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About The skanner. (Portland, Or.) 1975-2014 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 2017)
May 31, 2017 The Skanner Page 3 News cont’d from pg 1 tractors were wounded — none with life-threat- ening injuries, a U.S. State Department official said. “I have been to many attacks, taken wounded people out of many blast sites, but I can say I have ever seen such a horrible attack as I saw this morn- ing,” ambulance driver I have been to many attacks, taken wounded people out of many blast sites, but I can say I have ever seen such a horrible attack as I saw this morning Alef Ahmadzai told The Associated Press. “Ev- erywhere was on fire and so many people were in critical condition.” There was no claim of responsibility for the at- tack, which came in the first week of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The Taliban flatly denied any involvement in an email to news outlets and condemned all attacks against civilians. The explosives were hidden in a tanker truck used to clean out septic systems, said Najib Dan- ish, deputy spokesman for the interior minister. The number of dead and wounded was provided by the Afghan govern- ment’s media center, cit- ing a statement from the Afghan Ulema Council, the country’s top reli- gious body that includes Muslim clerics, scholars and men of authority in religion and law. The blast gouged a cra- ter about 5 meters (15 feet) deep near Zanbaq Square in the Wazir Ak- bar Khan district, where foreign embassies are protected by a battery of their own security per- sonnel as well as Afghan Vanport partners. “The terrorists, even in the holy month of Ramadan, the month of goodness, blessing and prayer, are not stopping the killing of our inno- cent people,” said Presi- dent Ashraf Ghani. Afghanistan’s war, the longest ever involving U.S. troops, has shown no sign of letting up, and the introduction into the bat- tle of an Islamic State af- filiate has made the coun- try only more volatile. Although they are small in number, mili- tants from the Islamic State in Khorasan — an ancient name for parts of Afghanistan, Iran and Central Asia — have taken credit for several brazen assaults on the capital. “Let’s be clear: This is an intelligence failure, as has been the case with so many other attacks in Kabul and beyond. There was a clear failure to an- ticipate a major security threat in a highly se- cured area,” said Michael Kugelman of the U.S.- based Wilson Center. Read the rest of this story at TheSkanner.com New Faubion School, the first newly constructed Portland Public School in two decades, announced a partnership May 23 with Concordia University Facility and Kaiser Permanente at 3039 Northeast Rosa Parks Way. Workers broke ground on the new school, which opens in the fall of 2017, last month. Attack Left to right: Kimberely Dixon, Faubion Principal Jen McCalley, Concordia University Gary Withers, Kaiser Permanente Northwest Dr. Imelda Dacones, Tracy Dannen-Grace, Concordia’s Sarah Sweitzer. cont’d from pg 1 away shortly after the incident at a local hospital. Fletcher was treated for his injuries and re- leased from a hospital Tuesday. Christian was apprehended at the scene, and according to the affidavit released by the Mult- nomah County Circuit Court Tuesday, he confessed to the crimes in the back of the police car: “I just stabbed a bunch of (ex- pletive) in their neck.” The state has charged Christian with two counts of aggravated murder, one count of attempted aggravated murder; one count of first-degree assault; three counts of unlawful use of a weapon; and two counts of intimidation in the second degree. At a Saturday press conference Multnomah County district attorney noted aggravated murder is “a capital offense in Oregon.” Witnesses say the incident took place just as a Green Line train bound for Clackamas Town Cen- ter pulled into the Hollywood Transit Center, and that imme- diately afterward, Christian de-boarded the train and fled into the Hollywood neighborhood. A passenger’s video of Chris- tian’s arrest shows him shouting at police and drinking out of a container before being appre- “ with 42 incidents – half of which were reported in Portland. A spokesperson for the SPLC told The Skanner the organiza- tion only began tracking hate in- cidents starting after the election. The Portland Police Bureau’s in- Christian will most likely die in prison since our state has not executed any- one against their will since Kennedy was president hended. Friday’s slayings made national headlines along with a string of gruesome crimes targeting mi- norities. In December, the Southern Poverty Law Center reported more than 1,000 hate incidents took place nationwide in the first weeks after Donald Trump was elected to the Presidency. The re- port, which tracks the number of incidents between Nov. 9 and Dec. 12 of that year, notes Oregon had the highest per capita reporting teractive crime map allows users to look at crime broken down by neighborhood and type of inci- dent (such as theft, vandalism or assault) but the map does not in- clude a category for bias crime — which can encompass several of those categories. The bureau was not able to provide information on how bias crimes are tracked, and whether they have increased in its jurisdiction, in time for The Skanner’s deadline. Read more at TheSkanner.com cont’d from pg 1 vivors found it especially difficult to locate housing in Portland, as city officials there continued their dis- criminatory policies of redlining to “ New Faubion School temporary housing during the Second World War. Many of its residents were transient laborers that were employed to work on the Kaiser shipyards in Port- African American survivors found it espe- cially difficult to locate housing in Portland, as city officials there continued their discrim- inatory policies force crowding of African American residents into the Albina community — just because the color of their skin,” Winters said while addressing the Sen- ate floor on Tuesday. Stories like Winters’ are recounted in “The Wake of Vanport” — a series of short documentaries that capture the memories of those who lived in Vanport and survived its demise. The Skanner Foundation, through its North Portland Multimedia Training Center, created the oral history project. Vanport was built in 1942, largely as land and in Vancouver, Wash. Vanport took its name from both cities. Largely recognized as a center of di- versity, Vanport was home to some of the first Black teachers and policemen in the state during wartime. And while covering only 650 acres, the city was self-sustaining, equipped with shop- ping centers, a hospital, post office, li- brary, schools, and even a movie theater. On that fatal day of May 30, 1948 — shortly after 4 p.m. — a 200-foot section of the dike holding back the Columbia River collapsed, drowning Vanport in less than two hours. The loss of property totaled millions of dollars. Today, Delta Park rests on the former site of Vanport. But through an effort of community mem- bers, historians and survivors, a peti- tion and campaign has been launched to change the name Survivors gather on high ground to watch the destruction of Vanport after of the park to Van- the flood on May 30, 1948. port. ed at the airport in Josephine County. This year, the State Senate recognized The legislative assembly also com- two additional hallmarks of Oregon’s memorated the 75th anniversary of wartime history. the internment of Japanese Americans The “Triple Nickles” were a Black with Senate Concurrent Resolution World War II paratrooper unit that de- 14. It acknowledges the injustice, pain ployed to Pendleton Field, Oregon near and suffering inflicted on Japanese the end of war. In their honor, a marker Americans during World War II and will be unveiled on June 3 at the Siskiy- recognizes Feb. 19 as a national Day of ou Smokejumper Base Museum, locat- Remembrance. PHOTO BY ALLEN DELAY (1915-2005) ©THOMAS ROBINSON “ police and National Secu- rity Forces. The nearby German Embassy was heavily damaged. Also in the area is Af- ghanistan’s Foreign Ministry, the Presiden- tial Palace and its in- telligence and security headquarters, guarded by soldiers trained by the U.S. and its coalition PHOTOS BY JERRY FOSTER Bombing