• -r. j «. JAN. 20, 1999 Page A6 U p' |Jortlanb Of)bsertier Do Something Kindness 8< justice Challenge H h a t is it? T h e D o S o m e th in g K in d ­ n e s s & J u s t i c e C h a l l e n g e is a n a tio n a l, s c h o o l-b a s e d le a d e r s h ip p ro g r a m th a t in ­ v i t e s s t u d e n t s in g r a d e s K - 12 to l e a r n a b o u t a n d p e r ­ fo rm A c ts o f K in d n e s s (h e lp in g o th e r s ) a n d J u s tic e ( s t a n d i n g u p f o r w h a t is r i g h t ) f o r tw o w e e k s f o l ­ lo w in g th e M a r t i n L u t h e r K in g , J r . H o l i d a y ( J a n u a r y 1 8 -2 9 , 1 9 9 9 ). T h e p ro g ra m is s p o n s o r e d b y D o S o m e ­ th in g , a n a tio n a l n o n p ro f it o r g a n iz a tio n th a t in s p ir e s , tr a in s , fu n d s an d m o b iliz e s y o u n g p e o p l e to b e l e a d e r s w h o m e a s u ra b ly s tre n g th e n th e ir c o m m u n itie s , a n d A p ­ p lie d M a te r ia ls , a F o rtu n e 5 0 0 g lo b a l g ro w th c o m p a n y a n d th e w o r l d ’s l a r g e s t s u p ­ p lie r o f w a fe r fa b ric a tio n s y s t e m s a n d s e r v i c e s to th e g lo b a l s e m ic o n d u c to r in ­ d u s try . H ow d o es it w ork? 1929-1968 T e a c h e rs a n d s tu d e n ts at Martin Luther King, Jr. was bom in Atlanta, Georgia on January 15,1929. His religious upbringing in the King home shaped his destiny and thereby shaped the destiny o f Black Americans, now and for evermore. He graduated from Morehouse College at the age o f nineteen and entered Crozer Theological Seminary in Pennsylvania. He graduated at the top o f his class and was awarded a Doctoral Fellowship to Boston University. Upon receiving is Doctoral Degree in 1955, Martin Luther King returned to the South to pastor the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery Alabama. King founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Atlanta on January 10, 1957 to coordinate all civil rights activities. On December 10, 1964 at the age o f 35, he received the Nobel Peace Prize. Martin Luther King was assassinated while protesting the rights o f 1,200 sanitation workers in Memphis, Tennessee on April 4, 1968. e v e r y s c h o o l in t h e n a t i o n a re in v i te d to p a r t i c i p a t e in th e D o S o m e th in g K in d n e s s & J u s tic e C h a l l e n g e . B e tw e e n J a n u a r y 18 an d J a n u a ry 2 9 , 1 9 9 9 , s tu d e n ts in p a r t i c i p a t i n g c l a s s e s o r s t u ­ d e n t o rg a n iz a tio n s p e rfo rm in ­ d i v i d u a l A c ts o f K i n d n e s s a n d J u s t i c e w h ile l e a r n i n g im p o r ta n t v a lu e s s u c h as r e s p e c t, r e ­ s p o n s ib ility , to le r a n c e , c o m ­ p a s s io n , g e n e ro s ity a n d m o ra l c o u ra g e fro m an in n o v a tiv e , a g e -a p p r o p ria te c u rric u lu m . S tu d e n ts an d te a c h e rs c a n p o s t th e ir “ A c ts " o n a n in te r a c tiv e In te rn e t w e b s ite ( w w w .d o s o m e th in g .o rg ) a n d sh a re s to rie s an d e x p e rie n c e s w ith o th e r p a r t ic i p a ti n g s t u ­ d e n ts fro m o rg a c r o s s th e c o u n try . H ow do I G et i n ­ volved? E d u c a to r s c a n r e g is te r fo r th e 1 9 9 9 D o S o m e t h i n g K i n d ­ n e ss & J u s tic e C h a lle n g e on th e In te rn e t at w w w .d o s o m e th in g .o r g o r by w r i t i n g to D o S o m e t h i n g a t 4 2 3 W e s t 5 5 * S t r e e t , 8 lh F l o o r , N e w Y o rk , N ew Y o rk 1 0 0 1 9 ( A t­ te n tio n : K J C h a lle n g e ) . E a c h te a c h e r w h o r e g is te r s w ill r e ­ c e i v e a n E d u c a t o r K it w ith a n a g e -a p p r o p ria te c u rric u lu m th a t in c l u d e s tw o w e e k s o f d a ily le s s o n s , in s tr u c tio n s fo r p o s tin g A c ts o f K in d n e s s an d J u s tic e o n th e I n te r n e t a n d in ­ c e n t i v e s to e n c o u r a g e s t u d e n t p a rtic ip a tio n . A re th ere P rizes? Y e s ’ P a r tic ip a tin g s tu d e n ts w ill r e c e iv e a c e r t if ic a te o f p a r t i c i p a t i o n s i g n e d b y M a r tin L u t h e r K in g I I I , i n c l u d e d in th e D o S o m e th in g K in d n e s s an d J u s tic e C h a lle n g e c u rric u lu m m a te ria ls . T h e s tu d e n