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Northwest News

Presidential candidate promises to reenergize African American vote

Two days before joining Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and former President Bill Clinton in Selma, Ala. to remember the civil rights marchers killed 42 years ago by riot police on Bloody Sunday, presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., apologized to members of the Black press for not speaking to publishers and editors sooner; but said he is dedicated to winning over African American voters.


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Nonprofit adds cafe, recital hall with money from building sale, grant

The boarded-up, single pane, leaky windows at the Ethos Music Center are now a thing of the past, says Director Charles Lewis. The nonprofit music education center, at the corner of Killingsworth Street and Williams Avenue, is in the midst of a cosmetic remodel after receiving a $20,000 storefront improvement grant from the Portland Development Commission.
More extensive renovations also are in store for Ethos now that the group's sale of the old Masonic Temple, two blocks away from Ethos at 5308 N. Commercial Ave., has gone through.


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The U.S. Congress is expected to give special recognition to the Black Press on its 180th anniversary during the annual observance of Black Press Week, March 14-17.
A congressional resolution introduced by the leadership of the Congressional Black Caucus will be presented to officials of the National Newspaper Publishers Association Foundation, sponsors of Black Press Week, and the National Newspaper Publishers Association, the trade group for the more than 200 Black newspapers. The resolution will cite the historic role of the Black Press as the strong, influential voice of the Black community beginning with the anti-slavery movement and the founding of the first Black newspaper, Freedom's Journal on March 17, l827.


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AUSTIN, Texas — Dennis Johnson, former player for the Seattle SuperSonics and the Boston Celtics died Thursday, Feb. 22, after collapsing at the end of his developmental team's practice. He was 52.
Johnson, coach of the Austin Toros, was unconscious and in cardiac arrest when paramedics arrived at Austin Convention Center. Paramedics tried to resuscitate him for 23 minutes before he was taken to a hospital and pronounced dead.
"He was one of the most underrated players in the history of the game, in my opinion, and one of the greatest Celtic acquisitions of all time," said former Boston teammate Danny Ainge, now the Celtics' executive director of basketball operations.


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The Trail Blazers honored six Portlanders as part of the team's month-long Black History celebration. The Trail Blazers presented the honorees with a ticket section and a grant for $500 to donate to the charity of their choice. The 2007 roster of Trail Blazers Black History Month honorees includes:
Judge Ancer Lee Haggerty, Gregory Gudger , The Reverend Alcena Elaine Caldwell Boozer, Garfield de Bardelaben, Kenneth W. Berry, Antonio Harvey.


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A new report by the Democratic Policy Committee shows that President George W. Bush's recent budget engages in gimmickry to distract from the fact that he is once again cutting funding for education, housing, health care, economic development and other programs critical to the African American community.


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You wouldn't know it by the laidback atmosphere inside Bradley-Angle House's new Healing Roots Center, but this North Portland community center for Black women and children experiencing domestic violence is pretty revolutionary.
"There's nothing else like this in the country," says Healing Roots Program Director Galadriel Mozee. "We're unique."
Of course, being on the cutting edge is nothing new for Bradley-Angle House. The 32-year-old Portland nonprofit was the first domestic violence shelter on the West Coast, and recently made headlines for its new Allies for Hope program, which brings men into the campaign against domestic violence.


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Dova Moore, 6, signs a 50-foot replica of the preamble to the constitution at the Festival for the Constitution, held Sunday, March 4 at the Seattle Center. The Backbone Campaign hosted an afternoon of speakers, music and art at the event.

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An idea conceived in the cradle of King County's civil rights movement became reality today as the Metropolitan King County Council unanimously adopted a new design for King County's official logo: an image of the county's namesake, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

"This was a dream introduced by the people of King County, who nurtured the dream when it would have been very easy to give up because of the anger and criticism the dream caused," said Council Chair Larry Gossett, prime sponsor of the ordinance. "When I joined the County Council, the only recognition that this county was named after America's foremost civil rights leader was a plaque placed above the line of sight of people entering the courthouse. Today's vote means that for future generations, we will have a daily visual reminder of Dr. King -- a reminder of who he was, what he stood for, and what we want the county we live in to strive to achieve."


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The African Americans Reach and Teach Health Ministry, a host of churches and community organizations, will sponsor a forum on HIV/AIDS in observance of the second annual Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day.
The free forum will be held from 3 to 6 p.m. Saturday, March 10 at the Langston Hughes Performance Center, 104 17th Ave. S. A buffet meal will be provided, as well as child care for children age 3 and older.


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The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast