«. . • I £*•* - 1. . *>f . .< • J I see trouble in the air irmingham, 1963 Birmingham really pulled together this coalition o f conscience which ran this nation from 1963 until the time o f Vietnam, in say, sixty-six. That’s three years. That coalition o f conscience and good w ill passed the Civil Rights Act o f 1964, which not only desegregated public accommodations but gave new statutes in terms o f school desegregation and desegregated jo b s .. . . Whether you agree with it philosophically or not, practically the only thing that would have worked in the South was a nonviolent approach to social change.” M o n than 5,000 people. Including children end the elderly, went to Jell In Bir­ mingham. The full force of the polloe wee ueed againat them Including doge end fire hoeee. —Andrew Young Exie Publishing Co.. Inc. I99J r r I 'When an individual is no longer a true participant, when he no longer feels a sense of responsibility to his society, the content of democracy is emptied. When culture is degraded and vulgarity enthroned, when the social system does not build security but induces peril, inexorably the individual is impelled to pull away from a soulless society. The process produces alienation—perhaps the n most pervasive and insidious development in contemporary society.1 -1&68 m u L T n o m o H c o u n T v OREGon Page 2 Section II Portland Observer, January 26, 1983 . 1« •i- /