04-25-2024  7:39 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Democratic presidential race between Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama has not only coaxed far more people to vote than in the past, it's also changed the mix of those showing up.
Democratic voters are typically younger, likelier to be female and more racially diverse this year than they were in 2004, according to exit polls of voters from both campaigns. The historic matchup features Clinton vying to become the first female president, Obama the first black.
Part of the difference could be because some 2004 primaries were held after Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., had already clinched his party's nomination, reducing the incentive for many voters to participate. This year's race is still raging, though Obama has emerged as the front-runner. Some of the difference could also reflect changes in the country's population.
Here are some ways the composition of Democrats voting has changed. Data from combined exit polls from 15 states that have held competitive Democratic primaries this year are compared with data from those same states four years ago.
RACE: In 2004, 70 percent of Democratic voters in these states were white, 17 percent black and 8 percent Hispanic. This year 63 percent have been white, 19 percent black and 13 percent Hispanic. Clinton has led in contests so far among whites, chiefly white women, but has faded in recent primaries. She has won strong support from Hispanics, while Obama has had huge margins among blacks. ...


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WASHINGTON (AP) -- A White House official who served as President Bush's middleman with conservatives and Christian groups resigned Friday after admitting to plagiarism. Twenty columns he wrote for an Indiana newspaper were determined to have material copied from other sources without attribution.
Timothy Goeglein, who has worked for Bush since 2001, acknowledged that he lifted material from a Dartmouth College publication and presented it as his own work in a column about education for The News-Sentinel in Fort Wayne. The newspaper took a closer look at his other columns and found many more instances of plagiarism. ....


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Willamette Week's Murmurs column reported on a story in The Skanner about a group of business…


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Charles Jordan
The first African American Portland city commissioner, Jordan was instrumental in creating "Portland's Living Room" – Pioneer Courthouse Square. But he is best known as the director of Portland Parks and Recreation, and is also a nationally recognized visionary for promoting parks. During ....


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Rep. Chip Shields and Sen. Margaret Carter

Rep. Chip Shields and Sen. Margaret Carter will host a town-hall forum on education from 10:30 a.m. to noon, Saturday March 8 at PCC's Cascade Campus Student services cafeteria, 705 N. Killingsworth Street. Special guests will include James Sager, Senior Policy Advisor on Education for Governor Kulongoski; Dana Hepper, Statewide Advocacy Coordinator for Stand For Children, and Algie Gatewood, President of Portland Community College Cascade Campus. The meeting will help set the agenda for Pre-K, K-12 and higher education for the 2009 legislative session. For more information, call Rep. Shields office at 503- 231-2564


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Should state Sen. Margaret Carter move from state government to city government? According to the buzz, that's a question being asked around town in everywhere from boardrooms to basketball courts. The Skanner can't reveal our sources on this, but it seems a group of business leaders have asked Sen. Carter to ditch her job in Salem and make a bid for the seat Commissioner Sam Adams is vacating in City Hall.


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Tuition-free private school turns low-income students into scholars

This summer, the first group of students to attend St. Andrew Nativity Middle School will graduate from high school — and all but one plan to continue their education, with most headed to a university.
Perhaps it isn't news that graduates from a private Catholic school make it into higher education, but St Andrew graduates are not typical private school students....


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Iraqi translator, Rev. Haynes lead debate on social costs of war

Dan Shea, a muralist and veteran with Vets for Peace chapter 72, shakes hands with a volunteer named Bucket at the 2007 People of Color Against the War workshop. Mic Crenshaw, an MC and founder of Global Fam stands in the background.

Mireaya Medina has noticed a shift in the way the Iraq War is treated in the media. Suddenly, now that election season is in full swing, coverage has tilted to the weak state of the U.S. economy. ...


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After 10 losses, Clinton counting on Ohio, Texas, superdelegates

After Tuesday's election results in Wisconsin and Hawaii, Sen. Barack Obama increased his lead in pledged delegates over Sen. Hillary Clinton, with his 10th win in a row.
The polling group  Zogby reported Wednesday, that nationally Obama has a 14 point lead over Clinton. Also according to the Zogby poll, voters currently favor Obama over McCain. Yet matched against Clinton, the poll showed voters chose McCain.
But if Sen. Obama seems to have harnessed the momentum, — for now — Sen. Clinton still has big wins in California, New York and Massachussetts in her corner. And with races in Texas ...


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Book It All Over Repertory actors Shermona Mitchell and Antonia Darlene bring to life the story "Minty: A Story of Young Harriet Tubman" Saturday, Feb. 16 at the Central Library. In this scene Old Ben tells Antonia to follow the North Star to freedom.


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The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast