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Northwest News

Huge youth rally planned at City Hall with music, speakers

The Youth Voter Registration Drive and Rally – "Be a Super Hero, Save the Vote" is Saturday Oct. 4, from noon to 4 p.m. at Seattle City Hall.
Oct. 4 is the last day to register to vote and qualify for the Nov. 4 presidential elections. The "Be a Super Hero" event is free and family-friendly, but especially geared towards young adults registering for the first time.
King County Elections will be registering voters and providing an accessible voting machine. Participants at this event have the opportunity to cast a test ballot using the machine.
A "Kids Zone" will include kids' ballots and an oversized post card to display the children's dreams for the future. Kids will also receive a free voting-related coloring book.
The "Be a Super Hero" campaign is a non-partisan effort organized by Musica Entertainment, in partnership with King County Elections, Seattle City Hall and with the support of Councilmember Bruce Harrell.
Musica staffer Emoree Martin said this event was conceived by Musica CEO Tony Benton. She said the company's mission is to produce events that focus on creating awareness and dialogue and the idea of a global community.
"The voter registration drive came out of the feeling that the 18-25 voting demographic is going to have a big, big impact on the upcoming elections," Martin said. "People are really excited, we've had a great response — we've been lucky to have some great key players with us on this event."
A key goal of "Be a Super Hero" is to ensure balanced information, political awareness and an open dialog amongst participants and advocacy groups.....


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Experts, educators, local residents invited to pitch in with schools

The public is invited to the Third Annual Seattle Alliance of Black School Educators Education Summit that is a meeting of the minds about the best ways to educate children in the pubic schools and address the achievement gap....


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Congress has apologized for slavery, but without compensation

The 2008 Seattle Race Conference meets Oct. 11 to discuss the issue of reparations and how they help to address racial inequalities and heal diverse communities. "We hope to implement some counter-balance to the inequality. It is a natural follow-on to how past discrimination effects the present."...


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Bulletin Board

What's happening for you in Portland this week? Read here a day-by-day diary of free community events to fill your spare time.….

 


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Bulletin Board

What's happening for you in Seattle this week? Read here a day-by-day diary of free community events to fill your spare time..…

 


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Jewell Parker Rhodes will read from her novel, "Yellow Moon" from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 8 at The Seattle Public Library, Douglass-Truth Branch, 2300 E. Yesler Way. "Yellow Moon" is a sequel to the book, "Voodoo Season," about a wazimamoto, an African vampire, who is stalking Marie Leveau, a doctor and voodoo practitioner in New Orleans....

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Parent Initiative Fund-Raiser....  Online Voter Information....  Youth Benefit....


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Students from the Media Arts Training Institute at Open Meadows School are starting their own newspaper this fall – so they took a tour of The Skanner's offices to learn a little more about how it's done. Accompanied by their advisors and teachers, the kids discussed the Oct. 31 kick-off of their new publication, and asked many, many questions.

 


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ACORN members rally for safety at the corner of North Midway and Fessenden Streets as cars zoom past on Friday, Sept. 26 during rush hour. All summer, ACORN members say, they've sent letters to the Portland Traffic Engineer, Robert Burchfield, and Commissioner Sam Adams, inviting them out to the streetcorner to see the need for a crosswalk – so far no officials have taken them up on the offer. The group argues that school children are forced to cross the dangerous street many drivers drive well over the posted 25-mile per hour speed limit. Left to right, Cassandra Patterson, Aimee Olin, Dan Bell, and Robert Simmons escorted pedestrians across the street while holding up signs calling for street safety.


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Student works past personal obstacles to attend top-flight college and honor ill teacher

Shantel Monk is a 17-year-old foster child, the eldest of four children born to a teen mom with drug and alcohol problems.  Joe Halloran is a cancer patient, only alive because of a stem cell transplant, who will  need medical care for the rest of his life -- Victims? Not so you'd notice....


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