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Black History at IU Kokomo
Description
An account of the resource
Images and digitized records related to the history of black students, staff, and faculty in the IU Kokomo community.
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1945-2020
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Appendix 1: Transcription of Charges filed by Mr. Jeffers
Description
An account of the resource
Appendix to May 22, 1968, meeting minutes of the IU Kokomo Faculty Governance detailing the charges filed by Lance Jeffers and forwarded to Victor Bogle by Dr. Orlando Taylor
Date
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1968-05-18
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KA00031-35
1960s
B.R. Davidson
Black history
Faculty
Herbert Miller
Lance Jeffers
Meetings
Reja-e Busailah
Ruth Hanig
Victor Bogle
-
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PDF Text
Text
UK A CH~\T.. j
Minutes of the Meeting of 22 May 1968
I. U. Kokomo Campus Faculty Organization
Present:
Richard Ardrey, Dean Victor Bogle, Roger Boneham,
Raymond Bonhomme, Alan Bosch, Rejae Busailah, Richard
Campbell, Dr. Anne Caudill, Dr. Lian-hwang Chiu, Dr.
B. R. Davidson, Raymond Echols, Mrs. Florence Gardner,
Dr. Melvin Goldstein, Dr. Ralph Gray, Dr. Phillip Haffley,
Dr. David Hanig, Dr. Ruth Hanig, Robert Hennon, Lance
Jeffers, Dr. Herbert Miller, Miss Marina Natsis, Miss
Alice Nelson, Nick Poulton, Mrs. Betty Robertson, Hrs.
Sally Roush, Miss Bernice Fowler, Dr. William Stoller,
Herman Wilhelm, and Dr. Ekkehard Wilke
This meeting opened at 1:05 P.M. , with four items on the agenda:
(1) the
issue of the faculty's making a resolution concerning Dean Victor Bogle,
in view of the charges with the University's Committee on Discriminatory
Practices by Mr. Lance Jeffers; (2) the nomination and election of Faculty
Organization officers for tbe 1968-69 year; (3) discussion of a letter on
tenure policy previously forwarded to Dr. William Harvey of the Committee
on Tenure Policy; and (4) action on the 'fdivisional eoncept 11 proposed
earlier this year as an organizational mechanism to be implemented at the
Kokomo Campus.
The first item was tabled until Dean Bogle, delayed by a late-r\Ulning
luncheon meeting, should return.
As to the second topic, election of officers for the coming year, the Nominations Committee, (constituted by Drs. Gray and Haffley and Mrs. Robertson,)
proposed the following slate:
Chairman, Dr. B. R. Davidson; Vice Chairman,
Mr. Robert Hennon; Secretary, Mrs. Florence Gardner; and Parliamentarian,
Dr. Ekkehard Wilke.
The way was opened for nominations from the floor, and
since none were forthcoming, it was moved that there be a voice vote on the
acceptance of this slate.
The vote was unanimous, and the new officers were
instructed to assume their posts on l June, 1968.
�2.
The third item, concerning tenure policy, arose as an objection by some
faculty members to a paragraph included in the letter which forwarded the
resolution on tenure policy taken by the Kokomo faculty at its meeting of
22 April 1968.
The paragraph, which followed the text of a resolution favor-
ing the Harvey Committee ' s Plan A (university-wide tenure), read as follows:
"Nonetheless, there does exist at the Kokomo Campus a minority opinion favoring the Tenure Committee's Plan C (regional campus tenure) as a more workable
option."
The objection raised was that this paragraph ran counter to the
import of the resolution and, indeed, had caused some confusion in Dean
Harvey's discussion of the tenure topic with faculty at the Indianapolis Campus.
After some discussion, during which Dean Bogle recommended that the Kokomo
faculty adhere to its original resolution, Dr. Gray moved that the Faculty
Secretary resubmit the item to Dean Harvey in a letter containing only the
resolution-text.
After Mr. Boneham moved an amendment to the effect that this
new letter also be forwarded to all the regional campuses, the compound motion
came up for a voice vote, which was unanimous.
The Secretary has acted as
instructed.
Dr. Bogle now being present, the faculty turned to the issue of_taking some
action in view of the fact that charges against the Dean had been lodged, by
Vtr. Jeffers, with the President's Committee on Discriminatory Practices.
The
Secretary was asked to read a summary version of the charges, as recorded in a
letter of 16 May 1968 from Dr. Orlando Taylor, Chairman of the Committee, to
Dean Bogle.
(A transc r iption of these charges is attached to these minutes
as Appendix #1.)
After the reading, during which Dr. Goldstein asked for
clarification of the second charge, it was moved and seconded (by Messrs. Bosch
and Busailah respectively) t hat the Faculty Organization 1'draw up a resolution
after a discussion of the char ges lodged. ,i
�3.
The discussion was opened by M Boneham, with a statement to the effect that
r.
the Faculty Organization ought not base a resolution on the charges without
having heard the Taylor Committee's verdict on them.
Mr. Busailah and others
demurred on this point, and the discussion continued.
M Jeffers gave his
r.
view that the resolution itself was out of order , since the issue it focussed
on was really a problem between •ia man and his superiors. :,
that a resolution would be
Again, he observed
1
j
unfair n , since the information it would be based
on could not but be il hearsay. •·
Further, he noted that the matter at issue was
one 1'demanding conciliation between individuals, 11 and was nnot an issue for
public discussion. "
Finally, Mr. Jeffers stated that for the Faculty Organi-
zation to take any action was nto pre-empt the decision-reaching process 1 ' of the
Discriminatory Practices Committee.
11
Dr. Gray objected to the last point, stating that the intent was not at all
"to pre-empt, 11 but rather nto add to the (Taylor) Committee's information on
the issue before us."
Dr. Davidson, who had been interviewed when the Discrim-
inatory Practices Committee visited Kokomo, supported this point with the observation that there seemed to be some evidence of faulty information, since
there had been "an item among the (Taylor) Committee's questions to the effect
that the (Kokomo Campus) faculty had been pressured to back off the WillardDouglas issue 11
-
an episode from 1967 involving allegations, by Mr. Jeffers,
of the mistreatment of Negro students at these two local grade-schools.
Noting
the pertinence of this item to the contention in the charges that Kokomo is a
"racist 11 community, Dr. M
iller remarked that, though the point could be asserted and supported, Kokomo nis no worse than other areas 11 in this respect.
Mr.
Busailah concurred with his view.
Mr. Jeffers responded that, nonetheless, there was a need to set up a committee
to
II
investigate the presence of racism here on the (I. U. ) Campus.
11
He based
his observation on what he identified as current 1'hearsay" concerning discrimination
in the Nursing and Tec:b..nical programs here.
At this point Mrs. Gardner
�4.
in charge of the Nursing Program, countered with vehement objections, citing
not only the errancy of the claims but also the utter absence of any corroborating evidence.
were only
11
Ivir.
Jeffers restated his earlier observation that the items
hearsay. 11
Then the discussion took a turn:
Dr. Davidson recommended that the standing
motion, (that the Faculty Organization ndraw up a resolution after a discussion
of the charges lodged" with the Taylor Committee,) be deleted because of its
"ambiguity 1'
-
i.e., its failure to note the sort of resolution being proposed,
or commendation, support, or what.
Dr. Miller referred the item to Mr. Hennon,
the Parliamentarian, as a question of 11whether or not the faculty has the
authority to make a resolution of such support."
Mr. Hennon's judgment was
Meanwhile, Mr. Jeffers had turned back to his suggestion
of a committee to
inquire into "the presence of racism hereu on campus, with a motion that there
be founded
11
a
that question.
voluntary faculty committee 0 which would concern itself with
Dr. Ruth Hanig opened the subsequent discussion by maintaining
that indeed, the case was quite the opposite:
that there was no evidence of
"racism" on this campus and that the evidence was all to the contrary.
Here-
upon she cited several instances of anti-discrimination and pro-civil rights
activity, among them:
Dean Bogle's instrumentality and participation in the
April march marking the funeral of Dr. Martin Luther King; his circulation
afterwards of pledge cards which, in sum, were statements disapproving and deploring any discriminatory behavior and activity and were signed by faculty
and staff; his own attendance at the Kokomo Common Council meetings which
brought forth the recently-passed Fair Housing ordinance, and his repeatedly
encouraging both faculty and students to attend; his encouragement of bi-racial
sessions of the regular faculty-student "Griddle" discussions; his involvement
in both the founding and the activities of the Kokomo Campus's Dean's Committee
on Hum.an Rights, etc. , etc.
