ho e boyco ,_----�--������ stimulated dialog on the isssue, the heels were set into motion for unifying the Black community. A full year and a half before the historic boycott ac­ tually began, the WPC sent a letter to city officials protest­ ing the conditions on the tansportation system and they threatened a boycott if the conditions were not improved. The Women's Council had even done a study linking the incidence of Black-on-Black crime in the Montgomery com­ munity to the abuses and indig­ nities suffered by Black people on the transportation system. It was this group which provided the vital initial communication system which permitted the boycott too get underway once the Rose Parks arrest was made. Robinson presents a wealth of historical material through very personal incidents about the people who carried out the boycott. She tells what they talked about as they rode in the cabs describes the long distances many laborers had to walk in order to get to their jobs. She gives a detailed ac­ count of the cruel harrassment which the walkers suffered and of the bitter persecution which whites received who were actively supportive of the boycott. She describes how the boycott affected all aspects of life in the Black community, such as the way a Black grocer was forced to close his business because producers refused to supply him. She also relates a number of instances showing how, when the Movement would reach its weakest point, some­ thing would happen to unite them again. This book, filled with stories of courage and inspira- tion, belongs on the family bookshelf along with Martin Luther King's Stride Toward Freedom. Together, they tell a full and well-rounded story of the historic Montgomery Bus Boycott. Dorothy Robin 0 Reading Together History has a way of shrink­ ing gigantic events down to a very tiny size. Something which happened involving hundreds and thousands of people becomes summed up into a few courageous actions taken by few heroic figures. Such is the case with the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The names Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King certainly deserve to be written large in this historic event, but there were also hundreds of people who played significant roles and made great sacrifices to make this boycott what it was. The Montgomery Bus boycott and the Women Who Started It by Jo Ann Gibson Robinson (University of Ten­ n e Pr ,1987) shows the role pi yed by many people h nam we will never know, d especially by a group of BI c women of ontgomery ho formed an organization called the Women's Political Council. Though many Blac people in Montgomery had broken the rigid rule of segregation by sitting in a seat which was not assigned to Blacks, their arrests did not pull together a massive boycott because the machinery for mobilizing the Blac community w simply not there. ut when JoAnn Robinson was humiliated by a .. city bus driver, she brought it to the attention of the omen' Political Council and from there, Black people began openly discussing the buses on the transportation tem which they all had ex­ perienced. Once the WPC had · zen OOdward MI 48203 3131869-0033 Offt 175W. Semon Harbor, 49022 618$27-1527 PhOne: 1 -445-NEWS • I By Wright Edelman On the steps of a dilapidated building, amidst the noise and bustle of a city street, a small boy sits crying. He is poor, he is Black, and has has no home. In his short life, he has al­ ready seen so much. He has been through room after dingy room in one rundown hotel after another, walked their dark cor­ ridors and ridden the crowded buses that shuttle homeless families like his to their next place of shelter for the night. He has seen, without yet knowing what they are, pimps and pros­ titutes and drug dealers. He has felt the sting of neglect. His mother, who tries to care for her children, is dis­ traught, exhausted, over­ whelmed by stress. He and his brothers and sisters play in the street, making toys out of the trash they find in the gutter or on the sidewalks. There is no room for toys in the suitcases and bags that hold the family'S few belongings. southern town of Conroe, Texas? That is, indeed, the question. For, evidence presented at a recent judicial hearing indicates that Mr. Brandley's case was handled in a blatantly raci t manner. Key evidence was lost or thrown away, there is strong indication of collusion between the prosecutor and the judge, and one the prosecution's own witne es has now confirmed the r cial overtones nrround­ ing the arrest. He te� that a There are so many things that this boy has never seen. He does not know what it is to have a bed, much less a room, to himself. He cannot remember what it is to sit down at a table and eat a family dinner. He has never had a story read to him at bedtime. He has never stayed any place long enough to make friends. All across this country, in cities, towns and rural areas, the numbers of homeless children like him are increasing. More and more American children are growing up not just in want but lacking even the most basic anchor: a place to call home. . Many recent studies tell us that the homeless are growing and that more d more of them are families with chidren. Children who grow up adrift may never find their bearings. The legacy of their early ex­ periences - in teenage pregnan­ cy, drug abuse, poverty - will be costly for them and for us. Surely our rich nation can af­ ford to ensure that every child Marian Wright Edelman CHILD WATCH has a place to call home. For those families that are already homeless, we can offer decent shelter and the help parents need to find a job and a new place to live. For the many who are one job loss or eviction away from homeliness, we can provide the emergency help they need to avoid that fate. And, in the long term, most importantly, we must work toward the day that every American family will be able to afford a decent home. Marian Wright Edelman is president of the Children's Defense Fund, a national voice for children. derer; they was trying to convict Clarence Brandley." ot supris­ ing when you consider that there are 94 Texas Rangers in the state of Texas and all of them are white. Or that, as the e Yor times noted, Conroe has" his­ tory of ugly racial incidents. Both the Ne Yor Times and "60 Minutes" have do ex­ tensive pieces on Brandley case. However ,it a tho crusading B press of Ho - ton and the unified support 0 C 17 'Capital punishmen - Texas style ... .... By Beoj .c , Jr. Clarence Brandley is a 36- year old African American. He has been on death row in Texas since February 1981 and has es­ caped two execution dates by the s in of his teeth, most recently in March of this year. When the Brandley case w presented before Congo John Conyers's Subcommittee on Criminal Justice earlier this year the Congressman raised this question: Can a young Black man r:eceive justice in the small Conroe police officer said of Brandley before his arrest, "You're the nigger; you're elected." The case is based on a 1980 assault and murder of a white female student at a high school in Conroe, Texas. The investigating Texas Ranger spent 500 hours on the case. But, according to Atty. Paul Nugent, a member of Brandley's defense team, "The Ranger and other investigators were not trying to find the mur-