Rodney King - tradução para Inglês
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Rodney King - tradução para Inglês

AMERICAN POLICE BRUTALITY VICTIM
Glen King; Rodney G. King; Rodney Glen King; King, Rodney; Can't we all just get along; Can't we all just get along?; Straight Alta-Pazz Recording Company; George Holliday (witness); Rodney King case; Beating of Rodney King; Rodney King incident; Rodney king beatings; Rodney King beating; Why can't we all just get along; Theodore Briseño; Laurence Powell; Can we all just get along; Can't we just get along; Can we just get along; Rodney King trial
  • King with fiancée Cynthia Kelley a few months before his death. Kelley was one of the jurors in King's civil suit against the city of Los Angeles when he was awarded $3.8 million.
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Rodney King         
n. Rodney King, uomo di colore statunitese picchiato duramente dalla polizia di Los Angeles dopo un inseguimento in auto (nel processo che ne seguì i poliziotti furono dichiarati innocenti e rilasciati provocando rivolte e dimostrazioni antirazzismo)
Rodney Dangerfield         
  • Dangerfield in 1978
  • Dangerfield's headstone at [[Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Memorial Park and Mortuary]]
AMERICAN STAND-UP COMEDIAN (1921–2004)
I don't get no respect; Rappin' Rodney (song); I don't get no respect!; Where's Rodney; Jack Roy
n. Rodney Dangerfield (1921-2004 ) pseudonimo di Jacob Cohen, attore comico cinematografico americano
Martin Luther King, Jr.         
  • Banner at the [[2012 Republican National Convention]]
  • King worked alongside Quakers such as [[Bayard Rustin]] to develop nonviolent tactics.
  • Martin Luther King Jr. speaking in an interview in the [[Netherlands]], 1964
  • The high school that King attended was named after African-American educator [[Booker T. Washington]].
  • King at the 1963 Civil Rights March in Washington, D.C.
  • Leaders of the March on Washington posing in front of the Lincoln Memorial
  • King first rose to prominence in the civil rights movement while minister of [[Dexter Avenue Baptist Church]] in Montgomery, Alabama.
  • King led the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and later became co-pastor with his father at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta (pulpit and sanctuary pictured).
  • Memo describing FBI attempts to disrupt the Poor People's Campaign with fraudulent claims about King{{mdashb}}part of the [[COINTELPRO]] campaign against the anti-war and civil rights movements
  • King standing behind President Johnson as he signs the [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]]
  • access-date=October 31, 2020}}</ref>
  • The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom (1963)
  • Martin Luther King Jr. with his wife, [[Coretta Scott King]], and daughter, [[Yolanda Denise King]], in 1956
  • King's childhood home in [[Atlanta]], Georgia
  • White House Cabinet Room]] in 1966
  • King gave his most famous speech, "I Have a Dream", before the [[Lincoln Memorial]] during the 1963 [[March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom]].
  • The [[sarcophagus]] for Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King is within the [[Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park]] in [[Atlanta]], Georgia.
  • King after receiving his honorary doctorate from Newcastle University
  • King speaking to an anti-Vietnam war rally at the [[University of Minnesota]] in St. Paul on April 27, 1967
  • King showing his medallion, which he received from Mayor Wagner, 1964
  • Martin Luther King Jr. statue over the west entrance of [[Westminster Abbey]], installed in 1998
  • King at a press conference in March 1964
  • The Lorraine Motel, where King was assassinated, is now the site of the [[National Civil Rights Museum]].
  • access-date=January 9, 2015}}</ref> mailed anonymously by the FBI
  • King received a Bachelor of Divinity degree at [[Crozer Theological Seminary]] (pictured in 2009).
  • Vice President [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] and Attorney General [[Robert F. Kennedy]] with King, [[Benjamin Mays]], and other civil rights leaders, June 22, 1963
  • A shantytown established in Washington, D.C. to protest economic conditions as a part of the [[Poor People's Campaign]]
  • King (left) with civil rights activist [[Rosa Parks]] (right) in 1955
  • march from Selma to Montgomery]], Alabama, in 1965
  • copyright held by King's estate]].
AMERICAN CIVIL-RIGHTS ACTIVIST AND LEADER (1929–1968)
Martin Luther King Jr; Martin Luther King, Jr; Martin Luther King Junior; Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; Martin Luther King, Junior; Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.; Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.; Martin Luther king; Martin luther king; A Comparison of the Conception of God in the Thinking of Paul Tillich and Henry Nelson Wieman; Martin Luther, Jr. King; King, Martin Luther, Jr.; Biography of Martin Luther King; Martin Luther King; Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.; Martain Luther King; Dr Martin Luther King; Martin luthur king jr; MLKJ; MLK Jr.; Dr. Martin Luther King; Mlk; Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr; MLK, Jr.; Mlk jr.; Mlk junior; Martin Luther King, jr; Dr. King; What Is Man? (King essay); Martin L. King; Martin L. King Jr.; Mlk jr; Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr; MLK; Dr.martin luther king jr.; The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; Martin King, Jr.; Doctor King; DMLKJ; MLK Jr; Michael luther king, jr.; What is Man? (King); Dr King; Martin luther ling; Luther king jr; Mlk Jr.; M. L. King; Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.; Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.; What Is Man? (Martin Luther King, Jr. essay); The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.; Martin Luther King, Jr,; Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr; Martin luther king jr; Doctor Martin Luther King; Doctor Martin Luther King, Jr.; Martin Luther King, jr.; The Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King, Junior; Dr. Martin L. King; Michael King, Jr.; Martin Luther King II; Michael King II; Kingian; Martin Luther-King; Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr; Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr.; Legacy of Martin Luther King Jr.; The Measure of a Man (Martin Luther King Jr. book); The Measure of a Man (Martin Luther King, Jr.); Martin Luther King, Jr.; Rev. Martin Luther King; Reverend King (pastor); Wiretapping of Martin Luther King Jr.; Mlkj; Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King; Martin Luther King Jnr; Mlkjr; Reverend Martin Luther King; Michael King Jr.; The Measure of a Man (Martin Luther King, Jr. book); M. L. King Jr.; Draft:Martin Luther King Jr.; Surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr.; FBI surveillance of Martin Luther King, Jr.; Martin Luther King,Jr.; Martin King Jr.
n. Martin Luther King, Jr.(1929-1968) pastore americano di colore, fautore dei diritti civili e della non violenza, premio Nobel per la pace nel 1964 (assassinato da James Earl Ray)

