May 13 2008 10:04:33:537AM
Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin Encourages Young Adults to Engage in Politics
Source:
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ATLANTA, May 10 /PRNewswire/ -- Noting the similarities between 1968,
the year Shirley Franklin graduated from college and today, Atlanta's first
woman mayor called on Agnes Scott College graduates to get involved in the
political process to effect social change.
Franklin earned her degree in sociology from Howard University in
Washington, D.C. in 1968. In that year and now, wars raged in distant
places, presidential candidates of markedly different political and
demographic stripes were vying for nomination, and young people seemed key
to the nation's political and social future, she said.
The mayor quoted anthropologist Margaret Mead to sharpen the focus of
her message to the graduating class of this liberal arts college for women
observing its 119th commencement: "Never doubt that a small group of
thoughtful committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only
thing that ever has."
"If there was ever a time in American history that epitomizes young
people leading our nation it was the 1960s," Franklin said. "History
confirms that students, young people, men and women, stood up and spoke up
for women, for African-Americans, for peace for freedom of speech."
She noted that this year a similar phenomenon is occurring. "More than
5.7 million voters younger than 30 have participated in the political
primary so far this season -- a 109 percent increase from the 2004
presidential campaign," Franklin said.
Franklin was one of two women recognized by Agnes Scott today for their
public service and activism. Agnes Scott College President Elizabeth Kiss
awarded honorary doctorate of law degrees to Franklin, and to Elizabeth
Wilson, who 25 years ago became the first African-American elected to the
Decatur, Ga. city commission. And 10 years later she became the city's
first African American mayor.
By simply walking into the Decatur branch of the DeKalb County Public
Library in 1960s and asking for a public library card, Wilson initiated the
movement that would ultimately desegregate most public institutions in that
county. As the first woman mayor of Atlanta, Franklin has built a record of
achievement in her two terms unrivaled by the men who preceded her, Kiss
said.
"Mayor Franklin talked about how every generation faces the challenge
of leadership. Each of these women, both representing two different
generations of leadership, stood up for the challenge," Kiss said.