H uïïje ílurtían h (O k m u 'r May 20 Primary 0 of u * community service S p e c ia l E d itio n *■ See coverage inside ‘City of Roses’ Volume XXXVIII. N um ber 13 lhc Review www.oortlandohserve www.portlandobserver.com Committed to Cultural Diversity Wednesday • March 26. 2008 Rock Star Treatmentfor Obama Dozono Stays in Race Oregon visit earns coveted endorsement H by R aymond R endleman T he P ortland O bserver If Barack Obama’s first visit to Portland as presidential front-run­ ner was a hearty reception, his lat­ est at Memorial Coliseum became fit for a rock star. Obama followed his landmark speech on ending racial inequities Recession Hits Consumers Levees Strained Emergency management officials began evacuating communities along the White River in east- central Arkansas on Tuesday be­ cause a rural levee showed signs of weakening amid the region’s prolonged flooding. -1 Food Prices Skyrocket M ark in g a grim m ile ­ stone, a deter­ mined Presi­ dent Bush de­ clared M on­ day the lives o f 4.000 U.S. m ilitary men and women who have died in Iraq “were not lost in vain.” The W hite House signaled anew that additional troops w on’t be pulled out soon. Missile Parts Misplaced nation’s only Hispanic, governor. “We cannot wait to fix our schools, to fix our healthcare sys­ tem, to end the war in Iraq,” Obama said to thunderous applause. The excitement had been build­ ing since his campaign announced the visit hours following his Phila­ delphia speech, as evidenced by tickets selling out for the 12,000- seat coliseum the following day and by people lining up outside before dawn. Electricity in the arena before Obama’s entrance could be found emanating from devoted fans as We cannot wait to fix our schools, to fix our healthcare system, to end the war in Iraq. Consumer confidence sank to a five-year low in March as tight credit markets, falling housing values, rising prices and worsen­ ing job prospects deepened wor­ ries that the economy has fallen into recession. Bush: ‘Not Lost in Vain’ VOTE Established in 1970 Travel-agency owner Sho Dozono plans to stay in the race for Port- land m ayor despite los­ ing his pub­ lic financing to a judge’s ruling that he wrongly ac­ c e p te d a $27,295 cam­ paign contribution from a lobby­ ist hoping to entice him into the race. “I don’t think of quitting as an option,” he said. From subsistence farmers in Ec­ uador to French gourmets, con­ sumers worldwide face rising food prices in what analysts call a per­ fect storm of freak weather, dra­ m atic ch anges in the global economy, higher oil prices, lower food reserves, and growing de­ mand in China and India. Last Day to Register: April 29 www.oregonvotes.org 1-866-ORE- VOTES photo by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver Barack Obama earned the endorsement of Bill Richardson, the nation's only Hispanic governor, at a rally o f more than 12,000 in Portland's Memorial Coliseum on Friday. last week with another crowd-pleas­ ing testimony. Confronting criticism s from within, Obama’s address on that Tuesday in Philadelphia parallels Martin Luther King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” Friday's rally here was Obama’s “March on Wash­ ington," delivering an inventory of demands for U.S. politics that at­ tracted an endorsement from the Party Faithful Pledge Support -B arack Obama much as from the 360-degree speak­ ers bumping R&B. “Obama inspired me to come out and vote,” says Octavius Miller, a 40-something from St. Helens who has registered for the first time in his life. "It’s now possible to have one America, not just a white America, Asian America and Afri- continued on page A8 at party convention The allure of Obama, who could soon stood behind Obama’s vision “As an African-American woman, by R aymond R endleman become the first black president, to end politics as usual. After meet­ I see clearly how we must have a T he P ortland O bserver In the tight race between Sen. has captured the allegiance of a ing with her union this month, she voice in this.” Last becoming a delegate as part Hillary Clinton and Sen. Barack longtime political organizer in Port­ concluded that it’s her duty to par­ Obama, two local activists areclam- land Shirley Minor. She said the ticipate in every way possible dur­ of Jesse Jackson’s run in 1988, former state senator Bob Boyer of ing the crucial times ahead. oring for an invitation to this year’s decision wasn’t made lightly. “I want to make sure that people Portland sees a renewedexcitement Minor recognized the value of Democratic Party Convention this Clinton sharing her gender, but like me are represented,” she says. in the presidential contest. summer in Denver. He too is supporting Obama who he says embodies the rejec­ tion of divisions in politics. Like many black Americans, B oyer’s family began turning Democratic as the Roosevelt ad- continued on page A8 Preserving Local Homes, Neighborhoods Residents vow to save what little is left The U.S. mistakenly shipped to Taiwan four electrical fuses de­ signed for use on intercontinental ballistic missiles, but has since recovered them. The error is par­ ticularly disturbing. Pentagon of­ by R \ y mond R endleman ficials said, because of the sensi- I T he P ortland O bserver tivity of arms sales to Taiwan. \ Perhaps everyone wonders how which China regularly denounces residences end up squeezed be­ as provocative. tween factories or get left jutting out of a neighborhood into fields of parking. The short answer is not by acci- Grannies Arrested Portland’s Seriously Pissed-off ; Grannies were back at Northeast Broadway's Military Recruiting Center last week, after having taken several months off from their Fri- i day protests. Police arrested sev­ eral for putting red handprints on the center's windows to symbol- I ize the blood of those who have died in the war. photos by R ay mono R endit m an /T iie P orti . and O bse ry lr Pauline Bradford, a retired Peninsula School teacher, keeps a close watch on developments near her home in the Albina neighborhood. Neighborhood historian Roy Roos, who has released a volume on Irvington, prepares photographs for his "History o f Albina," a research book he expects to publish in about two months. dent. The historically African- line with acardealership, wouldn't day for her about a decade ago, she American Albina district of inner sell out for an entire barge-load of remembers getting hack from a va­ cation to find several more houses north and northeast Portland has a newly minted SUVs. Even as almost everything she ra/cd. Vehicle-based commerce and particularly large number of such loner houses, and each one had its knew from mid-century Albina fell light industrial dominate this tract own astonishing way of surviving down around her. even as develop­ that has been largely abandoned to ers year after year offered her I arger the roars of the freeway and nearby decades of urban renewal. E ig h ty -y e a r-o ld P au lin e sums for her property, Bradford coliseums. Bradford, whose house overlooks held on and encouraged others to continued on page A J Interstate 5 and shares a property do the same. On a particularly sad