Definição

king post
¦ noun an upright post extending from the tie beam to the apex of a roof truss.

Wikipédia

Rodney King

Rodney Glen King (April 2, 1965 – June 17, 2012) was an African American man who was a victim of police brutality. On March 3, 1991, he was beaten by Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers during his arrest after a pursuit for driving while intoxicated on the I-210. An uninvolved individual, George Holliday, filmed the incident from his nearby balcony and sent the footage to local news station KTLA. The footage showed an unarmed King on the ground being beaten after initially evading arrest. The incident was covered by news media around the world and caused a public furor.

At a press conference, Los Angeles police chief Daryl Gates announced that the four officers involved would be disciplined for use of excessive force and that three would face criminal charges. The LAPD initially charged King with "felony evading", but later dropped the charge. On his release, he spoke to reporters from his wheelchair, with his injuries evident: a broken right leg in a cast, his face badly cut and swollen, bruises on his body and a burn area to his chest where he had been jolted with a stun gun. He described how he had knelt, spread his hands out, then slowly tried to move so as not to make any "stupid moves", being hit across the face by a billy club and shocked. He said he was scared for his life as they drew down on him.

Four officers were eventually tried on charges of use of excessive force. Of these, three were acquitted; the jury failed to reach a verdict on one charge for the fourth. Within hours of the acquittals, the 1992 Los Angeles riots started, sparked by outrage among racial minorities over the trial's verdict and related, longstanding social issues, overlaid with tensions between the African American and Korean American communities. The rioting lasted six days and killed 63 people, with 2,383 more injured; it ended only after the California Army National Guard, the Army, as well as the Marine Corps provided reinforcements to re-establish control. King advocated for a peaceful end to the conflict.

The federal government prosecuted a separate civil rights case, obtaining grand jury indictments of the four officers for violations of King's civil rights. Their trial in a federal district court ended in April 1993, with two of the officers being found guilty and sentenced to serve prison terms. The other two were acquitted of the charges. In a separate civil lawsuit in 1994, a jury found the City of Los Angeles liable and awarded King $3.8 million in damages.

Exemplos do corpo de texto para Rodney King
1. And that looked like the Rodney King treatment compared with the industry reaction.
2. Kennedy, the 1''4 Northridge earthquake and the 1''1 Rodney King beating.
3. Imagine, he said, the impact of the Rodney King video multiplied by the people power of Napster?
4. It was an uncomfortable echo of earlier Los Angeles Police Department scandals, including the videotaped Rodney King beating.
5. Three years later, rioting erupted in Los Angeles after a majority white jury acquitted four police officers of the videotaped beating of black motorist Rodney King.