50j¿ <4 y ^ C i r servii, òf * / c o m m in ili\ Special Coverage Issue Black _.ory Giant Surprise New York team stuns with Super Bowl upset Month J |Jo rt Inuit ‘City of Roses’ See sp o rts page, BIO F c to h Established Civil Rights Victory Gay couples in Oregon were al­ lowed to register as domestic partners after a federal judge Friday lifted the tem porary in­ junction he im posed in late D e­ cember. Couples began certify­ ing Monday at the Multnomah C o u n ty b u ild in g , 501 S .E . H awthorne Blvd., Suite 175. www.portlandobserver.com Committed to Cultural Diversity Volume XXXVIII. Number 6 .Week ¡n The Review in 1970 Wednesday' • Februaiy 6, 2008 Picking a President Washington Caucus Saturday With no chance to refute any complaints bv L ee P e r lm a n T he P o r tla n d O bserver As this election year shapes up to be the most suspenseful in decades, voters in Vancouver dorsed Sen. will join theircounterparts across B a r a c k Washington on Saturday to par­ ticipate in the Democratic and Republican caucuses to choose a president. Barring an unlikely sweep Portland Democrat said Obama’s of most of the 22 states voting energy, enthusiasm and optimism in elections and caucuses on helped him make up his mind be­ T u e sd a y , H illary R odham tween two great candidates. Clinton and Barack Obama will have picked up a mix of Tobacco Verdict Upheld The Oregon Suprem e Court up­ wins and losses. Each will held a$79.5 million punitive-dam- accum ulate delegates to the ages judgm ent Thursday against Democratic National Conven­ Philip M orris for the family of tion this summer, but neither longtime M arlboro smoker Jesse will have enough to secure the W illiams, an African American nomination. who worked as a jan ito r in Port­ At press time on Tuesday, land for many years before dy­ the Republican contest had nar­ ing of lung cancer in 1997. rowed between former Massa­ Yahoo Offered $44 Billion chusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and M icrosoft has moved to buy Ya­ Sen. John McCain. hoo with an unsolicited takeover Washington State voters will offer of $44.6 billion, seeking to get their chance to weigh in at join forces against Google in S a tu rd a y ’s party caucuses w h at w o u ld be th e b ig g e st around the state, mark the first Internet deal since the Tim e step in a complicated state pro­ W arner-AOL merger in 2001. cess of registering voters’ presi­ Education Donation dential preferences. National ra­ W ashington’s presidential Earl The Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods board voted to fire its executive director, Joseph Santos-Lyons, at a special meet­ ing Monday. The 12-1 decision came with one abstention. In a letter to the board prior to the vote, Santos-Lyons, who has held the position for six months, complained that he had not been given any information about complaints against him or given a chance to review and respond H IllH k ll.lliC I dio personal­ ity and phi­ la n th r o p is t Tom Joyner announced on M onday that he’s do­ n atin g $1.1 million to the National Education Association increase the number offully certified teachers in minor­ ity and h a rd -to -sta ff schools across the country. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama marked a turning point in the Democratic presidential contest on Tuesday, but barring an unlikely sweep of most of the 22 states voting, neither will have enough delegates to secure the nomination. preference primary is Feb. 19, but Democrats will elect nearly all their delegates through the caucus system. Republicans, on the other hand, will choose 51 percent of their delegates to the national convention based on results of the presidential primary. As part o f the preparation for the caucuses taking place Saturday from 1 to 3 p.m., D em ocrats have rented 30 schools to host voters in Clark County’s 180 precincts, with four to seven precinct cau­ cuses meeting at each school. Republicans rented space in 17 locations for their own cau­ cus meetings. Vancouver voters may visit clarkvotes.org to determ ine which caucus event to attend. More information can also be Mitt Romney found by calling Democratic Party rep re sen ta tiv e s Dan Ogden at 360-254-8886 or Marsha Allerat 360-254-2158, or Republican Party represen- tati ves M ike Gaston at 360-574- 0984 or Anna Miller at 360-600- 6668. Mardi Gras Kicks Off C la r in e tis t P e te F o u n ta in , dressed in a tunic as one o f King A rthur’s knights, looked frail but happy Tuesday morning as he led 100 members o f his Half-Fast W alking C lu b o n to U