Posts tagged Quaker Times Spring 2025
Black Girl Magic

Black Girl Magic is a holistic leadership development program that supports Black female students at Franklin High School. We are focused on empowering and fostering a deep and genuine relationship with African American and East African girls by providing them a safe space to gather and build engagement. We strengthen connection by volunteering at the Esperanza House, an assisted living home located in South Seattle. We focus particularly on African American, Latina, and Indigenous women and those who are living in low-income environments. 

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Quaker Times Editor’s letter

The more I work on this newsletter the more I become aware of the gift that Franklin was for me. In part, this awareness arises out of the terrific camaraderie of working with alumni friends old and new – those known from Franklin, Asa Mercer, and John Muir, and those more recently made.  It also comes from appreciating Franklin's long history, from its inception, of being at the center of diverse public education in Seattle, and how the values created still permeate the walls. 

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From Franklin High to Howard University: My Journey to an HBCU

When I walked the halls of Franklin High School, I dreamed of a college experience that would challenge me, inspire me, and surround me with a community that looked like me, uplifted me, and pushed me to be my best. That dream led me to Howard University—one of the most prestigious Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) in the country.

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The Gang of Four

The "Gang of Four" were Larry Gossett,’63, Roberto Maestas, Bob Santos, ‘52, and Bernie Whitebear. It began in the heat of battle within the walls of Franklin High School on the afternoon of March 29, 1968. Early in the afternoon, more than 100 Black students at Franklin took over the principal’s office in a classic, student protest sit-in. They said they were not leaving Principal Loren Ralph's office until their five demands were met. 

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Keye Luke, Class of 1922: Actor and Artist (1904-1991)

Growing up in Seattle, born in China, Keye Luke knew that he wanted to be an artist. To his surprise, he also became a movie, television, and stage star. In the 1930s, he played teenager Lee Chan, Charlie Chan’s “number one son” in a series of popular movies. In the 1970s, he became just as famous as Master Po, a blind sage in the hit television series Kung Fu. In a screen, stage, and television career that lasted more than a half century, Luke racked up more than 150 credits as a movie, television, and voice actor. A founding member of the Screen Actors Guild, he was honored in 1991 with a star on Hollywood Boulevard’s Walk of Fame. In May 2015, Luke was inducted into the Franklin High School Hall of Fame in a ceremony at the Mt. Baker Community Clubhouse. In attendance were his niece Myrna Luke Tsukamoto and several other family members.  

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Remembering Dr. Mark Dedomenico, class of 1955 October 9, 1937 - December 7, 2024

Mark arrived in Seattle with his family when he was three,  in the early 1940s during World War II. The Dedomenico family, second-generation Italian immigrants, had moved north from California after their pasta factory burned down, and reestablished it in Seattle.  They  lived above the Golden Grain Macaroni factory in Georgetown while the business produced rations for the military.  A few years later the family settled in Seward Park.

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