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Archive for Saturday, January 19, 2002

King honored in Topeka events

January 19, 2002

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— The Lawrence delegation at Friday's Martin Luther King Jr. celebration included two white students, a black state representative, a Hispanic Kansas University official and the president of Haskell Indian Nations University, a Standing Rock Sioux.

"I am delighted just to sit here and see the diversity of our crowd," said Rep. Barbara Ballard, D-Lawrence. "I think Dr. Martin Luther King would just smile."

State Rep. Barbara Ballard, foreground, leads the audience of
several hundred in singing during Martin Luther King Jr. ceremonies
Friday at the Capitol rotunda in Topeka. State officials
participating included Kansas Gov. Bill Graves, left. Janet
Murguia, Kansas University executive vice chancellor for university
relations, right, was featured speaker. Karen Swisher, Haskell
Indian Nations University president, gave the benediction, and two
South Junior High students were honored for their King-inspired
artwork.

State Rep. Barbara Ballard, foreground, leads the audience of several hundred in singing during Martin Luther King Jr. ceremonies Friday at the Capitol rotunda in Topeka. State officials participating included Kansas Gov. Bill Graves, left. Janet Murguia, Kansas University executive vice chancellor for university relations, right, was featured speaker. Karen Swisher, Haskell Indian Nations University president, gave the benediction, and two South Junior High students were honored for their King-inspired artwork.

Several hundred people gathered in the Capitol rotunda for the state's official King Day observance. The holiday honoring the slain civil rights leader's birthday is Monday.

"This is a wonderful day to celebrate Dr. King's legacy," Gov. Bill Graves said. "We have made great strides in this country in civil rights, but there is always room for improvement."

Near the towering mural of John Brown another civil rights icon who died fighting for his cause the diverse crowd listened to spirituals and speakers who hoped to keep King's spirit alive.

The featured speaker Janet Murguia, KU's executive vice chancellor for university relations said King's message wasn't one to be kept solely among Americans.

"Just as surely it belongs to the women and children of Kabul (Afghanistan), the members of our armed forces and anyone who struggles in a just cause to cast off the yoke of human tyranny," she said.

Kansas officials lead a march from the Kansas Judicial Center to
the Statehouse in Topeka as part of activities commemorating Martin
Luther King Jr . The group included, from left, State Sen, David
Adkins, Gov. Bill Graves, Atty. Gen. Carla Stovall and Leo Taylor,
chairman of the Kansas Martin Luther King Committee. The state
celebration of the slain civil rights leader's life was Friday.

Kansas officials lead a march from the Kansas Judicial Center to the Statehouse in Topeka as part of activities commemorating Martin Luther King Jr . The group included, from left, State Sen, David Adkins, Gov. Bill Graves, Atty. Gen. Carla Stovall and Leo Taylor, chairman of the Kansas Martin Luther King Committee. The state celebration of the slain civil rights leader's life was Friday.

With projections showing there will be no majority race in California in 10 years and no majority race in the United States in 50 years, Murguia said making connections between people should be a major goal.

"In a more interconnected world, this diversity can be our greatest strength," she said.

Two South Junior High School students were honored by Graves at the event for their King-inspired artwork. Margaret Pendleton won first place in the eighth-grade category for her work, which said, "Let Freedom Ring" with two bells.

Kate Truscello, a ninth-grader, won first in the seventh- through ninth-grade division. Her work said, "Making the Symphony of Freedom Play Louder Every Day" and was adorned with music notes.

King "really worked for what he believed in. He had the guts to go out and make that speech," Truscello said.

"He changed the whole world. If he hadn't, we might still be segregated. Look around here there's all different races," Pendleton added.



Past stories, 6News clips, schedule and MLK links at www.ljworld.com/section/MLK.

Karen Swisher, president of Haskell Indian Nations University, offered this challenge to the crowd in her benediction: "Dr. King's dedication to equality is a work in progress."

Here are the Lawrence events scheduled to honor the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday:

Banquet sponsored by Ecumenical Fellowship, featuring Richard Littlebear, president of Dull Knife Memorial College, Lame Deer, Mont., 6:30 p.m. today, Kansas Union Ballroom.

Gospel musical, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, Free Methodist Church, 3001 Lawrence Ave.

Commemorative service featuring Kansas University Chancellor Robert Hemenway, 11:15 a.m. Monday, Lied Center.

Discussion on public and civil rights by U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson, noon Wednesday, Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.

"Eyes on the Prize," video documentary about King, 7 p.m. Thursday at Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union.

"Phyllis Wheatley, Freedom's Poet, 1754-1785," one-woman theater performance by Omofolabo Ajayi-Soyinka, 3 p.m. Friday, Ecumenical Christian Ministries.

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