Central Area Motivational Program President Tony Orange leads several hundred soggy marchers to the…
Nearly four decades after Larry Gossett led a successful push to recruit more Black students to the University of Washington, African Americans account for less than 3 percent of the overall student body.
This academic year, there are just 118 Black freshmen in a class of nearly 5,000, the lowest number since 1999 and fewer even than when Gossett — then a student leader, now a King County Councilor — was recruiting.
OLYMPIA—Dozens of people made emotional arguments during a public hearing Tuesday on a gay…
ATLANTA—"Bold, audacious" action is needed to make sure society really heeds the…
The paralegal profession has been ranked by the U.S. Department of Labor as one of the most stable…
The Youth Employment Institute (Y.E.I.) a non-profit organization providing employment and training…
"Challenging People to Shape a Better Future Now" is the cornerstone of The Skanner Foundation's mission.
NEW ORLEANS--A confident and determined Mayor Ray Nagin said he will oppose a moratorium on issuing building permits in flooded neighborhoods to galvanize rebuilding and uphold property owners' rights. "I'm not going with a moratorium," Nagin said regarding a committee's recommendation to hold off on permits for four months. "We're going to keep going forward."
Jefferson High School student Brittnie Marcell, left, makes her views known at Tuesday's school board meeting...
Testimony from the Jefferson High School community will be heard by Portland School Board members next Tuesday, as they consider a proposal to once again – reorganize the school.The meeting, beginning at 6:30 p.m. in the Jefferson High School cafeteria, is the third of four meetings planned to discuss the proposal. Those wishing to testify should call the school district at 503-916-3741.
A public hearing and vote on the recommendation to divide the school into three academies as well as to create another academy at Harriet Tubman Middle School is planned on Jan. 23.
Nearly a dozen students told Portland school board members Monday night that they objected to the male leadership academy planned at Jefferson and a requirement for uniforms at both Jefferson and Tubman and that many of the recommendations appeared to unfairly single out the Jefferson schools cluster from the rest of the school district. Some suggested that the changes had racial overtones.