Center for Civil and Human Rights
On October 23, 2014, more than 50 ARCS Foundation Atlanta Chapter members and guests toured the recently opened Center for Civil and Human Rights in downtown Atlanta. The Center is unique in that rather than being content preserving and telling the important stories of the Civil Rights Movement it also strives to connect that movement to the Global Human Rights Movements of today.
Touring the Center is both emotional and educational. Visitors can better appreciate the commitment and discipline of protesters that staged lunch counter sit-ins by experiencing the lunch counter display, closing their eyes and listening to the soundtrack of threats and beatings seeming to happen just behind them. They can also listen to the pure sounds of children playing while looking at stained glass portraits of the four girls that were killed by the bombing of Birmingham's 16th Street Baptist Church in 1963. A map of the world where countries are color-coded to indicate their levels of freedom focuses the attention of observers on work that remains to be done.
Following the time allotted to explore the galleries, Doug Shipman, visionary CEO of the Center, joined the group for a boxed lunch and discussion of the Center's creation, development, and vision.
Center for Civil and Human Rights
On October 23, 2014, more than 50 ARCS Foundation Atlanta Chapter members and guests toured the recently opened Center for Civil and Human Rights in downtown Atlanta. The Center is unique in that, rather than being content preserving and telling the important stories of the Civil Rights Movement, it also strives to connect that movement to the Global Human Rights Movements of today.
Touring the Center is both emotional and educational. Visitors can better appreciate the commitment and discipline of protesters that staged lunch counter sit-ins by experiencing the lunch counter display, closing their eyes and listening to the soundtrack of threats and beatings seeming to happen just behind them. They can also listen to the pure sounds of children playing while looking at stained glass portraits of the four girls that were killed by the bombing of Birmingham's 16th Street Baptist Church in 1963. A map of the world where countries are color-coded to indicate their levels of freedom focuses the attention of observers on work that remains to be done.
Following the time allotted to explore the galleries, Doug Shipman, visionary CEO of the Center, joined the group for a boxed lunch and discussion of the Center's creation, development, and vision.
HUMAN Rights?
Society's Role
Martyrs
March on Washington
Freedom Riders
The Lunch Counter
Atlanta History
Jim Crow Laws
Segregationists
Colored Wall
Justice
Thanks from Alum Eliot Quon, Postdoctoral Researcher at National Renewable Energy Laboratory
ARCS Foundation has been a highlight of my academic career thus far, thank you for the support!
Thanks from Scholar Laura Redmond
"I want to thank you again for supporting my career development, and I look forward to encouraging the development of future scientists as an ARCS Scholar Alum."
Thanks from Alum Collette Miller, Postdoctoral Fellow at US Environmental Protection Agency
"Thank you all for reaching out and the support over the years. It's been a rocky few years following the passing of my doctoral research mentor a few weeks prior to my dissertation defense. Trying to rebound from his loss, finishing my dissertation, and figuring out where to go from there was challenging to say the least ... Thank you again for your support. Honestly I did not know how much I would have ended up relying on the generous gift that the Atlanta Chapter of ARCS Foundation provided when it was first received. However, it was vital in helping me launch a new chapter in my career when I found my plans collapse when my mentor passed. Again, THANK YOU!"