Note: The Lawrence Times runs opinion columns and letters to the Times written by community members with varying perspectives on local issues. These pieces do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Times staff.
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This fall, the changing colors hold a whole new meaning for me.
The last several years I’ve carried the yellow Promise Garden Flower in the Walk to End Alzheimer’s because it signified that I was my mother’s caregiver. This year, my flower will change to purple, because in January I lost my mom to this horrific disease.
I have friends who will carry the blue flower because they have the disease, and anyone who supports the vision of a world without Alzheimer’s will carry an orange flower. Someday, hopefully in my lifetime, there will be a white flower for all those who have survived Alzheimer’s disease.
On Oct. 22, I will join hundreds in South Park to walk a mile for all those fighting this devastating battle. The Alzheimer’s Association Walk to End Alzheimer’s raises money so that the association can continue to provide support and education to families like mine, while also advancing critical research toward methods of treatment and prevention.
I don’t want my family to experience another Alzheimer’s diagnosis, so I will continue to walk in my mom’s memory. Register for free at alzwalklawrence.org and join me.
— Kimberly J. Luce (she/her), Lawrence
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Letter to the Times: City should create oversight committee to guide pool renovation project, rebuild trust
”Our petition’s 1,764 signatures, our supporters’ 75 letters, and our research into the extensive flaws in the (pool renovation) community engagement process all indicate that the previously proposed plan did not reflect public opinion,” Holly Krebs writes in this letter to the Times.
Shawn Alexander: Say his name – Fred Harvey Smith (Column)
”Racial violence has been omnipresent in American history, and in far too many of the incidents, the perpetrators of the crime are acquitted or not even brought up on charges. When I think of such cases I am often haunted by the heinous murder of Fred Harvey Smith here in the land of John Brown in May 1936,” Shawn Alexander writes in this column.