March 1, 2017

Page 1

March 1, 2017 | Midwestern State University | thewichitan.com | Your Campus. Your News. | Vol. 81 No. 21

SGA Candidates

pg. 3

Voting for SGA candidates is open through my.mwsu.edu.

PHOTO BY TIMOTHY JONES | THE WICHITAN

Syreeta Greene, director of equity, inclusion, and multicultural affairs, Keith Lamb, vice president, Robert Palmer, Wichita County Historical Commission chairman, and Suzanne Shipley, university president, unveil the desegregation historical marker at the unveiling ceremony in front of Ferguson Hall on Feb. 5.

Unveiling history

Dinning Hours

University exhibits desegregation marker BRENDAN WYNNE FEATURES EDITOR

pg. 6

See what students think about the new dinning hours.

Community Mural

pg. 8

Anne Farley Gaines tries to bring life to downtown through murals.

P

laced just outside Ferguson Hall, the Midwestern University desegregation historical marker stood cloaked beneath a scarlet, velvet veil. Keith Lamb, vice president of student affairs and enrollment management, gave the opening remarks for the ceremony held Feb. 25 in honor of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit against Hardin Junior College, one of Midwestern State University’s former titles, and the enrollees of the 1954 integrated class. Marilyn Virginia Menefee-Billouin, the last surviving member of the original six plaintiffs that attempted to enroll in Midwestern State University’s segregated system, was in attendance along with two of the original enrollees, Edwin Fuller and Horace Pope. “When I arrived at Midwestern State University just a year and a half ago, I was not aware of the

PHOTO BY TIMOTHY JONES | THE WICHITAN

Syreeta Greene, director of equity, inclusion, and multicultural affairs, recognizes honorees at the desegregation historical marker unveiling ceremony in front of Ferguson Hall on Feb. 25. significant events that led to integration in 1954,” Suzanne Shipley, university president, said. “The lawsuit filed against the university was the first lawsuit of its kind, even predating the landmark, Brown v. Board of Education.” Robert Stewart and Chase

Thornton were both graduate students when they began the research that would highlight this significant event in the university’s history. “This is a very proud moment for us,” Thornton said. “When we began this journey several

years ago, we never imagined our humble project would evolve into what it has become, today. This project introduced us to so many wonderful people and uncovered a lost piece of history essential to the struggle of equality in education. It has been a great privilege and a crown jewel of our academic careers.” Thornton said this crown jewel comes with a history of its own. “This story began with Robert taking an African-American Politics course here at the university. Robert wrote a class paper originally designed around the procession of African-Americans in local media here in Wichita Falls,” Thornton said. “He invited me to start working on an independent research project concerning the integration of Midwestern State University. Eventually the historical association helped us in getting the historical marker that

see MARKER pg. 6


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March 1, 2017 by The Wichitan - Issuu