The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Page 44
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