.“y j i-rA-. i'tAS *»’* « «*»' M artin L uther K ing Jr. Special Edition_____Jan. 13, 1999 ®l|e ^lortlaub ©beerucr 1958 Krig.akiigwtfhRoy WfikradNAACP, A. Philip Randolph. and I « « r Granger. ineetswithPresMtatDwightD. Bsenhowr. King is arrest on a charge oHollering (later changed to ’ 'failure to obey an officer") m theuciratyoftheMentgoniery Recorder’s Court. He isreleasedonSlOObend. King is convicted afterpleading"notguilty"on the chargeof&iluretoobey anofficer The fine nnmeoiaieiy.oveiLzi.puug ispaidalnx*timmediately .overDr King's s objevtuxti. by Montgomeiy Police Com- nussionerClydeC Sellers. King’s book Stride Toward Freedom The Montgomery Story is published by Harper & Row. King is stabbed in the chest King meets with Walter Reuther, presi­ dent of the United Auto Woikers Union m Detroit Dr and Mis. King spend a month in India studying Gandhi's techniques o f nonviolence, as guests o f Prime Minister by Mrs. Laola Cuny, 42. who is subse­ quently alleged to be mentally deranged. rhe stabbing cocurs in the heart ot Harlem while Dr. King is autographing his recently published book His condition is said to be senous but not critical. Nehru 1959 I Z ^7 z 1960 Hie King family moves to Atlanta. King becomes copastor, with his tather.of the Ebenezer Baptist Church. The first lunch counter sit-in to desegregate eating facilities is heldby students inGreensboiu, N.C. A warrant ts issued lor King’s arrest on charges that he had falsified his 1956 and 1958 Alabama State income tax re­ turns. The Student Nonviolent Coordi­ nating Committee (SNCC) is founded to coordinate student protests at Shaw Uni- versity, Raleigh, N.C. King is acquitted o f the tax evasion charge by an all-white jury in Monlgom- oy KingandA. Philip Randolphannounce plans for picketing both the Republican C26 and Democratic national conventions King has a conference with John F. Kennedy, candidate tor president o f the United States, about racial matters. King is arrested at an Atlanta sit-in and is jailed on a charge of violating the state’s is then transferred to the Reidsville State Prison. He is released troni the Reidsville State Prison on a $2,000 bond trespass law. Hie Atlanta charges are dropped. All jailed demonstrators are released except for Dr. King, who isoidercdheklon a charge o f violating a probated sentence in a traffic arrest case. He is transferred to the DeKafoCounty Jail lnliecatnr.Ga. and Athndchild, Dexter Scott, is bom to Dr and Mrs King in Atlanta. The first group o f Freedom Riders, intent on integrating interstate buses, leaves Washington, D.C., by Greyhound bus. The group, was organized by the Congress tor Racial Equality. 1961 King Joins In Other Causes, Vietnam War Protest Equality (CORE), leaves shortly af­ ter the Suprem e C ourt has outlaw ed segregation in interstate transporta­ tion term inals The bus is burned outside o f A nniston. A labam a, on May 14. A mob beats the Riders upon their arrival in Birm ingham . The Riders are arrested in Jackson, M ississippi, and spend forty to sixty days in Parchman Penitentiary. 1962 King is tried an convicted for leading the Decem ber march in A l­ bany. King is invited to join the B ir­ mingham protest. King is arrested at an Albany city hall prayer vigil and jailed on charges of failure to obey a police officer, obstructing the sidew alk and disorderly conduct. James M eredith makes his first attem pt to enroll at the University ot M ississippi. He is actually enrolled by Supreme Court order and is es­ corted onto the Oxford. M ississippi, campus by U.S. m arshals on O ctober 1, 1962. King meets with President John F. Kennedy at the W hite House for a one-hour conference. t •Î <» 1963 The K ings’ fourth child Bernice Albertine, is bom . Sit-in dem onstrations are held in Birm ingham to protest segrega­ tion of eating facilities. Dr. King is arrested during a dem onstration. g ratio n o f the University of Alabama by “standing in the schoolhouse door" and personally refusing entrance to black students and Justice D epart­ ment officials. President John F. Kennedy then federal­ izes the Alabama N ational Guard, and G overnor W allace remov es him­ self from blocking the entrance of the King and Rev. Ralph A bernathy visits W est Berlin at the invitation of congress in tw o days and uses the slogan of civil rights movement, "We M ayor W illy Brandt. King has an audience with Pope Paul VI at the Vatican. King receives the N obel Peace Prize in O slo, Norway. Shall O vercom e." Black and w hite dem onstrators are beaten by sheriff’s deputies and police on horseback in M ontgom ery. O ver th ree tho u san d p ro test ' * « ’• * X j Î. •zVi 5 ' ’ 1964 ■■ ÎW I bers. C ouncil of Federated O rganiza­ tion (C O FO ) initiates the M ississippi Sum m er Project, a voter-registration drive organized and run by black and An antiw ar statem ent by Dr. King is read at a large W ashington rally to protest the w ar in Vietnam. Dr. King agrees to serve as cochair­ man of Clergy and Laym en C on­ white students. King joins other SCLC workers in dem onstrations for the integration of public accom m odations in St. Augustine, Fla. He is jailed. T hree civil rights w orkers - Jam es Chaney (black) and Andrew G oodm an and M ichael Schwcrner (white) - are reported missing after a short trip to Philadelphia. M ississippi. King attends a signing of the Public A ccom m odations Bill, part ot the Civil Rights Act of 1964. by President Lyndon B Johnson in the W hite House. "The ultimate o f a man is not