03-26-2025  10:53 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

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NORTHWEST NEWS

Fired Federal Workers Face Choices Now That a Judge Wants Them Rehired

Although it is unknown how many federal workers are taking up the offers to return to work, some employees have already decided to move on, fearing more reductions down the road.

Genealogical Forum of Oregon Offers Free Sessions in Open House

The Genealogical Forum of Oregon is inviting everyone with an interest in exploring their family history to their 2025 Open House. From March 23-29 the GFO Library in downtown Portland, at 2505 S.E. 11th Ave., Ste B018, will be open for research with no day-use fee and the forum will be offering free events

Wyden and Bynum Take Questions, Urge Civilian Engagement During Town Hall Forums in Oregon

Bynum encourages attendees to encourage friends in Republican districts to flood town hall forums. 

Local Leaders, Oregon Legislators Detail Dangers of Federal Stop-Gap Budget Bill as it Passes the House and Heads to Senate

Budget would gut approved community projects, undermine public safety, harm water quality, among other concerns, Portland leaders say.

NEWS BRIEFS

Engage Multnomah County

The Office of Community Involvement was established in 1984 to support county-wide engagement through a multifaceted...

Dexter Visits Local Health Clinics to Spotlight Medicaid Cuts

“Republicans are stealing from the poor to cut taxes for the ultrawealthy. Nowhere is this more egregious than their budget plans to...

National Civil Rights Museum Remembers Dr. King on April 4

The museum invites the nation to focus on King’s nonviolent direct action in addressing current social chaos. ...

Appeals Court Rules Oregon Gun Law is Constitutional

AG Rayfield: “Oregonians voted for this, and it’s time we move ahead with common sense safety measures.” ...

AG Issues Guidance for Schools on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion

“Making sure diversity, equity, and inclusion are protected in education is about giving every student a fair chance to succeed,”...

Fresh lawsuit hits Oregon city at the heart of Supreme Court ruling on homeless encampments

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — The small Oregon city at the heart of a major U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year that allowed cities across the country to enforce homeless camping bans is facing a fresh lawsuit over its camping rules, as advocates find new ways to challenge them in a legal landscape...

Western Oregon women's basketball players allege physical and emotional abuse

MONMOUTH, Ore. (AP) — Former players for the Western Oregon women's basketball team have filed a lawsuit in federal court alleging emotional and physical abuse. The lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in Marion County, seeks million damages. It names the university, its athletic...

Slaughter leads Missouri against No. 5 Texas

Missouri Tigers (12-10, 1-6 SEC) at Texas Longhorns (20-2, 6-1 SEC) Austin, Texas; Thursday, 9 p.m. EST BOTTOM LINE: Missouri visits No. 5 Texas after Grace Slaughter scored 31 points in Missouri's 78-77 victory against the Mississippi State Bulldogs. The...

Slaughter leads Missouri against No. 5 Texas after 31-point game

Missouri Tigers (12-10, 1-6 SEC) at Texas Longhorns (20-2, 6-1 SEC) Austin, Texas; Thursday, 9 p.m. EST BOTTOM LINE: Missouri visits No. 5 Texas after Grace Slaughter scored 31 points in Missouri's 78-77 win over the Mississippi State Bulldogs. The...

OPINION

The Courage of Rep. Al Green: A Mandate for the People, Not the Powerful

If his colleagues truly believed in the cause, they would have risen in protest beside him, marched out of that chamber arm in arm with him, and defended him from censure rather than allowing Republicans to frame the narrative. ...

Bending the Arc: Advancing Equity in a New Federal Landscape

January 20th, 2025 represented the clearest distillation of the crossroads our country faces. ...

Trump’s America Last Agenda is a Knife in the Back of Working People

Donald Trump’s playbook has always been to campaign like a populist and govern like an oligarch. But it is still shocking just how brutally he went after our country’s working people in the first few days – even the first few hours – after he was...

As Dr. King Once Asked, Where Do We Go From Here?

“Let us be dissatisfied until America will no longer have high blood pressure of creeds and an anemia of deeds. Let us be dissatisfied until the tragic walls that separate the outer city of wealth and comfort from the inner city of poverty and despair shall...

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE NEWS

Trump consoles crash victims then dives into politics with attack on diversity initiatives

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Thursday responded to the deadliest American aviation disaster in more than two decades by blaming diversity initiatives for undermining safety and questioning the actions of a U.S. Army helicopter pilot involved in the midair collision with a...

