Southern Register Summer 2012

Page 1

the the newsletter of the

Center for the Study of Southern Culture • Summer 2012

the university of mississippi

Opening the Closed Society University Commemorates the 50 Years of Integration

In September and October the university will commemorate the 50th anniversary of James Meredith’s entrance into the university with a series of programs titled Opening the Closed Society: 50 Years of Integration at the University of Mississippi. Many events will come together on Sunday, September 30, and Monday, October 1, the anniversary dates of armed resistance to Meredith’s admission to the university and the first day he attended classes. Events on September 30 and October 1 will include a walk across campus, a service led by religious leaders, major public addresses, music, and the showing of a new documentary on the events surrounding Meredith’s admission. On Sunday evening, September 30, a number of religious groups will lead a service entitled “Praise, Prayer, Progress: Celebrating 50 Years of Integration” at the Gertrude Ford Center for the Performing Arts, and a Walk of Reconciliation will bring together numerous groups to the steps of the Lyceum to commemorate the anniversary. Later that evening the Ford Center will show a new documentary film, produced by Matthew Graves of Media and Documentary Projects, on the events of fall 1962. On Monday, October 1, to note that James Meredith walked alone or with

U.S. marshals, there will be a public walk with numerous alumni, students, friends, and faculty to express solidarity with the goals of equality and opportunity in education. The walk will include music from the University of Mississippi Gospel Choir on the steps of the Lyceum, and it will end at the Gertrude Ford Center for a major address by Harry Belafonte, a musician and activist very involved in civil rights activities in Mississippi. Other events on October 1 include a dedication by the Black Student Union, a conversation with John Doar, the assistant attorney general for civil rights who represented the U.S. government by accompanying James Meredith in his admission to the university, and a presentation at the Overby Center by Henry Gallagher, author of a new mem-

oir on the Oxford riot from his perspective in the military. Numerous campus programs in September and October will examine the law, race, the media, and higher education, some with emphasis on University of Mississippi events and some addressing broader issues. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder will speak to the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College in a public event on Thursday, September 27. In early September the Isom Center will host a talk by journalist and activist Imani Cheers on the role of minority women in the media. There are special exhibitions developed by Special Collections in the J.D. Williams Library and by the art department in Meek Hall. The Center for the Study of Southern Culture will contribute to the commemoration through a series of Brown Bag talks and other programs. A September 19 lecture by Jackson State’s Robby Luckett will address Margaret Walker Alexander’s role in civil rights work, and on September 26 a talk by Faulkner scholar Robert Hamblin, a 1962 student at the University of Mississippi, will discuss his memories of campus events. On October 3 Ellen Meacham will discuss her study of Robert Kennedy’s work in continued on page 19


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