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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ThirdEye who wrote (173866)8/23/2001 4:33:17 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
I met James Meredith, the man who integrated Ole Miss, at a conservative gathering in Washington. We talked, with a couple of other people who had started out on the Left. At the time, he was working for Jesse Helms. Someone commented on the irony, and he just said, "Different times, different issues"

James Meredith
Author is only one of many hats worn by the enigmatic James Meredith. Born June 25, 1933, in Kosciusko, Mississippi, Meredith is best known as the first African-American student of the University of Mississippi. Meredith served in the Air Force from 1951 to 1960, including a tour of duty in Japan. He then attended Jackson State College for two years. In the fall of 1962 Meredith risked his life when he successfully applied the laws of integration and became the first black student at the University of Mississippi, a pivotal moment in the civil rights movement which sparked riots on the Oxford campus that left two people dead.

In 1966 he recounted the experience in his first publication, Three Years in Mississippi. Of that book, a reviewer for Newsweek wrote, "Seldom is a piece of violent history so dispassionately dissected by one of its participants as it has been by James Meredith in this three-years-later study of his breakthrough at the University of Mississippi. Part report and part legal brief, part manifesto, part tract, it is a valuable and fascinating account."

Shortly after the publication of Three Years in Mississippi, Meredith conceived and organized the "Walk Against Fear," a march from Memphis to Jackson, Mississippi, in a bold and selfless repudiation of the physical violence faced by African-Americans for exercising their voting rights. Meredith was shot on the march, and when he was physically able to resume the march, he did so, joined this time by the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., and other prominent civil rights leaders of the day.

In 1968 Meredith received a LL.B. from Columbia University. Meredith's career has included a run for a congressional seat in 1972 and, in perhaps his most controversial move yet, a stint on the staff of arch-conservative Senator Jesse Helms beginning in 1989. Meredith's most recent publication is a historical work: Mississippi: A Volume of Eleven Books was published in 1995.

On March 21, 1997, James Meredith presented his papers to the University of Mississippi where they are maintained by the Special Collections branch of the J.D. Williams Library.


olemiss.edu



To: ThirdEye who wrote (173866)8/23/2001 4:44:29 PM
From: DOUG H  Respond to of 769670
 
I'll pay closer attention to him and draw my own conclusions. It is very hard to unadultered facts these days.