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to THE SCHOOLHOUSE DOOR The University commemorates a moment in history, and the years that have followed by Danny Hanbery As June 11 approached, the students at The University of
Alabama felt tension in the air. They saw a police presence on campus that would
turn into a National Guard presence as the swirl of events came to a head. Many
of them helped to remove from the grounds anything that could be thrown to cause
injury or incite a riot, just to be on the safe side. They read articles in the
Crimson White about the two incoming students who were the cause for all of this
preparation and were asked to obey several rules and a curfew set forth by the
dean of men. Many of the students were frightened. Forty years later, as June 11 approached, students felt no tension,
unless they were in a particularly stressful summer class, though some of them
might have felt a sense of celebration in the air. The University was again preparing
for those two students to come onto campus. This time it wasn't just the two,
however. They were to be joined by others-students, administrators, priests and
lawyers--who had also had a hand in changing the history of The University of
Alabama. Vivian Malone, now Malone
Jones, and James Hood came to the University under the gaze of the entire nation.
Cameras recorded, reporters scribbled and Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace locked
horns in a highly publicized political battle with President John F. Kennedy as
two black students sought entrance to an institution that was part of the last
segregated public school system in the country. The University celebrated
this integration with a program titled Opening Doors, June 9-11. The program served
not only as an observation of that day, but also as a way to honor 40 people affiliated
with UA who were pioneers in civil rights history. These individuals included
Autherine Lucy Foster, who in 1956 was the first African-American to seek admission
to the University, and whose admission caused riots on the Alabama campus, as
well as Malone Jones and Hood. The rest of the pioneers were people who have broken
color barriers or fought for equality in other ways, but the students who braved
the social climates of the Old South and came to be the first African-American
students at a previously all-white university top the list. Anyone who has been
through an American history class knows why. Almost everyone in the
United States has heard about Wallace's "stand in the schoolhouse door"
through those classes, and even those who slept through class know about the events
through cultural references such as in the movie Forrest Gump. Dean Culpepper Clark of the UA College of Communication
and Information Sciences, author of the book The Schoolhouse Door-Segregation's
Last Stand at The University of Alabama, explains the reason for the celebration
this way: "At The University of Alabama we commemorate, even celebrate, because
June 11, 1963, marked our liberation to become a whole university, one that could
serve and be served by all people." As an integrated university
40 years later, students, faculty and alumni may not fully understand the meaning
of that liberation without understanding the atmosphere on campus in 1963. John L. Blackburn, who served as dean of men in 1963, impacted this campus
in many ways during the years he spent here. The Blackburn Institute, which provides
students opportunities to explore issues and identify strategic actions that will
improve the quality of life for all of Alabama's citizens, is named for him, and
he is responsible for the creation of The Mallet Assembly, in which students who
show leadership potential live in a self-governed environment. He is also being
honored as one of the 40 pioneers and served on the "Opening Doors"
planning committee. Blackburn came to the University after the riots surrounding
Autherine Lucy's admission in 1956. Initially, he had reservations about coming
because he'd seen the images of violence in Tuscaloosa on television. He laughed
when Louis Corson, who served as dean of men before Blackburn, called and asked
him to come help out at UA. But Corson persuaded him by asking where else he would
want to be if he wanted to help facilitate integration. On his first day at the
University, Blackburn saw members of the Ku Klux Klan standing on the corners
of what was then the student union building, now Reese Phifer Hall. They were
there to prove they had the power to be there. Blackburn was intimately involved in all aspects of the
integration. He helped to prepare the students for the situation, he met with
University leaders to plan the course of events and he tried to think of everything
that might go wrong, and remove the threat. "In preparation for [June 11]
we took out all of the bottled soft drink machines all over campus, picked up
rocks and every piece of wood. There was nothing bigger than a toothpick you could
find to throw," Blackburn remembered, sitting in the office of Blackburn
Educational Technologies, a firm he established after his retirement to "assist
educational institutions and nonprofit groups in fundraising and long range planning."
He and administrators, including Sarah Healy, the dean of women, chose
30 students to serve as leaders during the integration, to help smooth the transition.
"These 30 students were really sticking their necks out because here they
were coming out working to help integrate the University. If it went wrong and
didn't succeed
then their political careers were ruined, because political
careers up until that time were based on being a segregationist," Blackburn
explained. "I think Wallace assumed [Deputy Attorney General Nicholas] Katzenback
would take the students back off campus, and then he viewed that they would have
to have federal force to bring them back in. And so that would make the federal
government the aggressor against the state," Blackburn explained. "But
when they were turned away by Wallace, we took them to their residence hall rooms
the inside of the campus, with the residence halls, was under control of
the federal marshals. Now if Wallace was going to do anything, he would have to
be the invader of the campus." Fortunately, Wallace stepped down under Kennedy's
order federalizing the National Guard, and the school was successfully integrated.
