Welcome
Welcome to this special edition of Almanac as we play for you exclusive historic interviews from two of the giants of the 20th century: Martin Luther King and Richard M. Nixon. Each interview was originally recorded by KTCA in 1959 for a series on National Educational Television called "That Free Men May Live." Long forgotten and stored away in the National Archives, these interviews are being broadcast this week together for the first time.
Martin Luther King Junior
In 1959 Martin Luther King Jr was known chiefly for his role in the successful Montgomery bus boycott. It was years before his "I Have a Dream" speech in Washington. King sat down for his KTCA interview while on a trip to Minnesota. His interviewer was L. Howard Bennett, a civil rights leader and the first African-American judge in Minnesota. Bennett and King talked about segregation in the South, but much of their conversation had to do with racial issues that were also simmering in the North.
Richard M. Nixon
Nixon was Vice President of the United States in 1959, but he was just months away from announcing his run for President when he was interviewed by KTCA General Manager John C. Schwarzwalder. Nixon and Schwarzwalder spent most of their time talking about the challenges that communism presented to the free world. Nixon peppered his comments with his first-hand knowledge of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev who he had met in Moscow earlier that year.