Announcements
Gov. William Winter honored at Kennedy Library
Read the acceptance speech
Winter Institute sponsors new Civil Rights reader (link opens PDF file)
View a 10-minute video on the work
of the Winter Institute
Join the Welcome Table: A Year of Dialogue on Race
"As never before in our history, we are called upon to sustain and expand our commitment to building up the communities where we live. As far as we have come, we must understand how much more we have to do. For unless we continue to work to bridge the fault lines of race and class and the educational and financial disparities that still divide us, we can never expect to reach our true potential as a state and as a nation."
Former Governor William F. Winter, to graduating seniors at the University of Mississippi on May 10, 2003.
In 1997, then-President Bill Clinton inaugurated an unprecedented national conversation on race. "One America: The President's Initiative on Race" marked the first time a sitting president had called for such a dialogue without the catalyst of a major crisis. It suggested, on a federal level, the importance of dealing positively with race relations on a daily basis.
Accepting the challenge to prod grassroots efforts, the University of Mississippi hosted the only deep-South public forum for One America. Preceded by dialogue groups representing ten constituency topics ranging from the arts to education to religion, the event highlighted elected delegates from each group. Sharing the insight and hopes of the more than 160 participants, the representatives crafted a frank yet civil discussion on one of our nation's most difficult subjects.
The President's staff hailed the UM experience as the single most successful of the entire Initiative year. That recognition encouraged the University to formalize its dialogue process with the creation of an institute to promote racial reconciliation and civic renewal.
Founded in 1999, the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation builds more inclusive communities by promoting diversity and citizenship, and by supporting projects that help communities solve local challenges.
Click here for the Winter Institute Advisory Board

Born in 1923 in Grenada, Mississippi, William F. Winter served in the armed forces in World War II and the Korean War. He was awarded a BA from the University of Mississippi in 1943 and an LL.B. in 1949. He has since been awarded over five honorary degrees. His credentials within the academic community are long standing: Jamie Whitten Professor of Law and Government at the University of Mississippi School of Law (Fall 1989); Eudora Welty Professor of Southern Studies at Millsaps College (Spring 1989); Fellow, Institute of Politics, Harvard University (1985) and President, Ole Miss Alumni Association (1978). He continues to practice law with the Jackson, MS, firm of Watkins Ludlum Winter & Stennis, P.A. which celebrated its one hundredth anniversary in 2005.
William Winter is most well known, however, for his role in leading the charge for publicly-funded primary education while he was the fifty-eighth governor of Mississippi from 1980-1984. His governance echoed his belief that all people, regardless of race or class, should be entitled to the same rights and privileges as the most privileged enjoys. In a substantial way, Governor Winter's accomplishments were honored in 1997 when President Bill Clinton initiated "One America," an unprecedented national conversation on race. Winter served on the board of One America, helping to bring the only deep-South public forum to the University of Mississippi. President Bill Clinton has called Winter a "great champion of civil rights." Positive changes stem from great leadership, and William Winter is one of many guiding lights for Mississippi and America.

Susan Glisson is a native of Evans, Georgia. She earned bachelor's degrees in religion and in history from Mercer University. She holds a master's degree in Southern Studies from the University of Mississippi and a Ph.D. in American Studies from the College of William and Mary. Glisson was assistant director of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at UM from 1998 to 2002. She specializes in the history of race and religion in the United States, especially in the black struggle for freedom.
In 1998, Glisson coordinated the only deep-South public forum for President Clinton's One America, an Initiative on Race, which led to the creation of the Institute for Racial Reconciliation. Glisson was appointed director of the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation in November 2002. She has directed community projects throughout the state for the Institute since its inception.
