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On The Bricks

March 30, 2021

          Giving to others isn’t only about money, it is also about putting in time and effort. Getting involved in a local project can help you feel more connected to your community and neighbors.

          Those who volunteer often also benefit from lower levels of stress, lower blood pressure, and increased physical activity. One recent study says older adults who volunteer their time have improved cognitive function, increased physical abilities, and decreased television watching.

          That’s what I read. But I know that my blood pressure goes up when I’m working on an event. I do enjoy them and even more, I enjoy when they’re over and people have been happy that we had them.

          There is no argument though, the people who are giving and working for their community seem to be much happier.

          “Great opportunities to help others seldom come, but small ones surround us every day.” ~ Sally Koch

          Help someone load their groceries, be friendly to people in the restaurant, give a smile to those you meet. Send a card to someone to make them smile.

          Kathy Holmes makes lots of people smile by her kind and caring positive comments on Facebook. She and her family are also very supportive of community happenings.

          Here’s two to put on your calendar: The Women of St. Peter’s Catholic Church will be holding their Spring Salad Luncheon on Thur., Apr. 15 from 11 am to 1:30 pm. There are deliveries and carry-out and each plate contains assorted salads, homemade hot rolls, and a dessert. The cost of a ticket is $10 and call Aggie Zac at 580-651-1608 to get a reservation. It is a win for the church women and it is a win that you don’t have to cook.

          Then on Sat., April 17, at 2 pm is a Backyard BBQ at Bob’s Cowboy Bar … a fund raiser for young Noah Patterson. There will also be a drawing for items donated by local folks (tickets are $20 each). There is nothing fun about having a young son who is sick … but it can be fun to raise the family’s spirit with a BBQ and sharing.

          “Those who are happiest are those who do the most for others.” ~Booker T. Washington

          Get happy and join in the Community Clean-Up. Help by working with the crews on the morning of Sat., April 17, or plan a time for you and some friends to get together and give an hour for the Spring cleaning of our town. Clean your alley, pick up litter in a spot that you notice, help someone with their tree limbs, do something. When we all do a little bit, a lot can get done. And have fun when you’re doing it!

          “Do more than belong: participate. Do more than care: help. Do more than believe: practice. Do more than be fair: be kind. Do more than forgive: forget. Do more than dream: work.” ~William Arthur Ward

          This is Holy Week and Easter is here on Sunday, a day of true giving.

          See you on the bricks!

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On The Bricks

February 12, 2021

          A giraffe’s coffee would be cold by the time it reached the bottom of its throat. Ever think about that? No. You only think about yourself.

          This makes me laugh. And laugh. And laugh. It is outrageous. But it is also true. Most of us spend a lot more time thinking about ourselves. To the point we even pay therapists so we talk more about ourselves.

          Now, I’m not saying that a bunch of us don’t need therapy, but it is a bit ironic, don’t you think?

          My family taught that when you are blue, it is best to help someone else and this will pull you out of your shadows faster than anything. It has worked for me for over 50 years.

          Keep your therapists, if you need them because it is good to work through our problems with someone who knows how to teach you to deal with problems. But throw in some helping others and let’s see what happens.

          Need some ideas?

          Heritage Community is where some of our elders live. They have been isolated from their families and friends for quite some time through COVID. But their caretakers are doing some fun things with them such as BINGO. Go shopping and get some fun prizes for them to use in their BINGO games. Things like word search puzzle books, pens and / or pencils, small note pads, air freshners, body spray / perfume / cologne, small bags to hold prizes, individual yogurt or chocolate covered raisins packages, sugar free candy packets, cheese and peanut butter cracker packets, etc.

          Go to the store and get some note cards or greeting cards and send cheery notes to people you love / you miss / you think have done a good job. Tell your kids they make you proud. Tell your neighbor you love their flowers and admire the work they do in their garden.

          It’s community clean – up time pretty soon. Go clean up your neighborhood alley. Walk the streets and pick up trash. My father is in his 80s and when it’s decent weather he walks his block and alley and picks up all trash. The walk makes him feel better and doing something for the good of all makes him feel better. Now you also know who taught me that doing something for others is important.

          Ask about volunteering in the community. If you want ideas on that, come by the Main Street office and we’ll talk.