ptow n streets in what has becom e New O rleans’ unofficial opening of Mardi Gras. African Violence Spreads Hundreds of civilians have been estimated killed and a 1,000 more wounded in a coup attem pt this week by rebels in Chad. Bodies lay in streets littered with the hulks o f burned out tanks as soldiers blocked tw o bridges c ro s s in g in to n e ig h b o rin g Cam eroon, cutting off an escape route for thousands. photobv M ark W ashington TT he P orti . and O bserver Thirty-one-year-old James King argues that changes for the better in the Alberta neighborhood will start with the creation of more nonalcoholic activities geared to younger generations. Perceptions Collide on Alberta New survey shows support, hesitations by R aymond R endi . eman T he P ortland O bserver In response to a series of violent, alcohol- related incidents last spring, a nonprofit that supports artistic events on Northeast Alberta Street commissioned a survey of community attitudes toward celebrations on the thor­ oughfare. The Portland State University study, re­ leased Monday at Talisman Gallery, shows much more community support for Alberta than organizers expected. The pollsters had braced themselves for greater negativity in response to the violence. I Neighborhood Activist Fired Local Rep Picks Obama Rep. Northeast More than 80 percent of the survey's responses express enjoyment in attending Alberta's events and a sense that the street festivals benefit the local community. However, the survey also showed strong desire to make the events safer and more inviting to various types of people, which are sentiments especially echoed in the area's black community. A PSU survey almost two years ago showed that African Americans w ere less happy with the process of gentrification occurring on the street than their white neighbors. Although the latest survey doesn't ask respondents about ethnicity, conversations with community members reveal that percep­ tions about the street may continue along racial lines. “The art walks have been really good for the street, but the problem is getting every­ one involved." says Roslyn Hill, an African- American developer known for organizing against Alberta blight in the early ‘90s. Anthony Blake. 40. has lived in the Alberta neighborhood for decades and says he never sends back questionnaires. He worries that the survey missed important sentiments about the street. The latest PSU study analyzed 102 com­ pleted surveys out of 402 randomly sent throughout nearly 2.IXX) addresses on both sides of Alberta from Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard to Northeast 33rd Avenue, and from Prescott to Killingsworth Streets. con tin u ed on pane .43 Joseph Santos-Lyons to them. He also warned against an arbitrary, quick decision that could damage the neighborhood organization. Santos-Lyons is a Portland na­ tive who has worked extensively with neighborhood associations in the past. He was a national director of field organizing for Campus Ministries, was active in Oregon Action, the Coalition for a Livable Future, the Environ­ mental Justice Action Group and the Interstate Urban Renewal Advisory Group. The board spent almost three hours discussing his future in a closed-to-the-public executive session and board members de­ clined to comment after the dis­ missal, other than to release a statement saying that the action was "in the best interest of the Northeast Coalition and the com­ munity.” They also declined to hear public comments on the is­ sue. to the chagrin of some of Santo-Lyons’ supporters who attended the session and wrote e-mails. Geri Washington of Oregon Action said that discussing per­ sonnel issues in private was “to­ tally proper." However, she added, "As a resident who has I ived here for 54 years, when will 1 have input? My voice will not have been heard." Board chair Ron Laster said public testimony may be ac­ cepted possibly at some future time. The firing followed an em er­ gency m eeting of the organization' sexecutivecommit- tee last Thursday, also in execu­ tive session, called by Laster at the request of two other board members. The next day, Laster placed Santos-Lyons on admin­ istrative leave and scheduled the Monday board meeting. Both Santos-Lyons and the board members declined to make any additional public statements following the board vote Santos- Lyons will be paid for two weeks of accrued vacation time as sev­ erance pay. The coalition, a nonprofit cor­ poration. contracts with the city through the Portland Office of Neighborhixxl Involvement to continued on pane A2