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10/07/2018 2:21 pm  #1


Facebook post sparks call to rename Ole Miss journalism school for Ida

Facebook post sparks call to rename Ole Miss journalism school for Ida B. Wells-Barnett
 
After a Facebook post by a prominent University of Mississippi donor was denounced as racist, some professors say the university should rename its journalism school for an African-American journalist and Chicago activist who crusaded against lynching.

Ida B. Wells-Barnett was born a slave in Mississippi in 1862. She went on to become an investigative reporter in nearby Memphis, Tennessee, and denounced racial violence. She helped found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and pushed for women's right to vote. Wells-Barnett died in 1931 in Chicago.

Ole Miss donor Ed Meek, for whom the Meek School of Journalism and New Media is named, has asked that his name be removed from the school after he posted photos of two black women on Facebook on Sept. 19 and wrote: "A 3 percent decline in enrollment is nothing compared to what we will see if this continues ... and real estate values will plummet as will tax revenues. We all share in the responsibility to protect the values we hold dear that have made Oxford and Ole Miss known nationally."

Meek apologized for the post after receiving sharp criticism. The women were University of Mississippi students who said they had simply gone out after a football game to have fun with friends. Both denounced Meek's post as demeaning.

A letter from 62 Ole Miss professors and several instructors and graduate students was published Friday in the student newspaper, The Daily Mississippian , suggesting the journalism school be named for Wells-Barnett. They also suggest that the university start journalism scholarships for black women and that it start a Reparative Justice Committee that would work toward removing a Confederate soldier statue that has stood for generations in a prominent place on campus.

"Removing Ed Meek's name from the School is a necessary, but basic, step in a much longer process of reparative justice," the letter said. "Our university must firmly stand for its stated values of intellectual excellence, non-discrimination and inclusion and support for all its students."

The ultimate decision about whether to remove Meek's name from the journalism school would belong to the state College Board. Meek led Ole Miss public relations for 37 years, starting in 1964, and has had other publishing businesses. The journalism school was named for him after he and his wife donated $5.3 million in 2009.

The university has struggled for decades to deal with its history of troubled race relations. White mobs rioted on campus in the autumn of 1962 as James Meredith became the first black student to enroll at Ole Miss; military troops were called in and Meredith was escorted by federal marshals.

Mississippi's population is about 38 percent black, and black students made up 12.7 percent of the Ole Miss enrollment in 2017.

In an effort to promote racial diversity in recent years, Ole Miss renamed a street that had been called Confederate Drive and installed plaques to provide historical background, including on the Confederate soldier statue.

In July 2017, the university announced it would put up signs acknowledging that some buildings on campus were built with slave labor. The university also announced then that it would remove the name of James K. Vardaman from a building. Vardaman, a white supremacist, was Mississippi's governor from 1904 to 1908 and a U.S. senator from 1913 to 1919.

SOURCE: Pettus, Emily Wagster. "Facebook post sparks call to rename Ole Miss journalism school for Ida B. Wells-Barnett." Chicago Tribune, 7 October 2018, http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-ole-miss-journalism-school-ida-b-wells-20181006-story.html


 


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10/07/2018 2:26 pm  #2


Re: Facebook post sparks call to rename Ole Miss journalism school for Ida

Do you suppose that Ida B. Wells-Barnett contributed $5.9M to Ole Miss, not to mention time on the job and support with a media outlet?  Maybe they will need to rename other buildings in honor of Jessie Jackson, Al Sharpton, and Malcolm X.  This is beyond ludicrous and a mountain has been made out of a mole hill.  One thing for sure is if Meek loses his name on the building, then Ole Miss owes him $5.9M plus interest accrued since his donation. 

What kind of message do you think this will send to potential high dollar donors?  If someone finds anything wrong in their past that is even remotely related to race, then the donor will be chastised and their dollars donated will become second hand news.


(c) All rights reserved.  Content may not be copied, transposed, or used in any manner or form without expressed written permission of user.

     Thread Starter
 

10/07/2018 7:22 pm  #3


Re: Facebook post sparks call to rename Ole Miss journalism school for Ida

It is abominable that an institution perfusing it's integrity would not reimburse him 100%. Ole Miss has become a function of George Soros, who to my knowledge hasn't given OM a "red' pun intended, cent. End of story! 

 

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