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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Professors, authors, editors and other
experts on freedom of expression will speak at the Bankhead Historical
Symposium titled “Censorship, Free Speech and Free Press
in the University” Oct. 13 and 14 on The University of Alabama
campus.
The two-day event, co-sponsored by the UA department
of history, UA Libraries and
student and faculty organizations will begin with a reception
opening the “Banned in Bama” exhibit at the W.S.
Hoole Special Collections Library in Mary Harmon Bryant Hall
on Thursday, Oct. 13 at 7:30 p.m.
Topics will include “You Can’t Say That! Censorship
of Free Speech on Campus,” “We Dare Defend Our Rights:
Teaching and Research,” “Minorities and Freedom of
Expression on Campus and in Campus Media” and “Information
Wants to be Free – Controlling Access to the Web.”
The symposium will conclude with a gala at the Westervelt-Warner
Museum of American Art at 7:30 p.m. on Friday.
Panelists at the symposium sessions in the Ferguson Center Forum
include
- John K. Wilson, Illinois State University, author, “The
Myth of Political Correctness: The Conservative Attack on Higher
Education”
- Earl H. Tilford, professor, Grove City College (Pa.); former
director of research, U.S. Army Strategic Studies Institute;
author and editor, Air University
Review
- Douglas Ray, executive editor, The Tuscaloosa News
- Wayne Grytting, teacher, Seattle Public Schools; Internet
columnist, author, “American Newspeak”
- David French, president, Foundation for Individual Rights
in Education
- Donald A. Downs, professor, University of Wisconsin, Madison,
author, “Restoring Free Speech and Liberty on Campus”
- Bruce Barrett, UA associate professor
“We have sought varied points of view in academia and the
news media,” said Dr. David Beito, symposium co-organizer
and UA associate professor of history.
“we are, however, united by common concern about freedom
of expression in American universities,” added Dr. Maarten
Ultee, symposium co-organizer and UA professor of history.
The symposium is free and open to the public.
In 1982, the Bankhead family established the Bankhead Endowment
Fund to further historical research and scholarly activity in the
history department in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences. The Bankhead Fund has supported visiting
lecturers, Bankhead Postdoctoral Fellows, conferences, faculty
research projects and public symposia.
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