07-02-2024  8:39 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Despite losing longtime family residence, Cox-Tanner still in business

Jerome Cox-Tanner may down, but he certainly isn't out.
The longtime funeral director has moved to a new office at 328 NE Failing St. Suite 102 and his holding a community musical celebration this Saturday to help raise funds for the director's legal expenses and the ongoing operation of Cox-Tanner's business.
The celebration will be from 4 to 6 p.m. at Immaculate Heart Church, 2926 N. Williams Ave. on May 8.

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PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- The best indication of how strong the tea is brewing in Oregon this year may come May 18 in a Republican contest to run against Democratic U.S. Rep. David Wu in the northwest corner of the state.

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That's what the Blacks in Science Ron McNair Camp-In at Pacific Science Center is all about, says vice president Ellen Letvin – to get young people excited about science.

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PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -- Thousands of demonstrators marched through downtown Portland on Saturday to protest Arizona's new illegal immigration law, which requires authorities to question people about their immigration status.

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It would be an understatement to say bicycles get a lot of attention in this town. But the attention is mainly White attention, especially when it comes to hardcore bike commuters.
And the Community Cycling Center has set out to find out why.

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Sunrise March 15, 1951 -- Sunset April 24, 2010

Sunrise March 15, 1951 -- Sunset April 24, 2010. Memorial Services: Monday, May 10, 2010 11:00 am, Bethel AME. Church, 5828 NE 8th, Portland OR. Jerome Cox Tanner, Funeral Director, 503 281 4891

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Grad student took offense to theology school's spring break event

Zora Elisa said she was a bit troubled when she saw the crack house on the lawn of the seminary school she attends. She wasn't the only one; several other students attending Multnomah University theology school in East Portland were also troubled by what they saw.

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Ron Sims says sustainability must include everyone

Ron Sims, deputy director of HUD, came to Portland, Oregon, to explain why $8 billion in community development funds will go to projects that link urban and rural communities and help lift poor people and people of color out of poverty.

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Walter Kelsaw had a story in his head that he just couldn't shake. It was pieces of his life on the streets of Portland, people he once knew, and the lifestyles they used to lead -- plus a good dose of fiction in between. Kelsaw has now joined a growing army of independent book publishers, authors who've had either bad luck or no luck getting publishing houses to pay attention to their work.

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Are small schools succeeding?

Two of the seven Portland Public Schools board members voted against continuing with the proposed high school redesign  March 9 – educator and former Latino Network President, Martin Gonzalez, and Portland State University Professor Dilafruz Williams.
Gonzalez told The Skanner that while he agrees that Portland's high schools are segregated and vastly unequal, he disagrees with the idea that students of color will be better off in large comprehensives.
"The outcomes are not there," Gonzalez said. "Grant High School is a large comprehensive with all the characteristics they say every school should have. And 95 percent of White students are meeting or exceeding the academic benchmarks in reading but only 45 percent of African American students are meeting or achieving the benchmark.

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