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Selected Martin Luther King Jr.

Resources
available in the ACC Library
Black History: A Retrospective

Video and compact Disc Recordings

E185 B53 2010 DVD E185.97 K5 C58 2004 DVD

Civil Rights Civil Responsibilities


and

Citizen King by Orlando Bagwell

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr: A Historical Perspective by Martin Luther King E185.97 L8 D7 2002 DVD King: Man of Peace in a Time of War by Jesse Jackson E185.615 K56 2007 DVD Martin Luther King: I Have a Dream by Martin Luther King E185.97 K5 M295 2005 DVD A Call to Conscience: The Landmark speeches of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. by Martin Luther King E185.97 K5 A5 2001 CD Say it Plain: A Century of Great African American Speeches by Kate Ellis PS663 N4 S39 2005 CD

Books

April 4, 1969: Martin Luther King, Jr.s Death and How it Changed America, by Eric Michael Dyson E185.97 K5 D96 2008 At Canaans Edge: American in the King Years, 1965-68, by Taylor Branch E185.615 B67 2006 Becoming King: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Making of a National Leader, by Troy Jackson E185.97 K5 J343 2008 Going Down Jericho Road: The Memphis Strike, Martin Luther Kings Last Campaign, by Michael K. Honey HD5325 S2572 1968 M465 2007 Marching in Birmingham, by William J. Boerst F334 B69 N426 2008 The Martin Luther King Companion: Quotations from the Speeches, Essays, and Books of Martin Luther King Jr., by Martin Luther King Jr. E185.97 K5 A25 1993 My Life with Martin Luther King, by Coretta Scott King E185.97 K5 K5 1969 A Nation on Fire: America in the Wake of the King Assassination, by Clay Risen HV6477 R57 2009 Preaching With Sacred Fire: an Anthology of African American Sermons, 1750 to the Present, by Martha J. Simmons BV4241.5 P75 2010 Selma and the Voting Rights Act, by David Aretha Why We Cant Wait, by Martin Luther King Jr. F334 S4 A74 2007 E183.61 S14 1964

Martin Luther King Jr. Observance


January 19, 2012

2:00 p.m.

Childrens Books

As Good As Anybody: Martin Luther King Jr. and Abraham Joshua Heschels Amazing March Toward Freedom, by Richard Michelson Happy Birthday, Martin Luther King, by Jean Marzollo

Alamance Community College Auditorium

Lewis A. Brandon, III

Program
Please turn off cell phones (including texting) during the program.

Welcome and Words of Reflection ..................... Carolyn Rhode


Vice President, Institutional Advancement

Lewis Brandon is described by his friends and colleagues as a man who has a love for freedom, justice and equality. A native of Asheville, NC, Brandon is a retired science teacher. He received his BS in Biology and MS in Education and Biology from NC A&T College (State University). He has worked for the Biology Department of NC A&T; and for the Greensboro City Schools and Guilford County School System. Brandon was a student organizer during the early 1960s when he was matriculating at North Carolina A&T College. As a member of the Student Executive Committee for Justice, he played a key role in formulating protest strategies during the Greensboro Woolworth Sit-In Movement demonstrations of 1960. Brandons activism did not stop in 1960. He continued in the struggle for social, political and economic justice in his community. He was actively involved in CORE (Congress of Racial Equality), NAACP, and Greensboro Association of Poor People. Today he continues to play an active role in the struggle for social justice with the Beloved Community Center of Greensboro. Brandon is affiliated with numerous organizations including a Life Membership in the Greensboro Branch of the NAACP and holds membership in the Black Child Development Institute (Greensboro), the Beloved Community Center, the Committee to Save Dudley High School, the A&T Alumni Association, the A&T Aggie Club and the Piedmont Land Conservancy. Additionally, he has been a member of the North Carolina Association of Educators (Guilford County Unit) and the National Education Association. In 2001, Brandon received the first Human Rights Medal presented by NC A&T State University. He was awarded the Sit-In Participant Award by the International Civil Rights Center and Museum for his participation in the Sit-In Movement. He also received the One Community Award presented by the February One Society for his role in the Sit-In Movement.

Special Music ..........................................................................Students


Under the Direction of Rayvelette Farrington Early Childhood Staff member

The Ballad of Birmingham a poem by Dudley Randall ................................Cookie Pinas


ACC University Transfer Student

Special Music ..........................................................................Students Introduction of Speaker .................................... JaNeeva Sampson


ACC Student Ambassador Greensboro Educator

Civil Rights and Civic Responsibilities... Lewis Brandon, III Question and Answer Session ............................ time permitting Closing Remarks ................................. Martin H. Nadelman, Ed.D.
ACC President

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