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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will give the keynote
address at The University of Alabama's commemoration of the 40th
anniversary of the first successful enrollment of African-American
students at the University this June. Kennedy's father, Robert F.
Kennedy Sr., was a key player in the desegregation of the University
as U.S. Attorney General in 1963.
A three-day program, known as "Opening Doors: 40th Year Commemoration,"
is planned for June 9-11 to remember the events of June 11, 1963
when Vivian Malone (now Vivian Malone Jones) and James Hood enrolled
at UA despite then Gov. George Wallace's "stand in the schoolhouse
door."
Kennedy will speak Tuesday, June 10, at 8 p.m. in the Moody Music
Concert Hall. His talk will be part of a "Pioneer Recognition
Program," recognizing 40 outstanding "pioneers" whose
lives epitomize the principles that were so crystallized by the
events at that crucial time in UA's history.
"The Tuesday night dinner and program will be gala events
to raise funds for scholarships for UA students. These events will
be by reservation only; however, there will also be numerous free
events and opportunities for the public to take part in marking
this important anniversary," said Samory Pruitt, chair of the
"Opening Doors" planning committee.
Kennedy is an attorney and an environmental activist. He serves
as chief prosecuting attorney for the Hudson Riverkeeper, senior
attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council and president
of the Waterkeeper Alliance. He is also a clinical professor and
supervising attorney at the Environmental Litigation Clinic at Pace
University School of Law in New York.
A graduate of Harvard University, Kennedy studied at the London
School of Economics, received his law degree at the University of
Virginia Law School, and earned a master's degree in environmental
law at Pace University School of Law. He is the author of Judge
Frank M. Johnson, Jr., A Biography (1977) and co-author of The Riverkeepers
(1997).
Events on the evening of June 10 will begin with a Pioneer Scholarship
Dinner at 6 p.m. The dinner and the Pioneer Recognition Program
will benefit UA's existing scholarships in honor of Autherine Lucy
Foster, the first African-American student to attempt to enter UA
in 1956; Vivian Malone Jones and James Hood. Attendance is by reservation
only.
Sponsorship levels for the dinner and program include:
- Opening Doors Sponsor -- $10,000, includes VIP table at Pioneer
Dinner (6 tickets), Pioneer as guest at the table, VIP seating
at the Pioneer Recognition Program, recognition in the commemorative
program and recognition in all event materials
- Pioneer Sponsor -- $5,000, includes VIP table at Pioneer Dinner
(6 tickets), Pioneer as guest at the table, VIP seating at the
Pioneer Recognition Program and recognition in the commemorative
program
- Table Sponsor -- $2,500, includes table at Pioneer Dinner (6
tickets), Pioneer as guest at the table, reserved seating at the
Pioneer Recognition Program and recognition in the commemorative
program
- Individual Reservation -- $250, includes one ticket to Pioneer
Dinner, Pioneer as guest at dinner table and reserved seating
at the Pioneer Recognition Program.
Reservations may be made by sending checks payable to The University
of Alabama (indicating desired level of participation) to The University
of Alabama, Box 870100, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0100. Please include
return address.
The "Opening Doors" program will begin Monday, June 9,
with a reception for Pioneers, speakers, community leaders and other
invited guests.
On Tuesday, June 10, the College of Communication and Information
Sciences will host a symposium titled "Media and the Moment"
from 10 a.m.-noon at the Bryant Conference Center.
Events will continue on Wednesday, June 11, with a youth program
at Ferguson Theatre from 1-2:30 p.m. African-American alumni will
have a chance to share their experiences at the "Opening Doors
Symposium: Reflections from African-American Alumni, 1956-2000"
from 3-4:30 p.m. in Ferguson Theatre.
The three-day program will culminate with a community dinner on
the Quad at 5:30 p.m. followed by a procession to Foster Auditorium
for a candlelight vigil and culminating program.
For more information, visit the UA Web site at http://www.ua.edu/openingdoors/
or contact Samory Pruitt, chair of the "Opening Doors"
planning committee, at 205/348-8375.
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