t w h o p e r ­ f o r m s t h e m o s t A c t s in th e n a ­ tio n w ill r e c e iv e a N a tio n a l C h a m p io n T ro p h y , a c o m p u te r a n d a y e a r ’s w o rth o f v id e o re n ta ls fro m B lo c k b u s te r. T h e s c h o o l c o m m ittin g th e m o s t A c ts n a t i o n a l l y w i l l r e c e i v e a N a tio n a l C h a m p io n T ro p h y . T h e t o p s t u d e n t a n d s c h o o l in e a c h s ta te w ill a ls o re c e iv e a S ta te C h a m p io n T ro p h y . Why a K in d n ess & J u stic e C h a llen g e? D o S o m e t h i n g c r e a t e d th e K in d n e s s & J u s t i c e C h a l l e n g e to te a c h s t u d e n ts h o w in d i v id u a l A c ts o f K in d n e s s a n d J u s t i c e c a n m a k e a d i f f e r e n c e in th e i r h o m e s , s c h o o ls a n d c o m m u n i­ ti e s . D o S o m e t h i n g ’ s o v e r a l l g o a l is to i n s p i r e y o u n g p e o p le to b e l i e v e th a t c h a n g e is p o s ­ s i b l e a n d to h e lp th e m ta k e a c ­ ti o n to s t r e n g t h e n t h e i r c o m ­ m u n itie s . D o S o m e th in g c r e ­ a te d K in d n e s s & J u s t i c e C h a l ­ le n g e a r o u n d th e M a r tin L u th e r K in g , J r . H o lid a y to r e c o g n i z e , h o n o r a n d p a y t r i b u t e to th e s i g ­ n i f i c a n t im p a c t M a r tin L u th e r K in g , J r . m a d e o n g e n e r a t i o n s o f A m e ric a n s . M L K e m b o d ie d th e id e a l s o f K in d n e s s a n d J u s ­ tic e - e q u a lity fo r a ll, n o n v io ­ le n t re s o lu tio n o f is s u e s , r e ­ sp e c t fo r d if fe re n c e s a n d m o ra l c o u r a g e . T im in g th e K J C h a l ­ le n g e to c o r r e s p o n d w ith M L K , J r . D a y is a n o p p o r t u n i t y to “ k e e p th e d r e a m a l i v e ." The Death of the Dream: JAN. 6, 1964, WAS A LONG DAY FOR Martin Luther King Jr. He spent themoming seated in the reserved section of the Supreme Court, listening aslawyers argued New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, a landmark case rising outot King’s crusade against segregation in Alabama. The minister wassomething of an honored guest: Justice Arthur Goldberg quietly sent down acopy of Kings account of the Montgomery bus boycott, “Stride Toward Freedom,” asking for an autograph. That night King retired to his room at the Willard Hotel. Pillar O f Fire America in the King Years. 1963-65 It w as a landm ark tim e in A m erica s history, m arked by ram pant social up­ heaval and profound personal sacrifice. At its moral and political center rose an extraordinary social m ovem ent build on the concept o f nonviolence, led by one charism atic individual: M artin Luther King, Jr. In the fust volum e in his trilogy o f the civil nghts era, the Puhtzer- Prize w inning Parting the W aters. Tay­ lor Branch followed the infancy o f a m ovem ent and the baptism o f its leader Branch now continues his chronicle of A m erica's explosive struggle for equal rights for all its citizens - and the rise o f the m an w ho m oved legions to com bat oppression with nonviolence - in Pillar O f Fire: A m erica in the K ing Years. 1963-65 (A Touchstone B ookS im on & Schuster Trade Paperbacks: January 1999; $17.00). A N ew Y ork Tim es bestseller, this second volum e captures the heat o f breakthrough battles around the nation - from collisions o f towering egos to rem arkable acts o f courage am ong ordinary m en and w om en, black and white. "There is no historical precedent for Birmingham, Alabama, in April andM ay o f 1963. when the pow er balance o f a great nation turned out onclashing armies or global com m erce but on the young­ est student demonstrators o f African descent, dow n to the first- and second- graders,” Branch writes in his preface. “T he m iracleofBirm ingham might have stood alone as the culm ination o f a freedom movement grown slowly out o f Southern black churches. Y et it was merely the strongest o f m any tides that pivotal time in A m erica’s history. He delves behind the scenes o f grassroots stands and milestone incidents — from voting rights pickets in Mississippi to the segregated jail cells o f S t Augustine. Florida: from pettyjealousies within front­ line civil rights groups, including the N AA