11-16-2024  10:13 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

USA News

Two are serving life sentences for the crime that left a grieving father and mother to move on in life without their only daughter

Manning and Maretta Jeter might never fully recover from losing their daughter, but they know Marisha would be happy to know her memory is living on in the form of the Marisha Sharay Jeter Scholarship Fund -- an annual award that's helping give other young scholars the college experience she never had.


READ MORE

Nearly seven in 10 say the year gone by was a bad one, more than double those who consider it a success

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Americans are hopeful for what 2012 will bring for their families and the country, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll, though most say 2011 was a year they would rather forget.


READ MORE

One man's story of a chance encounter in a Jackson hospital waiting room with a man he'd never met but who knew just about every detail of his story except his name

VICKSBURG, Miss. (AP) -- A lot of people who have heard the story over the years still don't believe it, Wallace Goza says of his surviving a fall from the top of an electrical pole 48 years ago.


READ MORE

'The whole point of the project is to ask the African diaspora, people with any African background, to help us identify the names because the names are so ethno-linguistically specific'

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Almost two centuries before there was a man named Obama in the White House, there was a man named Obama shackled in the bowels of a slave ship. There is no proof that the unidentified Obama has ties to President Barack Obama. All they share is a name. But that is exactly the commonality that Emory University researchers hope to build upon as they delve into the origins of Africans who were stolen from their homes and sold.


READ MORE

Yet Fox was alone among the cable news networks in losing viewers - down 8 percent in prime time and 5 percent for the full day

NEW YORK (AP) -- It was a good year in the ratings for cable news networks. Or a rough one. It depends on your perspective. Fox News Channel continued its dominance, with an average viewership that exceeded CNN and MSNBC combined in prime time and for the entire day, the Nielsen ratings company said this week.


READ MORE

While Wells' name endures on a grade school and a professorship in the city, the monument will aim to reflect the full legacy of a woman who was born into slavery in Mississippi

To mark the 150th anniversary of Wells' birth in 2012, an effort is under way to build a sculpture to honor her legacy at the site of the housing development and renew her relevance for future generations.


READ MORE

A trial has been pushed back to March to discuss several issues, including a claim by the accredited schools that it's impossible to comply

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Nearly one-third of St. Louis students would change schools if they were allowed to take advantage of a contested state law that allows them to transfer to better-performing districts, according to a study conducted as part of a lawsuit. If that happened, the district would have to pay millions in tuition and transportation costs.


READ MORE

U.S. officials from the State Department and White House plan to continue a series of secret meetings with Taliban representatives in Europe and the Persian Gulf region next year

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Obama administration hopes to restore momentum in the spring to U.S. talks with the Taliban insurgency that had reached a critical point before falling apart this month because of objections from Afghan President Hamid Karzai, U.S. and Afghan officials said.


READ MORE

Barnes expects the list of legislative victories that she and others pulled off amid the hemorrhaging economy will become more clear in the coming year

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Melody Barnes is leaving as White House chief domestic policy adviser at a time when President Barack Obama's administration is getting little notice for its work on the home front to fix the struggling economy.


READ MORE

The transfer businesses are a crucial lifeline to Somalis in Africa, where even $100 to $200 a month from immigrants in Minnesota could buy enough food to prevent starvation

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Money-transfer businesses that cater to Somali immigrants in Minnesota stopped accepting money bound for the famine-stricken East African country Thursday, a day before a key bank was due to stop processing the transactions.


READ MORE

Recently Published by The Skanner News

  • Default
  • Title
  • Date
  • Random

theskanner50yrs 250x300