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Nobel Laureate, Betty Williams,
2001 Margo Johnson Lecturer |
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Date Posted:
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December 5, 2001
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A Nobel Laureate based on her work against violence
in Northern Ireland, Betty Williams will be on campus December 19
to address students as the 2001 Margo Johnson Lecturer. The title
of her lecture is "Creating Safe Havens for the World's Children."
Betty, along with Mairead Maguire, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1976.
Betty and Mairead founded the Community of Peace
People (formerly known as the Northern Ireland Peace Movement),
an organization which is still involved in the betterment of life
in Northern Ireland. Betty is founder and president of World Centers
of Compassion for Children, an organization whose mission is twofold
mission. The first is to perceive race, religion, politics and economics
in a different light so that these forces do not kill our children
or perprtuate hatred and violence generation after generation. The
second is to create a strong political voice for children in areas
of stress due to war, hunger or social economic, or political upheavel
and to respond to their expressed need, materially and emotionally.
Betty serves on the Council of Honor for the United Nations University
for Peace in Costa Rica and is a Patron for the International Peace
Foundation in Vienna. Betty is also Chair of The Institute for Asian
Democracy in Washington, D.C. and Honorary Member of the Club of
Budapest.
Betty has been honored with the People's
Peace Prize of Norway, the Schweitzer Medallion for Courage, the
Martin Luther King, Jr. Award, the Eleanor Roosevelt Award and the
Frank Foundation Child Care International Oliver Award. In 1992,
Governor Ann Richards of Texas appointed Betty to the Texas Commission
for Children and Youth. In 1995, she was awarded the Rotary Club
International "Paul Harris Fellowship," and the Together for Peace
Foundation Peace Building Award.

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