05-01-2024  11:58 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Two-time winner to be honored at Governor"s Gold Awards dinner

Tony Swan is not famous. He lives in a small apartment in North Portland. He takes public transport when he visits his friends. Yet the modest guy with a voice that any late night dj would envy, is the proud owner of not one, but two Olympic Gold medals.
In October, Tony Swan won a gold medal in the doubles bowling at the Special Olympic World Games in Shanghai, China. He also earned a gold medal for rollerskating at the 1991 Special Olympics games, held in Minneapolis. Next month, Swan will be honored with the Shriver Greatness Award at the Governor's Gold Awards ...


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PROPER'S THANKSGIVING FEAST ...  TAKE A HIKE.....   PORTLAND FARMERS MARKET....    BOTTLED WATER ...    TUESDAY MORNING YOGA ...    WRITERS IN THE SCHOOLS...    TEEN ART....    "AN UNREASONABLE MAN" ....     SELMA JAMES...    PCC PANTHERS....    KWANZAA MARKETPLACE....    SUNDAY CINEMA CLASSIC....


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Raising money for repairs, entertainment acts bring out local talent

The way Wanda Broadous sees it, if the only remaining African American fraternal organization in the city is lost, yet another piece of Portland's Black heritage will be lost with it.
But unfortunately, the organization's home – which is open to the public – is rundown. Aging and weather-worn, most of its windows boarded-up for nearly two decades, the Billy Webb Elks Lodge building, 6 N. Tillamook off Williams Avenue, is in need of repair. It's also in need of community support, says Broadous, who has been commissioned to increase participation at the old community hall. ...


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Award-winning Seattle Guitarist Michael Powers helps Shima True 3, play a shoe box guitar she made into the microphone at a Creativity Workshop featuring children's book writer and illustrator Javak Steptoe and Michael Powers, Sunday Nov. 18 at the Douglas Truth Library.

 


 


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The National Association of Minority Contractors of Oregon and TriMet hosted an award celebration Nov. 14 to mark the success of TriMet's efforts to involve minority and emerging firms in its major construction projects -- the I-205/Portland Mall MAX Light Rail Project and the Washington County Commuter Rail project. To date, more than $14 million has gone to local DBE (Disadvantaged Business Enterprise) firms from these projects. ...


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JENA, La. (AP) -- Legal proceedings against a Black teenager among a group whose prosecution in the beating of a White classmate led to a massive civil rights protest must be open to the public, a judge ruled Wednesday.
Because the charges involve violence, all proceedings against Mychal Bell -- including hearings, the trial and sentencing -- will be public even though Bell is being tried as a juvenile, state District Judge Thomas Yeager decided ....


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About 30 percent of inmates who leave Oregon prisons are back within three years. It's been like that for a decade.
Each repeat crime costs taxpayers up to $200,000 for law enforcement, court costs and incarceration. Reducing the recidivism rate -- repeat crimes by released offenders -- could save taxpayers millions of dollars, cut crime and give ex-offenders a better shot at a new life.
The cost-benefit analysis emerged this week during the first meeting of the Re-entry Council, appointed by Gov. Ted Kulongoski to address the problem ....


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BALTIMORE (NNPA) - Frances Murphy II, the first woman to chair the Afro-American Newspapers board of directors, the publisher emeritus of the Washington Afro-American and popular columnist at the Baltimore Afro-American and granddaughter of the newspaper's founder, has died. She was 85 ....


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A competitor in the Ethos Music Center's B-Boy Battle shows off his moves on the floor of the Reed College Student Union on Saturday night, where hundreds gathered to watch breakdancers compete. Saturday's event was a fund-raiser for the nonprofit Ethos, as well as for its director, Charles Lewis, who is raising money for his bid for City Commissioner.
Photo by Jenny Konopinksi 


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Proposed laws could curtail civil rights in Oregon for minorities

Eric Ward, the field director with the Center for New Community, a faith-based civil rights organization sited in Chicago;  believes the Oregon initiatives are part of a nationwide trend toward pointing to immigrants and refugees as the cause of all kinds of social and economic problems.
"In the wake of the collapse of the national bipartisan immigration reform legislation, we notice that the anti-immigration movement has grown ever more powerful and more hateful," Ward told the Skanner. 
"It is not finding any real solutions for the forced migration that really is a global phenomenon – including here in the USA. But what it is doing is scapegoating immigrants and refugees for the real problems we face — the disparity in wealth in this country, for example.
Ward, who attended Lane Community College in Eugene and graduated from the University of Oregon, said if Initiative 112 were to be passed it would erode civil rights for all Americans – and particularly people of color.
"It will have a substantial impact on African Americans and further disenfranchise many African Americans," he said. "One of the largest impacts of anti-immigrant legislation is that where it has passed African American participation in elections has fallen by around 5 percent." ....


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The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast