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The Rev. James Lawson
to return to Vanderbilt as visiting professor
Civil rights leader was
expelled in 1960

Rev. James Lawson
(AANEWSWIRE)NASHVILLE, Tenn. More
than four decades after a national furor over the expulsion
of civil rights leader James Lawson from Vanderbilt
University, he will return as a Distinguished University
Professor for the 2006-07 academic year.
This is for me an unexpected, even
momentous personal instant in my journey, Lawson
said.
The announcement was made Wednesday evening at Loews
Vanderbilt Hotel, where Lawson was named Vanderbilts
2005 Distinguished Alumnus.
Lawsons expulsion from Vanderbilt
Divinity School and the resulting resignations of faculty
members in protest embroiled the campus and the Nashville
community in a nationally reported controversy for months
in the spring of 1960. Eventually, a compromise was
forged to stop most of the resignations and allow Lawson
to complete his degree in Nashville. Lawson instead
chose to transfer to Boston University.
No other alumnus has ever contributed
so much to issues of national and international justice
and peace, and the promotion of a non-violent world
view, said Chancellor Gordon Gee. James
Lawson and the faculty and students who supported
him in 1960 knew Vanderbilts true mission
even before Vanderbilt understood it entirely.
During his visit, Lawson will teach at least one course
and give at least one public lecture each semester,
participate in discussion groups with faculty, and work
on his autobiography.
Its not often that either
persons or institutions have an opportunity to redress
a grievous wrong, said Lucius Outlaw, associate
provost for undergraduate education. The expulsion
of James Lawson was a significant moment in the history
of Vanderbilt that set it back decades. Bringing him
here isnt about making apologies, because that
happened many years ago. Its about a new point
in our relationship with him, and continuing the process
of working our way past the perception of Vanderbilt
as a white, segregated, arrogant institution.
Weve already made significant
progress, especially in the last half decade. We now
have the opportunity, because of the character of James
Lawson, to make history different than it was made at
Vanderbilt in 1960.
Lawson is pastor emeritus of Holman United Methodist
Church in Los Angeles, where he served for 25 years
before retiring in 1999.
As a young man, he studied the Gandhian
movement in India before becoming an integral part of
the civil rights movement. Lawson was dubbed by the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as the leading nonviolence
theorist in the world.
Lawson helped organize sit-ins by African American students
which led to the end of racial segregation of lunch
counters in downtown Nashville. He was also active in
civil rights struggles in Alabama and Mississippi.
Permanently expelled from Vanderbilt
University, James Lawson would have done fine and well,
said James Hudnut-Beumler, dean of Vanderbilt Divinity
School. But Vanderbilt could not be fine or well
without confronting its troubled soul.
James
Lawson has progressively helped this university find
it conscience - and dare I say - its soul.
Lawson returned to Vanderbilt Divinity
School in 1970-71 during a sabbatical, and that school
recognized him in 1996 with its first Distinguished
Alumnus Award. The Association of Vanderbilt Black Alumni
named Lawson the 2002 Walter R. Murray Distinguished
Alumnus.
-VU-
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