News

NYT Politics

City Hall in Springfield, Ohio, Is Closed After Bomb Threat
Author: Christine Hauser
The city said that “multiple facilities” had received the emailed threat.
Linda Ronstadt Criticizes Trump Before He Appears at Venue Named for Her
Author: Maggie Astor
The singer denounced the former president, singling out the impact of his administration’s family separations policy in Arizona, and endorsed Kamala Harris.
Why House Republicans Are Targeting China Weeks Before the Election
Author: Karoun Demirjian
The G.O.P. pushed through an array of legislation to get tough on China, seeking to persuade voters that they are the party that will protect Americans from economic and military threats from Beijing.

Columbian Newspaper

Pac-12 to add Boise State, Fresno State, San Diego State, Colorado State in 2026, poaching Mountain West
Author: RALPH D. RUSSO, Associated Press

The Pac-12 is adding Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State and San Diego State, starting in 2026, to join Oregon State and Washington State in a rebuilt Conference of Champions, the league announced Thursday.

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King’s Way Christian’s Ryan Charlton makes his way back from traumatic eye injury
Author: Meg Wochnick

Few outside the King’s Way Christian High School community who saw football standout Ryan Charlton last Friday rush for a team-high 93 yards, score a touchdown, and record double-digit tackles know what the senior has overcome.

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Washington State News

Jaguars place CB Tyson Campbell (hamstring) on IR
(Photo credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images) The Jacksonville Jaguars placed cornerback Tyson Campbell on injured reserve Thursday with a left hamstring strain. Campbell, 24, will miss a minimum of four games and is eligible to return on Oct. 13 against the Chicago Bears. He left Sunday's loss to the Miami Dolphins in the fourth quarter after posting three tackles, including one for a loss. Campbell has six intercep

The Stand (Washington Labor News)

UW research workers file to unionize
Author: Sarah Tucker

The workers are seeking to join the existing unit represented by UAW 4121 SEATTLE, WA (September 12, 2024) — New job classes of research workers at UW filed with the Washington Public Employees Relations Commission to form their union on Tuesday. The workers are from two research job classes at the University, Coordinators and Consultants. […]

The post UW research workers file to unionize appeared first on The STAND.

DemocracyNow!

"By the Fire We Carry": Cherokee Author Rebecca Nagle on the Ongoing Fight for Tribal Sovereignty
Author: webdev@democracynow.org (Democracy Now!)

We’re joined by award-winning Cherokee writer and journalist Rebecca Nagle, whose new book, By the Fire We Carry: The Generations-Long Fight for Justice on Native Land, has just been released. By taking a look at the more than a century-long fight for tribal sovereignty in eastern Oklahoma, Nagle investigates the development and future of tribal law since the beginning of colonial relations between Indigenous peoples and European settlers, from the Trail of Tears to the “war on terror.” “A lot of times we treat Native American history like this distant chapter and the legal terrain it created as some sort of siloed backwater of American law, but actually it’s foundational,” she says.

"On Thin Ice": Western Nations Crack Down on Climate Activists with Arrests & Jail Terms
Author: webdev@democracynow.org (Democracy Now!)

As the climate crisis continues to accelerate, wealthy governments in the West are clamping down on climate protest. According to a new report from Climate Rights International, demonstrators around the world are being arrested, charged, prosecuted and silenced, simply for using their rights to free expression. One of those prosecuted is activist Joanna Smith, who last year applied washable school finger paint on the exterior glass case enclosing Edgar Degas’s renowned wax sculpture, Little Dancer, at the National Gallery of Art to draw attention to the urgency of the climate crisis. She was charged and later sentenced to two months in federal prison for her civil disobedience. We speak to Smith just a week after her release, and to Linda Lakhdir, the legal director of Climate Rights International. “Countries who have held themselves up as beacons of rule of law are essentially repressing peaceful protest,” says Lakhdir. Smith says the nonviolent action she took was intended to highlight the disparity between a sculpture of a child protected from the elements with a strong plexiglass case and the billions of children around the world left unsafe and vulnerable by climate change’s effects. “The crisis is here now, it’s unfolding in front of us, and our governments are failing us,” she explains.

"Another Appalling Year" of Violence Against Land Defenders as Nearly 200 Killed Worldwide in 2023
Author: webdev@democracynow.org (Democracy Now!)

At least 196 environmental defenders were killed last year, most of them Indigenous or Afro-descendant. The deadliest country was Colombia, where at least 79 land, water and climate defenders were killed. “2023 was yet another appalling year for those who want to protect their lands and their environment,” and this violence is likely to “intensify as the consequences of the climate crisis become more apparent,” says Laura Furones, senior adviser to the land and environmental defenders campaign at Global Witness, which published the numbers in a new report.

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