7 * * «» • • » . / < We've got difficult difficult days ahead 1829 J a n u a ry IS. M a rtin Luther King, J r., is born to Reverend and M rs. M artin Luther King, Sr. (the former Alberta Christine W illiam s), in Atlan­ ta. Georgia. 1936 1944. King attends D avid T . H o w a rd E lem en tary School, A tla n ta University Laboratory School, and Booker T . Washington High School. He does n o t graduate fro m high school, but enters M orehouse College ( A t ­ lanta) by passing the entrance examination. 1947. King is licensed to preach and becomes assistant to his father, who is pastor o f the Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta. 1948 F eb ru ary 28. King is ordained as a Baptist minister. J u n a. King graduates from Morehouse w ith a B .A . in sociology. S ep tem b e r King enters Crozer Theological Seminary in Chester, Pa. After hearing D r. A .J . Muste and D r. M ordecai W . Johnson preach on the lire and teaching o f M ahatm an Ohandi, he begins to study Gandhi seriously. 1881 J u n a . King leaves Crozer with a B .D . degree. 1963 J u n a 18. King marries Coretta Scott in M ario n , Alabama. 1964 M a y 17. The Supreme Court o f the United States rule unanimously in Brown vs. Board o f Education that racial segregation in public schools is unconstitutional. 1964 O ctobar 31. King is installed by Rev. M artin Luther King, Sr., as the twentieth pastor o f the Dexter Avenue Church, Montgomery. 1966 J u n o 6. Boston University grants King the P h .D . in Systematic Theol- ofy- N o v e m b e r 17. Yolanda Denise King born in Montgomery. D e c a m b e r 1. M rs. Rosa Parks, a forty-tw o-year-old M ontgom ery seams­ tress, refuses to relinquish her bus seat to a white man, and is arrested. D ecem ber 6. The first day o f the bus boycott. The trial o f Mrs. Parks. A meeting o f movement leaders is held. D r. King is unanimously elected presi­ dent o f the M ontgom ery Im provem ent Association, whose name is pro­ posed by Rev. Ralph Abernathy. D e c e m b e r 10. The M ontgom ery Bus Com pany suspends service in black neighborhoods. 1956 1968 January 28. Dr. King is arrested on a charge of traveling thirty miles an hour is a twenty-five-mile-an-hour zone in Montgomery. He is released on his own recognizance. January 30. A bomb is thrown onto the porch of Dr. King’s home in M ont­ gomery Mrs. King and Mrs. Roscoe Williams are in the house with baby Yolanda No oneis ¡mured. February 2. A suit is Tiled in federal district court asking that Montgomery’s travel segregation laws be declared unconstitutional. February 21. Dr. King is indicted with other figures in the Montgomery bus boycott on the charge of being party to a conspiracy to hinder and prevent the operation of business withou “ just or legal cause." June 4. A United States District Court rules that racial segregation on city bus lines is unconstitutional. Septem ber. President Dwight D. Eisenhower federalizes the Arkansas Na­ tional Guard to escort nine Negro students to an all-white high school in Little Rock, Arkansas. 1957 1967 J an u ary 27. An uncxploded bomb is discovered on Dr and Mrs. King's front porch. January 10-11. The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) is formed at the Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta. Dr. King is elected its pre­ sident. S ep tem b er 9. The first civil rights act since Reconstruction is passed by Congress, creating the Civil Rights Commission and the Civil Rights D ivi­ sion of the Department o f Justice. O ctob er 23. A second child, M artin Luther I I I , is born to Dr. and Mrs. King. February 18. Time magazine puts Dr. King on its cover. June 27. Dr. King is the guest speaker at the annual N A A C P convention in San Francisco. A ugust 10. Dr. King is a speaker before the platform committee of the Democratic Party in Chicago. N ovem ber 13. The U.S. Supreme Court upholds the lower court in declar­ ing unconstitutional Alabamas’s state and local laws requiring segregation on buses. D ecem ber 21. Montgomery buses are integrated. M ay 17. Dr. King delivers a speech for the Prayer Pilgrimage For Freedom celebrating the third anniversary of the Supreme Court’s desegregation de­ cision. The speech, entitled "G ive Us the Ballot," is given at the Lincoln Memorial. Washington, D.C. 1958 June 23. Dr. King, along with Roy Wilkins of the N A A C P , A Philip Ran­ dolph, and Lester Granger, meets with President Eisenhower. June 13. Dr. King meets with then-U.S. vice president, Richard Nixon. S eptem ber 2. Dr. King addresses a Labor Day seminar on the twenty- fifth anniversary of the Highlander Folk School, Monteagle, Tennessee. Septem ber 3. Dr. King is arrested on a charge of loitering (later changed to "failure to obey an officer") in the vicinity of the Montgomery Recorder’s Court. He is released on one hundred dollars bond. "The dream is one of equality of opportunity, of privilege and property widely distributed; a dream of a land where man will not take necessities from the many to give luxuries to the few; a dream of a land where men do not agree that the color of a man's skin determines the content of his character; a dream of a place where all our gifts and resources are held not for ourselves alone but as instruments of service for the rest of humanity; the dream of a country where every man will respect the dignity and worth of all human personality, and men will dare to live together as brothers___" -1 9 6 0 SAFEWAY Page 4 Portland Observer. January 26, 1963