          Work every day on being more positive and more helpful. Before you get out of bed think of one thing and thank God (or whomever you wish to thank) for that. Then several times during the day notice something that is beautiful, something you are thankful to have, to see, to be.

          Every morning when I drive to work I say a prayer for the Main Street Guymon members who support the organization and give me the opportunity to work with the community. I love my job. I know I would not have this job without those members and volunteers that make it all possible.

          Let’s do this. We can work on becoming a better person. And when we need a laugh … think about the giraffe and his coffee.

          The Career Focus is going great. We have 17 people in the class from Guymon, Hooker, Beaver, and Perryton. They are awesome! And they are working to become better people, better managers, and better employees. Say a prayer for each of them and for the wonderful local people who give their time to teach in the class.

          My board of directors is in the process of giving out the winners of our Main Street Guymon awards this month. I appreciate and thank each of those board members and committee chairmen who are doing the presentations since we are not having the meeting in person. I also thank God for each of the individuals and members who are getting the awards. They are helping Guymon be a better place to live and work and shop.

          Keep your head up and I’ll see you on the bricks!

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On The Bricks

February 10, 2021

We should all strive to do more than is expected of us. Here is one Okie that did that. You might not agree with his methods, but this man from Oklahoma left a real mark.

Patrick Jay Hurley was a highly decorated American soldier with the rank of Major General, statesman, and diplomat. He was the United States Secretary of War from 1929 to 1933. He was a  self-made man born on Jan. 8, 1883, in a log cabin in Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory near Lehigh, Okla. Hurley worked as a coal miner and as a cowboy who had often hunted with Choctaw Indians during his teenage years before he saved enough to go to college. He graduated from Indian University, now Bacone College, in 1905 and received his law degree from the National University School of Law in Washington D.C. in 1908.

He started a law practice in Tulsa in 1908, one year after statehood. He was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court in 1912 and was national attorney for the Choctaw Nation from 1912 to 1917.

He received a second law degree, from George Washington University, in 1913. While he was enjoying much success as a lawyer, Hurley had become active as a Republican in Oklahoma politics. Hurley also served in the Indian Territorial Volunteer Militia from 1902 to 1907 and in the Oklahoma National Guard, from 1914 to 1917.

During World War I, Hurley served with the Judge Advocate General’s Department of the 6th Army Corps, American Expeditionary Force, in France. He thus received the Army Distinguished Service Medal. In November 1918, Hurley was detached to the 76th Field Artillery Regiment and participated in the battles near Louppy-le-ChâteauFrance. Hurley voluntarily conducted a reconnaissance despite heavy enemy fire and so was awarded with Silver Star for gallantry in action.

After the war, he attended George Washington University. Active in the Republican Party, he was appointed Assistant Secretary of War by President Herbert Hoover in 1929. He was later promoted to Secretary of War and served in Hoover’s cabinet until 1933.

Hurley received a promotion to brigadier general (from colonel in the reserves) in 1941 when the United States entered World War II, and General George C. Marshall dispatched him to the Far East as a personal representative to examine the feasibility of relieving American troops besieged on the Bataan peninsula. Dwight Eisenhower, a staff officer in Washington, sent Hurley to Australia with $10 million in cash, to arrange supplies and charters for the Philippines. He was successful in delivering additional food and ammunition to the soldiers on three separate occasions but could not evacuate them.

After the conclusion of this mission, he embarked on a series of assignments as a personal representative of President Franklin Roosevelt. He served as minister to New Zealand in 1942 and then flew to the Soviet Union, the first foreigner to receive permission to visit the Eastern Front. Over the next two years, he visited the Near EastMiddle EastChinaIran and Afghanistan on behalf of Roosevelt.

Hurley was assigned by Roosevelt to be his personal representative to Joseph Stalin in November 1942.

The first and potentially only high – ranking U.S. military officer to be granted access to Soviet combat operations on the Eastern Front, Hurley reported amiable relations with Soviet military officers.

When Hurley arrived in Tehran, he made a great impression by wearing cowboy hats and rejecting normal diplomatic protocols, with many in the Iranian élite used to strict diplomatic protocol saying they had never met a diplomat like Hurley. An Iranian-American historian, Abbas Milani, described Hurley as “an odd and eccentric character” who was “horrified” by the “abject poverty amongst the people and arrogant disdain for the populations by the British and Soviet ambassadors.” Hurley often met with Iranian officials, especially the young Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who had inherited the Peacock Throne only two years earlier. Hurley had the responsibility of organizing preparations on the American side for the Tehran summit in November 1943.

