Special
Events
Conferences
"A Time
to Share and Problem Solve" was a regional conference held
in Des Moines, hosted by the Iowa Civil Rights Commission. Civil
rights agencies in Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, and Wisconsin were
invited to participate in the conference. Mediation, case processing,
public relations and community image, and employment testing,
were some of the workshop topics.
Iowa local commissions were the participants in "Human &
Civil Rights: An Iowa Perspective," held in conjunction with
the Des Moines Human Rights Commission's Annual Symposium. Participants
were offered workshops on the role of commissioners, substantial
equivalency, Study Circles and town meetings, and an update of
Americans with Disabilities Act issues.
"From War Stories to Best Practices: Improving How We Do
Mediations" was the title of a conference held in West Des
Moines for the Commission's volunteer mediators and civil rights
agencies' staff. Small group problem solving teams worked on case
scenarios, as well as attending sessions on skillbuilding techniques
and taxability of settlements.
"The Changing Face of Iowa in the 2 1 st Century: A Conference
on the Implications of Diversity and Immigration" was held
in Waterloo. The co-sponsors of the conference included Ecumenical
Ministries of Iowa, Iowa Bureau of Refugee Services, Iowa Civil
Rights Commission, Iowa Council for International Understanding,
Iowa Division of Latino Affairs, Iowa State University Extension,
Hawkeye Community College, The Des Moines Register, and
The Stanley Foundation. The program covered a broad range of topics
on making Iowa a welcoming place for newcomers and the related
workplace, education, social and community issues. The conference
was also broadcast to five other sites around the state through
the Iowa Communication Network (ICN).
"Tackling the Tough Issues: A Fair Housing Conference"
was held in conjunction with the Neal and Bea Smith Law Center,
Drake University Law School, Des Moines. Small groups addressed
scenarios on specific legal issues, and participant also attended
workshops on legal resources available on the Internet, legal
update on housing cases, and update on current fair housing enforcement
in Iowa.
Friends Civil Rights Awards Ceremony and Banquet
The Friends of Iowa Civil Rights, Inc. is a non- profit organization
founded to further civil rights efforts in Iowa. Their annual
civil rights awards ceremony and banquet was held in October 1997.
The public is invited to make nominations for the civil rights
awards. The following individuals, businesses, and organizations
were awards winners:
Indiuidual: Greg Naylor; Rosa Maria de Findlay
Business: Cenex Land OLakes; Avery Brothers Sign Company
Community: Creative Visions; Iowa Protection and Advocacy
Services, Inc.
Education: First Friday Breakfast Club, Inc.; Marshalltown
Diversity Committee
Civil
Rights Victory Celebration
July 7, 1998,
marked the fiftieth anniversary of a Des Moines and Iowa civil
rights event. It was a day of laughter and tears, of joy and sorrow,
in remembrance of our Iowa civil rights pioneers whose actions
foreshadowed the modern civil rights movement.
The celebration started with the dedication of a plaque installed
on the building at the corner of Seventh and Locust Streets in
downtown Des Moines, which in 1948 housed the Katz Drug Store.
On July 7, 1948, Edna Griffin, her infant daughter Phyllis, John
Bibbs and Leonard Hudson entered the store and ordered ice cream
at the lunch counter. The manager refused to serve them, saying,
"It is the policy of our store that we don't serve colored."
This event triggered subsequent sit-ins and picketing directed
at Katz and other local lunch counters refusing to serve patrons
because of their race. The Polk County Attorney's Office prosecuted
the Katz manager under Iowa's only civil rights law, a criminal
statute prohibiting discrimination in public accommodations. The
manager was found guilty by a jury and fined $50. The Iowa Supreme
Court upheld the conviction in 1949. One week before the Supreme
Court ruling, local attorneys and the local NAACP Legal Redress
Committee negotiated an agreement with successfully ended Katz'
discriminatory practices.
Later in the day of celebration, a Reception/ Reunion/ Reenactment
was held at the State Historical Building. Edna Griffin, Phyllis
Griffin, and John Bibbs were present and honored; Leonard Hudson
is deceased and his family was present. The Langston Hughes Players
performed a dramatic presentation of the Katz Drug Store incident.
The celebration ended with an address, "Where do we go from
here?" by Dr. Lawrence Howard, Professor, University of Pittsburgh.
The celebration planning committee has continued to meet, to make
plans for providing information, curriculum materials, and a video
of these historic civil rights events to schools throughout Iowa.