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Rosa Parks statue on hold

WASHINGTON, July 31 (UPI) -- Plans to honor Rosa Parks, a heroine of the civil rights movement, with a statue in the U.S. Capitol have languished because the money wasn't appropriated.

Kenneth Edmonds, a spokesman for U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Ill., told the Detroit News that the appropriation appears to have been an oversight.

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Parks, who died in 2005 at the age of 92, would be the first black woman to be honored in the National Statuary Hall. Jackson plans to introduce a bill to extend for two years authorization for the statue.

Dec. 1, 1955, the day that Parks was arrested in Montgomery, Ala., for refusing to give up her seat on a bus to a white man, is generally held to be the beginning of the civil rights movement. The bus boycott that followed gained national attention as did a young Montgomery minister, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Edmonds told the News that once the money has been appropriated the process of choosing a sculptor and commissioning the work should be quick.

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