HIGH TIDE
Redondo Union High School Redondo Beach, CA October 26, 2016 Vol. XCVII Edition 4
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Taking to the streets. 1. Chief Sealth Interna-
tional High School and Denny Middle School teachers and students hold a rally Wednesday morning, Oct. 19, 2016 to show their commitment to closing opportunity gaps and continuing the conversation on racial equity in their school in Seattle. PHOTO BY MIKE SIEGEL/THE SEATTLE TIMES/TNS 2. Protesters chant outside Bank of America Stadium Sunday, Sept. 25, 2016 in Charlotte, N.C. PHOTO BY JEFF SINER/CHARLOTTE OBSERVER/TNS 3. Protestors confront a police line blocking their progress up Magnolia Avenue below the I-8 freeway in El Cajon, Calif., on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2016. PHOTO BY PEGGY PEATTIE/ SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE/TNS 4. Ebonay Lee holds up her fist toward a line of Sheriff deputies as she and other people protesting Tuesday police shooting of a black man confront the deputies under the Highway 67 bridge on Broadway in El Cajon, Calif., on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2016. PHOTO BY HAYNE PALMOUR IV/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE/TNS 5. Protesters speak at police officers as fans leave Bank of America Stadium on Sept. 25, 2016 in Charlotte, N.C. PHOTO BY JEFF SINER/CHARLOTTE OBSERVER/TNS
Schonberg recounts his experiences with police by Shaniya Markalanda
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As soon as he sees a cop take a U-turn, he immediately pulls over. Not because he has done something wrong, but because he is so used to being pulled over by police, and now it is the easy thing to do. Half-white and half-black, freshman counselor Arond Schonberg has had many encounters with police officers. “I’m big. I’m brown. And I can fit a lot of different cultures. I think what happens is
that when police officers first come out they work in jails and prisons. If you look at statistics, 80% of crime is supposedly committed by blacks and hispanics, so I could probably look like I’m black and hispanic. People still have those stereotypes. All people have those stereotypes,” Schonberg said. When he first moved to the Lomita area,
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