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MEDIA CONTACT: Wendy
Leopold at (847) 491-4890 or at w-leopold@northwestern.edu
February 3, 2004
Juan Williams to Talk About Race Relations
EVANSTON, Ill. --- One of America's best known journalists will
talk at Northwestern University about race relations in the United
States 50 years after the landmark 1954 Supreme Court decision declaring
that separate but equal schools were not equal at all. Juan Williams'
remarks at 4 p.m. Monday, Feb. 16, are part of the Medill School
of Journalism's popular Crain Lecture Series.
Williams, National Public Radio senior correspondent and Fox News political analyst,
will present "Brown vs. The Board of Education 50 Years Later" at the
McCormick Tribune Center Forum, 1870 Campus Drive, on Northwestern's Evanston
campus. The event is free and open to the public.
Williams is author of the critically acclaimed biography "Thurgood Marshall:
American Revolutionary," which this year has been reissued with a new epilogue
to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the historic Brown decision. His other books
include "This Far by Faith," the story of the African-American religious
experience, and the bestseller "Eyes on the Prize," which traces the
African-American struggle for civil rights.
Prior to his work in radio and television, Williams worked for 21 years at The
Washington Post as a political analyst, national correspondent, editorial writer
and White House reporter. He won numerous journalism awards for writing and investigative
reporting. Later, he was acclaimed for a series of television documentaries including "Politics:
The New Black Power" and a documentary on labor and civil rights activist
A. Phillip Randolph that appeared on public television.
For information about Williams' lecture or about upcoming Crain Lectures, call
(847) 491-5401 or check the Medill School of Journalism Web site at http://www.medill.northwestern.edu.
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