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Life-long friendships made at ‘Free Spirit Convention’
By Cassandra Kapp
Special to KP News
Growing up in the area of the
quaint, suburban waterfront town of Gig Harbor, it seems
as though I sometimes live out my days in a routine,
monotonous manner. Gig Harbor is a very homogeneous
town, according to the U. S. Census Bureau, which states
that three-fourths of the city’s population is
Caucasian. It is for this reason that I have always
wondered what it would be like to meet

Cassandra Kapp, right, in front of the White
House with
the Tennessee representative, Caitlin
Lindstrom.
Photo courtesy Cassandra Kapp |
teenagers who have grown up
in communities other than the Gig Harbor and peninsula
area, or in communities outside Washington state. Last
March, I was fortunate enough to have my thoughts
answered.
As the recipient of the Al Neuharth
Free Spirit Journalism Award, I traveled to Washington,
D.C. along with 101 other student journalists (one male
and female from each state and D.C.) to meet with
journalists and newsmakers during a conference program.
Although the guest speakers and
journalism workshops taught me more than I ever could
have imagined, my most life-changing experience was
meeting those fellow high school journalists from across
the country. Nearly one-third of the student journalists
were minorities.
The convention was only five days.
However, this was enough time for me to form a very
strong bond with the “free sprits.” These kids opened my
eyes to the rest of the world, showed me the true
meaning of hardwork and dedication, and were the most
multifaceted students I have ever met.
The male representative from
Mississippi was African-American. He had grown up in one
of the poorest cities in the nation and decided to
develop a newspaper at his school in order to keep
himself busy and out of trouble. He described the
blatant racism he encounters in the South. Kids at his
school accessorize their cars’ rearview mirrors with
mini-lynches. He even witnessed part of a Ku Klux Klan
meeting before he “got the heck out of there.” The other
Southern students agreed that obvious racism ran rampant
at their schools as well.
One of the girls was trilingual and
will be attending Harvard University this fall. The boy
from Alaska lived two hours away from civilization.
Another girl lived through Hurricane Katrina and had to
survive on packaged meals for several weeks. The girl
from New York City had never driven a car. The boy from
Wisconsin would go out “cow tipping” on the weekends.
One girl was getting ready for her debutante ball. There
were liberals from California and conservatives from
Nebraska.
The “free spirits” and I would get
in arguments about silly topics, such as what is the
correct term for a carbonated beverage. The kids from
the Northeast and California swore by “soda,” while the
West and Midwest went by “pop,” and the South referred
to it as “Coke.”
We were all so different, but yet
were bound together by one thing: our love for
journalism and the power to change the world, one word
at a time.
Today, more than two months after
the convention, I am still in contact with many of the
“Free Spirits.” With some, I have developed lifelong
bonds and I know I will be meeting many of them later in
my journalism career.
I urge Key Peninsula students to
travel outside of Washington state, whether it is for
college or vacation, in order to meet a diversity of
people, learn about unfamiliar situations, and possibly,
to create lifelong friendships.
Cassandra Kapp is a 2007
graduate of Peninsula High School and the outgoing
co-editor-in-chief of the PHS newspaper “The Outlook,”
where she won numerous awards. She will continue her
journalism career this fall at Northwestern University
in Illinois.
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