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Source:
Myra Gordon, 785-532-6276, mygordon@k-state.edu
http://www.k-state.edu/ddcd/mlkweek2007.htm
News release prepared by: Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, 785-532-6415,
ebarcomb@k-state.edu
Thursday,
January 4, 2007
MARTIN
LUTHER KING JR. WEEK OBSERVANCES AT K-STATE INCLUDE DEDICATION OF
BUST AT AHEARN FIELD HOUSE, SITE OF KING'S LAST UNIVERSITY SPEECH
MANHATTAN
-- Martin Luther King Jr. will once again have a presence at Kansas
State University, where he delivered a speech nearly four decades
ago.
K-State
will dedicate a bust of King at noon Friday, Jan. 19, outside the
southeast corner of Ahearn Field House as the culmination of the
university's Martin Luther King Jr. Observance Week, Jan. 14-19.
Adding a special poignancy to the event is that the last university
speech King gave before his assassination in April 1968 was at the
field house. On Jan. 19, 1968, King presented "The Future of
Integration" as part of the University Convocation Lecture
Series.
The
bronze sculpture of King, designed by K-State alumnus Richard Bergen,
Salina, will sit atop a black African granite base on a pedestal
with the names of various donors.
The
day's celebration also will include the honorary naming of 17th
Street, which runs by Ahearn Field House, as Martin Luther King
Jr. Memorial Drive. The site of the bust eventually will be encompassed
by the Coretta Scott King Garden of Engagement, to be designed by
members of K-State's National Organization of Minority Architecture
Students.
Myra
Gordon, K-State's associate provost for diversity and dual career
development, said the observance week continues to grow each year.
"We
will be celebrating a set of historical events with the dedication
of 17th Street as Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Drive and the
installation of the bust," Gordon said. "It's just really
amazing to be part of what's going to occur during this week in
Manhattan, Kan."
That
K-State was the site of King's last speech on a college campus is
a bittersweet distinction, Gordon said.
"It
is so terribly sad that we have lost this man and the way we lost
him," she said. "I remember the day of his assassination
as if it were yesterday. But if a university has to be one of the
last universities, then we have been blessed that it is K-State.
We're a university that heard and documented where Dr. King's thinking
was within four months of his passing."
The
theme for this year's Martin Luther King Jr. Observance Week at
K-State is "Marching Toward A Just Society." Activities
include:
*
Weeklong -- College of Engineering Martin Luther King poster presentation,
atrium complex in Rathbone and Fiedler halls.
*
Saturday, Jan. 13 -- Martin Luther King community celebration, Manhattan
High School East Campus. Includes music, speakers, presentations
and a candlelight walk to First United Methodist Church, 612 Poyntz
Ave., 6:30 p.m.
*
Monday, Jan. 15 -- Prayer breakfast and buffet, 8 a.m., Clarion
Hotel, 530 Richards Drive. Cost is $9 per person. Clyde Howard,
Human Rights Commission and K-State director of affirmative action,
will speak.
*
Monday, Jan. 15 -- Martin Luther King Jr. Day activities, 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m., Manhattan Town Center. Day includes music, speakers,
community service projects and presentations.
*
Tuesday, Jan. 16 -- "Diversity: Addressing the Needs of Our
People," 12:30-2 p.m., Flint Hills Room, K-State Student Union.
Presented by Carl T. Butler, national Minorities in Agriculture,
Natural Resources and Related Sciences public relations chair and
program manager for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's 1890 program.
Sponsored by Cargill Inc. and the K-State College of Agriculture
diversity programs office.
*
Tuesday, Jan. 16 -- Interfaith dialogue, "King, Ghandi, Ikeda
-- A Legacy of Building on Peace," noon, K and S ballrooms
in the Union. Sponsored by the K-State Committee on Religion, K-State
Martin Luther King Jr. Committee, K-State Women's Center, Campaign
for Nonviolence, K-State office of student life and Soka Gakkai
International-USA.
*
Tuesday, Jan. 16 -- Commerce Bank Award presentations and reception,
3:30-5 p.m., Bluemont Room, Union.
*
Tuesday, Jan. 16 -- "Building Peace," presented by Phyllis
Goodson, 7 p.m., K and S ballrooms, Union.
*
Jan. 16-18 -- Showing of the film, "King, Ghandi and Ikeda
-- A Legacy of Building Peace," noon, 4 and 7 p.m., K and S
ballrooms, Union.
*
Wednesday, Jan. 17 -- Martin Luther King noontime lounge, noon to
1 p.m., designated locations at K-State colleges. Includes King
readings and discussions.
*
Wednesday, Jan. 17 -- "Four Little Girls," 7 p.m. at Forum
Hall, Union. The Spike Lee film recounts the bombing of the Sixteenth
Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. Sponsored by the Union
Programming Council.
*
Thursday, Jan. 18 -- Martin Luther King Observance Week luncheon,
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., Union ballroom. Dr. Debbye Turner, a veterinarian
and Miss America 1990, will speak. Cost is $10 per person; make
reservations at 785-532-6276 by Friday, Jan. 12. Sponsored by Black
Student Union, Student Government Association diversity programming
committee and the College of Veterinary Medicine.
*
Thursday, Jan. 18 -- Martin Luther King candlelight vigil, featuring
"The Untold Story of Emmet Louis Till," 7:30 p.m., K-State
Alumni Center ballroom. The documentary film unravels the brutal
murder of a 14-year-old African-American boy. Director Keith Beauchamp
will speak. Sponsored by Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. and Student
Government Association diversity programming committee.
*
Friday, Jan. 19 -- "A Street Fit for a King," 10:30 a.m.,
Long's Park, 17th and Yuma streets. Dedication of 17th Street as
Martin Luther King Memorial Drive. Remarks by Bruce Snead, Manhattan
mayor.
*
Friday, Jan. 19 -- Memorial march form Long's Park to Ahearn Field
House, 11 a.m. Progresses from 17th and Colorado streets to the
east side of Ahearn. A hot chocolate social sponsored by leadership
studies and programs will follow.
*
Friday, Jan. 19 -- Martin Luther King bust dedication and installation
ceremony, noon, Ahearn Field House. Remarks by Dan Lykins, Kansas
Board of Regents, as well as Gordon and others.
*
Friday, Jan. 19 -- "Naming Streets for Martin Luther King Jr.:
A new Geography of Memory in America," 3:30 p.m., Forum Hall,
Union. Presented by Derek Alderman, professor of geography, East
Carolina University. Sponsored by Gamma Theta Upsilon geography
honor society and the K-State geography department.
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