�5.
It was about this time that Mr. Jeffers' motion, which had triggered the above
discussion, was declared out of order and invalid by Faculty Chairman Miller,
on the ground that a previous motion (on the
the floor.
11
resolution il issue) still held
As to the viability of that prior motion in view of Dr. Davidson's
observation on its H
ambiguity," it was ruled that the standing motion be withdrawn and a more cogent one substituted.
Thereupon Dr. Gray moved
11
that the faculty go on record as commending Dean
Bogle for his active and effective leadership in the area of civil rights, both
on this campus and in the comm.unity."
After a second by Mrs. Gardner and some
favorable discussion, the question was called for.
The motion was approved by
voice vote.
Next, Mr. Jeffers re-introduced, as a new motion, his idea that there be
founded
11
a faculty committee, independent of the Kokomo Campus administration
and of voluntary membership, to uproot racism on this campus - whether that
racism be by omission or commission, implicit or explicit. 1'
Dr. Gray seconded
it ';for purposes of discussion," and lvlr. Busailah moved an amendment:
sertion of the clause lfif it exists n to follow the phrase
on this campus. 0
11
the in-
to uproot racism
The motion for amendment was seconded by Dr. Davidson.
Discussion ensued, wherein Mr. Jeffers voiced his refusal to accept the amendment and was informed that this could not be done.
Then, in reaction to a
comment by Mr. Jeffers on the significance of his having been the one to second
the amendment motion, Dr. Davidson withdrew his second.
It was, however, im-
mediately replaced by one from Mr. Ardrey, and the discussion continued.
When
the question of accepting the amendment came to a voice vote, it was approved.
The group then turned to consider the ori ginating motion, whereupon Mr. Echols
observed that, as the motion defined it, this new committee could conceivably
become a committee of one; Mr. Wilke pointed out that another committee seemed
�6.
redundant, in view of the already-existing Taylor Committee in Bloomington
and the Dean's Committee on Human Rights here at the Kokomo Campus; and Dean
Bogle, noting that he had objected to the title 1'Dean • s Committee" when the
Board was first proposed, suggested that perhaps it could be renamed and/or
reconstituted along the lines of Mr. Jeffers' proposal.
Messrs. Jeffers, Bosch,
and others concurred with this idea, suggesting that the existing committee be
renamed the
11
Kokomo· ·Campus Faculty-Student Committee on Human Rights. "
After Drs. Bogle and Miller had each contributed to a brief sketch of the
history, composition,
and purposes of the existing Dean's Committee, Dr.
Davidson proposed another amendment:
that the present Dean's Conmlittee "be
renamed the Indiana University Faculty-Student Committee on Human Rights ; "
that the new one "be constituted by the mem
bers of the existing Dean's Committee;" and that
11
Dean Bogle be withdrawn as a member" of the new committee.
After a second by Dr, Wilke , the amendment was voted upon; the decision was a
unanimous
11
ayen.
Then the originating motion was voted upon and passed.
Mr. Jeffers next proposed another motion:
that ,;the faculty go on record as
disapproving of membership by any faculty mem
ber in any organization which
actively or implicitly excludes Negroes, n
After a second by Miss Natsis,
discussion began.
The colloquy quickly focussed on the case-in-point of the Kokomo Swim Club,
of which Drs. Bogle and Davidson are members and which does exclude Negroes.
Dr. Goldstein objected to the motion on the ground that membership in such a
social organization is " a private, personal matter u outside the realm of concern of the faculty as a body.
Dr. Davidson then sketched the history of the
Kokomo Swim Club, noting that its present discrimination policy was the product of the difficulty of financing the venture in the first place.
Because
the club was a non-profit venture, no out-of- town bank would have provided the
l~ge amount of money (some $200,000) necess ary to launch it ; so the founders
�7.
were limited to approaching local banks on a
11
cornmunity service· basis.
1
And
the only bank in Kokomo which would advance the funds at all stipulated that
it could not do so unless the Club were a segregated one.
Dr. Davidson also
recounted that, before this obstruction arose, it had been planned to include
Mr. John Grimes, a prominent local Negro attorney, as a charter member; Mr.
