OTHERcmES:
Birthday
Patb.
nta
THE PEACE ADVOC CY of DR.
U DE
�.
11
· deacd and lengthened into a
superhighw y of justice, as
Negro and white men create al
liances to overcome their com
mOD problems.
"Mankind mus put an end to
or will p an end to
m.nkind. It is DO lodger a choice
between violence d non
violence. It is either non-
• . or aoo-existence, the
aItemative to disarmament, the
aItemative to a greater uspen-
. . of nuqe&r . tests, the alter-
native to strenghteniDg the U.N.
and thereby, disarming the
whole world. - .
• y we be a civilization
p1uoged into an abyss of an
nihilation and our earthly
habitat uld be transformed
ioto an iafcno tha C\al the
miad of D� could not· -
. .1
. On another occas! he
of the respo ibilities of
leadorship in the struggle for
peace. Ultim tely, a genuine
leader is not a searcher for COD
seosus but a molder of consen
sus. On such positions
co ardice as , "Is it safe?
Voity "Is it popular? Con
science asks, "Is it right?"
Museum did not start out a
musuem, but began to evolve in
1m when the Motown World
Headquarters moved form
Woodward Aveliue to Hol-
lywood California. .
Edwards id, - y office
moved ck to the ho that
Berry Gordy bought in 1959, at
2648 West Grand Boulevard,
where Motown started.
Edward id Gordy
planned to live upstairs, have his
office down front, and the
recording studio out b ck on
the first level. There, he made
master recordings and took
them to �or recordiag com
panies in New York and
Chicago. S said 0 thing led
to and soon Gocdy was .
in for: himself'.
. Ms. Ed ards recalled t I
days en, due to recorcliq
·0 d other faceta of the
music rid, m .. writers
and artists utiIiziDg every aspect
of the comp ny's facilities,
Hitsville remained open 24
hour a day. After gazing
reminecently the Museum's
artifacts, Edwards . d, "In the
aad people &om all
wodd old up
door step and
d 'AAHHH', and
if· eHoIy
every part of the .
.... _-- ._-- . original facility,
USEU
- MOTOWN - 2648 W. GtIInd
Blvd., Oettoit,' 8S7-OC»1.
-GRAYSTONEJAZZ - 3000
E. Gt d Blvd., Detroit, 871-
0234.
- YOUR HERrAGE HOUSE-
110 E. FMy, Detroif.I71-1887.
-AFRICAN ,_;...-- ....
TORY - 301 Frederick
�1gIal., Detroit, 833Il00.
-NATIONAL AFRICAN
.. a_��l'" SPORTS HALl OF
F. ()pen Monday-Frfday, 0
to 5 on Roof,
County Bldg, eoo RIInClIOlC)ft
GAil ERIE
- FRONT ROOM GALLERY -
41 E. AdamI,
-SliERRY WASHI GTON.
GALLERY - CentIr,
Detroit, �'"Vr1"""""n.
"In order to atone for our sins
and error in Vietnam, we
should take the initiative in
briDging to an end this tragic
war. I would like to suggest five
concrete things that our govern
ment should do, immediately, to
begin the long and difficult
process of cUr cting ourselves
from this Digbtmarish conflict.
- End aU bombing of North
and South Vietnam
- Declare a unilateral
cease-fire
- Prevent new b ttlefields
by stopping our build up in
Thailand and La .:
- Accept the fact that the
ational Liberation Front has
considerable support in South
VICtDam d must playa role in
any meaningful negotiations
and in any further Vietnam
gcwemment.
- Set the date when we will
remove all for . tr
Vietnam in acootdanct
1954 Geneva Agreement.
"Meanwhile, we in the chur
ches and synagogues have a .
continuing t . While e urge
our government to dUsorge it
self from this disgraceful com
mitment, must continue to
raise our voices, if our nation
persists in its perverse ways in
·Vietnam. .. We must prepare to
just as it did in 1959, Edwards
recognized,
loyal (i bf
Motown as their' own, maybe we
should put some of the
memorabilia up for them to see,
especially since they co e from
far as South America, Japan,
Africa, Europe, and the Far
Bas for a visit..
Immediately Edw rds and
taff set about the t of ac-
quiring e entertainers' gold
records, photos, literature, and
any type f written, or published ,,
materi I pertinent to the
legends Motown.·S 'dan
audio equ' leer ... DlIeG
e
KI G
. match 000 with ords by
seeking out every creative
means to protest, possib e.
If we had listened.to the mes
sage rather than kill the m -
senger the world would have
been a different place today.
We would not have continued
to support the Duvalier in
Haiti for more than a quarter of
a century, mobilized the CIA
b c ed Contras in Nicaragua,
financed the murders of priests,
nuns, and thousand of Sal
vadorans at a co t of $ one mil
lion e ch day, supported
Mobutu for twen y-five years
and supported South Africa's
apartheid regime for forty-one
years, just to name a few of the
U.S.'s mis dventure around
the world since King's murder.
There is no more important
matter on King's unfinished
agenda than the que t for world
peace. Tho who are serious
about " eoping The Ore m
Alive" must prepare to m tch
actions with words by seeking
out every creative me ns to
prote t, possible!" When we
return, next year, let bring
our score pads of creative ac
tivity for Peace.
. necessary in a corporation that
wa about m uf cturing
music.
It consisted' of publishin&
ar . ts' personal management,
the legal department, finance,
marketing, sal . arranging. art
ist development, choreography
and much much more that
business of this nature entails. .
Edward heartfeltly ated;
"The personal fulfillment I
received came from tching
the lives develop and the rise in
stat for the young people that
started in this house and went
on to become legends in their
own ti e, a ell having
aocial change in
The mu cum's hours re
from 10:am to 5:pm Monday
through Friday and from 2:pm
to 5:pm on Sunday , clo ed
Saturdays. Admission is $2.00
. for dult and $1.00 for
children.!
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