where he stands in moments o f comfort and convenience but where he stands at the time o f challenge and controversy . Multnomah County's Northeast Health Center joins the Portland community in recognizing the many achievements and lasting contributions o f Dr. M artin Luther King, Jr. Are you looking for a place to receive medical services for you and your famtlyl £4 'V '] tional. King makes a tour o f A labam a to help elect black candidates. The Alabama prim ary is held, the first time since Reconstruction that blacks have voted in any num ­ nated in D allas, Texas. M ULTNO M AH CO UNTY OREGON Give us a try. We provide medical care for adults, children, and pregnant women. Call 248-3333 to find out how to obtain services. Health Department Northeast Health Center 5 $29 N.E. M artin Luther King Jr, Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 (503) 248-5183 Best Wishes from Senator Ron Wyden 1966 King rents an apartm ent in the black ghetto of Chicago. K in g m e e ts w ith E lija h M uham m ad, leader o f the Black M uslim s, in Chicago. King takes over a C hicago slum building and is sued by its owner. The Supreme Court of the United State rules any poll tax unconstitu­ N egro students. The M arch on W ashington, the first large integrated protest march, is held in W ashington, D C. Dr. King delivers his "1 Have a Dream speech on the steps o f the Lincoln M emo­ rial, and afterw ard he and other civil rights leaders meet with President JohnF . Kennedy in the W hite House. President Kennedy is assassi­ i-.f -n... io a x V Vr,»ina PiahtK A Aei is The 1965 oting Rights ct is signed by President Johnson. In W atts, the black ghetto o f Los A ngeles, riots leave thirty-five dead, o f whom tw enty-eight are black. cerned about Vietnam. James M eredith is shot soon af­ ter beginning his 220-m ile "M arch A gainst Fear" from M em phis, Tenn., to Jackson, Miss. King launches a drive to make C hicago an “open city" in regard to housing. King is stoned in C hicago as he leads a march through crow ds of angry whiles in G age Park section of C hicago’s southw est side. One black studi student is killed in rioting on the cam pus o f all-Negro Jackson State College, Jackson, Miss. The Justice D epartm ent reports that more than 50 percent of all eli­ gible black voters are registered in M ississippi, Ga., A labama, Louisi­ ana, and South Carolina. Tw enty-three people die, 725 are injured in riots in Newark, N.J. Forty-three die, 324 are injured in the D etroit riots, the worst of the century. B lack leaders M artin Luther King Jr., A. Philip Randolph, Roy W ilkins, and W hitney Young appeal for an end to the riots, "w hich have proved ineffective an dam aging to the civil rights cause and the entire nation.” 1968 S an itatio n w o rk ers strike in M em phis, Tenn. King leads six thousand protest­ ers on a march through downtown M em phis in support o f striking sani­ tation workers. D isorders break out during which black youths loot stores. One 16-year-old is killed, 50 people are injured. K ing’s last speech, entitled “I’ve Been to the M ountain Top,” is deliv­ e re d at th e M e m p h is M a so n ic Tem ple. King is assassinated by a sniper as he stands talking on the balcony of his second-floor room at the Lorraine M otel in M emphis. He dies in St. Jo sep h 's Hospital from a gunshot wound in the neck. James Earl Ray is later captured and convicted of the Statement by Representative Deborah Kafoury on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Remembrance Day Today I extend my heartfelt appreciation to the wonderful people o f North and Northeast Portland community fo r the mandate you have given me to serve and represent you in Salem. Your courageous vote last November stands as a monument to progress and fearless faith. Our victory was a direct fulfillm ent o f Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. s dream o f a community where “all God s children black and white ” could live in harmony. Over the next two years, I am going to work hard to ensure that the civil rights gains that Dr. King fought fo r are not eroded by the poisonous politics o f division and hatred that prevail in our country. I will fig h t hard to ensure that the rights o f minorities and women are not trampled, violated and diminished through code words and institutional racism. I will challenge other lawmakers - not only in words but also in deeds - to help us move our community forward into a new century born in the ideals o f Dr. King. I will fig h t fo r economic justice, better health care, jobs, education, affordable housing, equality and criminal justice. “ Let us rise up tonight with a greater readiness. Let us stand with a greater determination. And let us move on in these powerful days, these days of challenge, to make America a better nation... . , , c n a iic » . . Rev Martin i_uther King Jr. Paid for by Wyden Senate. I urge you to support me in this struggle by sending me your comments and concerns. You can reach me or my legislative assistant Promise King by calling us in Portland at 281-3960 or at your districts office in Salem (503) 986-1914. We must not allow stagnant passivity to derail our dream o f building a better community. I leave you with a quote from Dr. King about the path that I choose to follow “Never succumb to the temptation o f becoming bitter. As you press on I fo r justice be sure to move with dignity and discipline, using only the weapon o f love and non-violence. ” ’.*£,****■* ” ’ «