WEDNESDAY. MAY 15, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE T. ' Y 1 1 AYi.157TEMIHGNDAL AG HE Education School Council tea, May 16, LED BY REV. KING: Trip To Mark Integration Anniversary By The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Next1 week a young Negro minister will lead a pilgrimage to the Lincoln 4 Memorial in Washington to mark the third anniversary of the Supreme Court's order desegre- gating public schools. The observance is expected to attract 15,000 or more negroes from all parts of the South. The man who heads it was virtually ,unknown three years ago. Today he is a symbol of the day the Negro feels is coming. From Montgomery alone, a thou- sand persons are expected to go in chartered buses, private cars and the church-owned station wagons put into service during the city's historic bus boycott. Says the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King : Discourage Motorcade "We will discourage a motor- Haber Calls }Automation National Aid Should Americans continue to work a 40-hour week during the next quarter century they could double their standard of living, according to Prof. William Haber, of the economics department. Prof. Haber, who spoke at the University extension in Flint, said that automation could boost the nation's productivity when it be- 4 comes more widespread. "However, Prof. Haber contin- ued, "the height of the nation's standard of living will depend on how much of this increase Ameri- cans decide to devote to increased leisure; and how much is used to produce more goods and services." Argue for Leisure Many will argue for more lei- sure, that is, a shorter work day and shorter work week, he said. Had this not happened during th past 50 years, "our standard 6f living measured in physical goods and services' would have been much higher than it is now," Prof. Haber said. Discussing the alternative, Prof. Haber said, "there are others in our country who question wheth- er . . . it would not be a wiser course to concentrate in the next decade in raising our national in- come, rather than in increasing our leisure. tUrge Same Hours "Many say that, until our na- tional productivity has advanced so that we can fill the serious gaps in goods and services which still prevail, reductions in working hours would postpone the time when we would be in a position to deal with these problems," Prof. Haber said. "Some compromise between these two points of view will, no doubt, be worked out in the prag- matic mpanner which we have em- ployed in meeting most of our industrial relations problems. "We shall have shorter hours and more leisure. We shall also have a higher national income, though not as much as we might have if we did not reduce our hours," Prof. Haber concluded. cade, because we feel it will be too hazardous." As a leader of the demonstra- tion, the 28-year-old King is work- ing with Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Col- ored People and A. Philip Ran- dolph,, president of the Brother- hood of Sleeping Car Porters. King came here from Atlanta in September, 1954, to become pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist church, only a block from the spot where Jefferson Davis took the oath as first president of the Confederacy Worked Quietly King worked quietly among his parishoners, preaching the "social gospel" that a minister's duties go far beyond the realm o person- al salvation. He once told an in- terviewer: "A minister should attempt to improve social conditions of men at every point where they are not proper - education, cultural and economic. He must not only change a man's soul but a man's environment, too." Despite his youth and relatively short residence in Montgomery, King assumed leadership at the outset of the bus boycott in De- cember, 1955. He helped organize, and was elected president of, the Montgomery Improvement Assn. Guided Protest The association guided the bus protest. When on Nov. 13, 1956, bus segregation was outlawed by the U.S. Supreme Court, it turned its efforts to other means of uplifting the Negro community. King has said the next legal step probably will be toward in- tegrating the public schools or parks. Throughout the boycott and in the face of later bombings and gunfire attacks on buses, King held steadfast to his belief in "non- violence." He urged his people to refrain from retaliation. Home Bombed The Negro leader's home was bombed during the first weeks of the boycott. Later a shotgun charge was fired through his front door. No one was injured. After buses were integrated, four Negro churches, three homes and a taxicab stand were damaged by bombings. An unexploded bomb containing 12 sticks of dynamite was found on the front porch of King's home. Four white men were indicted by a country grand jury for the bombings and face trial late this month. Police Chief G. J. Ruppen- tha blamed the violence on the Ku Klux Klan. Convicted Early Early in the protest, King had been convicted of leading an il- legal boycott. He received a 386- day jail sentence which was sus- pended, pending his appeal. Two weeks ago the appeal was thrown out of court on a technicality be- cause King's lawyer failed to file the transcript of the trial testi- mony within the time fixed by law. When the boycott began, the Negroes offered to settle for what theytcalled a fairer system of seg- regation -- a "first come, first served" seating arrangement on the buses. But city authorities turned that down and subsequent- ly a federal court suit was filed that led to the integration decree. In the face of victory, the young