The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr.

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  telegrams to

  transformation of

  Kennedy, Robert

  Kent, Duchess of

  King, Rev. A. D. (brother)

  King, Alberta Williams (mother)

  letter to

  King, Bernice Albertine (daughter)

  King C. B.

  King, Coretta Scott (wife)

  advice of

  background of

  calmness of during crisis

  grandmother of

  letters to

  supportiveness of

  telegram to

  See also Scott, Coretta

  King, Dexter Scott (son)

  King, (Michael) Martin Luther, Jr.

  and Albany Movement

  arrested

  assassinated

  and Atlanta sit-ins

  attempt on life of

  on Birmingham, desegregation in

  on Birmingham, violence in

  birth of

  bombing of home

  at Boston University

  on Chicago

  church as second home for

  course papers of

  at Crozer Theological Seminary

  and Day of Penance

  at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church

  on death

  early years of

  elected head of MIA

  final address in Memphis

  on freedom

  “I Have a Dream” speech

  instructions from

  “I’ve been to the mountaintop” speech

  jail diary of

  on Kennedy assassination

  Kennedy meets with

  lecture at University of Oslo

  and Letter from Birmingham Jail

  letters of

  on Malcolm X

  March on Washington address

  marries Coretta Scott

  to Memphis strikers

  message from jail

  on Mississippi

  on Mississippi Freedom Democratic

  Party

  and Montgomery bus boycott

  at Morehouse College

  Nobel Peace Prize for

  on oppressors

  parents of

  at Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom

  and preaching ministry

  and Poor People’s Campaign

  quoted in newspapers

  reminiscence of

  on segregation

  and Selma voting rights

  sentenced

  sermons of

  in solitary confinement

  speeches and statements of

  stabbed

  as teenager

  telegrams from

  on temporary segregation

  travels of

  unfullfilled dreams of

  on Vietnam War

  and Watts riots

  King, (Michael) Martin Luther, Sr. (father)

  letter to

  suffering of

  King, Martin Luther III (son)

  King, Slater

  King, Tom

  King, Yolanda Denise (Yoki) (daughter)

  Ku Klux Klan (KKK)

  Kunstler, William

  Lafayette, Bernard

  Lamumba, Patrice

  Latin America

  Lawndale, poverty in

  Laws, just and unjust

  Lawson, Rev. James

  Lazarus (beggar-hero)

  Leadership, and consensus

  Lee, Bernard

  Lee, Rev. George

  Lee, Herbert

  Lenin, Nikolai

  Letter from Birmingham Jail (King)

  Lewis, Rufus

  Liberalism, failures of

  Life, three dimensions of

  Lincoln, Abraham

  Little Rock, Ark., high school integration in

  Liuzzo, Viola Gregg

  Locke, John

  Loeb, Mayor Henry

  Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth

  Looking Backward (Bellamy)

  Los Angeles. See Watts riots

  Louisiana

  Love

  and evil

  and Jesus Christ

  and justice

  and power

  Lowell, James Russell

  Lowery, Joe

  Lunch counter sit-ins

  Atlanta (Ga.)

  Greensboro (N.C.)

  Montgomery (Ala.)

  Luther, Martin

  Lutuli, Chief Albert

  McCall, Walter

  McGill, Ralph

  McKissick, Floyd

  McNair, Denise

  letter to family of

  Malcolm X

  Mandela, Nelson

  Manhood, and Black Power

  Mao

  March on Washington

  and “I have a dream” speech

  Marshall, Burke

  Marshall, Thurgood

  Marx, Karl

  Marxism

  vs. capitalism

  Matzeliger, Jan

  Maynard, Dr. Aubrey

  Mays, Dr. Benjamin E.

  Mazo, Earl

  Means, and ends

  Meet the Press (TV)

  Memphis

  King’s final address in

  march

  movement in

  Meredith, James

  Mexico

  MIA (Montgomery Improvement

  Association)

  Middleton, Rev. Allen

  Mill, John Stuart

  Miller, Rev.

