
Following his arrest during a 1966 protest march in Mississippi, Carmichael angrily demanded a change in the rhetoric and strategy of the civil rights movement. In the mid 1960s, Carmichael challenged the civil rights leadership by rejecting integration and calling on blacks to oust whites from the freedom movement. Carmichael became a leader in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), but was radicalized when he saw peaceful protestors brutalized in the South. and his philosophy of nonviolent protest. Stokely Carmichael was the brilliant and impatient young civil rights leader who, in the 1960s, popularized the phrase "black power." Carmichael was initially an acolyte of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. Stokely Carmichael speaks at the University of California's Greek Theater,īerkeley, California, October 29, 1966, jammed with 14,000 people. Symphon圜ast The great orchestras in concert.Saint Paul Sunday In-studio music and conversation.Pipedreams Celebrating the King of instruments.Performance Today America's classical conversation.Holiday Specials Programs to celebrate the season.Composers Datebook Profiles of composers in history.Classical Live The best concert events of the year.

Carnegie Hall Live 12 "must-have" classical music events.The Writer's Almanac Today in history and a poem or two.The Story The human side of news and issues.


Marketplace Morning Report 8 minutes you can't afford to miss.Marketplace Money How money makes the world go 'round.Marketplace Business news for the rest of us.

