05-22-2024  12:26 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

USA News

In Washington, protesters in McPherson Square and Freedom Plaza appear to be getting along with the police and the neighbors

NEW YORK (AP) -- Fed up with petty crime, the all-night racket of beating drums, the smell of human waste and the sight of trampled flowers and grass, police and neighbors are losing patience with some of the anti-Wall Street protests around the U.S.


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Samuel \"Joe" Wurzelbacher gained prominence in 2008 after questioning Obama policies

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -- Joe the Plumber is launching his bid for Congress in Ohio. A county Republican official tells The Associated Press that the man who became a household name during the 2008 presidential race will make his announcement Tuesday night.


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Testimony helps defense show that singer was looking for propofol on his own

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A nurse who treated Michael Jackson has testified the singer asked her to help him get the powerful anesthetic propofol.


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Hundreds of officers enter encampment with tear gas and beanbag rounds around 5 a.m.

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- Police in riot gear cleared anti-Wall Street protesters on Tuesday morning from the plaza in front of Oakland's City Hall where they had been camping for about two weeks, prompting health and safety concerns among city officials.

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Family says authorities haven't given case enough attention because 5-year-old is Black

PHOENIX (AP) -- Nearly two weeks after a 5-year-old girl seemingly vanished outside her suburban Phoenix home, police were no closer Monday to figuring out what happened to her as her family criticized the investigation.


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Says agency crossed line in assessment of Arab Americans in Michigan, Blacks in Georgia and other groups

NEW YORK (AP) -- The American Civil Liberties Union accused the FBI on Thursday of abusing increased powers it was given after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks by collecting and analyzing racial and ethnic demographic information across the country based on widespread stereotypes.

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City officials think supporting group chastised elsewhere could be economic driver

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -- On the same afternoon thousands of Hispanics in Alabama took the day off to protest the state's strict new immigration law, Mexican-born Francisco Mejia was ringing up diners' bills and handing containers piled with carnitas to drive-thru customers on the east side of Dayton.


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Preacher's fire and faith brought attention to the brutality of legalized discrimination

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -- Those who toiled alongside the Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth through the beatings and bombings of the civil rights era were among the hundreds gathered Monday to celebrate his legacy in the city he fought to liberate from segregation.


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Striking statistics likely a result of self-doubt, discouragement and misguided perceptions

With black unemployment reaching historic levels, banks laying off tens of thousands and law school graduates waiting tables, why aren't more African-Americans looking toward science, technology, engineering and math - the still-hiring careers known as STEM?


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Apple founder had issues with religion, "corrupt" colleagues and mainstream medicine

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- A new biography portrays Steve Jobs as a skeptic all his life - giving up religion because he was troubled by starving children, calling executives who took over Apple "corrupt" and delaying cancer surgery in favor of cleansings and herbal medicine.


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The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast