10-29-2024  10:29 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

LOS ANGELES (NNPA) - Health advocates recently gathered at the New Orleans Vieux Carre Restaurant here to discuss causes of skyrocketing HIV/AIDS and other Sexually Transmitted Diseases among Black women. HIV/STD reports indicate that 2.8 million new cases of Chlamydia and HIV/AIDS infections are among women, but the majority of the women who make up these new cases are African American....


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Groups build grassroots network seeking health care for everyone

Oregon Action Executive Director JoAnn Bowman speaks at the kickoff of a new national movement for universal health care. The event, held at the Garlington Center on Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue, drew dozens of local grassroots activists. ...


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Volunteers help round out Portland Police Cold Case Unit

In Portland, there are about 300 murder cases that have gone cold. And the number keeps rising. Whenever a murder case goes unsolved and the leads dry up, Sgt. Paul Weatheroy steps in.
Weatheroy is in charge of the Cold Case Homicide Unit, a nearly 4-year-old team of detectives assigned to solve the city's most unsolveable cases. But an overload of cases — and a lack of manpower and resources — means Cold Case detectives haven't been able to manage as many cases as they would like.
"Every single day I get calls," Weatheroy told The Skanner.
So in order to provide families closure and get more murderers off the street, Weatheroy began asking retired detectives and investigators to help out with the old cases....

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The Skanner News Group won three honors at the National Newspaper Publishers Association national convention last week in Louisville, KY, including the prestigious 2008 A. Phillip Randolph Messenger Award.
Considered the very highest honor given in the field of African American journalism, The Skanner's former news editor, Helen Silvis, has now won the prize twice for the newspaper, in 2005 and in 2008....


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In-office screening could transform America"s addiction treatment

In the 1950s, the American Medical Association recognized that addiction was a medical condition. Today, a handful of states are implementing programs that are trying to expand the role the medical community plays in reducing the harm associated with drug abuse and addiction.
Since January, Oregon has encouraged doctors to verbally screen their patients for signs of substance abuse indicators. While doctors have used routine physicals and other visits to screen for signs of addictive behaviors for years ...

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Bulletin Board

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

 


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Joey Thomas, a cornerback for the Miami Dolphins shows Jamar Kemp, 11, how to run a route at the second annual Joey Thomas "Make It Happen" Youth Football Camp. Thomas, who recently signed with the Dolphins, played at John F. Kennedy High School in Burien. About 100 boys and girls ages 6 to 14 attended the camp on July 7 and 8. 

Photo by Susan Fried


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Town Hall meeting focuses on creating sustainable employment

Creating an environmentally sustainable economy will present many challenges to our community and nation in the coming years, but it will also lead to many new opportunities in manufacturing, construction, research and other fields.
That's the message from local officials as the Metropolitan King County Council holds a special Town Hall Meeting Monday, July 14 to discuss creating a sustainable, green economy and stimulating job growth in the new "green-collar" jobs sector.
The Town Hall will be held at the Seattle Aquarium at 1483 Alaskan Way, Pier 59. The public is invited to meet face-to-face with King County Councilmembers at an informal reception starting at 6:30 p.m. The Town Hall will begin at 7 p.m.
"Building a green economy will spur new investment, create living-wage jobs, and help make our communities healthier," said Councilmember Dow Constantine, chair of the Council's Committee of the Whole.
"King County is a world leader in both innovative technology and environmental stewardship, and we are prepared to embrace this great challenge and opportunity," said Councilmember Larry Phillips, who recently introduced legislation to encourage green-collar job training and...


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KnowHow2Go, local organizations connect students with schools

Attention is often focused on how to narrow the racial achievement gap in public schools. The KnowHow2GO Campaign looks to narrow the racial gap in university attendance by showing middle schoolers and high school students teens how to plan for college.
The campaign is focused on students of color as well as youths who would be the first in their family to attend a university.
"There is a myth out there that colleges are literally going to show up at the student's door or send them invitations, and they will magically just go to college without realizing there are actual steps they can take now to prepare for it," said Carolyn Stanek, assistant director of national initiatives for the American Council on Education. 
College enrollment across the nation has risen by nearly 21 percent over the last decade ...


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My Mini City [http://myminicity.com/]Bloon…


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