He was appointed U.S. Ambassador to China in 1944. Despite being a Republican, Hurley had often worked with Roosevelt. On Nov. 26, 1945, Hurley submitted a scathing letter of resignation, two hours after he met with President Truman. 

In 1950, when Senator Joseph McCarthy accused the State Department of being ridden with Soviet spies who were all “Communists and queers” and were the ones responsible for the United States “losing” China, Hurley publicly endorsed McCarthy in a 1950 speech. Hurley was the Republican candidate for a seat in the United States Senate for the state of New Mexico in 1946, 1952 and 1958, but he lost all three attempts against the Democratic candidate Dennis Chávez.

Both contemporary and modern assessment of Hurley have not been kind. Aside from Hoover himself, Hurley was the last living member of the Hoover administration. He died on July 30, 1963.

Major General Hurley served in two World Wars and received many decorations for bravery and distinguished service, including the Army Distinguished Service Medal with oak leaf cluster, Silver Star, Legion of Merit, Distinguished Flying Cross, Purple Heart, World War I Victory Medal with three battle clasps, Army of Occupation of Germany Medal, American Defense Service Medal, American Campaign Medal, European – African – Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal with two service stars, World War II Victory Medal, and Order of the White Eagle.

Keep on those New Year’s resolutions: Join a group or get involved with a program that has you make new friends, meet new people, do new stuff. This can help you blossom this year!

See you on the bricks!

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On The Bricks

February 5, 2021

          One of my kids’ friends was pregnant and she and her husband were ecstatic. They had several miscarriages prior to this pregnancy, but it appeared this one was going to help their dreams come true for a family. Miscarriages are not uncommon, but we don’t know the pain people have gone through because of them because this isn’t something we tend to talk about unless we know someone really well.

          Problems are usually like that … we don’t know other people’s hurts and challenges. They usually don’t know ours.

          When the friend was at 20 weeks, she and her husband learned the baby had something wrong with it and would likely not live. She carried it for 18 more weeks and at her appointment there was no longer a heartbeat. They induced labor and their little boy was stillborn.

          How many of us assumed, seeing the pregnant young lady, that she and her husband were happy?

          How many of us have any idea what it is like to carry a baby for 18 weeks, knowing that you won’t be giving that baby a birthday party?

          Recently she was on social media and saw a post by someone that said something along these lines, “My husband and I just found out that our baby is a girl. We are so heartbroken. We want to have a boy so badly.”

          I have no words for this mess.

          My prayer is that you find the strength to face your problems and you find the compassion to know there are many who have bigger challenges than you.

          My friend Jada says too often we let “third world problems” get us down when we are lucky to have them. We could have first world problems where we are worried about food and a safe shelter to stay alive.

          Are you more interested in learning about other people’s challenges in our community and nation? Please consider attending Challenging Conversations, a program sponsored by the Guymon Rotary Club on Tuesday evenings at 6 pm in the Guymon Library. The start on March 16 and run for eight weeks. It can be that you might find out more about yourself in being a part of these evenings. For more information, contact Melyn at Main Street Guymon, 338-6246.

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On The Bricks

February 1, 2021

          To try each day to be a better person than you were yesterday can be a challenge. But the things you do to improve don’t really have to be big.

          Tip your server better. Return your shopping cart. Pick up a piece of trash. Hold the door for someone behind you. Let someone into your lane.

          Small acts can have a ripple effect and can change the world.

          Main Street Guymon is starting their Career Focus, a professional development course for people wanting to improve themselves in their workplace, this week. We have 15 people who are attending. They are employees from Dizzy B’s, First National Bank of Hooker, Golden Mesa Casino, PCHC, PTCI, TCEC, and Urban Bru. All businesses that have chosen an employee(s) to invest in this year.

          This program is a personal favorite of mine. We have local people who come in and share what they know. Every single one of them has something we should all learn. We started Career Focus in 2015 and I have attended almost all of the sessions. Some of the sessions have been held every year and yet I learn something every year.

          If we think we have nothing to learn, no way to improve who we are, we probably are either really arrogant, really boring, or ready to kick the bucket because things can ALWAYS get better, as can we.

