03-28-2024  7:46 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

President-elect Barack Obama on Saturday named New York City's housing commissioner to his Cabinet, turning to a former Clinton administration aide to help deal with an issue at the heart of the U.S. economic crisis.
If confirmed by the Senate, Shaun Donovan will lead the Housing and Urban Development Department at a time when the mortgage crisis is being blamed for the financial market turmoil that has dragged the U.S. into a recession.
Obama praised Donovan's record in New York City ..."We can't keep throwing money at the problem, hoping for a different result. We need to approach the old challenge of affordable housing with new energy, new ideas, and a new, efficient style of leadership. We need to understand that the old ways of looking at our cities just won't do ...


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Roll over Beethoven -- Chuck Berry's house earns national recognition.
The modest one-story red-brick house in St. Louis where the rock 'n' roll pioneer lived for eight years in the 1950s has been added to the National Register of Historic Places, city officials confirmed Monday....
Berry and his wife bought the house in the city's Ville neighborhood in 1950, and lived there until 1958, when the family moved to a larger home, also in St. Louis. It was in the house that he refined his guitar style and wrote and rehearsed many of his classic songs -- "Maybellene," "Johnny B. Goode," "Roll Over Beethoven" and "Sweet Little Sixteen" ...


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ATLANTA (AP) -- The racial gap in colon cancer death rates is widening, a new report says, and experts partly blame Blacks' lower screening rates and poor access to quality care.
Colon and rectal cancer death rates are now nearly 50 percent higher in Blacks than in Whites, according to American Cancer Society research being released Monday.
The gap has been growing since the mid-1970s, when colon cancer death rates for the two racial groups were nearly equal.
"We have seen this enormous progress in Whites. We could be seeing the same progress in Blacks, if we could overcome disparities in access to health care," said Elizabeth Ward, who oversees surveillance and health policy at the cancer society.
Colorectal cancer is the third leading cancer killer in the United States. About 50,000 Americans will die of the disease this year, the cancer society estimates ...


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Activists worried over city's decision to reorganize reform effort

In May of 2006, Oregon Action held the first of five listening sessions on the practice of racial profiling among Portland police. More than two years, dozens of public meetings and thousands of traffic stops later, some say the problem has not gone away. And as the Racial Profiling Committee is dissolved into the newly formed city Human Rights Commission, it remains to be seen if the efforts will produce tangible results. Leading some of this criticism is Ron Williams, the organizer for Oregon Action's multiphase Community Campaign to End Racial Profiling. He says motorists are still being stopped for Driving While Black, despite a commitment by the city to eliminate the illegal practice that many in the police bureau still deny occurs ...


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But class availability, inequity remain a problem district-wide

Despite positive academic results from many of Portland's small schools, the educational experiments mounted in mostly minority schools remain a hot point for the district's critics. Test scores show that small schools have boosted academic achievement for many students, but those schools offer far fewer class options -- particularly when it comes to college level credit opportunities. At the same time plunging enrollment has led to the closure of at least one school within a school, and threatens the future of others ...


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Business association plans gala, new initiatives along MLK Boulevard

North and Northeast Portland businesses are barely scraping by during this tough economic season.
However, armed with a new development grant, the North/Northeast Business Association hopes to jumpstart local enterprise with a special awards event as well as fresh resources for small business owners along the Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard corridor.
"What we're doing is we're bringing in a majority of the business owners that have gone above and beyond the call of duty," said marketing and business outreach director RJ Floristan. At a gala event Dec. 5 ... the group will bestow special awards to area business owners, and present information about N/NEBA's new initiatives funded by its new state of Oregon Transforming Main Street grant.
"Our focus is the revitalization of this community," Floristan says. "When you drive down Sandy Boulevard you see Welcome to Hollywood, when you drive in the Northwest, you see Welcome to the Pearl District, well when you drive down MLK we want you to be welcomed to the Soul of Portland District ...


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AIDS Awareness Training ...
Landlord Study Hall ...
Support for Lions Medical Work ...
Vision into Action Coalition ...


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Bulletin Board

What's happening for you in Portland this week? Read here a day-by-day diary of free community events to fill your spare time. For a full calendar please click on "Read the complete article" below ….


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Bulletin Board

What's happening for you in Seattle this week? Read here a day-by-day diary of free community events to fill your spare time. For a full calendar please click on "Read the complete article" below ….


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Hope Rally ....
Jobs Meeting ...
Special Election Candidates ...
Students: Join ACT-SO ...


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The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast