마틴 루터 킹 목사 서거 40주년

조회수 674 2008-04-07 14:15:26

CBS News Headline

 

Tonight, remembering a man of peace, a champion of equal rights. “Yes, you can kill the dreamer. But no, you absolutely cannot kill the dream.” As three candidates 후보자 honor 경의를 표하다 his dream and confront 직면하다, 맞서다 America’s racial 인종간의 divide.

 

I’m Katie Couric. Also tonight, our first look in 8 years at the Clinton’s tax returns 납세 신고서. The couple earned big money. A staggering 경이적인 $109 million since 2000. “$650,000” Who would spend 6 figures on a license plate 자동차의 번호판? Steve Hartman finds out in Assignment America. This is the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric.

 

마틴 루터 목사 서거 40주년

 

Good evening, everyone. He was the most prominent 두드러진 leader of the civil rights movement 민권 운동 <특히 1950-60년대의 흑인 차별 철폐 운동>, its most effective and effecting voice. Tonight, 40 years after that voice was silenced 침묵시키다, Americans are reflecting on the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. In Memphis, marchers 행진자 retrace the path of Dr. King’s final rally 집회 recalling his message of peaceful protest while tonight a vigil 철야기도 is being held at Lorraine Motel where an assassin 암살자 gunned him down.

 

A new CBS News New York Times poll 여론조사 shows overall race relations are improving, but there’s still a divide. 8 years ago, 31% of blacks viewed race relations as good. Now it’s 42%. Among whites, it’s about the same it was 8 years ago with 57% describing race relations as good. And as Dean Reynolds reports, race is just as big a political issue today as it was in 1968.

 

Good evening. Dr. Martin Luther King has been shot to death in Memphis, Tennessee. When that news broke <뉴스 > 전해지다, 알려지다 four decades ago, Barack Obama was six years old and living in Indonesia. Hillary Clinton was a college junior in Massachusetts. And John McCain was a prisoner of war 전쟁포로 in North Vietnam. Today all three venerated 숭배하다 king from very different perspectives 견해, 관점.

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