Category Archives: Education

Hanging on to the N-word

Twenty-five years after Spike Lee burned down Sal’s Famous Pizzeria, his people are still trying to do the right thing. Some of them don’t have a clue. Take LaRue Bell, a black senior at Cajon High School in San Bernardino, Calif. Earlier this month he said that when he arrived in math class, he asked […]

Lessons in Faking It

Three University of Oregon basketball players, who crowded into a bathroom with a drunken young woman and treated her like a glory hole, thought she was being a good sport. “It seemed like she was cool with it …,” Dominic Artis is quoted as saying in a Eugene Police Department report, referring to the UO freshman […]

No Equity in ‘Restorative Justice’

A school board that is scared of its teachers and students is a school board that needs to grow a spine. It says something about the Portland School Board that only Steve Buel remained when 400 students, teachers and their supporters interrupted a meeting to protest contract negotiations. (Andrew Davidson, the student representative to the […]

The Soul of Oregon

The University of Oregon Ducks football team has been having a humbling season this year, despite having the best training facility money can buy. It’s an excellent lesson for the entire state. Money cannot buy competence. Oregon spent $21 million to advertise its state-run health insurance exchange called “Cover Oregon,” but it has not enrolled […]

Craven conversations on race

It’s too bad Willamette Week’s cover story on the expulsion rates of black students in Portland didn’t run a week earlier, when Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was in town. What would he have said about Kwame Briggs, whose 12-year-old son has been suspended more times than the dad can remember, and who blames his […]

King and ‘the Gangstahs’

What happens to a dream deferred? Ask anyone. We’ve all had dreams deferred. Langston Hughes asked if a dream deferred festers like a sore — and then runs, or does it stink like rotten meat, or sag like a heavy load. What he led up to in his poem Harlem was that a dream deferred […]

Downsizing High-Tech’s Future

In the 1990’s, I was so busy as a newspaper reporter in California I didn’t notice that men like my father were losing their work in the Oregon sawmills. When I came home on vacation one summer, I saw a bumper sticker on my dad’s pickup truck: “Save a logger, eat an owl.” I’d heard […]

Taxing Portland’s Art Spirit

Has there ever been a more inspirational work of art than the dollar sign? It mesmerizes everyone from the Dalai Lama to the humblest public employee. His Holiness recently blessed the city of Portland with a visit that drew at least 10,000 to Memorial Coliseum where he offered his usual advice: Scorn wealth and materialism. […]

Benson Tech Played as a Pawn

There it was on the front page of The Epoch Times, an international newspaper distributed throughout the Oregon state Capitol Building: “Only Half of Grads Use Their Degrees.” Too bad Gov. John Kitzhaber doesn’t at least peruse the headlines of this Chinese-based weekly. “Nearly one-half of college graduates in the United States are overqualified for […]

Portland’s ‘Slumdog Millionaires’

There’s something about Portland, Ore., that is reminiscent of Sally Field’s famous Oscar speech: “You like me … you like me!” Except in Portland’s case, the city is exulting in its national recognition for chicken wings. Plus foie gras ice cream and khao man gai and bacon-inspired everything (not including the world-class coffee that Portland […]