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Obama expected to talk with Chicago teens about challenges they face

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — In addition to a speech at a South Side high school on Friday, President Barack Obama is expected to meet privately with 20 young black men there and discuss the challenges of growing up in a rough neighborhood.

White House officials asked Principal Antonio Ross of Hyde Park Academy High School to suggest students the president could meet with. Ross said he recommended teens in a mentoring and behavioral skills program called Becoming a Man.

“These students are very honest, very open, very opinionated and passionate,” Ross said, adding that Obama will “get a real dose of what it feels like, at least from their perspective, of what it feels like growing up in the city of Chicago right now as a teenager.”

Obama, coming to Chicago as part of a three-state tour following his State of the Union speech, will address up to 700 people in the Hyde Park Academy gymnasium, with students, mostly seniors, taking up about 300 of those spots, Ross said. The rest will include parents, community members and public officials, he said. The event is not open to the public.

“We have a lot of students who are not doing well and may need the president’s remarks for motivation,” Ross said.

The president will discuss proposals for “strengthening the economy for the middle class and those striving to get there,” White House officials said.

He is also expected to touch upon the subject of gun violence in the wake of the slaying of Hadiya Pendleton, a 15-year-old honor student, at a park a mile from Obamas’ home in the Kenwood neighborhood.

Hadiya’s parents, Nathaniel Pendleton and Cleopatra Cowley-Pendleton, were guests Tuesday of the president and first lady at the State of the Union speech.

On Wednesday, Sen. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., said he had met with Cowley-Pendleton in Washington and asked permission to name his gun-safety legislation after Hadiya. A Kirk spokesman said he understood Hadiya’s parents to be “receptive” to the idea and added: “We will work with them on it.”

Kirk, who returned to work Jan. 3 nearly a year after he suffered a major stroke, said that one of his top priorities this year is to pass the bill.

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