Early Learning Festival at Hamlin Robinson on November 9

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The annual early learning festival, “Building Blocks: Learn, Eat, Play” on Saturday, Nov. 9, from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Seattle’s Hamlin Robinson School.

HRS is located in the TT Minor Building at 1700 E Union.   Accessible via Metro and there is plenty of parking in the lot at 17th & Union and the back lot at 17th & Pike.

Building Blocks is free to attend. More than 35 local preschools will be on site to answer questions. Free snacks, childcare, mini lectures on hot topics and live entertainment for the little ones!

Entertainment includes: Stone Soup Theatre, Jamtown and Your Imaginary Friend.

Food from: Beansprouts, Smith Brother’s Farms and Hello Robin Cookies!

Mini-talks: GET WashingtonSara Eizen of NEST and Sponge School.

Get information on everything from saving for college (GET Washington) to new summertime camps for toddlers (Pacfiic Science Center, among others).

Seattle Gymnastics Academy will provide free on-site childcare so that you can listen to a mini talk or work through the booths without having to wrangle the kid!

To learn more about the Building Blocks event:  www.hamlinrobinson.org OR contact Amy at: [email protected]

 

Central District resident captures history of the neighborhood through personal stories

Just after Justin Ferrari’s shooting death, Central District resident Madeline Crowley began attending community meetings, where she noticed “people weren’t really listening to each other.” Crowley says that despite the neighborhood’s diversity, there seemed to be a lack of connection to the past, and to each other.

“My hope is that if we hear each other’s stories, that may facilitate some openness and

Madeline Crowley's Central District history project website

Madeline Crowley’s Central District history project website

bridge gaps,” Crowley says. “Besides, the history of this neighborhood and the personalities in it are fascinating.”

Crowley set out to document the neighborhood’s history through the stories of its residents through a project she calls “The People of the Central Area.” She’s posting her interviews, which now number 17, on a blog here. Crowley started her project in November 2012 with an interview with John Platt of St. Clouds restaurant. She plans to interview about 30 to 50 people in total, wrapping up the project about this time next year.

Crowley had a lot to say about her favorite experiences working on the project:

It’s enlarged my sense of the Central Area and changed its ‘geography’ for me. I drive down a street and see a house that I now know was occupied by a young Sephardic girl in the 1920s. It’s nearby another house where a young Chinese boy played kick the can in the street with his two best friends, a Japanese kid and an African-American kid in the 1940s.

The neighborhood is now becoming populated (for me) with other people’s memories. Since I didn’t grow up here this has added immeasurably to my love of the area.

More importantly, though, is that it’s enlarged my small experience of the world. If I listen to people carefully I learn what it might have been like to be sent from your home, from most of your possessions, to see your parents stripped of their business and to grow up in an American concentration camp as happened to the Japanese-American population in the 1940s (they were the largest ethnic group in this neighborhood at that time).

Or in another example, I’ve listened to what it was like to hide from the police in a backyard during the Black Panther period, and what it was like to be a white neighbor of the Black Panthers who knew them and supported them. While in other cases, when someone lived further away and didn’t know the Panthers personally, they were afraid during their marches. All of these things are ‘true’ in that they reflect the different experiences of people living in the neighborhood.

I’m interested in each person’s ‘truth’ in their story, not in finding a singular truth as I don’t believe memories function that way.

We plan to reprint excerpts of Crowley’s interviews on occasion. In the meantime, you can read them on her website, and donate to keep her project going.

LIFE ENRICHMENT BOOKSTORE SILENT AUCTION/FUNDRAISER

These Silent Auction Items are GREAT Christmas gifts!

Bid on your favorite items:  Retro sports memorabilia: Superbowl; Chicago Bulls; Michael Jordan; Seattle Sonics; Washington Huskies; and more.  Ebony Magazines: dates from 1965 with various celebrities on the cover. Out of print-hard to find books.  Malcolm X items.  Ponies from the famous “Trail of Painted Ponies”.  Star Trek: Phaser and other items.  Leather biker jackets.  Reebok and Nike shoes (Kemp, Kamikazi II, Reignman II; Barkley, Pippen, Air Penny II).  Shannon Crystal items.  Artwork; gift baskets;  jewelry; African clothing; restaurant and bakery gift certificates; gym memberships; Black collectible dolls; unique services; action figures; sports figures’ bobbleheads; and more.

