12-04-2024  3:52 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

30 - WORKER RETRAINING PROGAM orientation class held weekly at 2 p.m. Seattle Central Community College, 1701 Broadway, room 4180. Call 206-587-6310 for more information. ...


READ MORE

 

Tre Rostick 13, gets help trying on some diving gear from Seattle Police Dive Rescue Officer O. Gonzalez during the Rainier Beach Summerfest and Back2School Bash on Aug 25. Activities included musical entertainment, a bazaar, a rummage sale and free school supplies, as well as sales by local merchants, and took place at various locations between Henderson Street and Rainier Avenue.


READ MORE

Kaliea Miller, 10, gets impromptu French horn lessons from Charles Crabtree, 16, on Aug. 18 at a community festival in Arbor Lodge Park. Crabtree, principal horn player in the Portland Youth Philharmonic, and others were teaching children the basics of several instruments, including vibes and violin. Many bands performed during the afternoon, including the headlining Oregon Symphony. The symphony will play another free outdoor concert at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 30 in Tom McCall Waterfront Park.


READ MORE

Bobbie Nunn, civil rights activist, teacher leaves long legacy

Bobbie Bonner Nunn, educator, longtime civil rights activist and a Portland icon, died Sept. 24. She was 82.
"She was a tireless workaholic for civil rights," said Myrtle Carr her friend for more than 60 years and a former NAACP secretary. "She was a trail blazer and a community activist. She has given so much of herself at all times. You could always count on Bobbie Nunn." ...


READ MORE

If financial estimates pan out, 600-room hotel could pay for itself

Metro Councilman Rex Burkholder says there's only one thing holding up a multimillion dollar Convention Center hotel project: Financing.
Sure, there are a few other items of business Metro will have to decide upon before going forward with the hotel project, Burkholder said, but he is confident that if a financial review — due at the beginning of September — provides a way to pay off construction costs with revenue ...

READ MORE

2007 Susan G. Komen Race helps raise money for research, screenings

Peggy Ross is living proof that mammograms can save lives. Ross, director of the office of affirmative action for the state of Oregon, was diagnosed with cancer after a mammogram screening.
"I had one sister die of breast cancer," Ross told The Skanner. "then I was diagnosed in April. I know that early detection is important because it was caught by a physical when I was in early stage one. If I had not had a mammogram, it would have been in a later stage. So I am a survivor." ...


READ MORE

Black fathers across Portland are encouraged to take part in the national Million Father March, an event that aims to get hundreds of thousands of fathers to take their children to school on the first day. The event, locally sponsored by the Black Parent Initiative, encourages strong family structures that include a positive male role model, which studies have shown leads to decreased drug and alcohol abuse, premature sex and violence. ...


READ MORE

A free seminar titled "Building Parent Professional Partnerships with Your Child's School" will be held from 9 to 11 a.m. Sept. 11 at the Swindells Center, 830 N.E. 47th Ave, in Portland.
This workshop will cover: Different strategies to improve communication between parents and professionals in the school setting; positive ways to manage conflict; attributes of successful partnerships; ...


READ MORE

Just 5,000 online votes are needed to make Instant Birth Control – hormonal contraception – eligible for millions of dollars in program development and expansion funding.
Instant Birth Control, available now to women in Oregon and Washington, is one of 10 finalists in an international competition that seeks to identify Disruptive Innovations ...


READ MORE

University of Portland's record-setting incoming freshmen class has not yet started classes, but some have already been assigned their first reading. Their assignment: Barbara Ehrenreich's best-selling investigative book about poverty in America, "Nickel and Dimed."
A total of 810 freshmen students, the largest in the school's 100-plus-year history — is set to start classes on Monday. But prior to that, about 190 freshmen will participate Thursday and Friday in a two-day service project called the Service Plunge. ...


READ MORE

Recently Published by The Skanner News

  • Default
  • Title
  • Date
  • Random

theskanner50yrs 250x300