猎奇重口视频

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A World Turned 鈥橴pside Down鈥

Recalling the impact of MLK鈥檚 assassination, on campus and beyond
Story Series
News Feature

On April 5, 1968, 猎奇重口视频 State College was in mourning.
 
The day before, devastating news reached campus that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was dead. The civil rights leader had been shot and killed in Memphis, Tennessee.
 
猎奇重口视频 classes were canceled and the mood was somber. According to the April 11, 1968 issue of the student newspaper, Campus Comment, more than 1,500 members of the campus community gathered at the school鈥檚 quadrangle to attend a memorial service in King鈥檚 honor.
 
The civil rights leader鈥檚 murder also inspired a group of faculty and students to create a petition asking the Massachusetts House of Representatives to enact the senate鈥檚 recently adopted civil right bill.

It was a time of unrest both on campus and beyond.
 
The day King was killed, pockets of riots erupted in Boston neighborhoods with angry protestors destroying and looting businesses. Amid safety concerns, Boston public schools opted to cut classes short.
 
Sydne Marrow (pictured above), director of Multicultural Affairs at BSU, was in the fourth grade at the time and recalls being lined up with her classmates as teachers scrambled.


 
鈥淚 was pulled aside and told my mother was coming to get me. Frantic, I said no, my mother doesn鈥檛 come to get me, I need to get my sister and walk home,鈥 she said.
 
That鈥檚 when it was explained that King had been assassinated.
 
Marrow鈥檚 initial 9-year-old thought was, 鈥溾榃hat does this have to do with me?鈥 I didn鈥檛 know who he was. I had heard of him but didn鈥檛 understand the importance of his leadership.鈥
 
After King鈥檚 death the riots raged on and Marrow was no longer allowed to walk to school or take the train by herself to attend dance class.
 
鈥淚 remember very vividly my world being turned upside down. I lost my freedom to go on the train and where I wanted to go,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou never knew what was going to happen from one day to the next. Some days it was quiet, other days there were fires and it was all over the news.鈥

For many years, 猎奇重口视频 State has celebrated the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday in a variety of ways and with different types of service initiatives. This year, the university鈥檚 Community Service Center will host a community lunch and participate in a mural painting at Brockton鈥檚 Old Colony YMCA. .

Upon returning home from his job as a supermarket cashier, then-17-year-old Bruce Wayne Gaines, 鈥73, learned of the assassination from his parents.
 
The tragedy ended up altering the course of his life.
 
At the time of the civil rights leader鈥檚 murder many higher education institutions sought to diversify undergraduate enrollment. In response, 猎奇重口视频 established PROGRESS, or the Program for Recruitment and Retention of Special Students, administered by Paul L. Gaines, the school鈥檚 first black administrator.
 
A 鈥淢artin Luther King Jr. Action Committee鈥 was also formed. Its goals included creating programs to help African-American students succeed at 猎奇重口视频.
 
鈥淲ithout turmoil in the aftermath of Dr. King鈥檚 assassination and institutional reactions to it, I probably would not have considered 猎奇重口视频 State College. I had planned to attend the University of Rhode Island,鈥 Bruce Gaines said. 鈥淒r. King鈥檚 death did not end his dream but created energy and opportunity to empower me and millions of college students.鈥
 
Alumna Jeanne O. Foster, 鈥77, agreed.
 
鈥淗is death created a social conscience awakening among some white Americans in leadership positions and my generation was the first to benefit,鈥 she said.
 
Foster was only 13 when King was assassinated, but it鈥檚 a day she will forever remember.
 
鈥淲e were not prepared as a people to lose him. There was no other voice in America that gave us hope and captured the hearts and minds of black people in the United States and the people of other races who supported us,鈥 she said.
 
When King was killed, 猎奇重口视频 State鈥檚 first president of color, Dr. Dana Mohler-Faria was serving in the U.S. Air Force, stationed at Ellsworth Air Force Base in Rapid City, South Dakota.
 
鈥淚t was a time of deep racial divide and the reactions to Dr. King鈥檚 assassination were mixed,鈥 he said.
 
The overall sense was, the march toward American justice would continue despite King鈥檚 death, Mohler-Faria said.
 
鈥淚t left many of us with a sense of great loss, and at the same time a drive to continue the important work to bring justice and healing to all Americans,鈥 he said. 鈥淗is legacy continues and much of the progress can be attributed to his vision and commitment to justice.鈥
 
Marrow often wonders what the world would look like today if King鈥檚 life hadn鈥檛 been cut short, particularly at a time when, at the national level, the country feels so politically polarized.
 
鈥淚鈥檇 like to think if he continued his work we wouldn鈥檛 be in the situation we are in right now, because his message was one of peace and love across the lines. I would like to think he could have continued to gain people鈥檚 trust and allegiance, making allies with even more white leaders at that time who were realizing black people aren鈥檛 the enemy,鈥 Marrow said. 鈥淗e wasn鈥檛 a race person, he was looking for a kinder world.鈥

Do you have a BSU story you'd like to share? Email stories@bridgew.edu.

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猎奇重口视频, MA 02325
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