MURFREESBORO — Civil
rights legend Dr. Bernard Lafayette Jr. will give the keynote address for
MTSU’s 24th annual Social Science Symposium set for Wednesday, Oct.
28, and Thursday, Oct. 29, in the James Union Building.
With a theme of “Voting
Rights 1965-2015: Commemorating 50 Years,” this year’s symposium will celebrate
the anniversary of the Voting Rights Act while looking at the work that still
needs to be done, organizers said.
A voting rights panel
discussion will be held from 12:40-2 p.m. Wednesday in the Tennessee Room in
the James Union Building. Lafayette, co-founder of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee and a veteran of the Freedom Rides and Selma movement,
will speak from 1-2:35 p.m. Thursday in the Tennessee Room.
All events are free and
open to the public. A searchable campus parking map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParking2015-16. Off-campus visitors
attending events should obtain a special one-day permit from MTSU’s Office of
Parking and Transportation at http://www.mtsu.edu/parking/visit.php.
The symposium has been
held every year since 1991 as a way to provide MTSU students a forum for
presenting their research. Student paper sessions will be held from 8 a.m.
until noon both days in the Hazlewood Room and Dining Room C.
Wednesday’s panel discussion
will be moderated by Dr. Sekou Franklin, associate professor of political
science, and includes Dr. Ernest “Rip” Patton, civil rights activist with the
Nashville sit-in movement, Freedom Rides and the Operation W.A.V.E. initiative;
Joshua Crutchfield, Black Lives Matter of Nashville; attorney Elizabeth
McClellan, O’Neal v. Goins case
(voter rights for former felons); Justin Jones, founder of the Nashville
Student Organizing Committee, and the Nashville
Student Organizing Committee v. Hargett case (challenging the state
voter ID law).
Following the panel, the
movie “Selma” will be shown, followed by a Q&A session moderated by Dr.
Louis Woods, associate professor of African-American history at MTSU.
Lafayette, 75, has been a
civil rights movement activist, minister, educator, lecturer and is an
authority on the strategy on nonviolent social change. You can listen to his
recent interview on the “MTSU on the Record” radio program at http://www.mtsunews.com/Lafayette-civil-rights-2015/.
Among the many leadership
positions held during more than a half-century of service, Lafayette is former
president of the American Baptist College of ABT Seminary in Nashville,
Tennessee and former Scholar in Residence at the Martin Luther King Jr. Center
for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta.
In receiving the National
Civil Rights Museum’s National Freedom Award for 2012, the following statement
was made about Lafayette: “He never stopped believing in the future even
when he was arrested with other riders in Jackson, Mississippi, and jailed in
Parchman State Prison Farm in 1961.”
Lafayette is author of
the newly published “In Peace and Freedom: My Journey in Selma.” Georgia
Congressman and fellow civil rights legend John Lewis, in his foreword to the
book, states, “A powerful history of struggle, commitment, and hope. No
one, but no one, who lived through the creation and development of the movement
for voting rights in Selma is better prepared to tell this story than Bernard
Lafayette himself.”
Since 2006, Lafayette has
served as Distinguished Senior Scholar in Residence at the Candler School of
Theology at Emory University in Atlanta. He is chairman of the board of
the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, founded by Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.
His visit follows the
September visit by fellow civil rights icons and Freedom Rides veterans James
Lawson and C.T. Vivian for MTSU’s Constitution Day activities that also
commemorated the Voting Rights Act anniversary.
The symposium is funded
and sponsored by the College of Liberal Arts, Department of Sociology and
Anthropology, Department of History, Department of Political Science,
Distinguished Lecture Series, Seigenthaler Chair of Excellence in First
Amendment Studies, Middle Tennessee Anthropology Society and the Sociology
Club.
For more information
about the symposium, contact Dr. Andrew Wyatt at 615-904-8487 or Andrew.Wyatt@mtsu.edu or Connie Huddleston at
615-494-7914 or Connie.Huddleston@mtsu.edu or visit www.mtsu.edu/soc/socsymp/.
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