Pulitzer Prize-winning author to give Dole lecture
On the day before Presidents Day, the Dole Institute of Politics will
present
Pulitzer Prize winner Roger Wilkins as the second speaker in the Dole
Forum lecture series.
Wilkins, a journalist, activist and distinguished professor at George
Mason University in Fairfax, Va., will speak at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb.
16, in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
The lecture is free and open to the public, but seating is limited and
tickets are required for admission.
Tickets are available at the Lied Center, 864-2787; Murphy Hall, 864-3982;
and SUA in the Kansas Union, 864-SHOW.
The Dole Forum is a periodic lecture series featuring prominent people
in the fields of government, politics and media.
The series was inaugurated last fall with a speech by Brian Lamb, chair
and CEO of C-SPAN.
Wilkins was born in 1932 in Kansas City, Mo. His father, a business manager
with a prominent African-American newspaper, the Kansas City Call, died
when Wilkins was a child.
The family moved to New York and then to Michigan, where Wilkins spent
his formative years.
Wilkins attended the University of Michigan, where he received his bachelor’s
degree in 1953.
He earned a juris doctor degree in 1956 and interned with Thurgood Marshall
at the Legal Defense Fund of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People.
Following graduation, Wilkins worked in several capacities as an advocate
for justice, beginning his career as a caseworker in the Ohio Welfare
Department. Later, Wilkins went on to work for USAID and as attorney general
under President Lyndon B. Johnson.
In 1972, Wilkins began writing for the editorial page of the Washington
Post just as the Watergate scandal was breaking.
For his editorials about the issues, he shared a 1973 Pulitzer Prize with
reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein and cartoonist Herb Block.
Wilkins then moved on to the New York Times, where he was the first African-American
on the editorial board as well as a columnist.
Wilkins also has worked for the Institute for Policy Studies, the Washington
Star, National Public Radio and CBS Radio.
He continues to be a prominent commentator and analyst on American public
policy and social justice issues.
Today, Wilkins is a history professor at George Mason University and has
written or edited several books, including A Man’s Life, Quiet Riots
and Jefferson’s Pillow. He also is the publisher of the NAACP’s
journal, the Crisis.
For more information about the Institute and its programs, visit www.doleinstitute.org.
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