u1.?7 w. FI-Idey, prl'II 5, P. wirephoto. yesterday. gg. Jesse Jackson, director King?s Operation poor Negroes ?Dr. {iKrng was up on the. bal? 5.: Solomon Jones, Dr. King?s .. jiffeur, said he and oth- ?5 ?in the party were stand- lbeside the car. t?s kind of cool, Dr. King,? Jones commented. ?Yes, 'it is,? was Dr. King?s reply. Ben Branch, another offi- cial. of Operation Breadhas? ket, was told by Dr; King: ?My man, be sure to sing ?Blessed Lord? tonight and sing it we.? The Rev Andrew Young, executive vice president of, the Southern Christian Lead- :ership Conference, said he ?Watched as Dr. King walked onto the balcony outside his second? floor room and en- gaged in conversation path his friends. ?He stood there about Slaying $5;an 5/5 m9 at? it? :1?.deme Tenn. (AP) The night before his ud?eath, the Rev Dr. Martin efnther King, Jr., told an :?udience he had ?seen the prfom1sed land? of victory in ?lms: ?ght for equality and ?e?i?s'tice, but may not go #Wl?llh you.? wgtheats had been made on - life, Dr. King told a "wd of 2,000, but he .was afraid. WASHINGTON (AP) Carmichael, black- ?WWer advocate, urged today to arm them? ?fselves with guns and take to 1; f? streets in retaliation for Etheiassassinatmn of the Rev. 313:; Martin Luther King, Jr. rashCarmichael told a news rovincial. special purchase of world famous FISHER Stereos makes possible this great offer! Nine brilliant ?esigns in Mediterranean, French or Italian 1* EXECUTIVE CONT WALNUT WITH AMPEX TAPE RECDR. g6?le?ls?3f?I.Y?t?i?fT..f 295 1 145"0 ?We?ve got some difficult days ahead,? Dr. King said. ?But it really doesn?t matter with me now, because I?ve been to the mountain top, and I don?t mind. .1 ?Like anybody, I would like to live a long life; lon? gevity has its grace. But I?m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God?s will. And he?s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And conference he wanted black America to ?kill off the real enemy.? He said there would be ex- ecutions in the streets. Carmichael blamed Presi- dent Johnson and Senator Robert F. Kennedy, with the rest of the nation?s white WAS NOW STATESMAN COUNTRY FRENCH 5' 295 . 1 19500 DARK PECAN . STATESMAN MEDITERRANEAN .71; LIGHT PECAN fall REGENT CONT. WALNUT. . I . 9* I FISHER PORTABLE 50! STER E0 "tuft,? 1 LOWBOY 2 72" long mg; REGENT COUNTRY FRENCH LOWBOY PECAN 995 REGENT ITALIAN PROVINCIAL 99 LOWBOY 015 CH. 5 . - REGENT PECAN . 1* FISHER arc. WALNUT. MOD. novel.) speakers, AM, FM, FM stereo. base, 21/1" Tweeters. Complete FISHER m. WALNUT. moo. STEREO ONLY Now canoe-necl-uuvveluot 89500 89500 895"0 495? 45995 169?5 IDS WITH $2095o Excellent Terms With A: Little As 10% Down SHERMAN . 119500 LAY REV. DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING. JR. STOOD QN MOTEL BALCONY Rev Dr. Ralph Abernathy. right._ Man at left was not Identified Hit; King Sold three minutes,? said the Rev. Samuel Kyles of Mem- phis. ?Then we heard what sounded like a sho Mr. Young said. thought it was a firecracker.? Jones said Dr. King had just smiled, but ?the smile faded into a dazed stare.? ?He had just bent over,? Mr. Jackson said. ?If he had been standing up, he wouldn?t have been hit in the face.? ?The bullet exploded in his face,? Branch said. ?It knocked him off his feet.? ?All he said was, I?ve looked over, and I?ve seen the promised land. may not get there With you. But I want you to know tonight that we as a people will get to the promised land. So I?m happy tonight, I?m not worried about any- thing. I?m not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord.? population, for the death of the Nobel Peace Prize win- ner. Carmichael said violence that erupted in city after city across the nation after Dr. King was shot was ?just light stuff? compared with ?what will happen.? A4 I. with. I .. I 895 $1 745"0 minnow Sums" BELLEVUE BENTON Isa-4+1. Ave. - 10660 NE our Shopping Center MA 2.7530 - or. 40633 . BA 5.1.170 ORTII . . .. TACOMA. . ?"996 Aug-m. . I s. OLYMPIA EVERETT -. EM 44050 . . . CH MISC - BREKRION BELLINGIIAM By WILLIAM Washington Post WASHINGTON ??A1most frorn the nmoment in 1955 . whenhe erupted into the na- tiohal?. consciousness as an apostle, of nonviolence, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., brooded about the possibility he would die a vi- olent death. He had before him the ex- ample or his great mentor, Mohandas K. Gandhi, who died in India in 1948 at an assassin?s hand. Dr. [King was ?stabbed in 1958 in a Harlem department store as'he sat autographing copies *of' ?Stride Toward Freedom,? the hockthat de- scribed his first great triumph as a civil-rights leader the boycott and subsequent integration of the Montgomery, Ala., bus sys- tem. The blade, thrust into his chest byIIzola Ware Curry, 42, a Negro woman, just missed his heart.? Dr. King was three hours in an Oper- ating room and many days recovermg. EVEN BEFORE that, at the height of the Montgo- mery struggle, unidentified persons threw a bomb that did not detonate on the front porch of Dr. King?s Montgo- meryhome. . By