          Here’s something I read on the internet that gives a harsh lesson to us as Christians:

          “A man went to church. He forgot to switch off his phone and it rang during prayer in church. The pastor scolded him. The worshippers admonished him after prayers for interrupting the silence. His wife continued lecturing him on his carelessness on the way home. His face showed the shame, embarrassment, and humiliation for his mistake.

          “After that day, he chose to not go back to church.

          “That same evening, he went to the bar. He was still nervous and trembling. He spilled his drink on the table by accident. The waiter apologized and gave him a napkin to clean himself. The janitor mopped the floor. The manager offered him a complimentary drink. She also gave him a huge hug and a peck while saying, ‘Don’t worry. Who doesn’t make mistakes?’

          “He has continued going to that bar since that time.

          “Lesson: Sometimes our attitude as believers drives people away from Jesus. You can make a difference by how you treat people, especially when they make mistakes.”

          Let’s all improve ourselves together.

          Shop and Dine is on Feb. 4 from 4 – 7 pm in downtown Guymon. The best part is artist Leyla Bello’s reception at SPC WOW Boutique. It is a great time to stop by and meet her and see the cards she has for sale there. And you can sign up for the Shop and Dine prize, too!

          Eggs and Issues is a morning we can come together and learn what is currently happening from our politicians. It’s a great morning at Hunny’s at 7 am on Feb. 5.

          Pangaea is an evening when we can learn more about our neighbors in the community. It is happening on Tues., Mar. 9 at 6 pm in Pickle Creek. Main Street Guymon will have tickets to sell soon.

          And mid-March is when we start working for our Community Clean – Up. Do you have some folks willing to do 30 minutes to an hour of clean – up with you?

          Hope to see you on the bricks!

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News On The Bricks

February 1, 2021

          Starting your own business can be an intimidating endeavor. Any type of business, whether you’re providing a service or it’s a retail business, one that you have to have a building open to the public, one from home, or one that is industrial – there are a lot of things that you should consider before jumping in to such a project.

          Those who do plan well have a better chance of being successful. They also have a better chance of getting funded.

          The Main Street Guymon Business Development Committee would like to help those who have thoughts about being their own boss.

          Starting on March 23 they offer a workshop, one evening a week for four weeks, from 7 – 8:30 pm, that addresses aspects an entrepreneur might need to consider before opening shop. The workshop is geared for all types of business ideas and is open to all ages.

          “We built our workshop around one that has been done for the past 10 years in a Kansas community,” explains Main Street Director Melyn Johnson. “And their track rate on improving the new business success rate is very impressive. Our committee chairman for this project is Davin Winger, Dean of Business at Oklahoma Panhandle State University, and a farmer / rancher who ran his own successful business for many years before taking a dip into academia.”

          The workshop addresses types of businesses, legal, financing, permits and licenses, sales tax, start up costs, demand, target markets, location, insurance, e-commerce, promotion, bookkeeping, bank services, and management. The cost is $50 per business to register to attend and this fee allows up to two people per business to attend. The maximum for attendance is 15 people, so that each person / business idea can get specific attention.

          Area business owners and managers are going to be asked to address the topics that they have expertise and experience in doing.

          “It’s important to know,” explains Johnson, “that the workshop is open to high school students and up. According to the Kansas group, some of the most successful people to come out of their workshop are high school and college students who know that what they would like to do is own their own business. Often, they have ideas for services that are outside the realm of traditional services, but that the younger people are wanting.”

          For more information about becoming your own boss, contact Melyn Johnson at Main Street Guymon, 580-338-6246 or Director@MainStreetGuymon.com.

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News On The Bricks

January 26, 2021 – Artist Reception

Reception Invitation

          It is always about the color to Leyla Bello, a Guymon artist. She notices color everywhere. She loves to combine color, whether it’s with her watercolor or in how she dresses.

          And this love of color can be seen in her art. Her watercolor paintings use softer colors, quiet colors, colors that make you feel warm and happy. Her colors surround you with good feelings.

          She says all long as she can remember she drew or colored. “I colored with my aunt and drew with my cousin in the countryside of Honduras,” she tells in her quiet voice. “I think everybody can draw. We just do it differently. I had no theory of color, I just did it.”

          Bello worked and graduated from college and then decided it was time to make some dreams come true.  She took private art lessons where she learned technique. “My teacher said I was a natural,” she says with a smile. “I just love all the possibilities of being able to create.”

