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As Legend sang with the students, India Reynolds, 17, a member of the choir, said they all sang backgrounds a little softer to hear his voice. "If 'What's Going On' came out yesterday, it still would have been a hit," she said. "He wrote that album so that people would listen." Many of the same issues Gaye wrote about still linger today, such as war, violence and unemployment, she said. "Using my craft to help people notice them is an honor," Reynolds said. The Kennedy Center has partners in seven cities for the project, including Cleveland, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland, Santa Fe, N.M., and the Chicago-based Digital Youth Network. The center created curriculum for teachers to bring the program into their classrooms, or students can join on their own. Darrell Ayers, the center's vice president for education, said engaging students with digital media integrates literacy and artistic literacy with lessons about history and issues of the day. It's also a way for young people "to realize the impact the arts can have, not just to make you feel good but to make people think about things." ___ Online: What's Going On ... Now:
http://www.whatsgoingonnow.org/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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