Manchester Magazine Fall 2017 | Page 13

MU| F e a t u r e s of King’s visit to students would only strengthen with time. He knew “for years to come, around dinner tables, they would be discussing the civil rights movement, and they were there.” Manchester was the last campus where Dr. King would speak – he was murdered two months later. The building no longer stands. But his visit is ingrained in the University’s legacy and embedded in the hearts of those he inspired. For Sue Wells ’70 Livers, the only African- American in the Class of 1970, life at Manchester wasn’t always easy, but it was where she wanted to be. She recognized that Manchester was on the side of equality and integration and “they seemed to really try to include every nationality and every race on campus.” After all, she says, Manchester recognized her potential and sent someone all the way to Madison, Ind., to recruit her. After King’s visit, Manchester’s enrollment became steadily, if slowly, more diverse. Today the University is more diverse than at any time in its history. Jo Young ’69 Switzer who had lunch with King that day, says Manchester has always been more welcoming than some colleges and universities and encourages students to respect and learn from differences. “That skill helped me through life, and it helps me yet today.” Adds Switzer, “I definitely believe all of us were committed to making the campus a place that welcomed all people, even at a time when some towns were not as open as they are now. I was – and still am – proud to be associated with a school that respects the infinite worth of every person.” Joel Eikenberry ’68 is proud too. He learned a lot about his school and President Helman when he went to Washington, D.C., with other Manchester students to march against the Vietnam War. They called President Helman beforehand and asked his permission to carry a sign that said they were from Manchester College. “He thought only a few moments before he agreed,” remembers Eikenberry. “Manchester is about living out our values,” Helman told the marchers. “That is who we are.” By Melinda Lantz ’81 Dr. King is pictured in the old gymnasium-auditorium in the top two photos and walking up the steps inside the Union at far left. At left, demonstrators protest King’s visit and his opposition to the Vietnam War. In his speech, “The Future of Integration,” King called for an economic “Marshall Plan” to lift Americans out of poverty. The United States, he said, was spending nearly 10 times as much money to kill a Viet Cong soldier as it was spending to help an American living in poverty. Photo at left courtesy of The Fort Wayne News-Sentinel. Manchester | 13