  Ming, William

  Mississippi

  civil rights workers in

  delegation in House

  Freedom Democratic Party

  Freedom March through

  murders in

  New Negroes in

  Mitchell, Oscar

  Montgomery (Ala.)

  anarchy in

  bus boycott

  lunch counter sit-ins

  racism in

  from Selma march

  terror in

  See also MIA

  Montgomery Advertiser

  Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Harry T.

  Moore, William

  Moral Man and Immoral Society (Niebuhr)

  Morgan, Juliette

  Moses, Bob

  Moslems, in India

  Motley, Connie

  Mountbatten, Lady

  Mozambique

  Muelder, Walter

  Muhammad, Elijah

  Murray, Rev. George M.

  Muste, Dr. A. J.

  NAACP (National Association for the

  Advancement of Colored People)

  Legal Defense and Educational Fund

  Narayan, Jayaprakash

  Nation, The

  Nebuchadnezzar

  Negro

  in American history

  anti-Semitism

  community, opposing forces in

  faith in

  “haves” and “have-nots”

  insulting of

  music of

  new, in South

  in North

  “old” vs. “new”

  religion, emotionalism of

  revolution

  stereotype of

  suffering of

  “Negro and the Constitution, The” (King)

  Nehru, Jawaharlal

  New York Post

  New York Times

  Niebuhr, Reinhold

  Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm

  Nigeria

  Nixon, E. D.

  Nixon, Richard

  Nkrumah, Kwame

  Nobel, Count Alfred

  Nonviolence

  crisis for

  pride and power of

  questioning of

  vs. violence

  Nonviolent resistance

  and Gandhi

  and Montgomery bus boycott

  pilgrimage to

  steps in

  Northern Europe

  Norway

  king of

  Olson, Rev. Clark

  “On Civil Disobed
ience” (Thoreau)

  Open housing, in Chicago

  Operation Breadbasket

  Oppression, violence against

  Ovid

  Pacifism, positions on

  Pakistan

  Parks, Rosa

  Paul, Apostle

  Peace Corps

  Personalism, importance of

  Peru

  Phenomenology of Mind (Hegel)

  Philosophy of History (Hegel)

  Philosophy of Religion, A (Brightman)

  Philosophy of Right (Hegel)

  Plato

  Platonic philosophy

  Plessy v. Ferguson

  Poor People’s Campaign

  Poverty

  in Chicago

  war on

  Powell, Adam

  Powell, Mary

  Power, and love

  Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom

  President’s National Advisory Commission

  on Civil Disorders

  Pritchett, Laurie

  Project C.

  Public schools, segregation in

  Quakers

  Raby, Al

  Racism

  early experiences with

  and future

  and new Negro in South

  and segregation

  Rainey, Sheriff

  Ramage, Rev. Edward V.

  Randolph, A. Philip

  Rauschenbusch, Walter

  Ray, Rev. Sandy F.

  Reason, and liberalism

  Red China

  Reddick, Dr. Lawrence D.

  Reeb, Rev. James

  Renaissance

  Republican Party

  Reuther, Walter

  Rich, Marvin

  Ricks, Willie

  Rillieux, Norbert

  Robertson, Carole

  Robinson, Jo Ann

  Roman Empire

  Roosevelt, Franklin D.

  Rousseau, Jean Jacques

  Royster, Gloria

  Russell, Richard

  Rustin, Bayard

  Satyagraha

  Scandinavia

  Schwerner, Michael

  SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership

  Conference)

  and Albany Movement

  and Birmingham campaign

  and Chicago campaign

  and Crusade for Citizenship

  and Freedom March through Mississippi

  and Mississippi challenge

  in North

  and Operation Breadbasket

  and poor people

  in Selma

  in South

  and St. Augustine (Fla.) struggle

  See also Southern Leaders Conference

  Scott, Bernice

  Scott, C. A.

