M a r t in E i Page B2 ther K in g .J r . 2 0 03 s p e c i a l e d itio n . Jan u ary IS, jQ (B King Brings Message of Hope to Portland Resident remembers 1961 visit to Vancouver Avenue Baptist Church by S ean P. N elson / T he P ortland O bsery eh Late civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. carried a message full of hope on a November 1961 visit to Portland. King appeared downtown at the Portland Public Auditorium after the Jefferson High School Choir sang. Then-Gov. Mark Hatfield and MayorTerry D. Shrunk brought him greetings on behalf of the both the city and state. ‘There must be people in this nation with a sort of divine content, it is no longer a choice between nonviolence or violence, it is a choice between non­ violence or nonexistence," the Baptist minister told an audience of .3,500. An African-American parishioner remembers King’s visit and his reception at the Vancouver Avenue First Baptist Church. Although King was slain, the historic church at 3138 N. Vancouver Ave. still stands. “They had a reception for him at the parsonage so he could meet the ministers,” recalled Henry Knight, 78, a member of the church for 53 years. Hatfield helped plan the reception to introduce Dr. King to Pacific Northwest ministers, including the Albina Ministerial Alliance. ‘Tom e he was one of a kind," Knight recalled. “He had a sharp wit. I don’t know anyone I could compare him to.” King also took time out to talk to college students. He appeared as part of the Urban League of Portland s Equal Opportunity Program at Portland State during a commemoration of the Civil War with music and a discussion of the battles at Shiloh, Gettysburg, Vicksburg and Chancelorville. “We are on the border of the promised land of integration. But challenges remain,” King said. King, just 32 years old at the time, believed then that true integration of the races would occur before the turn of the century. ‘‘Americans must rise above the narrow confines of their individualistic concerns to the broader con­ cerns of all humanity. They must rid themselves of the notion that there are superior and inferior races,” he told area residents. A little more than 7 years later, on April 4,1968, the Oregonian carried a different story on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.— the story of his assassination. American civil rights movement, was killed by an assassin’s bullet Thursday night. “King, 39, was hit in the neck by a bullet as he stood on the balcony of a hotel there. He died less than an hour later at St. Joseph Hospital.” “MEMPHIS, Tenn. ( AP)— Nobel Laureate Mar­ tin Luther King Jr., father of nonviolence in the Like the rest o f the world, Knight was sad­ dened by Dr. K ing’s assassination. photo by D avid P lechi TT hf . P ortland O bserver Henry Knight, 78, stands outside the Vancouver Avenue Baptist Church at 3 1 3 8 N. Vancouver Ave., where he m et Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1961. a rio t. To me he was one o f a kind. He had a sharp wit. I don't know anyone I could compare him to. - Portland resident Henry Knight, talking about his 1961 meeting with Dr. Martin Luther King In Portland “That was very disturbing and upsetting,” he recalled. King had come to M em phis lead protests on behalf of the city’s 1,300 striking garbage work­ ers, most o f them A frican A m ericans. T ennes­ see Gov. Buford Ellington immediately ordered 4,000 N ational G uard troops back into the city and re-im posed a curfew that had been ordered a week earlier after a King-led march turned into “Police said incidents o f violence, including several fire bom bings, were reported following K ing’s d eath,” the article noted. Dr. King’s surviving wife, Coretta Scott King, spoke on the prospect o f her husband’s assas­ sination when she presented a “Freedom C on­ c e rt” in Portland on March 10, 1965. Mrs. King said she and her husband were accustom ed to fear. “My husband has no fear o f death. He has said it does not m atter how long you live, but how w ell... if you have to do this for a great cause...you are doing right. “ 1 have tried to prepare m yself for w hatever com es, because somehow I have felt all along that what we were doing is right. If you believe in your convictions, you must stand up for them . If you really believe in a cause enough, you are w illing to die for that cause,” Mrs. King said. PCC: Celebrating Educational Equality and Excellence 11 Intelligence plus character. That is the goal of a true ed u c atio n /' Martin Luther King Jr. Q, Portland Community College joins all citizens in honoring the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. His dedication to the pursuit of equality, his contributions to civil rights and his insistence on excellence in character and in actions shaped our nation's conscience. -IL 0 3!S PCC is founded on the principle of equal educational opportunity. Like Dr. King, we too have a dream. -e»* Our dream is to make the Cascade Campus the nation’s premier urban community college campus. We are reaching that goal by building and planning for the future. We hope the community will focus on the dream with us. In the next few years, here is what is planned: ■ A new building on the corner of Killingsworth and Kerby, open to the community, and housing a gymnasium with seating for 600 people. ■ Three other new buildings, fronting on Killingsworth and Albina, and improvements to existing buildings. A D BD 001 » • z Architectural rendering, PCC Cascade Campus 2004 i New, modern science labs in Jackson Hall. i Better lighting, beautiful landscaping and community access to the campus. ■ PCCs goal is that at least 20 percent of the construction contracts will go to minority, women and emerging small businesses (MWESB). i A healthy balance of campus, commercial and residential properties in the area. 400 new full-time jobs in the community during the next four years. Portland Community College Educational opportunities to meet the growing needs of the community until at least 2010. I À