James Kelly, president and CEO of the Urban League of Metropolitan Seattle listens to the remarks made by Washington State Gov. Christine Gregoire at the Urban League's 8th annual Benefit Breakfast on Dec. 14 at the Washington State Convention & Trade Center. Over 1,300 people attended the breakfast which included remarks by former Mayor Norm Rice, King County Executive Ron Sims and the governor ...
Seattle Public Schools' Garfield and Roosevelt High Schools were recently both awarded silver medal distinction by U.S. News and World Report magazine.
From a pool of over 18,000 high schools, the magazine annually ranks the top 100 "gold medal" high schools based on their college assessment readiness index.
Described as one of the "Most Likely to Succeed," Garfield High School and Roosevelt High School serve as the nation's best example of how students across the board perform on state tests and are provided college-level coursework. Both schools received a certificate of recognition from the Seattle Public School Board on Dec. 5th for the caliber of education provided to their students.
"First of all, Roosevelt High School and Garfield ...
When FRESH Start Director Shawn Benning was working as one of the teachers for the child care Head Start program, he found some problems. He noticed there was a lack of fathers involved in their children's lives and the educational system, and he felt First A.M.E. needed to create a fatherhood program that encouraged that involvement.
Thus, the First A.M.E. Child and Family Center's FRESH Start program "The Men's Workshop," was born.
"The Men's Workshop," aims to improve low income fathers' parenting skills and involvement in their children's lives. The program, which began in March, offers men the opportunity to learn valuable parenting skills and practices. It also offers counseling, mentoring and mediation as well as domestic violence and child abuse prevention classes.
FRESH Start classes are free and participation is voluntary ...
The Seattle Seahawks will be sending six players to this year's Pro Bowl. Quarterback Matt Hasselbeck, tackle Walter Jones, defensive end Patrick Kerney, linebackers Julian Peterson and Lofa Tatupu and cornerback Marcus Trufant were selected Tuesday to represent the club in the 2008 Pro Bowl. All but Hasselbeck were named starters.
For Jones, this will mark his seventh consecutive trip to the NFL's annual all-star game, tying a club record with his eighth overall (1999, 2001-07). Cortez Kennedy also made the trip to Honolulu eight times during his 11-year playing career.
Hasselbeck will make his third trip to the Pro Bowl and has already set the club's single-season record for completions (319) and is on pace to set the mark for attempts and yards. ...
By adopting 12 minority ownership proposals and putting 13 more proposals out for comment, the FCC marked December 18, 2007 – coincidentally MMTC's 21st birthday -- as one of the best days in the history of minority media ownership.
The day was marred only by the FCC's use of a poorly defined "small business" eligibility criterion for three of the proposals it adopted. Apparently only about 8.5% of small business-owned commercial radio stations are minority owned – barely more than the 7.8% of all commercial radio stations that are minority owned. MMTC will act promptly to secure a correction of the FCC's unfortunate mistake.
The FCC's minority ownership decision was taken separately from its decision to relax its broadcast-newspaper crossownership rule, and is not contingent on the crossownership decision. ...
The Cities of Bellevue, Bothell, Issaquah, Kenmore, Kirkland, Mercer Island, Sammamish, Shoreline,…
Throughout last year we measured how many hits you give us on the stories we put upon this website, and here are the stories you rated top of the month in 2007. Thanks you readers!
Ray Ballentine was waiting for a sign to throw his support to Barack Obama. And when Obama coasted to victory in Iowa's caucuses, there it was -- evidence that the senator had the broad racial appeal to get to the White House.
"I did have some reservations before, but he certainly got my vote now," Ballentine said, eating a brisket and roast turkey salad with hush puppies at The Q Shack, a barbecue joint in Raleigh, N.C. "I was sort of undecided, but I feel like he can win the presidency."
Obama's convincing win in Thursday's caucuses in Iowa -- a state with just a smattering of minority voters -- demonstrated the Illinois senator's support crosses racial lines and bolstered the notion that America is receptive to electing its first black president.
DES MOINES IOWA -- Oregon state Senator Margaret Carter, standing on a snowy doorstep, chatted with a voter inside, doing what she does best: talking politics. But this time it's not for her own race, but for Democratic Presidential candidate John Edwards. And this time the door step is not in Northeast Portland, but in a subdivision in Altoona, Iowa.
Carter joined her co-chair of the Oregon/John Edwards for President campaign, Portland Attorney Robert Stoll and a half dozen other Oregonians last weekend to help with down-to-the-wire campaign efforts. Fanning out from their hotel in downtown Des Moines, they've phone-banked from the Steelworkers Union Hall and braved 9 degree temperatures and slippery sidewalks in order to tell as many Iowans as possible why John Edwards is the most elect-able candidate among the field of seven Democratic hopefuls.