Bidding begins Mon., Nov. 4 – Sat., Nov. 9, 2013.  Winning bidders announced immediately upon bid closing on Nov. 9th.

Building Blocks Early Learning & Preschool Festival

Attention all parents of infants, crawlers, toddlers and preschoolers! Seattle’s Child is thrilled to bring back its annual early learning festival, “Building Blocks: Learn, Eat, Play” on Saturday, Nov. 9, from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Seattle’s Hamlin Robinson School.

Building Blocks is free to attend. More than 35 local preschools will be on site to answer questions. Free snacks, childcare, mini lectures on hot topics and live entertainment for the little ones!

 

Women and children have been some of the first to feel the effects of budget cuts and government shutdown. While politicians bicker and posture, vital programs such as Headstart, WIC (an early nutrition program) and domestic violence services take big hits from already small budgets. This leaves thousands of poor and working families stranded without resources or services.

Enough is enough! Join the next Sisters Organize for Survival meeting to discuss how to make changes needed to prioritize childcare, food and the whole social safety net. All are welcome. You are needed!

Childcare will be provided.
For more information, to volunteer or endorse, call 206-722-6057 or email [email protected]

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SPD busts burglary suspects as Sheriff chopper helps foil roof to roof getaway

Screen Shot 2013-11-01 at 10.35.08 PMSeattle Police with the assistance of a K9 unit and King County Sheriff’s Guardian 1 helicopter pursued one burglary suspect who attempted a roof to roof escape after a caller reported a break-in underway in the 400 block of 21st Ave.

Just after 9 PM a 911 caller reported the sound of breaking glass at a 21st Ave house. Police responded and began chasing suspects through the area.

One suspect was taken into custody in an alley of E Alder.

Guardian 1 spotted a second suspect shortly thereafter on a roof of a nearby house.

“He’s [lying] on the roof next to the chimney,” the chopper’s unit reported via East Precinct radio.

The suspect proceeded to leap across the roof of multiple houses in the area as police on the ground pursued the man. After a warning from police, the suspect was removed from the roof and taken into custody, according to police radio.

Adoption Information Night at Giddens School, Wed. Nov. 20th, 6:30pm

Adoption-information-night-2013Want to learn more about growing your family through adoption? Come celebrate National Adoption month on Wednesday, November 20th, 6:30-8pm, at Giddens School (620 20th Ave. S.) and hear from several local adoption agencies such as Amara, Open Adoption and Family Services, and WACAP about their unique foster and adoption programs. Childcare will be available.

Contact April Rauch with any questions and to RSVP for childcare: 206-940-8080.

Want to learn more about growing your family through adoption? Come celebrate National Adoption month on November 20th at Giddens School and hear from several local adoption agencies such as Amara, Open Adoption and Family Services, and WACAP about their unique foster and adoption programs. Childcare will be available.

Seattle University buys former hospital laundry facility

Seattle University has paid a hefty $9.2 million sum for the former hospital laundry facility

Former hospital laundry facility at 1300 E. Columbia St.

Former hospital laundry facility at 1300 E. Columbia St.

at 13th and Columbia, reports the Puget Sound Business Journal. When we reported it was for sale back in July, we noted it sat in Seattle U’s overlay and that the school might be interested in the purchase.

The PSBJ has more details:

The 1.4 acres, where a commercial laundry operated for many years, is one of the last big development sites left near downtown Seattle. Current zoning would allow construction of a five-story residential project.

Seattle University, whose 7,500-student campus is just west and south of the property, is growing. According to the university’s 20-year master plan, new facilities need to be added to accommodate an expected 36 percent increase in the school’s student population.

The university has no specific plans for the property on Columbia, Associate Vice President of Facilities Robert P. Schwartz said Monday. “We are reviewing our options, which will take some time.”

The building was long occupied by the Hospital Central Services Administration (HCSA), which serves Swedish, Virginia Mason, Overlake Medical Center, Providence Health & Services and Seattle Children’s. They shuttered the laundry facility that had operated at 1300 E. Columbia St. since 1966.