US Supreme Court rejects likely final appeal of South Carolina inmate a day before his execution

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court rejected Thursday what is likely the final appeal of a South Carolina inmate the day before his scheduled execution for a 2001 killing of a friend found dead in her burning car. Marion Bowman Jr.'s request to stop his execution until a...

Trump's orders take aim at critical race theory and antisemitism on college campuses

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is ordering U.S. schools to stop teaching what he views as “critical race theory” and other material dealing with race and sexuality or risk losing their federal money. A separate plan announced Wednesday calls for aggressive action to...

ENTERTAINMENT

U.S. & WORLD NEWS

Cynthia E. Griffin Special to the NNPA from Our Weekly

Life has gone on since Sept. 11, 2001. And as the nation pauses to remember—10 years beyond the cataclysmic events of that morning—there is time to reflect and observe.

However, one major question that has gotten little attention amid the calls for commemoration is this one: What impact did the events have on African Americans? Some observers feel Blacks were somewhat excluded from coverage of 9/11 remembrances, a fact that has left their voices, emotions and recovery unheard.

 "I was watching the television special 'Children of 9/11,'" said Atlanta-based psychotherapist Joyce Morely, Ed. D. "Ironically, I was seeing that the majority of the focus was on White families and White children.  There was only one African American, (a) male profiled, and it was from the perspective of how much trouble he had gotten into over time, before he finally pulled himself together last year."

In fact, Morely, said she has seen Indian families who lost loved ones in the tragedy saying the same thing about their stories being ignored.

"A lot of times when people have latent issues, they so internalize them that if they are not dealt with, they manifest themselves in other behaviors; negative behaviors . . . when your grief is not seen as important and when your grief seems to be minimized as opposed so someone else's grief, it makes it very difficult."

Rev. DeQuincy Hentz of Shiloh Baptist Church, in New Rochelle, a bedroom community to New York, recalled many of his members being in shock at the attack and believing that God had protected them going to work that day at the towers.

"A lot of people express how they felt God had protected them.  Some people were headed to towers, but were delayed."

He added that there were no members of his church lost, and they don't talk about the tragedy much.  They sort of relate to it like knowing where you were when Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy were assassinated.

"I think, as a people, African Americans have such a history of tragedy and terrorist acts against us that something within us that is part of our history and fabric helps us to just move on.  Now that may not always be good," Hentz said, adding that in some respects 9/11 enabled Black people to feel that there could actually be a equalization of terror—that hate knows no color, and when unchecked, it can impact everyone.

There are Black stories to tell.  From those who died on the planes, to survivors who walked away without a scratch on their bodies.

Perhaps one of the most poignant is the three 11-year-olds, who were on Flight 77, which crashed into the Pentagon.

Asia Cottom, Rodney Dickens and Bernard Curtis Brown II, had been selected from three different middle schools in Washington, D.C., to travel to the Channel Island National Marine Sanctuary near Santa Barbara, Calif., to participate in a National Geographic Society research project called Sustainable Seas Expedition.  They were each traveling with a teacher, and two National Geographic staff members accompanied the group.  All perished.  But in November 2001, the then-mayor of Washington, D.C., in conjunction with the D.C. public schools, the Department of Parks and Recreation of Washington, D.C., the National Geographic Society, the Anacostia Watershed Society and the Earth Conservation Corp. turned the islands of Kingman and Heritage into sanctuaries in honor of the children and their adult companions.

The islands are located in the Anacostia River, which flows through D.C.

And then there was a close friend of Pastor Gregory Robeson Smith of New York's Mother A.M.E. Zion Church, whose sister was on vacation from her job at the Pentagon, but stopped in that morning to pick up some papers before meeting with her husband for lunch.  She never made it.

Marcy Borders too had a story to tell.  She had been working only one short month in a bank in one of the towers, when the planes hit.  She was led to the lobby of the second tower, where a photographer captured the image of her covered from head to toe in ash and cast in a strange yellowish light.

During the 10 years since the attack, Borders struggled with unchecked fear and paranoia, drug addiction and the inability to work a day.

In April, she checked into rehab, and is working to regain control of her life.

