The Time Is Always Right to Do Right, by Marty Dobrow
Description:
This article from volume 76, issue 3 of Springfield College's alumni magazine The Triangle, written by Marty Dobrow, describes the June graduation at which Martin Luther King gave the commencement speech.
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In 1964, Springfield College shared a moment in history often overlooked by historians with honorary degree recipient and commencement speaker Martin Luther King Jr. Despite significant pressure from prominent shareholders and benefactors of the College to not invite Martin Luther King to speak at Commencement, college President Glenn A. Olds, a minister and conscientious objector during World War II, refused to waver. When King was arrested the day before, Olds contacted law enforcement officials, telling them that if they continued to hold King, school officials would fly down to tape the commencement address, leaving St. Augustine to deal with the attendant publicity. Whether or not his intervention played a role, King was released on a nine hundred dollar bond Saturday afternoon. Met at the airport by Springfield College Economics Professor Robert Randolph, later the first black president of the Massachusetts State College System at Westfield State, King toured the campus, gave a press conference, and shared a brief luncheon with faculty and administration. On the day of commencement, Black Muslim protestors who felt King was too conciliatory and bomb-sniffing dogs greeted the graduating class. Dobrow was born in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, grew up in suburban New York, and currently teaches Communications at Springfield College. His two books, Knocking on Heaven’s Door: Six Minor Leaguers in Search of the Baseball Dream (2010) and Going Bigtime: The Spectacular Rise of UMass Basketball (1996), deal with sports, as do the majority of his nationally acclaimed newspaper and magazine stories over the past twenty years.
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