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"Maybe after Arizona what our children need to see is us sitting together," Warnock said. In Philadelphia, hundreds of volunteers including Mayor Michael Nutter helped refurbish computers for needy residents as part of the city's "day of service" events to mark the King holiday. "The computer is your passport, not only to the future but to knowing what's going around you," Nutter said. The effort was part of the $25 million federally funded Freedom Rings Partnership, which aims to deliver 5,000 computers over the next few years to people in the city, where 41 percent of residents lack Internet access. Coloradans marked the day with marches and parades in Denver and Greeley, and the National Western Stock Show was set to host its annual Martin Luther King Jr. African-American Heritage Rodeo on Monday evening. In South Carolina, the day was an opportunity for the NAACP to underscore its opposition to a Confederate flag that flies outside the Statehouse. It was moved from atop the Capitol dome in 2000 after protests by the group. "Take down that flag," North Carolina NAACP president, the Rev. William Barber, told the audience at a rally in Columbia. He argued the flag's presence disrespects people not only in South Carolina but across the nation. But the South Carolina commander of Sons of Confederate Veterans disagreed. "They have the right to view it any way they wish. ... But I'm telling you it is. It is our heritage, and we will honor it," said Mark Simpson of Spartanburg, whose great-great grandfather was a Confederate soldier. In Maine, Gov. Paul LePage changed plans and attended a King memorial breakfast just days after saying critics could "kiss my butt." King is the only American who was not a U.S. president to have a federal holiday named in his honor. He has been recognized on the third Monday in January since 1986.
[Associated
Press;
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