There is also Genelle Guzman-McMillan who laid trapped nearly 27 hours in the rubble of the towers.  She said she had an angelic encounter with a man named Paul, who grabbed her hand, called her name and said he was there for her.  Once she was freed, neither Guzman-McMillan nor anyone else was ever able to find Paul.

As she lay with her crushed leg awaiting help, the young New Yorker pledged to God, she would dedicate her life to him, if he rescued her.

She kept her promise by joining a church and travels the world telling her testimony through speaking and in her book "Angel in the Rubble."

Brent Watson literally walked away from his experience at Ground Zero with the same understanding that Guzman-McMillan had developed—life is not promised and must be lived to its fullest and with a profound reverence for God.

Watson, who was then an employee with Merrill Lynch, now Bank of America Merrill Lynch, had gone into work early for a company meeting in World Financial Center 2, a 43-story-high structure that was about 100 yards from the World Trade Center Towers.

"I was in our conference room (which seated about 200 people) that morning, when I heard this sound like a piece of heavy equipment had been dropped on the floor right outside of our conference room," recalled Watson.

"There was a former Army officer in our management at the time, and he started moving to investigate.  I said to myself, 'if he's moving, I'm moving . . . .' All my instincts started to kick in.

"Someone said a plane had hit one of the Twin Towers.  We assumed it was a single-engine plane or a helicopter because there had been a number of close calls with small planes."

"Then our risk manager came in, and I'll never forget her face.  She said we are evacuating the building."

Watson remembers that a ridiculously practical thought about refusing to wait for hours at the New York Department of Motor Vehicles for another license popped into his head.  So he went to his desk, retrieved his jacket, wallet, laptop and other personal belongings and headed for the exit.  He and his colleagues debated taking the stairs or the elevator, and decided on the elevators.

Had Watson taken the stairs, he like his son's godfather (who was also in the World Trade Center in 1993, when dynamite exploded in the garage, killing five and wounding at least 1,000), would have seen people falling from the towers.  Instead, he and others gathered in a plaza that was about 50 feet from his building and the Hudson River.

"We could see the building burning: white flames, jet fuel.  I said that building is not going to be able to sustain itself with that intense heat.  I could tell it was going to melt.  I felt it might tip over and fall toward us.  A few minutes later, here came the second plane.  It cut through almost like a knife.  That's when everybody scattered out of fear.  My spirit said to me, get as far away as you can."

Taking about five of his colleagues with him, Watson began walking toward the Westside.

"I kept telling them to stop looking back, and I talked to them about Sodom and Gomorrah.  After walking about 18 blocks, the group heard the first tower collapse.

Watson said he knew that the next thing that would happen would be F-16s arriving on the scene.

"Sure enough, shortly after the collapse, you could hear the F-16s traveling at mach [speed]. They were trying to see if another plane was coming."

Continuing to walk, Watson and his group arrived at Grand Central Station, but the trains were not running because of a bomb scare.  He decided not to try for a cab, because he said cabdrivers were gouging people and exploiting the situation by charging people $500 to get out of Manhattan.

Watson eventually ended up in Harlem at a relative's house after a four-and-a-half-hour walk. "Ain't no terrorists coming to Harlem," the wealth management adviser remembers thinking.  He also remembers a woman he encountered remarking that he looked like he could walk to Canada.

The 15-year financial veteran credits his strength to an inner spirit honed by a lifetime of growing up in the church and believing in God.

Watson described the first few days after Sept. 11 as a time of shock and questioning how you go on, particularly if you've lost someone close to you, and he had.

" . . A colleague of mine, who had spent time mentoring me, David Grady; he was trapped at the top in Windows of the World.  He was there for a breakfast appointment.  He only had enough time to call his father and wife to say goodbye.  His remains were never found.  We have a conference room in our company in his memory.  He always had inspirational things to say to me . . . he was one of those guys who believed in what Charlie Merrill said: 'Put your client's needs ahead of your needs, and you will be successful."

Rather than let himself be paralyzed and prevented from reaching full potential in a space where he knew that seeing a Black man working was rare, Watson said he decided to work harder doing things that benefited others.

But he also relied on conversations with members of the male chorus at his church, people in his investment club, a cousin who was a church deacon, discussions with pastors and his own personal relationship with God to sustain him.

"You focus on things bigger than yourself.  You dream big," Watson said.  In his case, he is also more aggressive toward things he wants to achieve.  "It's galvanized me to know that tomorrow is not promised and to not be afraid to go it alone."