Grimes had been approached with this idea and had expressed great interest.
Finally, Dr. Davidson pointed out that the Swim Club and its covert policy
were no different from other organizations - specifically the Rotary, Lions,
and Elks Clubs - to which Kokomo Campus faculty also belong.
Mr. Bosch
ob-
served that, were the logic of the motion applied to such gro~ps the Kokomo
Campus faculty and administration would ilcut us offn from people in the community with whom it was important, for the school, to keep in free contact.
Hr. Jeffers responded that, regardless of the basis of such membership, it
in fact constituted
11
bad example to our studentsil.
He elaborated to the effect
that, since Indiana University Kokorao Campus was a public institution whose
employees were paid wit'h tax funds, it wasninconceivable" that public employees
"could argue for the right to belong to such an organization. 11
here asserted that she knew
11
Mrs. Robertson
these men (i.e., Drs. 13ogle and Davidson) for
their activities against segregation" rather than "for their membership in
the Kokomo Swim Club. ' 1
In the same vein, Dr. Goldstein remarked that it made
"no difference which organizations they belong to."
At this point Dr. Davidson
interjected that he had quit the local Lions Club because it would not admit ·
Mr. Grimes, and went on to observe that "the motion on the floor Judges people
on the basis of passion rather than reason.n
Dr. Wilke noted that the standing
motion was "vague, 11 and raised the point that in order "to have any hopes of
reforming such groups, we must belong to them.
Thereupon Dr. Davidson proposed, and shortly withdrew it in the interest of
time, an amendment to the main motion:
deleted.
that the words
11
membership in 1' be
The main motion quickly came to a vote, and was rejected.
�8.
Next, the group turned to the fourth item of business:
action on what has
come to be called '' the divisional conceptd since its introduction as a topic
earlier this year.
11
Briefly, the concept focusses on a reorganization of
departmental 1i administrative activities so that the faculties of broadly
interrelated disciplines can coordinate their concerns and operations under
the umbrellas of three large divisional areas - Humanities, Sciences, and
Social Sciences - and thus obtain quasi-departmental stature until the
Kokomo Campus's faculty-program expansion brings about the establishment of
full departments.
(A fuller discussion of this topic is attached to these
minutes as Appendix #2.)
It was moved and seconded, (by Drs. Gray and Wilke respectively,) that ilthe
faculty accept the proposed reorganization along divisiona1 lines for administrative purposes."
The voice vote on the motion was a unanimous .iaye/' and
the meeting adjourned at 3:15 P.M.
�9.
NB:
The foJ.l01 d_ n:--: is e. transcription of a sui11mary version of
the charges filed b·-:~· l';r
o
Jef'f ers
j
and fort-J arded to Dean Bor;le
by Dr o Orlando TE1.:-1or on 18 Hay 1968 ~
lo
The s.d:-,1 inistration of the ICoL:ono Re rd onal Campus is
reported as havin g harassed Pro?o J~ffers and treatinG
hin ver ~, disrespectf'ullyo Prof·. Jef'fers feels this
:
beha,dor has resulted from a 11e 0 ati . .~-s attitude b~r the
atmi nistration of his actions in the area of civil
ri;;hts within the community
Prof·. Jeffers reports
that these actions have interf·e red ni th his teaching
effectiveness and relationships with studentso
o
2.
The Xo::oi:10 Re.i:_iJonal Campus is described as being
reflective of the business - prof~ssional elite of
a rac :i. st comrnuni ty o As a result, Prof. Jetf·ers
states that he has been pressured b~ the Regional
Car;1pus ac~: linistration for challenginr; the conmmni t3r
p01rnr st:cuctureo
3.
The ICo:wmo Regional Campus is described as having
been ineffective in its recruitment of black students.
4.
The Kokomo Regional Carnpus ad.ministration is reported
as having been unwilling to secure suitable housing
in a unsegregated neighborhood f'or Prof. Jef'fers upon
his arrival in the city.
5.
The Dean of' the Kokomo Regional Campus is reported·
as being a member of a swim club ·which had a
racially discriminatory membership policy until
recently.
�10.
Appendix #2
Proposal for nDivisional" Organization at I.U.K.C.
