11-09-2024  10:17 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Forty years after the Fair Housing Act, work remains to be done

Moloy Good, the council's executive director and Jill Fuglitzer, of the Coalition for a Livable Future, will discuss what's happening in Portland and Sherrill Frost-Brown from National Fair Housing Alliance will discuss fair housing issues arising across the country. The event will culminate in an award ceremony that will honor the winner of the 2008 children's poster competition and other fair housing heroes.


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Annual June culture festival seeks talent, volunteers, vendors

Despite talk of a recession, Cheryl Roberts is optimistic that things still will be good in the North and Northeast neighborhood come June. The chair and chief fund-raiser for the annual Good in the NeighborHood festival says it's time to start finding the ingredients for Portland's premier multicultural food and music celebration. Roberts is going to need volunteers, entertainers, vendors and a grand marshal....

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Wide variety of cinematic stories are told during nine day event

This is a screen shot from the film "Yokes and Chains," a documentary about a Camano Island family who has traveled around the country, as well as historic slave ports around the world, apologizing for slavery. Local filmmaker Michael Lienau will be in attendance at the screening of the film at 4:30 p.m., Monday, April 14. ...


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Three finalists could mean prosperity or ruin for organization

Three candidates have emerged as finalists for the national NAACP's top position, the Free Press has learned.
But an undercurrent of discontent over the choices of a special NAACP search committee may force the nation's oldest civil rights organization to find an alternative from within its own upper ranks.
According to sources who wish to remain anonymous, the three finalists for president and chief executive officer are:
• Benjamin Todd Jealous, 35, a former executive director of the National Newspaper Publishers Association and now president of the Rosenberg Foundation in California;
• The Rev. Frederick D. Haynes III, 47, a Dallas megachurch leader;
• Alvin Brown, 37, a former White House senior advisor to President Bill Clinton and urban policy director for Sen. Hillary Clinton's campaign.
Contacted at the NAACP's Baltimore headquarters this week, Richard McIntire, a spokesperson for the national organization, would neither confirm nor deny the names. However, he did say the first opportunity for the NAACP's 64-member board to take any action would be at its May 16 and 17 meeting in Baltimore.
Leaks have sprung from what was to be a highly guarded process because of the antipathy with which the three finalists are viewed by many insiders....


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"Where are We?" becomes the question as King"s legacy is examined

Over the past 40 years since the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., extensive advancements have been made in the Black community.
 For example, the African-American high school graduation rate has increased by more than 214 percent and the college graduation rate for African-Americans has increased by more than 400 percent, according to the Institute for Policy Studies in a special report released last week.
However, at the rate of the advancements over the past 40 years, in most instances, it would take more than another decade for Blacks to catch up with the current graduation rate of Whites


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An Insider"s Tale of the Rise, Fall and Rebirth of West Coast Hip Hop

"I'm about to blow the top off of everything I saw," writes Bruce Williams, longtime friend and former right-hand man to successful rapper and record executive, Dr. Dre, one of the best hip-hop mega producers of all time and the brains behind the record label Aftermath.
In "Rollin' With Dre: The Unauthorized Account," by Williams with Donnell Alexander, Dre's former go-to guy gives readers an inside look at the roller coaster that is hip-hop culture."
You can see Williams in the flesh at noon, Saturday, April 12 at Barnes & Noble Bookstore, 300 Andover Park W., Suite 200 in Tukwila.


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Mahki Sanders 12 and Malcolm Tyson 11, read some of the biography of Paul Robeson at the 11th annual Paul Robeson Peace and Justice Awards,  April 5 at the Montlake Community Center. The event is sponsored by Mother's for Police Accountability and honors community members who fight for justice,  This years honorees included the ACLU: Voter Restoration Project-Coalition Partner of the Year; Christie Hedman, of Washington State Defenders Association-Lawyer if the Year; Black Student Union, Foster High School-Youth of the Year and Jenna Stephens, Volunteer of the Year.


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Bulletin Board

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


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Job Seeking with a Twist

Jobtini
Job Seeking with a Twist

May 21 2008


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MISHAWAKA, Indiana (AP) _ A political tempest over Barack Obama's remark about bitter small-town voters who "cling to guns or religion" has given rival Hillary Rodham Clinton a new chance to court working class Democrats 10 days before Pennsylvanians hold a primary that she must win to keep her presidential campaign alive.
Obama tried to quell the furor Saturday, explaining his remarks while also conceding he had chosen his words poorly.
"If I worded things in a way that made people offended, I deeply regret that," Obama said in an interview with the Winston-Salem (North Carolina) Journal.
But the Clinton campaign fueled the controversy in every place and every way it could, hoping charges that Obama is elitist and arrogant will resonate with the swing voters the candidates are vying for not only in Pennsylvania, but in upcoming primaries in Indiana and North Carolina as well.
Political insiders differed on whether Obama's comments, which came to light Friday, would become a full-blown political disaster that could prompt party leaders to try to steer the nomination to Clinton even though Obama has more pledged delegates. Clinton supporters were eagerly hoping so.
They handed out "I'm not bitter" stickers in North Carolina, and held a conference call of Pennsylvania mayors to denounce the Illinois senator. In Indiana, Clinton did the work herself, telling plant workers in Indianapolis that Obama's comments were "elitist and out of touch." ...


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