"Prior to that date there was a cloud over the University. There
were things you couldn't do, there were meetings you couldn't hold, because of
that segregationist cloud," Blackburn said. He described the day as exciting.
"Most people don't have an opportunity to live through an experience like
that." It's true that the combination of all of these events
and experiences adds up to a moment of great historical significance. That in
itself would be enough to celebrate Opening Doors--but that's not all the organizers
had in mind. Samory Pruitt, UA's assistant to the president for community
and corporate relations, and chair of the planning committee for Opening Doors,
shed some light on the reasoning behind the events. He said that the events today
weren't focusing on the fact that Wallace blocked the way of progress, but that
progress prevailed. "At that point in the University's history, it made a
decision that everybody, regardless of race, should be afforded opportunities,
and collectively the community, the students who were seeking admission, the federal
government, they all agreed on that particular principle. That's really what we're
trying to highlight," Pruitt said. In the end, the events at The
University of Alabama on June 11, 1963, were important not only because of what
did happen, but what could have happened. As it turned out, things went smoothly
and Alabama became the last state to desegregate its public schools. The situation,
however, included all the elements of a massive civil rights tragedy: men with
guns, a Southern governor with a dedication to his constituency, a U.S. president
who had to make things right, and two students entering a hostile environment
with the goal of obtaining a degree from The University of Alabama. Five months
later that president was shot on national television, 20 years later that governor
renounced his segregationist past, and 40 years later we're celebrating the events
of that hot summer day, because it's important to remember. Times
have changed since the days when an African-American couldn't enter the University's
buildings for a glass of water, as reporter Chris McNair, a photographer for Ebony
who was one of five African-American journalists covering Wallace's "stand,"
could not. Today UA is ranked among the top four flagship universities in the
Southeast with regard to the number of African-American students it admits, and
is ranked among the top 25 public flagship universities in the nation in the same
category. There's still controversy over the lack of integration in
UA's greek system, but two new sororities are circumventing traditional greek
boundaries on campus. Delta Xi Phi and Alpha Delta Sigma are both dedicated to
issues of diversity. It's a changed university. This year also marks
the election of the first African-American president-elect for the University's
National Alumni Association. André Taylor, who obtained his bachelor's
degree in journalism from UA 10 years after "the schoolhouse door,"
is currently serving in that position. Reflecting on his position, Taylor said,
"I think it is a very visible sign of the progress that has occurred over
the past 40 years. Just simply the fact that I will be coming in as the head of
the alumni organization says that opportunities exist today that clearly show
the progress that has occurred at The University of Alabama." Opening Doors events included a symposium titled
"Media and the Moment: Images of the Schoolhouse Door," during which
media professionals and those involved in "the stand" discussed the
media coverage and politics surrounding the integration; a dinner program and
gala, both honoring the 40 civil rights pioneers and featuring a speech by Robert
Kennedy Jr.; the "Opening Doors Symposium: Reflections from African-American
Alumni, 1956-2000," during which African-American students from different
decades discussed their experiences on campus; a community celebration on the
Quad, highlighted by performances from musical and dance groups and ending with
a candlelight vigil and procession to Foster Auditorium; and a culminating program
at the doors of Foster with presentations by Gov. Bob Riley and Malone Jones. As she began,
the wind picked up and the clouds overhead gave a subtle rumble. "I think
God is sending me a message not to speak too long," Malone Jones laughed.
As she talked about that day when she came to the University in 1963, she interspersed
her speech with the phrase "Indeed, what a difference 40 years "Forty years ago what we saw when we looked out there--we saw bayonets,
we saw the troops prepared for battle," she remembered. Malone Jones said
that on the UA campus she knew the meaning of the 23rd Psalm when it says, "Yea
though I walk through the valley of he shadow of death." "Life
was not safe in Tuscaloosa in 1963," she said. Her experiences
steeled her for the road ahead when she would delve into politics and social change
working with organizations like the Environmental Protection Agency. "I will
serve my God, my country and my state by working to help our children to see my
vision of a brighter day," she said. "All of us have a right to worship,
to be educated and to achieve the American dream. "For over 130
years we as African-Americans could not have a legacy at this University,"
Malone Jones noted, saying her children were the first generation of African-American
children to be able to check the box on the application that says that their parents
attended The University of Alabama. "Indeed, what a difference 40 years has
made," she observed. Gov. Riley began his speech, but rain interrupted him as the storm finally broke. Fittingly, the entire crowd hurried together through the doors that had been closed to so many for so long, into the hot and dusty, but dry, Foster Auditorium, to finish the ceremony and hear the governor conclude by asking all Alabamians to embrace change. To see descriptions and photos of the 40 pioneers honored during Opening Doors, visit the program's Web site, at www.ua.edu/openingdoors. |