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      <image:title>Home - Make it stand out</image:title>
      <image:caption>Congressman John R. Lewis, one of the principal leaders of the American Civil Rights Movement. As Founder &amp; Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, he was a leader in many of the most dramatic campaigns of the movement: the lunch counter sit-ins, the Freedom Rides and the March on Washington. In 1965, he led the historic march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. In 1986, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives. For over 30 years, he represented the City of Atlanta, Georgia, and surrounding counties in Congress.</image:caption>
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      <image:caption>Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a Baptist minister and activist who led the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott and helped organize the nonviolent 1963 protest in Birmingham, Alabama and the March on Washington, where he delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech. Dr. King received the Nobel Peace Prize “for combating racial inequality through nonviolent resistance.” He was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal. The Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. was dedicated in 2011.</image:caption>
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      <image:caption>Rosa Parks, the “Mother of the Civil Rights Movement,” was one of the most important citizens of the 20th century. Mrs. Parks was a seamstress in Montgomery, Alabama when, in December 1955, she refused to give up her seat on a city bus to a white passenger. The bus driver had her arrested. Her act sparked a citywide boycott of the bus system by African Americans that lasted more than a year. The boycott raised an unknown clergyman, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., to national prominence. Mrs. Parks’ example remains “an inspiration to freedom-loving people everywhere.”</image:caption>
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      <image:caption>Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr., a pioneering United States District Judge in Montgomery, Alabama whose landmark civil rights rulings helped end segregation of African Americans in the South. With unblinking moral courage, Judge Johnson upheld the Constitution and the law, insisting all Americans be treated equally regardless of color. He served as a federal judge for 44 years — and lived to see centuries of oppressive customs overturned, and the state and region he loved transformed. Judge Frank Johnson is acclaimed as “one of the greatest heroes of the 20th century.”</image:caption>
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    <lastmod>2019-03-04</lastmod>
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    <lastmod>2019-04-29</lastmod>
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