February 13 Discussion Set on Brown v. Board Anniversary
Monday February 2, 2004
      SALISBURY, MD---Dr. Dean Kotlowski, assistant       professor of history at Salisbury University, continues African-American       History Month discussions marking the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board       of Education, the epochal Supreme Court ruling that led to desegregated       schools in America. Kotlowski leads a Brown Bag discussion at noon Friday,       February 13, in Fulton Hall Room 130.      He focuses on “Presidents and the Brown Decision,”       examining the policies of several U.S. presidents during that era.       “The two Democratic leaders of the 1960s, Kennedy and       Johnson, were not as liberal as we think in terms of school       desegregation,” Kotlowski said. “Nixon [a Republican and a pragmatist] on       the other hand, was more liberal than most people think.”      Kotlowski is the author of Nixon's Civil Rights:       Politics, Principle, and Policy (Harvard University Press), which examines       the Nixon administration's initiatives in the fields of African-American,       Native American and women's rights.      His lecture ushers in several speakers on the       historic Brown decision, including Dr. Ronald Walters, a professor with       the University’s of Maryland College Park’s Government and Politics       Department, who speaks at 7 p.m. Monday, February 16, in the Wicomico       Room, Guerrieri Center. His talk is titled “Brown vs. Board: What Has 50       Years Accomplished?”      Janet Sims-Wood rounds out the series with “Separate       But Equal Has No Place” at 7 p.m. Thursday, March 11, in the Wicomico       Room. Her presentation includes historic photos of school conditions in       states represented in the Brown case prior to the verdict, as well as       photos and information on celebrations of the case’s anniversary       nationwide. Simms-Wood is a member of Howard University’s Moorland-Spingarn       Research Center. Sign language interpretation is available upon advance       request by February 23.      The Office of Multiethnic Student Services sponsors       all three lectures. The Maryland Humanities Council and Wicomico County       branch of the NAACP co-sponsor Sims-Wood’s lecture. All events are free       and the public is cordially invited.      
					For more information call 410-543-6030 or visit the 成人抖阴Web site at www.salisbury.edu.