Glisson is the co-author (with Sam Chaltain and Charles Haynes) of First Freedoms: A Documentary History of First Amendment Rights in America (2006), and she edited The Human Tradition in the Civil Rights Movement (2006). She is a contributor to the Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor and Working Class History and is the editor and contributor to The Wellspring, the newsletter of the Winter Institute. Glisson is a Salzburg Fellow and has been quoted widely in the media, including in the Jackson Clarion-Ledger, the Memphis Commercial-Appeal, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, USA Today, the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Miami Herald, The Economist, and on CNN, NBC, and CourtTV. Click here to email Dr. Susan M. Glisson
Melissa Cole is a student intern for the Winter Institute. A junior Biology/Pre-Med major from Jackson, she is a part of One Mississippi, Ole Miss Ambassadors, Columns Society, and several other organizations on campus. She enjoys reading, watching sports, and making a difference in the world. Click here to email Melissa Cole
Bryan Doyle is a recent graduate in Journalism from Corinth, Mississippi. He served as editor of The Daily Mississippian, the student newspaper for the University of Mississippi, during the 2006-2007 academic year, netting honors for exceptional journalism by the Southeastern Journalism Conference, The William Randolph Hearst Foundation, and the Society for Professional Journalists. He is music editor for the Jackson Free Press, and he coordinates the media literacy project for the Winter Institute, the Jackson Free Press, and the Civil Rights Civil Liberties (CRCL) clubs. Click here to email Bryan Doyle
April Grayson is from Rolling Fork, Mississippi. She is documentary educator for the Winter Institute, where she works on oral history projects, documentary films, web development, and community-based projects. She has a B.A. in English from Millsaps College and has studied Documentary Video Production at the University of Washington. She is currently pursuing an MFA in Film & Video from the San Francisco Art Institute. Her films have shown in festivals throughout North America, as well as in Europe and Africa. Click here to email April Grayson
Nickolaus Luckett, from Drew, Mississippi, is a student intern at the Winter Institute. He is a sophomore Public Policy and Latin major in the Honors College at the University. Nick works with the Associated Student Body Cabinet, is involved in One Mississippi, and is on the planning committee for the 2008 Presidential Debate. Click here to email Nickolaus Luckett
Jake McGraw is a junior Public Policy Leadership/Economics major
and a native of Oxford. He became involved with the
Institute through Respect Mississippi, and he continues to
promote social integration in the student body as Chief
Coordinator of One Mississippi. Jake is also involved in the
planning around the 2008 Presidential Debate and currently
serves as a member of the Associated Student Body Cabinet. Click here to email Jake McGraw
Megan McRaney is a senior Sociology major from Madison, Mississippi. She is a student intern at the Winter Institute, where she helps lead Respect Mississippi, a student organization sponsored by the Winter Institute. She also serves as UM student body vice-president. Click here to email Megan McRaney
Bennett Mize is a senior from Tupelo, Mississippi, and is pursuing a double major in Philosophy/Religion and History. He is a leader of Respect Mississippi, a student organization sponsored by the Winter Institute, and he interns at Oxford–University United Methodist Church. Click here to email Bennett Mize
David Molina, a native of Cleveland, Ohio, completed a BA in English at Amherst College and then came to Mississippi as a participant in the Mississippi Teacher Corps (MTC). Through MTC, he taught mathematics at Jim Hill High School in Jackson, where he and a colleague started the Jim Hill Civil Rights/Civil Liberties Club (CRCL) in an effort to maintain a space dedicated to the cultivation of critical inquiry in students. David’s work as Project Coordinator at the Winter Institute is an expansion of the CRCL process, with a focus on developing and maintaining spaces for student criticism and inquiry throughout the state. Click here to email David Molina
Artair Rogers is a student intern for the William Winter Institute from Guntown, MS. He is a junior Public Policy Leadership major in the Trent Lott Leadership Institute and the Honors College. On campus, Artair is involved with the Associated Student Body, Ole Miss Ambassadors, and the Columns Society. Click here to email Artair Rogers
Latoya Thompson is a senior Banking and Finance major from Ashland, Mississippi. She is active in many campus organizations, including NAACP, University of MS Gospel Choir, Omega Phi Alpha, and Big Brother Big Sister of America. She is a student intern at the Winter Institute. Click here to email Latoya Thompson
Patrick Weems is a senior from Madison, Mississippi. He is a Philosophy and Religion major, with Political Science and Spanish minors, and he is co-founder and leader of Respect Mississippi, a student organization sponsored by the Winter Institute. Click here to email Patrick Weems