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120,000 line the streets to honor King

Spectators wave, sing and dance as bands and floats pass during the South L.A. parade held in tribute to the slain civil rights leader.

January 16, 2007|Ashley Surdin, Times Staff Writer

Some boogied, sang or cheered in the streets. Some lounged on lawn chairs or waved from their home balconies. Some quietly rocked on porches, baby on knee.

In all, an estimated 120,000 people turned out for the 22nd annual Martin Luther King Jr. Kingdom Day parade Monday morning in South Los Angeles, the largest in Southern California celebrating the life of the slain civil rights leader.


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The parade, which traveled a 1.5-mile route headed west from Western Avenue down West Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, curved south on Crenshaw Boulevard, and ended at Leimert Park, where an afternoon festival featured jazz, food and souvenirs.

Among the notables participating were Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo, Rep. Juanita Millender-McDonald (D-Carson) and 8th District City Councilman Bernard C. Parks. Celebrity Grand Marshal Maria Elena Durazo, leader of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, rode on an open platform towed by a big rig, waving to the music of the Black Eyed Peas. The parade's tiara-clad queen for 2007, Alexandria Hutchinson, seemed to float by, her strapless champagne-colored dress billowing over the back of a convertible.

"She's beautiful," said one spectator, wrapping her arms about her in the cool air, "though, somebody should have given her a mink coat."

Villaraigosa, in a casual collared work shirt and slacks, rode in a police-flanked Cadillac, waving and grinning as the crowd called his name.

"Happy King Day, everybody. It's good to be here with all of you. God bless you all," he said into a microphone, before abandoning the car to shake hands and have his picture taken with parade-goers.

Knight High School Destiny Alliance Regiment, a marching band, kicked off the parade with "Fairest of the Fair." In front of them cheerleaders shimmied gold pompoms.

Other groups proudly marched by, including the umbrella-toting International Society for Krishna Consciousness, Minority AIDS Project and military groups, such as the Crenshaw High School Marine Corps, Junior Reserve and the Garfield High School JROTC.

In the spirit of the day, an antiwar protest group, ANSWER Coalition L.A., was allowed to participate, officials said, though it was not given permission ahead of time. Coalition members were later permitted, said Los Angeles Police Officer Eddie Martinez, "as long as they demonstrated peacefully."

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