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Torstaina
07.10.2004.
"Tuuli käy heidän ylitseen".
Poisnukkuneitten muistolle. Kuvasarja.
Kuva:
Pertti Manninen. |
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ILMOITA ILMAISEKSI: LINKKI UUSIMPIIN!
ILMOITA ILMAISEKSI: LINKKI UUSIMPIIN!
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Tulossa!
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Rösta och försvinn.
Arundhati Roy
om den nedtryckta folkmakten - och demokrati
son något större än att välja tvättmedel- Del 1. Läs
fortsättningen i morgon: Det finns ett alternativ till terrorism:
RÄTTVISA. Aftonbladet. Tisdag 21 september 2004.
Äänestä ja katoa.
Arundhati Royn
kirjoitus alaspainetusta kansanvoimasta - ja
demokratiasta, joka ei ole sen suurempaa kuin pesuaineen
valitseminen: Osa 1. Lue jatko huomenna: On olemassa vaihtoehto
terrorismille: OIKEUDENMUKAISUUS. Aftonbladet tiistaina
21.09.2004.
Katkelmia tulossa!
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TOIMITUS. Vastaava päätoimittaja Pertti Manninen. Yhteydenotto: nettisanomat@hotmail.com. Copyright nettisanomat.com
2004/289. Sivut valmisti Pertti Manninen 14.10.2004, ensimmäinen
versio: 17.10.2004 19.28 (linkkejä 17.10.2004 20:12
). Vanhempi toimittaja ja kesätoimittaja. Kuvannut Pertti
Manninen.
nettisanomat - 2004/10/14
- etusivu - "I
have a Dream". Martin Luther King..
- Tänään
torstaina 14.10.2004 tulee kuluneeksi päivälleen 40 vuotta siitä kun
Nobel- komitea ilmoitti myöntävänsä Rauhan palkinnon Martin Luther
Kingille. 14.10.2004
- avoin -
ainakin joka torstai - kuva - kuvat - pertti manninen - nettisanomat. |
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King's Nobel Left Atlanta Ambivalent
Jum Auchmutey, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 03 Oct.
2004
[Editor's Note: This year the Journal-Constitution is examining the
evolution of civil rights in the South over the past six decades. This week's
story is one part of that series. Perhaps this excerpt will pique further
exploration by specialists or general readers .]
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was half-asleep in a hospital bed when he
found out he'd won the Nobel Peace Prize.
Exhausted by a heavy speaking schedule and suffering from a respiratory
infection, he had been admitted to St. Joseph's Infirmary --- then in downtown
Atlanta --- for several days of rest. On the morning of Oct. 14, 1964, the
phone rang and Coretta Scott King gave the good news to her groggy husband. A
few minutes later, he dialed her back with a question.
"Did you just call me? Or was I dreaming?"
On Friday, the winner of the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize will be announced in
Oslo, Norway. A similar announcement 40 years ago left Atlantans awkwardly
divided. Some folks celebrated and offered prayers of thanks. Others grumbled
and wondered what the world was coming to.
The ambivalence reflected the times --- just months after segregation in
public places was outlawed --- and provided a freeze-frame image of a city in
transition.
At 35, King became the youngest recipient of the peace prize. But the
coming weeks were to be anything but peaceful for him as the FBI stepped up
its clandestine campaign to discredit him by using salacious information about
his personal life.
Atlanta's reputation hung in the balance, too. People weren't exactly
snapping up tickets for a banquet to honor Georgia's first Nobel winner. Was
"the city too busy to hate" going to turn its back on a native who
had become an internationally known disciple of nonviolence?
In the end, the banquet was a success, a gilded evening that marked
Atlanta's first truly integrated public gathering of consequence and cemented
its stature as a progressive outpost in a region haunted by old prejudices.
"Atlanta came of age that night," says former Mayor Sam Massell,
who was there as president of the Board of Aldermen, the forerunner of today's
City Council.
How it happened is a telling story of modern Atlanta, a city that did the
honorable thing even if some of its motivations were not entirely honorable.
...