she liked to sing and sometimes she would write.
i am awesome
she did have some hobbies. she did give charity money to black schools and she suported those black schools.
he feel unhappy. he did not want people to be violent. he told people to act with dignity and courage.he was a strong leader for civil right.he knew that segregation was wrong. it mean that people were treated better or worse just because of the color of their skin.
Some Lion King toy's r some stuffed animal Lion King animals, action figure Lion King toys, and some other ones. :)
Scott has a crush on some one way out of his league!
Bounty, Scott, Viva, Sponge.
I think one of coretta scott king friend is martiLLuther king jr. and some other people that I dont know about.
coretta scott king is a risk taker a communicator and a caring women
noblke
martin Luther king's wife!
martin luther king dreams
No she is not alive, here is some info:Date of Birth:04/27/1927Date of Death:01/30/2006Age at Death:She lived in Detroit.78
The 2013 winners are: "Hand in Hand" by Andrea Davis Pinkney is the Auhor Award winner. "I, Too, Am America" by Bryan Collier is the Illustrator Award winner.
Bud, not Buddy. And some other Christopher Paul Curtis books.
Martin Luther King Coretta Scott King Larry King Billie Jean King Michael Keaton Toby Kieth Grace Kelly John F. Kennedy Teddy Kennedy Bobby Kennedy Gladys Knight Ted Knight Ashton Kutcher (sp?)
well.. i am trying to figure that too, but i got some of them. Coretta Scott King, Harriet Tubman, Malcomn X, W.E.B Du Bois, and Rosa Park, Mahatma Ghandi, Martin Luther King Jr. hope this helps
There is some evidence that Martin Luther King, Jr. was unfaithful to Coretta. However, nothing has ever been proven nor will there likely be.
Coretta Scott was Martin Luther King wife. They were married on June 18, 1953. The Kings had four children in all: Yolanda Denise; Martin Luther, III; Dexter Scott; and Bernice Albertine. She conceived and performed a series of critically acclaimed Freedom Concerts, combining poetry, narration and music to tell the story of the Civil Rights movement. Over the next few years, Mrs. King staged Freedom Concerts in some of America's most distinguished concert venues. Dr. King's leadership of the movement for human rights was recognized on the international stage when he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace. Mrs. King accompanied her husband when he traveled to Oslo, Norway to accept the Prize. Mrs. King found herself in increasing demand as a public speaker. She became the first woman to deliver the Class Day address at Harvard, and the first woman to preach at a statutory service at St. Paul's Cathedral in London. She served as a Women's Strike for Peace delegate to the 17-nation Disarmament Conference in Geneva, Switzerland in 1962. Mrs. King became a liaison to international peace and justice organizations even before Dr. King took a public stand in 1967 against United States intervention in the Vietnam War. After 27 years at the helm of The King Center, Mrs. King turned over leadership of the Center to her son, Dexter Scott King, in 1995. She remained active in the causes of racial and economic justice, and in her remaining years devoted much of her energy to AIDS education and curbing gun violence. Although she died in 2006 at the age of 78, she remains an inspirational figure to men and women around the world.