Lamplighter • Aug 25, 2013 12:30 pm
commercialappeal.com
8/25/13
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March on Washington - 50th Anniversary
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A few months after King delivered the speech, he sent a copy of the address
to the U.S. Copyright office and listed the remarks as a “work not reproduced for sale.”
<snip>
Since 1963, King and, posthumously, his estate have strictly enforced control
over use of that speech and King’s likeness.
<snip>By now it is well known that Jones did not include the words "I have a dream"
in the "suggested textual material" he drafted for King before the speech.
King had used the phrase earlier in speeches in Detroit and Rocky Mount, N.C., Jones said,
[COLOR="DarkRed"]and it was singer Mahalia Jackson who encouraged King to go back to it when she called out to him in mid-speech
from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial: "Tell 'em about the dream, Martin, tell 'em about the dream!"[/COLOR]<snip>
"He, in response to Mahalia, began to speak extemporaneously," Jones said....
<snip>
[COLOR="DarkRed"]"... we must mark him now ... as the most dangerous Negro
of the future in the nation from the standpoint of communism,
the Negro and national security"[/COLOR]
“No holds were barred. We have used [similar] techniques against Soviet agents.
[The same methods were] brought home against any organization against which we were targeted.
We did not differentiate. This is a rough, tough business.”
<snip>
Sullivan, in his 1975 testimony before the Church panel, backtracked from his post-speech memo,
noting [COLOR="DarkRed"]“we had to engage in a lot of nonsense which we ourselves really did not believe in.”[/COLOR]