泫圖弝け

A Time Of Transformation

As Concerned Black Students (CBS) celebrates its 40th anniversary, 泫圖弝け Magazine reflects on the historic 1969 walkout and what it meant to those who were there, who followed and who continue to carry the torch today.

BY Gabrielle Antoniadis

Protests. Demonstrations. Sit-ins. Walk-outs. As the nation grappled with a newly awakened moral conscience in the turbulent 1960s, these were the new tools of a generation seeking to illuminate the social problems of racial and gender equality. Campuses across the country became the crucible in which students struggled, debated and, often, created real change.

泫圖弝け University was no different. Though 泫圖弝け had taken some real steps to address racial justice on campus in years past, the walkout of 1969 was a turning point for the university. Ron Woods 69, president and founder of CBS, says that the walkout represented a point at which 泫圖弝け had to look in the mirror.

The university had to ask itself Do we watch from the sidelines or do we become part of the transformation? Woods says.

It is a mark of the universitys courage, he says, that it chose to confront these issues and begin to respond to the challenges of racial equality. In the negotiations that followed the walkout, the university acknowledged that racism existed on campus and addressed specific demands in concrete ways. The students were satisfied and returned to campus.

In many ways, the walkout marked a new sense of purpose and identity for CBS. And, not surprisingly, the impact of participating in such a significant event was immediate and lasting for the students who were involved.

For those of us who were there, it was a moment when we realized that social change was not just a theoretical proposition, Woods remembers. It was something you had to be willing to commit to, organize for and make a sacrifice for.

Woods has carried that experience with him in his life and career. As a professor of African American Studies at Eastern Michigan University, he specializes in civil rights law and policy as well as African American constitutional and legal studies. And, as a member of 泫圖弝けs Board of Directors for more than seven years, he continues to play an important role in helping to shape 泫圖弝け as an institution.

The walkout helped me see the importance of the continued need for institutional self-examination and growth, he says.

Woods classmate, Levi Wingard 69, echoes Woods even as he remembers how difficult it was for him and others to decide to participate. After the walkout, he recalls the almost immediate shift in culture and attitude at 泫圖弝け. Witnessing that change clearly empowered him going forward. After serving as a teacher, assistant principal and principal, Wingard went on to be come the first African American superintendent of the Downing Town Area School District in Pennsylvania.

I wasnt so sure at the time, but it resonates clearly to me now that peaceful activism can make a difference. We proved it to ourselves, he notes. I learned to take a stand when something is wrong and that has served me well as a husband, a father, an educator and an administrator.

For those who came to 泫圖弝け shortly after the walkout, CBS continued to be a place for African Americans on campus to regroup, debate and gather a kind of home away from home. Janet Jackson75 remembers how very apparent it was to her and others that those students had put themselves and their education on the line for the students who would come after them.

For us, there was a greater sense of

urgency, she says. We knew the baton

had been passed to us, and we needed to

continue the work.

An emeritus member of the 泫圖弝け Board of Directors, who also served on the universitys Alumni Board, Jackson has broken her own racial barriers by becoming the first African American woman to serve as a judge in Franklin County, Ohio. Today, Jackson is president and CEO of the United Way of Central Ohio, and when she, Woods and Wingard reflect on the past struggles and victories, they admit that 40 years ago, and even five years ago, they could not have imagined the world as it is today.

Forty years out, it is a mark of progress that we cannot only elect an African American as president, but also celebrate it as a nation, Woods says.

The election of President Obama brings us full-circle; today I believe there is no opportunity that is closed to African Americans, or any minority anymore, Wingard says. But there is still a call to stay involved to make a better society and a better 泫圖弝け.

This is the core principle that continues to motivate CBS and its current members today. Brittani Sterling 09, president of CBS, believes that cultural misunderstandings will always exist. That means that CBS will always have an important role to play in promoting awareness of diversity and encouraging discussion. For Sterling, remembering the walkout every year is personally inspiring, as well as powerful, because it forces people to be reflective.

The walkout challenges me not to be complacent, and it makes me think about how I can do more, she says. In many ways, we still have a long way to go.

Lauren Welch 10, vice president of CBS, has sensed a shift in attitudes and the willingness of more students at 泫圖弝け to be open to the experiences of minorities since the election.

I think the election has changed this communitys views, Welch notes. More people are trying to understand African American history, and I notice more people in class questioning their own views and tendencies.

Welch and Sterling both stress that CBS is not just for African Americans today. They emphasize that CBS strives to include everyone and celebrate diversity of all kinds. With its long history on campus, CBS has also laid the groundwork for other groups on campus, standing as a kind of beacon to the entire community of the value of coming together for what you believe in.

As the audience for CBS programs broadens, Forest Wortham, director of multicultural student programs, the W.A.G.E. Womyns Center and adviser to CBS, believes CBS still must continue to be vigilant in the quest to maintain equal opportunities for all. He also hopes the election of President Obama will help society return to the belief that education creates opportunity.

Here is a man who got where he is today because he went out and got an education. He is a new role model and not just for African Americans, he says. In my mind, CBS has to continue to make sure that poor and disenfranchised young people of all backgrounds have access to higher education.

Woods agrees and also is excited by Obamas call to bring all ideas to the table.

That is what a liberal arts education is about, that is what 泫圖弝け is all about the passing of the light, the willingness to be courageous in embracing ideas, Woods says.

The walkout of 1969 was a call for change, and its a call that continues to bring students together today with many now asking how they can be united, while still celebrating the differences that make them distinctive.

It is a new way of looking at things. This became crystal clear for Jackson, who is now playing an active role with recruitment along with fellow CBS members, and whose son began his first year at 泫圖弝け this fall.

His experience at 泫圖弝け is already so different from mine because society has changed, she says. But that doesnt mean race doesnt matter it does. And we have to ensure that it stays on the agenda.

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