11-18-2024  12:50 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

Culture Counts lectures target ethnic issues in mental health

John Head, author of "Standing in the Shadows: Black Men and Depression"

Gayathri Ramprasad has a Master of Business Administration, a family history of mental illness, and a mission to help communities of color find treatment and healing for depression and other mental health problems.
"They are disorders of the brain and can be treated," she says....


READ MORE

We want to make sure we give an education to all the students of color

The Portland State University NAACP hosts "Black America: State of Emergency," Saturday, May 24 at Cramer Hall. The one-day series of seminars includes 16 workshops presented by educators and activists such as Charles McGee of the Black Parent Initiative, Kayse Jama of the Center for Intercultural Organizing, and PSU Urban Studies Professor Karen Gibson. The events are free and lunch is provided. Organizers want to make it an annual event....

READ MORE

Bulletin Board

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


READ MORE

Volunteer and Seattle Police Sgt. Jay Shin cheers on Jaleah Calloway, 9, as she reels in a rainbow trout at the annual Fishing Kids event May 17 at Seward Park. As a way to get more kids interested in fishing, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and C.A.S.T. for Kids Foundation have teamed with businesses, organizations and volunteers to provide an opportunity for kids to fish at local parks. For $5 kids get to catch and keep a couple of rainbow trout, they recieve a T shirt and they get to keep the Zebco rod and reel their given at the start of the event.


READ MORE

But Clinton vows to take the fight until the final primaries in June

Barack Obama won a healthy victory over Hillary Clinton in Oregon, and is projected to take 30 of 52 pledged delegates in the state. Clinton also won handily in Kentucky, but it didn't give her enough delegates to secure a chance of winning the nomination.
Clinton has vowed to continue the fight through the last primaries in early June _ determination which was cheered on by a group of female supporters from the WomenCount political action committee who took out a full-page ad in The New York Times urging her not to give up.
After Tuesday's primaries, Obama has 1,961 out of 2,026 needed to secure the nomination; Clinton has 1,777....


READ MORE

Until reforms are implemented, WASL requirements are put on hold

SEATTLE (AP) — State officials, paid consultants and interested volunteers are making efficient progress toward revising the Washington science education standards but the leader of the committee managing the effort says their work may be wasted if things don't change in the classroom.
"Our standards aren't bad. I don't think the science WASL is that bad, but we still only have 36 percent of students passing," Jeff Vincent, chairman of the state Board of Education's science committee, said Friday.
The board on Thursday approved the final report from a consultant hired to review the science stand ards. The next step is an overhaul of the standards by the office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction....


READ MORE

Renowned internationally for her provocative performance art and writings about race, damali ayo made a radical career change this month.
The author of "How to Rent a Negro," who was chronicled by The New York Times and National Public Radio as she traveled coast to coast panhandling for reparations for the trans-Atlantic slave trade, is now a clothing designer.
Her new fashion line, Crow Clothing, is available exclusively on her website. What made ayo decide to switch from social justice activism to designing clothes? ...

READ MORE


HOUSTON (AP) -- The day Mount Carmel Missionary Baptist Church dissolved into shards of bricks and a pile of rubble, tears filled the eyes of the people who had tried to save the historic structure.
But their grief was not just for this 68-year-old building in the heart of Houston's Fourth Ward. On this recent Friday, the solemn and stricken group was also crying for all the other now-vanished fragments of Freedmen's Town, the nation's only remaining post-Civil War historic district built by freed slaves.
They mourned for Bethel Baptist Church, a majestic century-old structure reduced to a scorched hull by a fire four years ago, and for the shotgun-style houses on Victor Street, where Houston's first African-American teachers, lawyers, and brick-masons once lived and which now seem abdicated to neglect.
They lamented the loss of dozens of historic homes and churches that have been demolished to make room for markers of a new Houston -- a modern metropolis of glass-walled skyscrapers, newly built urban lofts and chic cafes and restaurants...


READ MORE

NEW YORK (AP) _ Seventeen years after race riots left the streets of Crown Heights bloodied, tensions are rising again in the neighborhood restlessly shared by Orthodox Jews and Blacks. First, a Black man was badly beaten on a Brooklyn street. Weeks later, a Jewish teenager said he was attacked by two young Blacks while riding his bicycle, and angry Jewish residents took to the streets with signs saying "Jewish blood is not cheap!" and "Every Jew a .22"....


READ MORE

Recently Published by The Skanner News

  • Default
  • Title
  • Date
  • Random

theskanner50yrs 250x300