CP, to the assassination o f Medgar E\ansandtheCnxximan.Cheney,Sweiner ONE HEART ? t : / * murders; from the Shakespearean in­ trigues o f J.Edgar Hoover and Robert d and Kennedy to the M arch on Washington. The high-stakes action unfolds against J JIJ , crested in the m ovem ent's peak years, 1963-65. They challenged, inspired, and the tumultuous daw n o f Johnson s presi­ dency - w hich saw the passage o f confounded America over the meaning o f sim ple words: dignity, equal votes, equal souls. They gripped M alcolm X along with President Johnson, buffeted groundbreaking civil nghts legislation and changed the very structure of partisiui politics by delivering the South to the the watchwords 'integration' and ’non­ violence’. broke bodies and spirits, en­ involvement in Vietnam. A sem inal and gripping w ork ofh is- tory, P illarO fF ire im m ortalizes a chap­ ter in A m erica's distinctive quest for larged freedom." Drawing on the fifteen years o f re­ search - including nearly two thousand interviews and new primary sources, from FBI wiretaps to White House telephone recordings - Branch vividly portrays this ONE VOICE ONE SOUL Republicans - and A m erica's escalating ONE KING equality and freedom , w hile enriching ourcollectiveunderstandingofaunique o f dissension, intrigue, sacrifice and A4 7 I * . >7’ determ ination inournot-so-distantpast. "Our Friend, Martin" i. I ,, 1 ft lb An animated feature-length home video on the life of Dr. Martin Luther King N ew Y o rk , N Y (Jan u ary 5 ,1 9 9 9 ) - U n iv e rs a l R e c o rd s is set to re ­ lease th e d ire c t fo r O u r F r ie n d , M a r tin , 2 0 th C e n tu ry F o x H o m e E n te rta in m e n t’s a n im a te d d ire c t for v id eo m o v ie on th e life an d tim es o f D r. M artin L u th er K in g , Jr., w hich also featu res a rch iv al fo o tag e o f the slain civ il rig h ts leader. B o th the film an d the u n iv e rsa l so u n d track w ill b e in sto res o n T u e s d a y , J a n u ­ ary 12, 1999 to c o in c id e w ith the n atio n al K ing h o lid a y o n Jan u ary 18th, a n d B lack H isto ry M o n th in F eb ru ary . T h e v id eo an d so u n d track w ill b e sold sep arately . T h e 11-tra c k a lb u m featu res a m ix tu re o f R & B an d h ip -h o p songs, from b o th e sta b lish e d an d u p -an d - f 1 * * V *♦•<***■ ' - • c o m in g artists. T h e lead single. “ F e e lin I t , ” is a funky rap R & B track p erfo rm ed b y A n tu a n & R ay R a y o f th e 1 0 -m e m b e r h ip -h o p K n ig h t a n d D ia n a K in g ’s p ra ise - filled , “W h e n W e W e r e K in g s ," M o n te ll J o r d a n ’s “ I D o " an d S a lt ‘N P e p a ’s “ I m a g in e " rem ix fea­ cliq u e. T h e B iv 10 P ee W ees. A s­ sem b led b y M ic h a e l B iv in s, T h e B iv 10 P e e W ees, w ho ran g e in age from 7 to 14, are rap p ers and singers w h o hail from N ew Y o rk , P h ilad el­ p h ia an d L os A ngeles. O th e r k e y tra c k s o n th e O u r F r i e n d . M a r t i n s o u n d tra c k in ­ c lu d e S te v ie W o n d e r ’s b irth d a y trib u te to D r. K in g , “ H a p p y B ir th ­ d a y , ” M a r v i n G a y e ’s tim e le s s p ro te st so n g , “ W h a t ’s G o in g O n ," D ia n a R o ss c lassic p e a c e an th em , “ R each O ut A nd T ouch ( S o m e b o d y 's H a n d ) ,” B r ia n M e tu rin g S h e r y l C r o w N ew com er in c lu d e D e b e la h M o r g a n 's d a n c e re m a k e o f “ A in ’t N o M o u n ta in H ig h E n o u g h .” O n Jan u ary 15th, Dr. K in g 's a c ­ tu al b irth d ate (1 9 2 9 ), th e K in g fam ­ ily , c ele b rities an d en te rta in e rs w ill g ath er at T he M artin L u th er K ing C e n te r in A tlan ta for th e m o v ie ’s ( if1 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in i' J a tifo n i tin intuiti of January 1 5 ,1 9 9 9 c 1 11 r t I n il AMERICAN FAM I LY f = auto mat aouirss muru in " SS.'SÏJ w o rld p rem iere. P lc o n ta c t W e n d y W a sh in g to n , V P M e d ia R e la tio n s , U n iv e rs a l © 1998 American Family Mutual Insurance Company and Its Subsidiaries, Madison, Wl 53783 0001 www.amfam.com R eco rd s, 2 1 2 -3 7 3 -0 7 0 2 , fo r m o re in f o r m a tio n r e g a r d in g th e O u r F rien d , M a rtin so u n d track u, wc orc free at itisi f / l ’,' honk