Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, January 30, 2008, Image 1

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‘City of Roses’
Super Bowl Preview
It will be a showdown between
Beantown and the Big Apple
when the New England Patriots
and the New York Giants lock up
in the Super Bowl Sunday. The
biggest game in A m erica will air
on KPTV Channel 12 (FOX). See
preview, page B6.
Bush’s Last Stand
With his approval rating near its
all-tim e low and less than a year
rem aining in his presidency.
P re sid e n t B ush fo c u se d on
gnaw ing recession fears in his
final State of the Union address
M onday.
Economy Boost
The House, seizing a rare mo­
ment o f bipartisanship to re ­
spond to the econom y’s slump,
overw helm ingly passed a $146
billion aid package Tuesday that
would speed rebates o f $600 to
$1,200 for most taxpayers. The
bill now goes to the Senate.
‘Z Man’ Killed on 1-5
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See story, page A2
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The Review
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Committed to Cultural Diversity
Volume XXXVIII. Number 5
W
■ 1
Presidential contender
is endorsed as a man
f 'grit
and
grace.’
o f o ‘grit
and
grace.’
Race in
the Media
Vanport
Square
Success
A grand-opening celebration last
Thursday marked a successful comple­
tion of a major minority-led development
of office and retail space in the heart of
Portland’s African-American community.
Vanport Square is a42,000-square-foot
commercial project at 5225 N.E. Martin
Luther King Jr. Blvd., across the street
from the Blazer Boys and Girls Club.
The development was led by Ray Leary
and Jeana Woolley with the backing of the
Portland Development Commission and
the Portland Family of Funds, a tax credit
financial group headed by Carl Talton,
another longtime African-American busi­
ness leader.
“It is immensely rewarding to finally
see a project that you have invested so
much energy into for six years became a
reality. Ray and I are extremely proud of
the end result," said Woolley of Vanport
Partners. LLC.
Fourteen of the 16 properties in Vanport
Square have been purchased and are oc­
cupied by local enterprises, including nine
that are owned by women and minorities.
The businesses are the Hom of Africa
Restaurant, Old Town Pizza, Hardshell
continued
on page A3
Wednesday • January 30. 2008
Forum to spotlight
Foxworth case
BY R O MONI) RENDI.EMAN
T he P ortland O bserver
Portland State University will host a
forum next week to discuss what can be
learned from the 2(X)6 media handling of
then-Police C hief
Derrick Foxworth
when a former em­
ployee accused him
o f sexual harass­
ment.
Sensationalist re­
porting and editori­
als may have con­
trib u te d
to
Foxw orth's demo­
tion, according to
PSU Black Studies
p ro fe sso r Ethan
Johnson, as the city
identified one count
photo by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver
Carl Talton (left), Jeana Woolley and Ray Leary, the backers o f Vanport Square,
an owner-occupied office and retail complex on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr.
Boulevard, celebrate last Thursday's grand opening.
of unprofessional
conduct while the
seven other more se­
rious accusations
were found to be un­
substantiated.
Seeing an opportunity to learn from
past instances involving white women
and black men, Johnson hopes that a
panel of editors and reporters who w rote
continued
on page A3
a ff e c t io n
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jS I t h r o u g h
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east Precinct
and 17 years of service to Port­
land, was killed by a truck going
south on 1-5 Sunday morning.
Cascade Festival"1 African Films
18th-annual
event opens
Friday
See story, page A2.
Kenya Leader Dead
M ugabe W ere, 39, a freshman
opposition politician who had
resisted his party ’s often bellig­
erent talk, could have been one
of the keys to unlocking K enya's
crisis, but he was shot and killed
in his drivew ay on Tuesday.
The 18th edition of Portland
Community College's Cascade
Festival of African Films com­
m ences in February with a
Cannes Film Festival award-win­
ner and a visit by one o f
Cameroon’s most influential film­
makers.
Organized entirely by volun­
teers. the festival is offered free
to the public at venues that in­
clude Room 104 of the Moriarty
Arts and Humanities Building at
PCC’s Cascade Campus, 705 N.
Killingsworth St.: the Hollywood
Theatre,4 122 N.F. Sandy Blvd.;
and the McMenamins Kennedy
School Theatre, 5736 N.F. 33rd
Ave.
This year's month-long event,
starting Friday, Feb. 1, and run­
ning through to Saturday, March
I, will open with a screening of
Immigrant Seeks Asylum
Spurning a deportation order
M onday, Elor Crisostom o, 28,
said she is ’’picking up the torch”
from another illegal resident who
became a symbol for im m igra­
tion reform when she took shel­
ter in a Chicago church for a year
before being deported.
Spacecraft Threatens Earth
A 20,000-pound U.S. spy satel­
lite containing hazardous m ate­
rials has lost power and could hit
the Earth in late February or early
March. It is unknown where on
the planet it might come down,
but officials assure that num er­
ous satellites o v er the years
have come out of orbit and fallen
harmlessly.
Bamako, a film from Mali, brings to life the realities o f contemporary Africa. The Cascade Festival o f African Films selection
will be screened on Thursday, Feb. 7 at noon and again Friday, Feb. 8 at 7:30 p.m.
Algerian director Rachid Bouchareb 's “Days o f Glory," the hard-hitting winner o f
the 20 0 6 Cannes Film Festival, is an exceptional war film and a study in colonial
exploitation.
continued ' y ^ on page .15
Sweet Crude is a documentary o f Nigeria's Niger Delta - where big oil
brings stories o f survival, corruption, greed and armed resistance.
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