11-13-2024  4:28 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Faced with mid-life career changes, workers learn new job skills

After 31 years in the airline reservation industry, and one-and-a-half years from retirement, Chris Siapicas' job at United Airlines was outsourced and his pension forfeited. Instead of planning his retirement, Siapicas was left looking for a new career....Siapicas entered the web development program in summer 2005 and will graduate this spring with honors.


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Event aims to build community among people of African descent

A celebration for people of African descent from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 25 at Seattle Central Community College's Student Activity Center, 1718 Broadway St., Seattle.


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If you like Reggae music, you won't want to miss the Northwest World Reggae Festival, sponsored by Conscious Productions and Mutant Audio, March 23 and 24 in Portland and Eugene.
Legendary reggae band The Abyssinians will headline. The March 23 show starts at 8 p.m. in the Wonder Ballroom, 128 N.E. Russell Ave., Portland. This show is all ages with ages 21 and over in the balcony area. The March 24 show will be held at Agate Hall in Eugene and is open to all ages.


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Grand jury found insufficient evidence

JACKSON, Miss. -- A grand jury declined to issue an indictment in the 1955 slaying of Black Chicago teenager Emmett Till, who was kidnapped from his uncle's home in the Mississippi Delta and shot to death after allegedly whistling at a White woman.
The grand jury in Leflore County wrapped up its work this past week and issued a "no bill" against Carolyn Bryant, the widow of one of two White men originally acquitted of Till's death. A "no bill" means the grand jury found insufficient evidence existed for an indictment on a criminal charge.
Documents made public Tuesday show prosecutors sought a manslaughter charge.
Till was kidnapped from the Leflore County town of Money in 1955. Three days later, the 14-year-old's mutilated body was found in the Tallahatchie River.
Roy Bryant, Carolyn Bryant's husband, and his half brother, J.W. Milam, were acquitted of the crime by an all-White jury. The two men later confessed in an interview with Look magazine. Till had been accused of whistling at Carolyn Bryant, and some witnesses have said a woman's voice could be heard at the scene of the abduction.
The FBI reopened the case in 2004 but decided in 2006 not to press charges.


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Church Recovering After Blaze

Members of the New Generation Revival Church, which also was destroyed in the fire that claimed the Morning Star Mission Baptist Church last week, rise to their feet as their pastor, the Rev. Johnasen Pack, not pictured, gives an impassioned address to the multi-church congregation on Sunday, Feb. 11. Pictured from left are Madison Jackson, 9, Dana Jackson, an unidentified woman, and Mother Robinson.

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Officials say closure shouldn't affect other retail development

It was once a beacon of hope for a stretch of road blighted with empty storefronts, but after 10 years in business, the Adidas retail shop at the corner of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Alberta Street is closing.
Local media broke the news last Tuesday, and Adidas sent internal memos to employees this week notifying them of the closure.
"As a neighbor, it's sad that an anchor tenant is leaving, especially since it was such a big deal when they moved in there," said Jennifer Jardee-Borquist, president of the King Neighborhood Association. "We haven't discussed it as a neighborhood association yet … but, personally, most of the neighbors I know don't shop there. In the seven years I've lived here I've only shopped there once."
Adidas representatives wouldn't say why the store is closing, only that it will close in the second half of 2007, but city officials close to the redevelopment on MLK Jr. Boulevard say the closure shouldn't have an adverse affect on the area's burgeoning business community.
"Personally, I don't see it as a huge issue," said Bernie Kerosky, of the Portland Development Commission. "There is so much happening on MLK … these other projects are on the drawing board and the Vanport Square project down the street is selling out well."


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Business owners say rules would give free pass to illegal parkers

We've all done it. You need to run a short errand, and the only available parking spot is in a restricted lot. So you take a gamble; thinking you'll only by five minutes, surely a tow truck driver won't catch you. Four minutes later, you're back, but your car is gone – hauled off by a contracted towing company.
The practice of patrol towing – illegal in some states – is called "predatory towing" by its critics and it is widespread, with the state Department of Justice receiving nearly 200 towing-related complaints in 2006.
Now one local politician has come up with a remedy.

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Rosie Hanson and her son Forrest Hanson admire photographer Herb Robinson's 1990 portrait of Miles Davis at Nordstrom's "Rhythm of Life" photography exhibit in downtown Portland. To celebrate Black History Month, the retailer is showcasing the work of African American photographers through February.


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Oregon law enforcement leaders have asked Rep. Darlene Hooley, a key member of the House Budget Committee, to push for more money in the federal budget for Head Start and other educational child care programs to help cut crime.
Research has shown that Head Start and quality childcare programs for low-income working families help prepare children for school, help them lead productive lives and prevent them from committing crimes. One study of Child-Parent Centers in Chicago showed that at-risk kids not participating in the program were 70 percent more likely to have been arrested for a violent crime by age 18, when compared with similar kids who were enrolled in the high quality early education program.
Sheriff Raul Ramirez of Marion County serves as president of the Oregon State Sheriff's Association. He is one of 137 members of Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Oregon, a bipartisan, anti-crime organization.


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The Black Youth Project, under the direction of Dr. Cathy Cohen of the University of Chicago, has unveiled the findings of a comprehensive survey of the experiences and attitudes of young African Americans.  
The national survey questioned 1,590 Black, White and Hispanic young people, ages 15 to 25, on everything from pre-marital sex to their beliefs about the "color-blind" society.  
 "Religious leaders, social commentators and entertainers claim to understand Black youth," Cohen said. "This survey, however, shows young Black Americans to be more thoughtful and complex than they are usually assumed to be, with strong opinions about education, the political system, and the future of race and racism in America — opinions and perspectives we should understand if we want to promote effective policies that can really change the lives of young African Americans."


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