11-04-2024  4:46 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

"Human Right" police officer Alice Kungu, escorts four prisoners through the streets of Seattle during an anti-war protest on March 19, marking the fourth anniversary of the start of the Iraq War.  Thousands of people marched in Seattle and in Portland this week to protest the war and to call for a complete withdrawal of troops from Iraq. The protestors in both cities joined hundreds of thousands of anti-war demonstrators who marched in cities throughout the world on March 18 and 19 to protest the America's continuing involvement and support of military action in Iraq, as well as the Bush Administration's recent threats against Iran.


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Journalist and author Jack Hamann kneels next to a grave in Discovery Park's  military graveyard, where his investigation into the wrongful court martial of 43 Black soldiers during World War II in Seattle began nearly 20 years ago. Hamann is being honored as a Horace Mann Award recipient later this month.


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Columbia Building will house school during construction

Students at Seattle's New School won't have to go far while their new site is being built.
Seattle Public Schools announced last week that the nearby Columbia Building will house the New School while its permanent South Shore site is under construction.
Located less than three miles north of the permanent South Shore site, the Columbia Building allows Seattle Public to keep the New School in Southeast Seattle, helping to maintain the school's connection with the Rainier Valley community.
"Every decision is driven by academic achievement," SPS Chief Academic Officer Carla Santorno said. "We are particularly pleased that locating the New School at the Columbia facility while the permanent building is being constructed will keep our students close to their families and their community."


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Welcoming new Oregon Shakespeare Festival Artistic Director Bill Rausch are, left to right, Nancy Tait, outgoing board president, Board Treasurer Anjelica Ruppe and Noell Webb, board member. Rausch announced the 2008 season at his first meeting with the board last week

Incoming Oregon Shakespeare Festival Artistic Director Bill Rauch recently unveiled his inaugural season. 
While continuing to maintain a strong commitment to Shakespeare and American classics, Rauch has also put his unique stamp on the playbill by including an epic text outside the Western canon, two new plays, a world premiere production that will head to Washington, D.C.'s Kennedy Center in July, and the first-ever 20th-century play to be produced on OSF's outdoor Elizabethan Stage. Joining OSF on the 11 artistic teams is an unusually high number of guest directors and designers new to OSF.


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Miss Washington, Miss Oregon compete for Miss USA title this weekend

Leilani Jones of Washington and Sharitha McKenzie of Oregon.
Of the eight African American women competing in this year's Miss USA Pageant, two of them are from the Pacific Northwest.

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Like many cities, the District of Columbia has a crime problem. It is getting worse, not better, as…

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WASHINGTON -- Republican support for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales eroded Sunday as three key senators sharply questioned his honesty over last fall's firings of eight federal prosecutors. Additionally, two Democrats joined the list of lawmakers calling for Gonzales' ouster.
Several Republicans also urged President Bush to allow sworn testimony from his top aides about their role in dismissing the U.S. attorneys -- a standoff threatening to result in Capitol Hill subpoenas of White House officials.
The embattled attorney general was facing the toughest test of his two-year tenure at the Justice Department with the release of documents suggesting he was more involved with the firings than he indicated earlier.
Democrats have accused the Justice Department and the White House of purging the prosecutors for political reasons. The Bush administration maintains the firings were not improper because U.S. attorneys are political appointees....


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Listening to Willie Mae Hart talk about her life, and the life of her ancestors, is like opening a book you can't put down.
A few weeks shy of her 91st birthday, Willie Mae's memory is as sharp as any 20-year-old's and her story has all the makings of a classic novel.
First, there are the characters: great-grandmother Sarah Reid Moseley was born a slave, experienced the terror of the Civil War, raised 13 children and lived more than 100 years before passing her legacy on to Willie Mae, the family historian. Another great-grandmother, "Grandma Martha," was White, of Irish descent, and her family — including her own identical twin sister — disowned her after Martha married a Black man
Then there are the historical chapters: When John F. Kennedy ran for president, Willie Mae and her friend, Beatrice Mott-Reed, hosted a picnic for the senator at Jansen Beach, to give Portland's African American voters a chance to speak to the senator and share their views. Willie Mae remembers JFK as a very laidback man, who propped himself up in the grass on his elbows to drink a Coca Cola, and talked to the people as if he had all the time in the world.


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For 10 years, scholarship has celebrated students who dedicate time to community service

Jefferson High graduate Neal Brown, class of 2000, is a perfect example of a Neil Kelly scholarship recipient.
While attending Jefferson, Brown said he mentored younger students at Self Enhancement, Inc., volunteered for Habitat for Humanity, while also working a part-time job at UPS.

"That's the way I was raised … to help other people," he said. "I knew if I didn't work hard, I wouldn't make it through school."
When Brown was applying for colleges, he knew scholarships would have to be part of the equation. The 12 scholarships he received, including the Neil Kelly Memorial Scholarship, helped Brown earn a sociology degree from the University of Portland.


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Pastor expresses relief that arson did not cause devastating blaze

With excavation of the Morning Star Missionary Baptist Church site already underway, Deacon Lee Magee says he can finally close a troubling chapter in his life.
After a month-long investigation into the fire that destroyed the 88-year-old church, officials announced last week that there were "no detectable signs of arson." They said the exact cause of the fire is "undetermined."
Magee said he's relieved by the investigation's results.
"I definitely did not want it to be arson. Now I can move on," Magee said.
Portland Fire Capt. Rich Stenhouse said he would like nothing more than to pinpoint the course of the fire's path through the 88-year-old church.
"But I can't do that," he said. "I find that immensely frustrating."


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