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Patrick Kimbrough, 14, joined at least 100 young people on Jan. 19 at the 7th annual "We have a Dream" Martin Luther King Jr. March and Event sponsored by the Seattle Parks and Recreation Teen Signature Programs.
The marchers walked from Martin Luther King Jr. Park to the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center.


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Increased money to Children"s Health Initiative closes coverage gaps

The Metropolitan King County Council today unanimously approved $443,000 for public health pilot programs. The programs – part of the Children's Health Initiative — are designed to ensure that uninsured children have greater access to health care.
"Healthy children grow up to be healthy adults. Children who lack health care face a future of health disparities that will impact the rest of their lives," said Councilmember Larry Gossett, prime ...


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Keynote speaker says environmentalism new "Lunch Counter" fight

Oregon State Sen. Avel Gordly, after receiving The Skanner Foundation's Drum Major for Justice Award, talked to the crowd of over 1,000 about the importance of community-based mental health centers. She called upon Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski (left) and Senate President (right) Peter Courtney to act to protect patients at the Oregon State Hospital.


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After wife"s statements thrown out, prosecutor dismisses case

Charges of domestic violence have been dropped against Seattle Councilmember Richard McIver after a judge ruled that statements his wife made to police were hearsay.
Marlaina Kiner-McIver gave two different accounts of an argument to 9-1-1 operators and police, and has refused to testify at trial against her husband of 30 years. The Oct. 10 9-1-1 call Kiner-McIver placed stated that the couple had gotten into a purely verbal argument after McIver had come home after several drinks...


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NAIVASHA, Kenya -- Ethnic clashes convulsed western Kenya on Sunday as gangs fought with crude weapons and set homes ablaze in this tourist gateway, pushing the death toll from a month of violence over the country's flawed presidential election to nearly 800.
The bloodshed -- with Sunday marking exactly one month since the Dec. 27 vote -- has transformed this once-stable African country, pitting longtime neighbors against each other and turning towns where tourists used to gather for luxury holidays into no-go zones....


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COLUMBIA, South Carolina (AP) -- Overwhelming support from Black voters fueled Barack Obama to a decisive win over Hillary Rodham Clinton in South Carolina's primary, a boost to his campaign just 10 days before a coast-to-coast presidential nomination competition in which nearly half the U.S. states will vote.
Former Sen. John Edwards, who has yet to win any of the early state contests, finished third Saturday, a sharp setback in his native state, where he triumphed in the 2004 campaign....


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Portland"s minorities must look toward sustainable careers

Thanks to globalization, many blue-collar manufacturing jobs have packed up and left the country. Workers in developing countries will do the same jobs, but for far less money. And costs for employers are lower all round. For American workers, however, this exodus has left a huge void where traditional living wage jobs used to be. Now a new environmental justice movement says the future security of working class families will depend on "green collar" jobs.
"The chief moral obligation of the 21st Century is to build a green economy that is strong enough to lift people out of poverty,"....


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This week Mayor Tom Potter moved his office to Jefferson High School. Here he is pictured along with students Sheree Bull, 16, and Tiana Rasin, 17, at a Listening Lunch circle. At the circle, the mayor and other representatives from city and state government ate with students and listened to student views on the on important issues affecting them and their school.


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Commission could handle discrimination, bias claims in Portland

Hate crimes, discrimination in employment, housing and justice. Communities all over the world are struggling to find solutions to the problem of discrimination based on race, ethnic origin, gender, sexual orientation, or religion — and Portland is no different.
That's why this week, after four years without any governmental office whose mission is dealing with discrimination, Mayor Potter brought legislation to the city council that will create a new human relations commission, to handle discrimination claims, educate the public about the issues, advocate for equality and advise other agencies and organizations.
"I'm truly excited by the possibilities …," Mayor Potter said last week. "I think the time is right and the growing diversity of Portland demands it....

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