The committee proposes that, for purposes of greater administrative
efficiency and a greater faculty voice in administrative affairs
of vital and proper concern to itt (particularly faculty recruitment and retention) the faculty be organized into three Divisions:
1.
Science Division:
composed, at present, of the resident
factilty in the departments of Chemistry, Geology,
Psychology, Zoology, and Nursing.
2.
Social Science Division:
composed, at present, of the
resident faculty in the departments of Education,
Government, History, and Sociology.
3.
Humanities Division:
composed, at present, of resident
faculty in the departments of English, Languages, Speech
and Theatre, and Folklore.
These Divisions would be organized and operated in much the same
way as traditional departments elsewhere, and would be headed by
a "coordinator" chosen annually by the Division members.
There is
no intention here of usurping authority properly belonging to the
chairmen of the Bloomington-based departments to which the
reg~onal campus faculty belong.
But it is deemed important that,
until we are large enough to organize locally into regularlyconstituted regional campus departments -- 5 or more members
that some super-departmental organization fill the void.
It is anticipated that the Divisions would be active particularly
in regard to the recruitment and selection of new faculty members,
and that local approval as well as Bloomington department approval
should be obtained by the I.U.K.C. administration before offers
are made to prospects.
Perhaps
other functions -- such as a
regular '' internal review" of personnel, or the coordination of
interdisciplinary prog~ams and budgetary requests -- might be
developed by the Divisions.
�11.
It will be the duty of the Faculty Organization Chairman to see
that the Divisions are properly organized.
When there are
sufficient members in a single discipline to constitute a
regular department, (5 is the figure used in the College of Arts
and Sciences; perhaps 3 would be more realistic in some fields,)
these members would cease to belong to the Division -- but the
Chairman of the newly-emergent department would remain as a
liaison officer, and certainly every effort should be made to
continue harmonious and cooperative efforts between the existing
Divisions and the new departments.
It is hoped that this system, a transitional stage between the
already-unwieldy faculty-wide ''committee of the whole" and the
time when numerous traditional departments are functioning on
this campus, will have a relatively short life.
Respectfully submitted,
Subcommittee D
Anne Caudill
Ralph Gray, Chairman
Philip Haffley
David Hanig
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Black History at IU Kokomo
Description
An account of the resource
Images and digitized records related to the history of black students, staff, and faculty in the IU Kokomo community.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1945-2020
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Paper
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
IU Kokomo Campus Faculty Organization Minutes of the Meeting of 22 May 1968
Description
An account of the resource
Notable topic includes "the issue of the faculty's making a resolution concerning Dean Victor Bogle, in view of the charges with the University's Committee on Discriminatory Practices by Mr. Lance Jeffers"
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1968-05-22
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
pdf
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
KA00031-27; KA00031-28; KA00031-29; KA00031-30; KA00031-31; KA00031-32; KA00031-33; KA00031-34; KA00031-35; KA00031-36; KA00031-37
1960s
B.R. Davidson
Black history
Faculty
Faculty Governance
Herbert Miller
Lance Jeffers
Meeting
Minutes
Ruth Hanig
Victor Bogle
-
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0ce0aa09a86dc51a493dce73a19e70f4
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Black History at IU Kokomo
Description
An account of the resource
Images and digitized records related to the history of black students, staff, and faculty in the IU Kokomo community.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1945-2020
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Newspaper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
I.U.K.C.'s Premiere Film Prospers Under Jeffers
Description
An account of the resource
Article from March 1968 issue of Road Runner reporting on production of student-faculty film directed by Lance Jeffers
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Road Runner, Volume 2, Number 2
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1968-03
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
image\png
1960s
Black history
Film
Lance Jeffers
Student Newspaper
Students
-
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78f3ec88ec406073ba5c3ab4488f49bf
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Black History at IU Kokomo
Description
An account of the resource
Images and digitized records related to the history of black students, staff, and faculty in the IU Kokomo community.
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1945-2020
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Slide
Physical Dimensions
The actual physical size of the original image
24mmx36mm
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Lance Jeffers
Description
An account of the resource
English faculty at Indiana University Kokomo sits at typewriter
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
c. 1967-1968
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
image/jpg
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Still image
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
KS000644
1960s
Black history
English
Faculty
Lance Jeffers