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NEWS
INDEX
2002
2003
September
Yearlong commemoration
of Brown v. Board decision to begin
Craig
Chamberlain, News Editor
217-333-2894; cdchambe@uiuc.edu
9/15/03
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — A commemoration of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education
Supreme Court decision begins this month at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign and will continue throughout the school year.
The decision that will be 50 years old next May ended legal segregation
in public schools and helped ignite the civil rights movement.
The Brown v. Board of Education
Jubilee Commemoration will feature speakers, seminars, artistic
and educational exhibits, performances, workshops, research projects,
and other scholarly and creative works – both on campus and in
the local community. Events will be sponsored by a variety of campus
units, businesses and other organizations. Most events will be free
and open to the public.
“It seems fitting for our institution and community to devote
the 2003-2004 academic year to events and activities that celebrate
both the great strides that have flowed from the Brown decision and
the unfinished work that remains before us,” said Nancy Cantor,
the chancellor of the Urbana campus.
The unofficial kickoff takes place Sept. 29 with a public lecture by
Juan Williams, who wrote “Thurgood Marshall – American Revolutionary,”
a biography of the winning lawyer in the 1954 Brown case, who would
also become the first African-American associate justice of the Supreme
Court. The talk is at 7 p.m. in Foellinger Auditorium, 709 S. Mathews
Ave., Urbana.
Williams, a senior correspondent for National Public Radio’s “Morning
Edition,” and a political analyst for the Fox News Channel, also
wrote the bestseller “Eyes on the Prize: America’s Civil
Rights Years, 1954-1965.” The book served as the companion volume
to the Public Broadcasting Service documentary series of the same name.
Williams also is the author of “This Far by Faith: Stories From
the African-American Religious Experience,” published this year,
a companion volume to another PBS series, which traces the African-American
religious experience through three centuries. His previous journalism
experience included more than two decades at the Washington Post, where
he worked as an editorial writer, op-ed columnist and White House reporter.
On Sept. 28, the day before Williams’ talk, the 1991 film “Separate
But Equal” will be shown at 7 p.m. at the Virginia Theater, 203
W. Park Ave., Champaign, the first in a Brown-related film series organized
by the News-Gazette. The film dramatizes the Brown case. The screening
was made possible by Paramount Pictures. Admission is $5.
Other events on the calendar for the first month of the Brown commemoration:
• Sept. 17 – Journalism professor Walt Harrington discusses
his book “Crossing: A White Man’s Journey Into Black America”;
noon, University YMCA, 1001 S. Wright St., Champaign.
• Sept. 30 – A talk by Jaime Escalante, the teacher portrayed
in “Stand and Deliver,” a 1988 film that dramatized his
efforts to help underachieving Latino students pass an advanced placement
calculus test; 7 p.m., auditorium, Smith Memorial Hall, 805 S. Mathews
Ave., Urbana.
• Until Sept. 30 – An exhibit on display in the first floor
hallway of the Library, 1408 W. Gregory Drive, Urbana, titled “Separate
and Unequal: Segregation and Three Generations of Black Response, 1870-1950.”
• Oct. 2 – Peter Irons, professor of political science at
the University of California, San Diego, discusses his book “Jim
Crow’s Children: The Broken Promise of the Brown Decision,”
noon, University YMCA. Irons is the author of numerous books, among
them “A People’s History of the Supreme Court.”
The Brown commemoration is part of Chancellor Cantor’s “Exploring
the Human Experience” initiative that incorporates one topic
into the academic, research, and engagement missions of the campus each
year.
Updates on future events and activities related to the Brown events
can be found online.
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