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NEW YORK - As America c
stanley cup elebrates the federal holiday honoring
stanley cups Martin Luther King Jr. today, Wynton Marsalis makes his debut as CBS News cultural correspondent. Using his words and music, the jazz great has created a stirring personal essay reflecting on King s long-lasting impact.Watch Marsalis report in the video above. Viewers are cautioned that some of his words are not appropriate for everyone.Special Section: Remembering MLK WATCH: Cronkite on MLK s deathGrowing up as
stanley flasche a young man in Louisiana in the 1960s, Marsalis describes segregated Southern towns and integration. It was tough, but it opened our eyes to a more humane world hidden by segregation. We had more in common with white kids than we thought, Marsalis says. By the time I became a teenager, the street-level perception was: King had seemed too willing to make nice for white folks, Marsalis says. For us, the dashiki clad, big-afro revolutionary was it. This was 350 years of oppression come crashing down on you, and here King is asking you to whisper instead of holler. Man, you must be crazy. PICTURES: MLK Memorial dedicationAfter having an argument about race with a young white college student, Marsalis began to read King s writings, as well as books written about the civil rights leader. The legacy of Dr. King is all around us. Marsalis says. It s all up in us. Even back then, he preached timeless human fundamentals that we all share. He once said, Everybody has the blues. Everybody longs f Nsah The Odd Truth, Jan. 6, 2004
Patrick Troughton second season starring in Doctor Who was the base under siege era, where relentless monsters terrorize an embattled crew of humans in story after story. But judging from the newly released Ice Warriors, it was also an era of good idea-driven science fiction. The Ice Warriors is out on DVD for the first time 鈥?the six-episode story is missing two episodes in the middle, and they ;ve been animated with the soundtrack from the original episodes. And this story, which introduces the eponymous Martian fighters who love low temperatures, holds up moderately well. On the one hand 鈥?like most classic Doctor Who stories that are longer than four episodes 鈥?The Ice Warriors has some pacing issues. In fact, the VHS release, which condensed the two missing episodes into a single 20-minute segment, felt a bit zippi
kubki stanley er 鈥?and luckily, that condensed reconstruction is available on the DVD as well. But watching this story after 45-odd years, it easy to see why the Ice Warriors joined the small pantheon of the show most memorable baddies, alongside the Daleks and the
stanley sverige Cybermen. They have t
stanley termosar ons of personality, and loads of menace 鈥?largely thanks to Bernard Bresslaw, who plays the Ice Warrior leader Varga with a huge assortment of tics, from the way he rolls his head to the way he laughs with a 8220 ss-sss-sss sound at the humans he about to obliterate. Varga becomes both