  Scott, Coretta (Corrie)

  letters to

  marries Martin Luther King, Jr.

  strength of

  understanding of

  See also King, Coretta Scott

  Scott, Mrs. Fannie E. (Coretta’s

  grandmother), letter to

  Scott, Obie (Coretta’s father)

  Segregation

  attack on

  basic purpose of

  on buses

  breaking down wall of

  brutality of

  on deathbed

  vs. democracy

  early experiences with

  and “I-it” relationship

  impatience with

  and inequality

  lunch counter

  moral judgment not given on

  in public schools

  and racism

  scarring effect of

  and selfhood

  temporary

  Selfhood, and segregation

  Sellers, Cleveland

  Sellers, Police Commissioner

  Selma (Ala.)

  march in

  to Montgomery march

  voting rights in

  Sermon on the Mount

  Sherman, Gen. William

  Shores, Arthur

  Shuttlesworth, Rev. Fred

  Simpson, Bryan

  Sit-ins. See Lunch counter sit-ins

  Slavery, vs. freedom

  Slums, in Chicago

  Smiley, Glenn

  Smith, Lillian

  SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating

  Committee)

  Sobukw窠Robert

  Social and Political Action Committee

  Socrates

  Songs. See Freedom songs; “We shall

  overcome”

  South Africa

  South America

  South Carolina

  Southeast Asia

  Southern Leaders Conference

  See also SCLC

  Soviet Union

  Spivak, Lawrence

  Spock, Dr. Benjamin

  Stallings, Rev. Earl

  Stanton, Secretary Edwin

  St. Augustine (Fla.) struggle

  Steele, C. K.

  Still, Larry

  Stride Toward Freedom (King)

  Student demonstrations

  See also Lunch counter sit-ins

  Supreme Court

  and Plessy v. Ferguson

  on segregation on buses

  on segregation in public schools

  Sweden

  Tension, in nonviolent resistance

  Thailand

  Thirteenth Amendment

  Thomas, Judge

  Thomas, Mrs. Lillie

  Thomas, Rex

  Thoreau, Henry David

  Thurmond, Strom

  Tillich, Paul

  Time, creative use of

  Time magazine

  Tolstoy, Leo

  Truman, Harry

  Turner, Nat

  Tuttle, Elbert P.

  United Nations (U.N.)

  United States

  destiny of

  future of

  vs. India, in integrating minorities

  See also America

  Untouchables, in India

  Values

  rediscovering lost

  true revolution of

  Vandiver, S. Ernest

  Venezuela

  Vesey, Denmark

  Vietnam War

  Violence

  backlash of

  and black nationalist groups

  as burden

  children as victims of

  vs. nonviolence

  against oppression

  precipitation of, through peaceful

  actions

  as result of unbearable frustration

  Vivian, C. T.

  Voting rights

  in Selma (Ala.)

  Voting Rights Act of 1965

  Walden, A. T.

  Walker, Anne

  Walker, Solomon

  Walker, Rev. Wyatt Tee

  wife of

  Wallace, George

  Warren, Earl

  Watts riots

  “We Shall Overcome”

  Wesley, Cynthia

  West, Mrs. A. W.

  Where Do We Go from Here, Chaos or

  Community? (King)

  White, Lee

  White churches

  disappointment in leadership of

  participation of, in March on

  Washington

  White Citizens Councils

  White moderates, disappointment at lack of

  understanding of

  Why We Can’t Wait (King)

  Wieman, Henry Nelson

  Wilkins, Roy

  Williams, A. D.

  Williams, Alberta

  See also King, Alberta Williams

  Williams, Dr. Daniel Hale

  Williams, Hosea

  Williams, Jennie Celeste

  Williams, Robert (Bob)

  Will to Power, The (Nietzsche)

  Wilson, Woodrow

  Wofford, Harris

  Woods, Granville T.

  Wretched of the Earth, The (Fanon)

  Wright, Richard

  Yates


  Yorty, Sam

  Young, Andy

  wife of

  Young, Whitney

  Zeitgeist

  Zoroastrianism

 

 

 


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