11-17-2024  9:50 pm   •   PDX and SEA Weather

Northwest News

At least three King County residents have reported to local hospitals with a life threatening illness, likely caused by the use of cocaine contaminated with a drug used to treat animals, health officials reported Thursday.

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Weekly Previews That Make Choosing a Film Fun

BIG BUDGET FILMS . . .
INDEPENDENT & FOREIGN FILMS . . .

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School staff and parents throughout Seattle are organizing several events this month to mark the loss of school buildings and programs that are being closed or discontinued by district officials.  

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Looking for free family activities this summer? Want to enjoy the beauty of your own neighborhood?  Portland Parks & Recreation (PP&R) is once again bringing "Movies in the Park" to neighborhood parks throughout the city, beginning Friday, July 3 through Friday, Sept. 11.

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On Saturday, June 20, in hundreds of cities across the U.S., tens of thousands of revelers will be celebrating Juneteenth, an important moment in American history.

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Nicole Ari Parker is the better half of Boris Kodjoe, the hunky star of such films as "Brown Sugar" and "Madea's Family Reunion." . . . Here, the Baltimore-bred beauty talks both about Sophie and about her latest film, "Imagine That," a family comedy where she plays the wife of Eddie Murphy. . . .

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JACKSON, Miss. - A reputed Ku Klux Klansman will remain in prison after a federal appeals court's split ruling wiped out his acquittal in the kidnappings of two Black teenagers who were slain in 1964. James Ford Seale, 73, was found guilty in June 2007 of abducting the teens who authorities said were beaten, weighted down and thrown, possibly still alive, into a Mississippi River backwater in May 1964 . . .

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Helen Zille has a sharp tongue and a short fuse, and she doesn't dodge a fight. In apartheid times she enraged South Africa's White rulers, and lately she has ruffled South Africa's Black political establishment . . .

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Washington is paying hundreds of millions of dollars to build new, cleaner-burning buses, but don't scour the want ads looking for a burst of job openings soon at major manufacturers or suppliers. The bus money, like many other programs in the $787 billion stimulus plan, is having the less glamorous and harder-to-quantify effect of keeping workers employed, providing a slight buffer from the recession to some in the auto industry. At the White House, where saving jobs always was as much a priority as creating jobs, the bus industry is a success story. But it also shows how hard it is to account for that success, especially in an industry that keeps shedding jobs despite the stimulus. . . .

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John Kroger, Attorney General, writes:

Last week we unveiled Operation Corridor Express ... This operation has resulted in 34 drug trafficking and racketeering indictments and dismantled a major drug trafficking ring in Clackamas and Washington Counties ... fight for federal stimulus money to protect our public safety budgets. These funds will be used to put more cops on the street, more patrols on the road in rural communities . . .

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