Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS)

 - Class of 2008

Page 21 of 488

 

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 2008 Edition, Page 21 of 488
Page 21 of 488



Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 2008 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

Tour-takers Thomas Bolder, senior in history and Lisa and Jade Ogle, Manhattan residents, listen as Richard Pitts, autnor and Manhattan resident, talks about the involvement of Captain William Mitchell in the Underground Railroad. A school bus full of tour- takers travel back in time on the Underground Railroad tour. I think the fact that the bus was full so early is a testament to how important this is. Lisa Ogle, Manhattan resident and tour-taker, said. — Jostyn Brown — ( These are the people who lit the fuse that started the Civil War. J J — Richard Pitts author of A Self-Guided Tour of the Underground Railroad in Kansas and Manhattan readent i! Hi-. ' - UndersTound Railroad 1 7)

Page 20 text:

, ' .Mitiniicd from page 14 ) They were kidnapped from ch-ilizations in Ahrid, said Pitts. Tliey weren ' t nnci -ili:ed; they weren ' t sa -ages wlien they ,i;ot here. Before movi ng to the next stop, Pitts addressed the issue of race. Race is contemporary, he said. Racism is relatively young. Before racism, it was about nationalism. X liat you were v ' as v ' here you came from, not the color of your skin. Pitts said his goals for the tour were to create cultural confidence and a complete memory of history. We have to create a consciousness in our people, he said. We have to remember the good things and the not-so-good things. We have to remember whose shoulders we are standing on to appreciate the opporttinities we have. Those shoulders, Pitts said, in part belonged to the members of the Beecher Bible and Rifle Colony that settled in Wabaunsee in 1856. Members of the colony came west in response to Henry Ward Beecher ' s call to arms against a pro-slavery vote during the popular sovereignty era in Kansas. This was an era which history has deemed the Bleeding Kansas period. Tlie Beecher Bible and Ritle Church serwd as a meeting place for abolitionists to discuss their work with the Undergrotmd Railroad. Because it was a secret society, Pitts said it was difficult to find information on this secret line to freedom. After die Civil War, people wanted to get on with being Americans, Pitts said. They weren ' t concerned with writing down information about tlie L ' nderground Railroad. Finding information about this toute is literally like trying to find a needle in a haystack. At the gravesite of Captain William Mitchell, the leadet of the abolitionist movement in Wabaunsee, Pitts talked about the risk taken by those who worked with the Underground Railroad. He explained how they could be taken to prison or forced to assist boimty hunters in renirning slaws to their owners under the second Fugitive Slave Act. Patt of the landscape ovetlooking Mitchell ' s grave was Mount Mitdiell. At the top of the hill, it was possible to see the trail escaped slaves took coming toward Mitchell ' s cabin, a pivotal stop on this spur. From this vantage point it was also possible to see the trail that led away from the safety of his cabin and toward freedom. As the tour ended, Pitts described the secret hiding place in the Mitchell ' s cabin. Mitchell cleared the shelves of a cabinet and used them as a ladder to the attic above, replacing the china aftet escapees were safely hidden. There were times, Pitts said, when Mitchell was caught by bounty hunters, but the punishments he received did not deter him from helping others. Afterwards, Pitts reiterated his goals. We are all Americans, he said. We all ha ' e dark parts of our history. We have to get over this racism thing. (Those who worked with the underground railroad) got over it. — Megan Wilson 16 Student Life



Page 22 text:

n between classes, Lucy Johnson, sophomore in athletic training, works on her laptop at the counter of the Caribou Coffee in the K-State Student Union. Carbiou Coffee was a common destination for students to hang out in between classes. I go there between classes to waste time, Johnson said. — Oinstopfief Hanewmckel — »5«t ' 5TUDENT UNION AND HALE LIBRARY WORK TOGETHER TO BRING CAFE INTO HALE With a ceremonial spilling of the first cup of coffee outside Hale Library, the new first-floor cafe became The Bookend Cafe. Lori Goetsch, dean professor of Hale Library, said when she was at the University of Maryland, they had a cafe in their library in partnership with the Union. When she started working at the university and found unused space in Hale, Goetsch said she began work to do the same here. it ' s a great location, not only for people in the library but for people just passing by as well, Goetsch said. I think we ' ve had a good start. To name the cafe, the library had a contest that ran from Sept. 5 to 14, and the winner was announced Sept. 27. A library committee picked the best five submitted names, from which the winner was chosen by votes of love it or hate it from students. Jenny Glodowski, senior in family studies and human services, won an iPod for her suggestion of The Bookend Cafe. Keith Arnold, junior in fisheries, wildlife and conservation biology, won a $50 gift certificate to the Union for the Sunflower Cafe, his second-place suggestion. Dana Seller, junior in art education, won a $25 gift certificate to the Union for her third place suggestion. Common Grounds. The Bookend Cafe does not have seating room: it is more of a grab and go cafe, Lori Goetsch, dean professor of Hale Library, said. She also said she hoped to add outside seating similar to what was outside Durland Hall and the Union. — Christopher Hanfwmckel — ,18 Snident Life

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