Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Come Together.

Segregation kept blacks and whites apart.

Desegregation drove Doc Eldridge and Michael Thurmond together.

Following a screening of the Peabody award-winning film “The Search for Quality Education: Busing,” the pair shared their story:

Both Eldridge and Thurmond had been student council presidents until the dawn of desegregation re-drew the map and brought whites and blacks together.

The pair weren’t thrown together by their differences, however, but their similarities — and in time became good friends.

Now the former mayor of Athens and former state Labor Commissioner, respectively, Eldridge and Thurmond have gone on to influence far larger stages than that of the Classic City, but their story remains vital.

“We originally thought we would try and find some people that were featured in the documentary, but that proved to be a little more of a challenge,” said Diane H. Murray, Director of Public Service and Alumni Outreach at the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication which is coordinating the event in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the desegregation of the university.

“We thought it was a natural fit,” Murray said, referring to the film’s place both in the list of commemorative events and in the university’s extensive archive of Peabody-winning work, overseen by professor and awards director Horace Newcomb.
So Grady reached out to Eldridge and Thurmond.
“They’re both very interesting on their own,” Murray said, “and the two of them together talking about their experiences, we [thought], [would] be very interesting.”
The answer was immediate.
“It was an easy ask,” Murray said. 
They were happy to appear and connect with an audience — an important part of the screening and discussion.
“We’ve been really pleased with how the audience has engaged,” Murray said.
Some of the positive reaction may be due, in part, to the documentary’s regional feel: one segment features Athens specifically, with comments from William Tate and Charles McDaniel, among others.
Of course, that was always the hope.
“We chose this documentary, in part, because it features Athens,” Murray said. 
However there is more than one part to the issue and side to the struggle.
Although “Busing” was made in 1972, almost 40 years ago, its problems remain a very real part of the landscape of today, Murray said.
“What we’re hoping I people will see how far we’ve come,” she said, “and that we still have a ways to go.”

2 comments:

  1. I'm excited to see what this story will look like next draft round. I think you managed to make an interesting start even with our one source, but obviously having another would be great. If either of the two men won't speak with you talk to anyone in the Peabody office who most likely was at the screening and could comment on watching them interact. But I tihnk that focusing on the men rather than movie seems to be what you are doing and is a great way to go about it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think that you took what you were given and ran with it and made something good with it. I think it's going to be a great story come your next draft and with another source. Keep the story fresh and relevant, you're off to a great start!

    ReplyDelete