Showing posts with label University of Mississippi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label University of Mississippi. Show all posts

Sunday, October 14, 2012

First African-American Homecoming Queen Crowned at University of Mississippi


Commander Kerri Pearson & Courtney Pearson Homecoming Queen   

In September, Courtney Pearson of Memphis, TN became the first
African- American to be elected as Homecoming Queen at the University of Mississippi .
Courtney won in a run-off vote, receiving 1,477 votes, compared to 1,387 ballots cast for Ashleigh Davis of Gulfport, MS.


Pearson wants to inspire other African-Americans to believe in themselves.

“I feel like it’s an inspiration for others to be like, there’s nothing that can hold me back, not my race, not my greekness, or my non-greekness – whatever it is that I want to do, I can do it. Now the students are saying ‘Not only do we want you to attend, we want you to represent us at a whole and go and show the whole world what we’re about and what we represent.”

The 21-year-old senior English secondary education major was escorted by her father Commander Kerri Pearson during halftime of the NCAA college football game between Ole Miss and Auburn in Oxford, Miss., on Saturday, Oct. 13, 2012.


Monday, October 1, 2012

TODAY in history: Integration of the University of Mississippi- Oct 1, 1962




James Meredith in 1962




Today marks the 50th anniversary of the integration of the University of Mississippi
On October 1st, 1962, James H. Meredith finally registered and attended his first classes after a 20-month struggle to enter the University of Mississippi ~ Ole Miss.
The University of Mississippi commemorates the 50th anniversary of its integration this fall.

James Meredith was born in Kosciusko, Mississippi, on June 25th, 1933. From 1951 to 1960 he served in the American Air Force. After this, Meredith studied at Jackson State College for two years. He later applied to take a course at the University of Mississippi. He was rejected twice. Meredith filed a complaint with the courts that he had been rejected by the university because he was black. His complaint was rejected by a district court, but on appeal, the Fifth Judicial Circuit Court supported him and ruled against the district court stating that the University of Mississippi was indeed maintaining a policy of segregation in its admissions policy.  State officials and students at the university voiced their opposition to Meredith attending the university. Numerous threats were made against Meredith. Robert Kennedy, the Attorney-General, sent federal marshals to protect Meredith. Riots followed and 160 marshals were wounded and 2 bystanders were killed on the Oxford campus.
On Sunday night, hundreds of white students and protesters from around the region flocked to campus and moved toward the Lyceum, the stately columned building where Meredith would register.
"Marshalls surrounded the Lyceum. They begin to use tear gas. People begin to throw rocks and bottles," Kennedy activated the Mississippi National Guard and called in Army troops from Memphis, Tenn. By dawn Oct. 1, the riot was quelled and marshals escorted Meredith to his first class, American history.

Meredith attended the university and graduated in 1963.


University of Mississippi



The Civil Rights Monument & James Meredith statue

OPPORTUNITY - KNOWLEDGE - COURAGE - PERSEVERANCE
(4 words engraved above pillars)



James Meredith - Statue Dedication - October 1, 2006



On October 1, 2006, James Meredith came face to face with a powerful image of his
contributions to opening the doors of higher education to all people.

The University of Mississippi's civil rights monument features a life-size bronze likeness
of Meredith, the first black student admitted to the university. Surrounding the statue
are a 17-foot-tall limestone portal, brick benches and historical markers.
Members of the university family and guests gathered that day  to dedicate the monument,
which also honors others who pioneered civil rights in the South and across the nation.  









Thursday, August 2, 2012

Ole Miss at 2012 Olympics



University of Mississippi students 
past and present
Competing & involved in the
2012 Olympics
London








 



The University of Mississippi was chartered on February 24, 1844.
It opened its doors to 80 students four years later, and for 23 years it was
Mississippi's only public institution of higher learning.
For 110 years, it was the state's only comprehensive university.

Known affectionately as Ole Miss, Mississippi's flagship university established the fourth state-supported law school in the nation (1854) and was one of the first in the nation to offer engineering education (1854). It was one of the first in the South to admit women (1882) and the first to hire a female faculty member (1885).

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