minister cautioned his followers to refrain from gloating. "Must Respond ... He told them on the eve of bus integration that "we must respond ... with an understanding of those who have oppressed us and with an appreciation of the new adjust-' ments that the court order poses for, them. "We must be able to face up honestly to our own shortcomings. We must act in such a way as to make possible a coming together of white people and colored People on the basis of a real harmony of interests and understanding . .. Since he became a recognized spokesman for integration, King has been the target of abusive words as well as bombs. Unsigned leaflets have appeared on the streets, professing to speak for other Negroes, accusing the Bap- tist clergyman of hurting the cause of his people and telling him to "get out of town." Threatening Calls King has received many threat- ening telephone calls. The son and grandson of clergy- men, the Negro leader has degrees from Morehouse College, Crozer Theological Seminary and Boston University. He received a doctorate in theology shortly before coming to Montgomery. King was assistant pastor for five years at the Ebenezer church in Atlanta where his father, the Rev. M. L. King, Sr., has been pastor since 1932 and his maternal grandfather was pastor for 37 years before then. King plans to fly to Washington a few days before the observance to make final plans. Union Aids In Foreign Friendship The primary project of the new- ly formed Union International Committee is an American Broth- er Program, according to Richard W. Schwartz, committee chair- man. The purpose of the American Brother Program is threefold. The program is designed to provide new foreign students on campus with a personal contact which would develop into a friendship beneficial to both the foreign and American student. Another aim of the program is to assist foreign students during the difficult period of adjustment after their arrival in this country. Finally, through the program the foreign student will be introduced to the numerous student activi- ties in which he can participate. The American Brother Program would involve over 1300 foreign student representing over 75 dif- ferent nations who are on cam- pus. The bulk of these students are from China, Canada and In- dia. HARP ER'S EDITOR: Americans Called jMagazine Addicts Organization Notices 3-5, Education School lounge. All in- vited who are interested in the School of Education or in becoming certified to teach. Kappa Phi, picnic, May 16, 5:15, First Methodist Church. Young Democratic Club, May 15, 7:30 Junior Girls Play, Central Committee 3R Union. Speaker: Mayor Eldersveld. meeting, May 15, 7:00, League. America is "a nation of maga-r zine addicts," John Fischer, editor- in-chief of Harper's Magazine said here yesterday. The seven thousand thousand magazines published in the United States today fill the role of a national press, he told a journal- ism department lecture audience in Rackham amphitheater. In his analysis of "The Chang- ing Role of American Magazines," Fischer divided the industry into two sections, the ascending and the declining pu1ication groups. General mass magazines headed the list of declining. "Colliers, The Saturday Evening Post. Life and Readers Digest" have lost sub- scribers and advertisers to the '"more palatible fare of television." Colliers, according to Fischer, was doomed after the Board of Direc- tors, all businessmen, took control. "In its heyday, Colliers was run by editors, not businessmen," he recalled. In contrast, five other types are in the midst of a period of partic- ular growth. News magazines, digesting great volumes of complex issues, cater to the busy. Leisure time publications, such as Better Homes and Gardens, Hi- Fi, and How-to-Do-It manuals, help plan the hours freed by shorter work weeks. "Confidential, "according to Fis- cher, leads the field in the "intel- lectual underworld." Like its ear- liest ancestor, "Captain Billy's Whiz-Bang," "Confidential" caters to expectation of thinly veiled pornography and "the inside dirt," he said. Anti-feminist men's magazines, providing excitement for men in "highly sedentairy jobs;" and the magazines of cultural criticism, like the New Yorker and the New York Times Sunday Magazine, complete the list of those growing in circulatiop and influence. Education School Council, business meeting, May 15, 4:10, 3545 S.A.B. Physics Club, May 15, 7:30, Randall Physics. Speaker: Dr. Glaser, "Parity." Roger Williams Fellowship, Midweek refresher, May 15, 4:00-5:00, Guild House. Student Government Council peti- tioning: for three vacancies on the Student Activities Building Adminis- trative Board. Petitions are available in Mrs. Callahan's office, 2011 Student Activities Building, and are due on May 22. Petitioning is restricted to stu- dents working in an organization on the second floor of the building. American Rocket Society and the In- stitute of Aeronautical Science, May 15, 8:00, Kellogg Auditorium. Speaker: Dr. Rudolf Hermann (German scien- tist who was responsible for the aero- dynamic development on the V-2 mis- sile). "Space Travel -- When?" Prior to the lecture, chapter members and their guests will dine in Room Ander- son-A, Union. Women's League, International Com- mittee, petitioning for the American Sisters of the International Friend- ship program will be extended throught Friday, May 17. Petitions may be se= cured at the Undergraduate Office of the League, and should be returtied there. I U Looking for GQOD DRYCLEAN ING? 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