On Feb. 10, (from left) Antonio Marrero 鈥13, Andrew Dietz 鈥15 and Christina Mullen 鈥12 will share their perspectives on the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. They will be joined by fellow contestants Brett Lerner 鈥12 and Frank Williams 鈥15 (not pictured).
by MaryAlice Bitts Jackson
Vernon Carraway was a gifted athlete, sailing on the coattails of an athletics scholarship at Slippery Rock University. He also was functionally illiterate, having reserved the sum of his passion and energy for the game. Then his psychology professor offered a challenge鈥攖o learn to read by studying the works of Martin Luther King Jr.
Today, Carraway is a noted King scholar and interpreter with a Ph.D. in workforce education & development from Pennsylvania State University, where he works as a counselor. On Feb. 10, he will visit Dickinson to take part in a daylong program, MLK and the Millennial Generation.
The events allow students to glimpse the world their parents or grandparents inhabited, says Norm Jones, dean of diversity and student development. 鈥淭he [Civil Rights movement] is less visible today, because we are a fluid kind of society, and the way we go about the work looks different,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o our opportunity is to challenge students to grapple with what the world must have been like at that time.鈥
Carraway will tackle those questions when he shares King鈥檚 historic writings and speeches in a performance titled An Evening With Dr. King. He will pepper the program with personal anecdotes鈥攊ncluding his memory of hitch-hiking to Maryland with friends, as a high-schooler, to see King deliver his historic 鈥淚 Have a Dream鈥 speech in 1963. He also will share his encounters with the leaders who shaped his career: His psychology professor (鈥淪he was a small person鈥攁bout 110 pounds鈥攂ut she had the heart of a lion,鈥); poet/author/activist Langston Hughes; Benjamin O. Davis, the first African-American Air Force general; and King mentor Benjamin Mays. 鈥淭hey showed me, by example, that I could achieve anything, if I gave it my all,鈥 he says.
Andrew Dietz 鈥15, Brett Lerner 鈥12, Antonio Marrero 鈥13, Christina Mullen 鈥12 and Frank Williams 鈥15鈥攁ll finalists in an essay competition鈥攚ill enter the daylong discussion when they vie for cash prizes during the MLK Institute speech contest. Topics include the evolution of dialogue about King and responses King might have had to current issues, including the Occupy culture, international race relations and LGBTQ equality.
Marrero, a former Marine and community-college transfer student in his first semester at Dickinson, will speak about leadership for a new generation born decades after King set the Civil Rights movement afire. Dietz, a double major in international business & management and economics, will comb through King鈥檚 letters and other writings and discover cross-generational parallels.
Mullen, an Africana-studies major, will discuss the obligations born of privilege. 鈥淚鈥檝e been very privileged in my own life,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been thinking about how I can use my voice to speak for those who don鈥檛 have a voice.鈥
Published August 2, 2013