal resistance m ost p ia n ists and c o m p o se rs. on the Edmund Pettus Bridge and W idely regarded as a m usical inno­ vator and visionary, he w as named were forced to turn back. The print was a gift to Reed from a National Endow m ent for the Arts the C onair Corporation, and is par, Jazz M aster in 2001. Bom in New o f the perm anent co llectio n o f York and immersed in a rich musical Reed's Douglas F. Cooley M em o­ continued on page A6 rial Ar, G allery. For specific view ­