Riall Lecture Series: Jonathan Kozol
SALISBURY, MD--- Teacher and best-selling author Jonathan         Kozol, who has been called today's most eloquent spokesman for America's         disenfrachised, delivers this spring's Riall Lecture at Salisbury University.
              
Kozol's talk, titled "Hearts of Children and the         Obligations of Our Nation's Schools," is sponsored by SU's Seidel         School of Education and Professional Studies. Free and open to the public,         the lecture in on Monday, March 18, at 7:30 p.m. in Holloway Hall Auditorium.         A reception follows his presentation.
              
In the passion of the civil rights campaigns of 1964 and         1965, Kozol moved from Harvard Square into a poor black neighborhood of         Boston and became a fourth grade teacher in the Boston public schools.         He has devoted the subsequent three decades to issues of education and         social justice in America.
              
Death at an Early Age, a description of his first year         as a teacher, was published in 1967 and received the 1968 National Book         Award in Science, Philosophy and Religion. Now regarded as a classic by         educators, it has sold more than two million copies in the United States         and Europe.
              
His 1995 book, Amazing Grace: The Lives of Children and         the Conscience of a Nation, described his visits to the South Bronx of         New York, the poorest congressional district of America. Praised by black         and Hispanic leaders and childrens advocates and theologians all         over the nation, Amazing Grace received the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award         in 1996, an honor previously granted to the works of Langston Hughes and         Dr. Martin Luther King. Despite the severe political conservatism of the         1990s, Amazing Grace became a national best seller. It joins Savage Inequalities         as required reading for future teachers and religious leaders.
              
Now, in a remarkable departure from his past, Kozol has         written the most energized and hopeful book of his career: a joyful answer         to the bleakness that suffused so many Early works. Ordinary Resurrections         is a book about the little miracles of stubbornly persistent innocence         in children who are still unsoiled by the world and still can review their         place within it without cynicism or despair. 
              
Kozol is a close friend and unswerving ally to schoolteachers.         He is a fierce defender of public schools, one who continues to condemn         the vicious inequalities of education in our nation. 
              
Begun in 1988, the E. Pauline Riall Lecture Series brings         to the University and community outstanding national lecturers in the         field of education. The series was established by the late Miss Riall,         long-time principal and teacher of the former Salisbury State University's         Campus School. A generous bequest was provided by Miss Riall's will to         fund this special program. 
              
For information visit the Universitys Web site at www.sslisbury.edu, or call 410-543-6030.