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TUSCALOOSA,
Ala. -- Throughout 2003, The University of Alabama will reflect
upon and celebrate the 40th anniversary of the first successful
enrollment of African-American students at the University through
a series of presentations and events.
A three-day program, known as “Opening Doors,” is
planned for June 9-11 to commemorate the events of June 11, 1963,
when Vivian Malone (now Vivian Malone Jones) and James Hood enrolled
at UA following then Gov. George Wallace’s famous “stand
in the schoolhouse door.” Wallace stood in the doorway of
Foster Auditorium to block the two students’ entrance, but
stepped aside following a confrontation with federal authorities.
Current plans to mark the 40th anniversary of this historic day
call for a dinner, with a nationally known speaker, on Tuesday,
June 10. Other events are expected to include an evening reception
on June 9 and children’s programs, an informal community dinner,
and a culminating candlelight vigil at Foster Auditorium on June
11.
“The events being planned seek to salute the courage of those
individuals who took a stand for change and inspire all of us to
do likewise in addressing the critical issues that face our communities
today,” said Samory Pruitt, assistant to the UA president
for corporate and community affairs and chair of the planning committee
for “Opening Doors.”
Planning committee members include James P. Adams Jr., Carl L.
Bacon, Katie Boyd, Cynthia W. Burton, Cornelius Carter, E. Culpepper
Clark, Kathleen P. Cramer, Janet L. Griffith, Calvin Harkness, Emily
C. Jamison, Hank A. Lazer, Steve Kent Miller,
Amilcar Shabazz, Jane B. Stanfield, William L. Taylor, Cleophus
Thomas Jr., Nikki Tucker, Pat Whetstone and Gwendolyn Stewart Williams.
Advisory members are James Hood; Vivian Malone Jones; Autherine
Lucy Foster, who was the first African-American student to enter
UA in 1956, but who was expelled “for her own safety;”
Dr. John L. Blackburn, UA dean of men in 1963; U.S. Rep. Artur Davis;
Bert Jones, men’s dorm director at UA in 1963; Willie Clyde
Jones, a local pastor, representing the Tuscaloosa Ministerial Alliance;
and State Sen. Charles Steele Jr.
Watch for updated information on 40th anniversary plans on the
Web at www.ua.edu/openingdoors/.
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