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Wide range of events mark university’s
annual Black History Month observance |
By Kim Cretors
kcretors@uga.edu |
The African American Cultural Center,
in conjunction with a number of other UGA units, will celebrate Black
History Month throughout February with a wide range of events, including
lectures, films, plays and readings.
The Niagara Movement, the national theme for this year’s Black
History Month celebration, was an organization of black intellectuals
led by W.E.B. Du Bois that called for full political, civil and
social rights for African Americans. The Niagara Movement was the
forerunner of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People.
Black History Month events at UGA began on Feb. 1. A complete
list of events is available at the AACC Web site at www.uga.edu/msp/bhm2003.html;
a selection of events follows.
Otis Johnson, mayor of Savannah, will recount his days as a student
at UGA as well as his life’s successes during a talk on Feb. 7
at 6 p.m. in room 101 of the Student Learning Center.
Derrick Alridge, an associate professor in the College of Education,
will discuss the Niagara Movement and its impact on the civil rights
movement and the formation of the NAACP. Alridge will give particular
attention to Du Bois’s role in the organization. Alridge,
who was recently named one of 10 rising stars in academe by Black
Issues in Higher Education, will speak on Feb. 8 at 12:30 p.m.
in Adinkra Hall.
Catherine Packer, a doctoral candidate in counseling psychology, will
present a lecture, “The Impact of Maternal Messages Given to
Single, Educated African-American Women about Relationships.”
Packer’s talk will take place in room 350 of the Student Learning
Center on Feb. 18 at 12:20 p.m.
The UGA Alumni Association will hold its Multicultural Alumni Conference
in Athens Feb. 4–5 to focus on ways of involving more UGA
minority alumni in university programs and activities.
A number of dance performances and plays will be featured during Black
History Month. More than 1,500 participants took part in the
All-Greek Step Show Competition at the Classic Center in downtown
Athens on Feb. 5. A concert version of Porgy
and Bess, with orchestra, chorus and soloists, will be performed
at Hodgson Hall on Feb. 19 at 8 p.m. Plantanos
and Collard Greens, a play fusing African-American culture
with Hispanic heritage, will be performed on Feb. 21 at 7:30 p.m.
in Georgia Hall of the Tate Student Center.
A number of readings are also a part of the month’s activities.
Eric Jerome Dickey, one of the most popular authors of contemporary
urban fiction, will read from his work on Feb. 8 at 8 p.m.
in Georgia Hall of the Tate Student Center. Mark Anthony Thomas, a
UGA alumnus and former editor-in-chief of The
Red & Black, will read from his new book The
Poetic Repercussion on Feb. 24 at noon in Adinkra Hall.
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