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Black History Month Observance at Goddard

Photo of Asa Gordon as he presents to Goddard
  Mr. Asa Gordon as he gave his lecture Jan 30.
Photo by Chris Gunn/293

Black History Month observances at Goddard began with a presentation from Asa Gordon, founder and executive director of Douglass Institute of Governement (DIG). The DIG organization does research and studies the policy of African - American culture, history and relevant contemporary issues.

Gordon's lecture examined the mal-apportionment penalty mandated by Section 2 of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United Sates for the disenfranchisement of hundreds of thousands of voters in the 2000 Presidential election.

Upcoming Black History Month Events at Goddard:

Dr. Charley Flint presents Race and Social Justice: A Historical Analysis of Crime and the Law
Thurs., Feb. 13, 2003 in Bldg. 3 Goett Auditorium - 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The presentation will try to present an overview of how social status, with a focus on race, become reflected in the criminal justice system. The meanings of justice entail larger political, economic, and social relations: the "criminal justice system" changes over history as the Slave Codes, became the "Black Codes" and the Black Codes came to legalize and codify legal racial segregation under the "Jim Crow Codes."

The presentation will show how African-Americans are processed within each process of the system of crime control and what implications, positive and negative, these have for the accused individual, as well as the group. The law is NOT color-blinded; there is a disadvantaged position for those defined as "black", with privileges and advantages to those defined as "white".


The Bowie State University Concert Choir will perform, and a film: "The Murder of Emmitt Till" will be shown.
Wed., Feb. 19, 2003 in the bldg. 8 Auditorium from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Very powerful documentary film footage and commentary ... graphic language and visuals. It's 1955, and this unbelievably brutal lynching in Money, Mississippi, of a 13 year old Chicago child, is probably the catalyst and spark for the Civil Rights struggles nationwide that followed ... starting exactly 100 days afterward!

His courageous mother, Ms. Mamie Till-Mobley personally crusaded to stop these types of murders; she is recently deceased. Well worth watching. There will be a brief opportunity for reaction and discussion after the viewing.


Dr. Freeman Hrabowski, III - President, University of Maryland - Baltimore County
Thurs., Feb. 20, 2003 in the bldg. 3 Goett Auditorium - 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

Dr. Freeman Hrabowski, III will speak on nurturing a new generation of engineers and scientists. He is a consultant to the National Science Foundation and the National Academy of Sciences. Dr. Hrabowski was instrumental in forming the Governor's Academy for Mathematics, Science, and Technology and is the successful co-author of Overcoming the Odds: Raising Academically Successful African American Women and Beating the Odds: Raising Academically Successful African American Males.


Ms. Jacqueline Galloway-Blake, MA School Failure and the African-American Boy - Causes and Cures
Wed., Feb. 26, 2003 in bldg. 26/205 Conference Room from 11a.m. to 1 p.m.

This workshop examines how African influences and the slavery experiences have shaped the learning styles of African-American children. It shows how American schools have failed the African-American boy and outlines how school educators and administrators can work with parents to improve the immediate and long-term academic success for African-American boys.

Why are so many African American boys placed in special education classes in America's schools? Has the African-American boy failed at school or has the school failed the African-American boy? Looking inside the typical American school and we can view the policies, practices and attitudes that work against this learning style and the African-American boy. Let's find new ways to bring educational successes to the African-American boy! Specific suggestions for meeting the educational needs of young Black males are discussed.


State Representative Rufus Straughter (51st Dist. - Miss.) Presents "We've Made It, In Spite Of ..."
Thurs., Feb 27, 2003 in bldg. 3 Goett Auditorium - 11a.m. to 2 p.m.

The history of Mississippi is a microcosm of the history of African-Americans and Euro-Americans in the United States. As recently as the public embarrassment and outcry resulting from Mississippi Senator Trent Lott's public speech alluding to a "different and better America had Strom Thurmond won the presidency" as an independent running on a platform of segregation, the social and political history of the "Mississippi Delta" has impacted and shaped the larger United States political landscape.

As Chairman of the Mississippi Legislative Black Caucus, Rep. Straughter has pressed for increased financial investment in state universities ($500 M), unlimited access for African-American businesses to private and state sponsored investment opportunities, like the new Nissan Assembly and Development plants - the largest in the country. His goals are to overcome the trangressions and bigotries of the past and strive for all to embody excellence and high standards of insight and achievement.

For more info: Leonard Brown on 6-5424, the EOPO 6-7348, or visit the EOPO website at: http://eeo.gsfc.nasa.gov/events.html


Black History Fact:

Archibald Alphonso Alexander
Design and construction engineer

Born: 1888
A 1912 recipient of a civil engineering degree from Iowa State University, Archibald "Archie" Alexander joined the Marsh Engineering Company where he designed the Tidal Basin bridge in Washington, D.C. After studying bridge design in London, he and George Higbee formed a general contracting business that focused on bridge design. Alexander's designs include Washington, D.C.'s Whitehurst Freeway, the heating plant and power station at the University of Iowa, and an airfield in Tuskegee, Alabama. Alexander went on to become the first Republican territorial governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Died: 1958


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