2016 01 14 bmi arcadia

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ARCADIA NEWS: Innovation Summit May Double

HEALTH: Special Olympics Young Athletes Kicks Off Season

SPORTS: Should High School Football Be Banned?

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arcadiaweekly.com

Thursday, January 14, 2016 - January 20, 2016

Your Voice, Your Community

Since 1996

COMPLIMENTARY COPY VOLUME 20, NO. 2

Celebrating a Dream and a Life of Nonviolence Martin Luther King Jr.’s Birthday Is Friday – Where Are We in Race Relations Today?

BY TERRY MILLER As we pause and reflect on the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (Jan.15, 1929) one cannot help but wonder how far, in fact, we have come in the United States. During the less than 13 years of Dr. King’s leadership of the modern American civil rights movement, from December 1955 until April 4, 1968 when he was assassinated, African-Americans achieved more genuine progress toward racial equality in America than the previous 350 years had produced. Dr. King is widely regarded as America’s pre-eminent advocate of nonviolence and one of the greatest nonviolent leaders in world history. But how does 1960s philosophy translate in today’s modern world? Well, that depends on many factors and how you feel about socialism. Despite his fear of backlash - calling for both racial integration and the explicit overturning of capitalism was bound to make him too threatening or fringe - socialism remained important to him, and by the end of his career, it was an open and

inextricable part of his dream for a better America. Drawing inspiration from both his Christian faith and the peaceful teachings of Mahatma Gandhi, Dr. King led a nonviolent movement in the late 1950s and ‘60s to achieve legal equality for African-Americans in the United States. While others were advocating for freedom by “any means necessary,” including violence, Dr. King used the power of words and acts of nonviolent resistance, such as protests, grassroots organizing, and civil disobedience to achieve seemingly-impossible goals. He went on to lead similar campaigns against poverty and international conflict, always maintaining fidelity to his principles that men and women everywhere, regardless of color or creed, are equal members of the human family. One of the seminal moments of the civil rights movement - and the one that made Dr. King a household name - was the 1963 March on Washington. Not everyone remembers that the march was “for jobs and freedom,” in that order. Among its demands were a national minimum wage and “a massive

federal program to train and place all unemployed workers - Negro and white - on meaningful and dignified jobs at decent wages.” After President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act and 1965 Voting Rights Act, “King kept moving leftward, to confront the racial and economic injustice that had created and maintained the black ghettos of the north, and the national hubris that had led America into the quagmire of war in southeast Asia,” says Lee A. Daniels of the New Pittsburgh Courier. When he was killed, Dr. King had been planning to “stage a multiracial Poor Peoples March on Washington and involve himself in the bitter sanitation worker’s strike in Memphis,” Daniels adds. Those were hard years for Dr. King, his push for the working poor costing him the support of former allies, but they were “King’s finest hours,” Daniels says. In 1964, at 35 years old, SEE PAGE 7

- Courtesy Photo

Arcadia Firefighter Returns Home from Burn Unit; Recovering Well BY TERRY MILLER

On Dec. 26, 23-year-old Dylan Devlin, who was about to graduate Verdugo Fire Academy, received an early morning call from his dad who was in the hospital as a result of a multi-alarm call not going quite as they had hoped. Dylan’s dad, Arcadia Fire Captain Thomas Devlin was calling to tell his son that he was fine and he loved everyone, but was in the Grossman Burn Unit in Sherman Oaks “after the call didn’t go as planned.” When Dylan got the call he said his dad was “collected and focused.” Arcadia Fire Captain Tom Devlin from Station 105 was called out on an early morning arson fire in Monrovia in the early hours of Dec. 26. The multi-alarm fire called in the Arcadia Fire Capt. Thomas Devlin with his son Dylan, recent graduate of Verdugo Fire Academy. – Courtesy Photo

troops from the Verdugo area to battle the intense, early morning warehouse fire. As firefighters rushed to quell the blaze from spreading further, highly-trained attack teams and first responders attempted to put out the fully involved fire. Devlin, a 20 year veteran of the Arcadia Fire Department who made Captain almost a decade ago, was working the exterior of the building by a rollup door with a rotary saw. Devlin noticed a huge amount of fire nearby and realized the fire was so intense that the supports for the overhangs near him were rapidly burning up. Within seconds, the whole overhang fell down and collapsed on Devlin, causing severe burns. “It felt like a ton of bricks coming down on SEE PAGE 19


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