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Special Video ReportCourtesy: NBC-Learn and The W.K. Kellogg Foundation ![]() With the dedication of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington, D.C., we remember the civil rights leader with a selection of videos from "Finishing the Dream," a project by NBC Learn, the educational arm of NBC News, and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. Select a video by clicking on a topic below March on WashingtonWhen civil rights leader A. Phillip Randolph proposed a civil rights march in Washington for the summer of 1963, no one knew how large the crowd would be. The number eventually rose above 200,000 people. The marchers, black and white together, crowded around the Lincoln Memorial where Martin Luther King Jr. gave his most famous speech. 'Bloody Sunday'Forty-five years after he and others were beaten during a voting rights march in Alabama, Rep. John Lewis returned to the Selma site of "Bloody Sunday," one of the defining events of the civil rights movement. The violence outraged the nation and President Lyndon Johnson, who ordered federal troops to guard Martin Luther King Jr. and protesters on their march from Selma to Montgomery. Meet The Press: Selma MarchMartin Luther King Jr. spoke on Meet The Press one week after leading his historic march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama. King said the demonstration was necessary not just to help push the Voting Rights Bill through, but to draw attention to police brutality and racially-motivated murder in Alabama. Right to VoteRep. John Lewis and other witnesses tell the story of the fight for African-American voting rights in the 1960s. They discuss the obstacles and violence faced by Martin Luther King Jr. and many civil rights workers in winning African-Americans the right to vote. Meet The Press: Vietnam and RiotsOn "Meet the Press," Martin Luther King Jr. talked about his opposition to the Vietnam War and said that despite the riots in American cities, he refused to allow himself "to fall into the dark chambers of pessimism." Last DaysAn examination of the issues and struggles that civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. focused on before his assassination and the impact his death had on the nation. Distributed by NIEonline.com with permission More NIE
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