          Leyla Bello was born in 1976 in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and grew up with her Chinese grandfather and Honduran grandmother. Their neighbors were American missionaries and so the young girl was exposed to English early. She attended the university in the Honduras and earned her degree in social work. Leyla was a preschool teacher in Honduras and works for the school today here in Guymon. The library is her favorite place to be. She and her Cuban husband moved to Guymon, Oklahoma, in 2016. They have two daughters, Jennifer and Adrianna. Leyla’s loves working with watercolors and often depicts her daughters, which is why those paintings are signed MOM.

          You can see by Leyla’s whimsical children in her paintings, Jennifer has been her muse, or source of inspiration, for several years. Jennifer is 11 years old and has a sense of humor her mother treasures. You can see that sense of humor in each of the paintings of the young girl reading with a light under her blanket in bed after curfew, skipping through the meadow with her younger sister behind her, and peeking from behind a tree.

          Bello’s paintings are most often purchased as notecards, where she sold them as a series of five in a packet at the Guymon Farmers Market last summer. They are now on the racks being sold as singles at Stanfield Printing Company’s (SPC) WOW boutique where there will be a reception when Kayla and Amanda will introduce Leyla and Jennifer to the public on Thur., Feb. 4, from 4 to 7 pm. SPC is located on the corner of 4th and Main at 322 N. Main in downtown Guymon.

          This reception is the fifth artist reception in the Main Street Guymon Bringing Creativity Downtown program, which is sponsored by TCEC and partially funded through an Oklahoma Arts Council grant.

painting
This is a painting of Leyla and her family by Leyla.
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On The Bricks

January 26, 2021 – Community Clean Up

          It is never too early to think about getting ready for company. It’s good to get things cleaned up, working as we have time and not being is a tizzy right before they come.

          In April and May we have a lot of company coming into town. The college rodeo happens in April and we have pickups and trailers pulling into the Hitch Pioneer Arena with license plates from Kansas, Texas, New Mexico, and downstate Okies. They are always impressed by the rodeo stock that OPSU brings and by the talent and skill of the OPSU cowboys.

          It is good for us to have the town spiffed up a bit so their impression of the town matches that of the arena. Lots of the college teams and university groups like HALO help during this, cleaning up and picking up trash.

          A few weekends after the college rodeo is the Pioneer Day festivities, where more family and class reunions are held every year. It is a time to come home for a visit. It is our time to shine. The Chamber of Commerce volunteers are working hard to bring sponsors together and make all happen without a hitch, bringing in lots of groups to make it go well.

          We can at least make sure we’ve clean up our street, our alley, and the highways coming in to town. We means each and every one of us, if we all gave 30 minutes and got the whole family or the whole crew at work out, it would make an amazing difference. You know, there are Sunday School groups and church women’s groups that put the gloves on and come into the Main Street office to get trash bags to fill.

          The week after Pioneer Day shuts down, the OPSU graduation occurs and we have many people coming into town from all across the nation, sometimes from overseas. We need to try to put our best foot forward.

          Civic groups and scout troops and classrooms each year help to clean. And we all know how our Spring winds can toss trash about (please close your dumpster lids so the wind doesn’t take the trash out and blow it around … and if you would put your trash in a bag and tie it before going in the dumpster it really helps too) and it is there to pick up just days after a crew has cleaned a place.

          And then the second weekend of May is the Five State Motorcycle Run. Whether you are one of the 1,000 people riding in this event, you should be a part of it! The motels are full again, the Iron Thunder Motorcycle Club makes several thousand dollars with this event (they work hard for it, too) and every cent is given back into the local communities to help those that are in need.

          It is another reason to do our part to show a little pride and help roll out the red carpet for those coming to the Oklahoma Panhandle, staying in our motels, eating in our restaurants, and having a good time. We love having them. We should get ready and do a little Spring cleaning before they get here.

          The City of Guymon cleans the streets and repaints them … let’s match that and do our part, too!

          Main Street Guymon and the City of Guymon encourage you to be a part of this Spring’s Community Clean – Up. Officially we’re going to be asking folks to help pick up trash and do a little painting from mid-March to mid-April. Then we’ll have time to party, going to the rodeos, graduations, Outback, and motorcycle run.

          If you would like to hear more about it, contact Melyn at 580-338-6246 and we can visit where you would like to clean, how to get your trash bags, and we can get down to business! It’s fun when we all work together.

