Thursday, January 13, 1994 Winston-Salem Chronicle MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. SPECIAL EDITION Page 13 Coretta Scott King , widow of Dr. Martin Luther J J King, right, chairperson of ther MLK Jr. Federal J ? Holiday Commission, and Attorney General Jj Janet Reno takes part in a luncheon in ?J Washhgton Monday Jan . 10. Reno was the\\ keynote speaker at the luncheon which honored I* the Turner Broacasting System; The Seattle* J Times; The Shell Oil Co. Foundation; and\\ Grand Haven, Mich., High School for their\ ? efforts on behalf of the King Federal Holiday. j{ Coretta King Asks All Adversaries to Halt Violence on MLK Day ATLANTA (AP) ? The wife of siain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. is appealing for a worldwide halj; to, violence on Jan. 17, the federal holiday honoring her husband. ? 4 We 3Te asking adversaries who are engaged in personal as we44 as political conflicts to honor Martin Luther King Jr. on this day by reaching out to each other." Coretta Scott Kipg said Friday. * She made her appeal the same -day that the Rev. Jesse Jackson con vened an anti-violence conference in Washington to arrive at solutions for a rising crime rate among black Americans. King was assassinated April 4, 1968. in~Memphis. Tenn. Mrs. King, outlining plans for Atlanta's annual 10-day observance of the holiday, also suggested that people devote the day to serving humanity with such activities as feeding a hungry family or collect ing food and medical supplies for Bosnia. J * ? The main event is the Jan. 17 "State of the Dream" speech by Jl Mrs: King at Ehenezer Baptist** Church, where King and his father preached. The federal holiday commemo-?}; rates the birthday of King, who wasjj' bom on Jan. 15. 1929. jj ? 2 ? -Upeoming King Celebration To Focus on Avers Case j WEST POINT ; Miss. (AP) ? West Point's upcoming Martin Luther King Day celebration will place special emphasis on Mississippi's upcoming college desegregation case. ? The lawsuit, filed in 1975 by Jake Ayers Sr. on behalf of his son and more than 20 other students, charges that Mississippi's institu tions of higher leJfWfng are unfairly funded, giving predominantly white universities more money than historically black universities. U.S. District Judge Neal Biggers is set to hear Ayers vs. Fordice Feb. I. "Where do we go from here?" is the theme^of the Jan. 17 celebra tion. King's life will begin with a convo cation at' 10:30 a.m. at Mary Holmes n. College s Sage Gymnasium, followed by a march from the campu? to Davidson Chapel CME Church on Martin Luther King Drive. Attorney Alvin Chambliss, lead plaintiffs' counsel of the Avers case, will speak at the church at 1 p.m. Education is vital to the growth of persons of all races and is playing a large role in this year's celebration, said Ken Stamps;, a West Point legal consultant and member of the West Point MLK Holiday Committee. A speech Kiqg gave to a Southern Christian Leadership Conference on equity in funding Stamps said the committee couldn't have found a more up-to-the minute way of applying King's philosophy. During the Civil Rights strug gle of the 1960s, "disparity existed in education primarily irl the South but all over the country, " Stamps said. *xThere were numerous inequities in appropriating money and there was waste in ruhning two school systems, with differences in the amounts spent per pupil, on black students and white students. This was what Dr. King was speak ing about, "Ayers has been a long time coming, especially when you think of all the years there was a dual system of education in ? Mississippi/' he-&akk "D ur children may learn about heroes of the past . Our task is to make ourselves architects wu uiv^i li of the future/^ lgt?io Kenyatta ist Prime Minister of Kenya Uphold the dream . . . r 1992 McDonald s Corporation Jonestown Management Co. t ?426 Jonestown Road ?2920 Waughtown Street ?780 Martin Luther King, Jr. Dr. Outstanding Alumnus of Morehouse College World-Famous Leader of the Non-Violent Movement Distinguished Winner of the Nobel Peace Prize There is nothing in all the world greater than freedom. It is worth paying for; it is worth losing a job for; it is worth going to jail for. I would rather be a free pauper than a rich slave. I would rather die in abject poverty with my convictions than live in inordinate riches with the lack of self-respect.'* Taken front I hmv a Dream ? | ' 77u' (funltilions of MAK11N H rn IKK KINC,. JU compiled and edited hi/ U711Y. 1 1( XSKJNS We salute Fellow Alumnus Rev. /Dr. Martin Luther King+ - Mr. J. Fred Acree" Mr. John E. Allen" Mr. Leroy Anderson, Jr." Atty. L. Todd Burke"9 Mr. Gregory T. Burrell"0 Mr. William H. Cain. Ill" Atty. Willie L. Clark, Jr. Dr. Luritz C. Creque4' Dr. Edward L. Davis Mi. L. Duaue Dayir Rev. Jerry A. Drayton Mr. I. Monroe Falls"7 Mr. Craig Marberry" Mr. Joseph Scott Mr. George Simmons ** ? / u Forgiveness is not an occasional act; it is a permanent attitude. / / - Dr. Martin Luther Kinq, Jr. It Is 1994. Let Freedom Ring. BELK IN THE TRIAD SALUTES HIS MEMORY AND HIS DREAMS. II IKIJ^I