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November 12, 1991
UM Professor's Civil War
conference thrice denied
By Chad Zoey
For the third time in as many months, the
University's Academic Council denied funding for
Dr. Charles Lowry's controversial conference
entitled "Reconstructing the Civil War: If the
South Won..."
At a meeting Monday night in the Law Center, Dr.
Lowry, professor of Civil War studies at Ole Miss,
presented the third draft of his proposal for a
four-day, university-sponsored conference that
would attract scholars of American history and war
to study the potential effects of the United States
and the world had the Confederate army won the
Civil War. The Academic Council - comprised of a
specially selected board, faculty members and a
student panel - spent little time rejecting Lowry's
proposal on the basis that it lacked intellectual
merit.
"As I've said before, that claim is ridiculous,"
Lowry stated to a room of 45 delegates and nearly
50 supporters, skeptics and students. "There is a
wealth of merit to be found in exploring the
flipside of the coin. Why do we study scientific
theories and hypotheses? Why are we interested in
the Big Bang Theory or wormholes in outer space?
Are we only to investigate that which we know to be
true, that which is easy for us to understand?"
"What you're proposing is an imaginative
history, Dr. Lowry," council chairman Brett
Matthews responded. "I think I speak for everyone
when I say that our University and the rest of the
academic world would benefit far more by focusing
on actual history, the sort which our ancestors
fought and died to make a reality and which
continues to affect our views today." "I think the
academic world would prefer you not use your lack
of foresight and your rampant patriotic cliches to
decry progressive education," Lowry replied
sharply. After a call to order, Lowry was
reprimanded for his behavior and the proceedings
continued in other matters.
"I'm as true a Southern as anybody, but some of
the things Lowry wants to do are just plain crazy,"
said Trey Bradford, a junior political science
major from Biloxi who was present at the meeting.
"Some of his ideas are quite intriguing," said
Phillip Jenkins, professor of history. "I know I
would be front and center for the re-enactment of
the Battle of Shiloh, where Beauregard runs Grant
out of town and the South blocks the Union advance
on the Mississippi River." Aside from the battle
re-enactment, Lowry's conference proposes such
lectures and panel discussions as "Hall of Southern
Presidents: Imagining the Model for Strong Western
Leadership," "Hog Jowls and Corn Whiskey: Hosting
the 20th Century World Party" and "Civil Rites: The
Evolution of Slavery."
Many noted scholars have already pledged their
participation in the conference, which was
scheduled for mid-July of next year. "We have no
doubt that Lowry could concoct an interesting
conference. If you've read his books you'll see he
has many fantastic theories and ideas about the
Civil War," said Matthews in a post-meeting
interview. "But it comes down to the fact that the
University of Mississippi is not interested in
propagating the idea that the South should have won
the war or that the South's interests in the war
are worthy of glamorization. We'll leave that to
the numerous Confederate organizations and rednecks
who won't let go of the South's loss."
"Obviously Matthews and the rest of the
so-called Academic Council have very little
understanding of the Civil War and the Southern
stance in that war," Lowry said in response. "But
their reaction to my proposal is typical. People
shun and denounce what they don't understand, even
in a setting of higher learning such as this."
Added Lowry, "Part of my hope for this
conference was to cure some of this
misunderstanding about the Civil War, and to
explore how it affects us so many generations
later."
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