Residents call King's visit unforgettable April 13, 1962: The day Dr. King graced Winston-Salem CtHOfHcte Staff The day was Apnl 13, 1962. It was a raihcr somber day. Exactly what one would expect in April. Temperatures, according to the National Weather Service, reached a high of 56 degrees and light rain added to the dismal day. Later on that evening temperatures dropped to 48 degrees, but it was still con sidered a pretty typical day for the spring season. were earned to the very heavens b> him, ' he added. Other residents expressed simi lar feelings of excitement alter heanng King speak at the rally. "It was a feeling that 1 can never describe in words.'' said County Commissioner Earline Par mon and director of LIFT program. "The thing that impressed me the most was the closeness of the people. The importance of having someone in the city of that magni tude. It was such a feeling . . . li s unexplainablc," she said from her arrested and put in jail . She said, office on Highland Avenue. she knew then that hc-^as a differ ~t remember thinking he was ent type of leader and shfc knew he This historic marker sits at tho top of the Goler Metropolitan AME Zion Church steps, commemorating Dr. King's visit to Winston Salem in 1962. "! remember thinking he was the next best thing to God. He was the ultimate person ... the impact was great on me. " - By Earline Parmon the next best thing to God. He was the ultimate person,'' she said. Par mon was 18 years old that day when she got her first opportunity to hear Dr. King. "The impact was great on me. Everything that evening was so impressive,11 she said, while searching for words to recapture the day. "I had taken part in. some of the marches and sit-ins sfiice I was around 16 or 17 (years old), but this was the thing that real ly made me know what I wanted to do for my community. I had made up my mind." Parmon said she also remem bers hearing that l5r. King had been had in some way touched her life. Parmon said she doesn't remember how she heard about the event, but she had, managed to tag along with Velma Hopkins, a well known community activist in Win ston-Salem. Hopkins, now 82 years old, is a volunteer at 'he Exodus Enrichment Center on 17th Street and said she has spent more than 40 years work ing in the community. The native of Winston-Salem said she had \frorked with Dr. King on many occasrbi^ "I use to follow him around. 1 went to Washington for the big speech and I visited Atlanta.'' Daniel W. Andrews, a member of Goler Metropolitan Choir In 1962, remenbers that Monday night when he sang the sotoof Rocks' Mah Soul sprirtuai to a captive audience. While Hopkins, said she could hardly remember the 1962 trip, she ^d I truly believe he did. The man had an effect on the spiritual pod. You illustration by r J ?crtbble* Martin Luther King, Jr. s dream begins with all of us. And Pepsi shares the celebration of that dream. PEPSI