50£ Opera is Her Dream Memorial Day Ouch! years of I ■■Ml Oregon gas prices heading into the Memorial Day w eekend soar past the record high national average o f $3.20 a gallon. See Career Education special section, inside Marttani* (©tigfrner ^^4 itv n f R n c p c ' ‘City of Roses r_ i„ l_ l!_ l Blazers Win Draft Lottery The Portland Trail Blazers beat the odds and will pick first in next month’s NBA draft. W ithjusta5.3 percent chance of winning the No. 1 pick, the Blazers won the top position Tuesday night, earning the right to draft a potential fran­ chise player from what’s consid­ ered to be a deep class. They will almost certainly choose between Greg Oden, the Ohio State center or Kevin Durant, Texas’ high-scor­ ing forward. Bush Criticized by ex-Prez The gloves came off when former presidentJimmy Carter look a ver­ bal sw ip e at President Bush in the Arkansas D e m o c ra t-G a ­ zette on Saturday, calling the cur­ rent administration the worst in the country’s history. Carter, 82, has since retracted his statement, calling it “maybe careless or mis­ interpreted,” but not before a White House spokesman labeled it “irrelevant.” Baghdad Violence Increases A parked car bomb at an outdoor market in southwestern Baghdad exploded Tuesday, killing 25 people and injuring 60 others, de­ spite a 3-month-old security crack­ down to reduce violence in the capital. The blast left the Shiite- dominated neighborhood o f Amil in devastation, police said. Richardson Enters Race N ew M exico G ov. Bill Richardson be­ came the latest Democrat to officially enter the crowded 2008 presidential race Monday. Richardson has been running for months but officially announced his candidacy in Los Angeles where he said he hoped to repair what he called the rav­ ages of the Bush administration. Teams Change Owner Merritt Paulson, the son of U.S. treasury secretary Henry Paulson, will be the new owner of the Port­ land Beavers baseball team and Portland Timbers soccer team. Paulson, manager of Shortstop, LLC, and his wife, Heather, are in the process of moving from New York to Portland, to be full-time president of both teams. ‘Dying Boy’ Exposed Joshua Kistler of Beaverton was sentenced to more than 24 years Monday in federal prison after posing online as a teenage boy dying of leukemia to coerce 12 to 14-year-old girls into sending him sexually explicit images. The 31- year-old chatted with them to gain sympathy and nude photos. im n .1 1 1 wwvv.portlandobserver.com Committed to Cultural Diversity Volume XXXVII, Number 20 .Week in The Review I !_ Established in 1970 Wednesday • May 23, 2007 H ig h -S ch o o l A ll S tar C lassic One-of-a-kind event to highlight community by R aymond R endleman T he P ortland O bserver T he Jo yce W ashington C las­ sic is the only basketball to u rn a­ m en t w here the rosters o f P ort­ land Interscholastic L eague all stars actually play against one another. It’s also the only h ig h ­ school to u rn am ent coached by tw o fo rm er T rail B lazers nam ed M ichael w ho both happen to w ork for State F arm Insurance. M ichael H arper and M ichael H olton play ed fo r the B lazers in the ‘80s, gaining m uch p o p u lar­ ity d uring th eir professional c a ­ reers by a co m m itm en t to serv­ ing the P ortland com m unity. F o r H olton, w ho w as also head basketball coach fo r five y ears at the U niversity o f P o rt­ land, the urge to give back runs d eep . “ I c e rta in ly le a rn e d a s a B lazer the value o f com m unity in v o lv em en t,” he says, “but I photo by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver Former Trail Blazers Michael Harper (left) and Michael Holton get ready to coach the top basketball players from Portland area high schools this Saturday at the Portland Observer Joyce Washington All -Star Classic. think it goes back further to w hen I w as a youth and people reached out to help me in my stru g g les.” H arper, w h o a lso c o a c h e s basketball at R iverdale H igh School in southw est Portland, sees S a tu rd a y ’s all-star classic as an entertaining, cityw ide o c ­ casion to benefit kids and build com m unity ties. “ It not only celebrates the life o f Joy ce W ashington (the late publisher o f the Portland O b ­ server),” he says, " I t’s also that the atm osphere is electric w ith this opportunity for unity in a city w ith so m any star players.” In keeping w ith this c o m m u ­ nity spirit, the e v e n t’s proceeds go to a scholarship fund for local high-school grads. continued y ^ on page A8 Sanctuary City for Soldiers ply refusing to fight for one reason or another. The anti-war movement is also growing in such strength that many students at colleges and universi­ ties around the country have joined by C harity P rater together to drive army and military recruiters from their buildings and T he P ortland O bserver Imagine Portland acting as a lawns. Sanctuary City where soldiers and According to Shea, a Vietnam war veterans opposed to returning Veteran who lost a child to war in to active duty could live peacefully 1981, last year alone there were while transitioning back to civilian more than 3,000 active-duty sol­ life. diers who deserted the army. Brian Barnett and Dan Shea are “Some soldiers refuse to deploy working together to open the door on the basis that they are being for conversations about jus, an idea this Memorial Day weekend, Satur­ day, May 26 at 7 p.m. at north Portland’s Bread and Roses Cen­ ter. Around the country, there is a growing movement of soldiers who are reaching a consensus that the war in Iraq is a fallacy. Soldiers like Kevin Benderman, Sarah Olson, Carl Webb, and others are refusing deployment, going AW OL.orsim- Group promotes refuge for war objectors asked to commit an international crime because the war is illegal,” says Shea, “Others, like Suzanne Swift, refuse to return for more per­ sonal reasons like sexual crimes or mental health concerns." While the paperwork is process­ ing, where do these soldiers live, work and receive healthcare? Many of them do not have any safe refuge because they have warrants out for their arrest for refusing to deploy. They are persecuted by their col­ leagues and officers, or they are continued y ^ on page AS Some soldiers refuse to deploy on the basis that they are being asked to commit an international crime because the war is illegal. photo by R aymond R endleman /T he P ortland O bserver Augustana Lutheran Church preschool teacher Sam Earle surveys the grounds o f the northeast Portland church a few days after the property got tangled up in a police standoff with a motorist. Church Questions Police Action Northeast Knott Street last Thurs­ day, and the police used the sanctuary's entranccway as a staging area for the ensuing SERT standoff. The action needlessly violated by R aymond R endleman the peacefulness of holy ground T he P ortland O bserver for Rev. Mark Knutson, who A pastor who marched against wants police to address commu­ the 2003 police killing of Kendra nity concerns. Jam es, the unarm ed African “What we’re looking for first is American woman who tried to a conversation from our mutually drive away from a north Portland shared religious traditions about traffic stop, is trying to open up a ancient faith-based practices of dialogue with the mayor and po­ sanctuary coming in conflict with lice leaders about the issue of a modem public-safety concerns," safe haven brought up by an­ he says. other suspect pulled over in acar. In the coming week, he hopes This time an armed, suicidal to announce an assembly in the man parked directly across from continued y ^ on page A3 Augustana Lutheran Church on Standoff on sacred property upsets pastor photo by C harity zb — O' 2 o c- zb A y I ri = P ra i er /T he P or i land O bserver A passer-by walks past a political statement chalked onto the sidewalk in front o f the U.S. Army Recruiting Center on Northeast Broadway. I )