telephone, by letter, by at least four other failed at- tempts on his life, the threats came until it became quite natural to him to say, as he did in Albany, Ga. ., in 1962: . ?It may get me crucified. I may even die. But I want it said even if I die in the struggle that ?He died to make men free.? His echoing of the ?Battle of the Republic? was the '?nal 'clue to why Dr. King brooded as he did about death by violence. Dr. King saw himself as anaimitat'or of Christ and professed his . Willingness to that follow 1n the footsteps of his Master, even if the path led ultimatelyto death. AS THE civil-rights move- ment became inCreasingly militant in 1966 andr'thereaft- er and the shouts of ?Black power!? displaced the strains of ?We shall over- come,? Dr. King scarcely wavered from his insistence ?nonviolent" protest? is the most effective weapon of an oppressed people.? Dr. Kinglremained proba- bly the single most effective bridge between "the nation?s increasingly estranged Negro and white communi- ties. This power of bridge-build- ing rose to two great climax- es during Dr. King?s career 4- the?1963 civil~rights march on? Washington and the 1965 voter-registration campaign in Selma, Ala., that culminat- ed in the triumphant 50- mile Selma-to-Montgomery march. Dr.? King, 39, was a preacher?s boy. He was or- dained to the Baptist mimins? try in 1948, when he was only 19, in his father?s church, the Eberenezer Bap- tist Church of Atlanta. One childhood humiliation Dr. King never forgot oc- curred in an Atlanta depart- ment store. ?You?re the nigger that stepped on my foot,? a white woman yelled at him, and slapped his face. The youth turned away. DR. commitment to principles of militant paci- fism led him a year ago to a position that cost him the support of many in positions of political power in the na- tion who previously had been friends. He condemned the United States role in the Vietnam war. Proclaiming the organiza- tion of a ?Vietnam summer? drive against the war, Dr. King expressed impatience with those who'suggested his move might hurt his civil- rights work. think, my fa11ure to work for peace would have hurt it mOre', he said. King- condemned ?this. cruel, ceaseless, unjust war,? and added: ?Some; where along the way we have allwed the means by which. we live to outrun the ends fur Which we live.? In his ?poor peeple? 5 campaign,? toward which he was building day by daygtill he fell in Memphis, Dr. King was once again demonstrat- ing his conviction that the evils that tear at. America. are all of a piece, that the key?to all is achievement?of true economic and social equality and that all other concerns, international and domestic, should yield to this prime priority. Dr. King was a graduate of Crozer Theological Seminary, Chester, Pa., and earned a ,doctorbf-philoso- phy degree at Boston Uni- versity in 1955. DR. role as a civ. il-rights leader began in 1955 in Montgomery, where he had been a pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church for one year. One night, Rosa Parks, a Negro seamstress, got on a bus and sat down. The dri? ver, following custom, or- dered her to get up and sur- render her seat to a White man. Parks refused. don?t know why,? she said later. was just tired. My feet hurt.? Mrs. Parks was fined for her offense and Dr. King, who was president of the Montgomery Improvement Association, called for a boy- cott of the buses by Negroes. For 381 days the boycott went on, the bus company was driven to the verge of bankruptcy and finally a court ordered the buses de~ segrated. In.1960, Dr. King became co-pastor with his father of the. Atlanta church and founded the Southern Chris- tian Leadership Conference FROM TEEN on Dr. King and his associates were al-? the - most ceaselessly in public eye, planning and ex- ecuting . demonstrations in city after city," firStfin the Deep South and: then more recently arui? less success- fully in the Negro ghettos that have beCOme a feature of the great metrOpolitan cit- ies of. the nation. As D?rl King?s fame grew, he became. an international hero. He was inv1tcd to the Ghana Independence Day celebrations. He toured Eu- rope, Asia and South Ameri- ca, and in 1964 Was granted an audience by Pope Paul who pledged to support the Negro freedom- move- ment. -. In 1964, Dr. King won the Nobel Peace Prize because he had: provided his peOple with a powerful new weap- on nonviolent protest in their crusade for full American citizenship. 147 dome seats for looking at the Rocky Great Northern's famous EMPIRE BUILDER. Enioy comfortable reclining seats and leg rests or Pullman sleeping accommddations. Fine diner, budget priced Ranch Car. Great Gomcwith two travcl- luxury levels. It's great! GN honors American Express BankAmericani; Seattle FirstBank and Rail Travel Cmdit Bards. GREAT NORTHERN The Growing Great Nonhem operates the Empire Builder dailyveach way between Chicago and Seattle-Portland by way of Saint Paul. Minneapolis and Spokane. 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