11-08-2024  10:29 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

As a senator, Barack Obama led the charge last year to pass a bill allowing black farmers to seek new discrimination claims against the Agriculture Department. Now he is president, and his administration so far is acting like it wants the potentially budget-busting lawsuits to go away. The change isn't sitting well with black farmers who thought they'd get a friendlier reception from Obama after years of resistance from President George W. Bush. . . .

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At home in central Somalia, Abdiwali Abdiqadir Muse frequented a dusty, outdoor cinema after school, watched Bollywood films dubbed into his native Somali and, his mother says, "was wise beyond his years.'' Now Muse -- the sole surviving Somali pirate from the hostage-taking of an American ship captain -- is a world away in New York City to face what are believed to be the first piracy charges in the United States in more than a century. He smiled but said nothing Tuesday as he was led into a federal building under heavy guard. "The last time I saw him he was in his school uniform,'' the teen's mother, . . .

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Humphries talks technology issues with Denise Rolark Barnes, publisher of the Washington Informer in the nation's capitol.
Photo by Frederic Kendrick

Microsoft executives discussed their governmental initiatives and product offerings at the event billed as the first Diversity Media Briefing of 2009. The nearly a dozen attendees quizzed top Microsoft decision-makers on the company's strategic approach in view of the new Obama administration. . . .

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The architectural group responsible for San Francisco's Museum of the African Diaspora will design the new Black history museum on the National Mall in Washington. A Smithsonian Institution jury announced the pick Tuesday. The firm Freelon Adjaye Bond in association with SmithGroup proposed a layered, glowing structure topped with a bronze crown ... The institution will be called the National Museum of African American History and Culture. . . .

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  • Humboldt Speaks, a series of discussions
  • Job Resource Fair for Seniors and People with Disabilities
  • Parenting, ESL Classes
  • Clackamas Business Seminar
  • "Coveted: The David & Bathsheba Story"
  • Small Business Help
  • Free Lead-Safe Home Projects Workshop
  • Water Conservation Workshop
  • Attention Employers: Register for MHCC Career Fair Now
  • Banquet of HOPE
  • Elders in Action Benefit
  • Clackamas Business Seminar
  • Kidney Center Health Fest for African Americans
  • Bike-to-Work Commute Day Celebration
  • Humane Society Holds Photo Contest
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Learn Money Management
Healthier Without Wheat
It's No Longer Just Soul Food at 'Food as Art'
Wangari Maathai: 'The Challenge for Africa'
Library Expands Foreign Language Access
Friends of Library Hold Annual Sale
Alki Center Holds Sale
Seattle Animal Shelter Needs Doghouses
Women's Center Health & Wellness Fair
Writing Poetry for Beginners
Access Public Officials During "Coffee Hours"
Alki Art Fair Seeks Artists
CREATION Project Sponsors Black Artists

 

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Barbeque hobbyists and Seattle police officers Wayne Johnson and Kevin Stuckey compete in the Pike Place Market's Annual Barbecue Competition, Sunday April 5. Twenty-nine teams competed in the first event of the Pacific Northwest Barbeque Association season.  Shots Fired, Johnson and Stuckey's team, placed 10th overall.
Photo by Susan Fried

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REACH Takes Over Complex, Preserving 38 Affordable Units

The residents of Walnut Park can breathe easier this year. The elderly and disabled tenants of the 38-unit complex were facing a possible eviction next year when federal Section 8 housing contracts were set to expire. REACH Community Development stepped in to purchase the apartments and guarantee the extension of the Section 8 housing contract, which supplement the cost of rent for low-income and disabled people. . . .

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Police department eyes reorganization in face of huge budget cuts

Ret. Portland police officer Harry Jackson, a member of the Crisis Response Team, says the all-volunteer team is the "single most valuable tool to come out of community policing." The Portland Police Bureau is facing a 3 to 5 percent budget cut next year. . . .

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

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