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On The Bricks

January 20, 2021

          My love of the Denver Broncos might not make sense to someone who doesn’t know the whole story. It doesn’t matter if they are winning or losing, if their uniforms are ugly or pretty, I love them. When they have good coaches, I love them. When they have bad coaches, I love them. I don’t know football rules very well, but I love football when it is played by the Denver Broncos.

          The reason is simple.

          Every time I watch a Denver Bronco game, I become that young girl who had her dad right there with her for two hours, or until the time ran out on the clock. Sometimes we watched from the couch in the living room and sometimes we watched from my parent’s bedroom with pillows behind us, sitting up in bed watching the bedroom TV. Oftentimes, mama was sitting and sewing in the same bedroom while we watched football.

          My dad loved watching the Broncos and I loved that time with my dad. The Broncos were born a little more than a year after I was born and they soon were on TV and I was ready to be there with my dad, watching every down.

          Floyd Little will forever be my favorite player because when the Broncos were terrible, Floyd Little was great. And Floyd Little was always and only a Denver Bronco. Floyd Little died this year. It makes me realize that I am not a little girl forever. My dad is 82. I am 61. And we still have regular conversations about the Broncos.

          My hope is that each and every one of you has something that can take you back to a happy time like the Denver Broncos do me. Heavens, even seeing someone wearing the blue and orange makes me smile.

          On Feb. 3 the Main Street Guymon Career Focus, a professional development course for those wanting to build their professional skills begins.

          On Feb. 4 is the monthly Shop and Dine and the best part at this one is the Artist Reception for Layla Bello at SPC WOW Boutique that goes from 4 to 7. SPC will be carrying Layla’s whimsical cards to sell. What a great way to support the local business that is supporting our local artists!

          February is also the month that we vote on new board members for Main Street Guymon. We have five awesome people running for the three open positions. There are so many people who are willing to work for their community here!

          Our Pangaea International Evening is scheduled for Mar. 9 at Pickle Creek. It will be a wonderful evening. Tickets will go on sale soon.

          Be thinking about what you can do to help the Community Clean – Up and who you want to help you! We’ll be starting that in March, too.

          If you have ever thought you might want to be your own boss and start your own business, be sure to register for the Starting Your Own Business workshop that begins on Mar. 23. Another Main Street Guymon program hoping to encourage our local folks to make their dreams come true.

          See you on the bricks!

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On The Bricks

January 18, 2021

This week we celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. and the impact he left on our country. The holiday, put in place by President Ronald Reagan, reminds us of a man that gave everything, including his life, to remind us that all have basic civil rights in the United States.

As a woman, this is important to me. It was 100 years ago that woman received the right to vote in America. Yet in 1970, women could not own credit cards in their own name. Women could not lease property in their own names. Women could be fired for becoming pregnant. Women could not be admitted into Ivy League schools, military academies, or become astronauts. No state allowed women on a jury. Women could not serve as a judge. Women could not receive direct consultation about their physical and mental health. Women could not adopt a baby as a single person. Girls could not wear pants to school. I remember those days for I was 20 years old in 1970.

Martin Luther King Jr. and his followers brought many people a life that was better with more civil rights, including those with disabilities, females, people of color, and gay and lesbian. He was a black man who was working hard for rights for the black people in America, but through his work many others gained rights they had not been granted.

Civil and political rights are a class of rights that protect individuals’ freedom from infringement by governments, social organizations, and private individuals. They ensure one’s entitlement to participate in the civil and political life of society and the state without discrimination or repression.

Civil rights include the ensuring of peoples’ physical and mental integrity, life, and safety; protection from discrimination on grounds such as race, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, color, age, political affiliation, ethnicity, religion, and disability; and individual rights such as privacy and the freedom of thought, speech, religion, press, assembly, and movement.

Political rights include natural justice (procedural fairness) in law, such as the rights of the accused, including the right to a fair trial; due process; the right to seek redress or a legal remedy; and rights of participation in civil society and politics such as freedom of association, the right to assemble, the right to petition, the right of self-defense, and the right to vote.

I am proud of the changes Martin Luther King Jr. and his followers brought to us. I pray we continue growing in our humanity as a people and as individuals.

Our history is important. Who we are, every one of us, is important.

Hope to see you on the bricks!