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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The executive producer of the Public
Broadcasting Service television series “A Force More
Powerful” will lead a video presentation and discussion on the
history of non-violent action as a political strategy during a
Nov. 25 session at The University of Alabama’s ten Hoor Hall,
room 30.
The 7 p.m. session, entitled “A Force More Powerful:
Non-Violent Conflict in Historical Perspective” will be led by
Jack DuVall, the PBS producer and director of the International
Center for Non-Violent Conflict, and Dr. Scott O’Bryan,
assistant professor of history in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences. DuVall will use video presentations
from the PBS series to bring to life historical case studies
depicting means of non-violent conflict resolution.
The event is sponsored by the department
of history, the Blount
Undergraduate Initiative, and UA’s Asian
studies program.
DuVall is a television executive and veteran writer who is
also co-author of a companion book that shares a name with the
PBS series. For 16 years DuVall has helped develop, market,
executive-produce, and promote non-fiction television
programming, with past clients including the Turner Broadcasting
System, The Learning Channel, KCET/Los Angeles, the Colonial
Williamsburg Foundation, The Christian Science Monitor, and more
than 30 other commercial television and non-profit
organizations.
His writing includes speeches for presidential candidates in
four national campaigns and poems and articles that have
appeared in literary journals and major newspapers. For more
information on the series, see its PBS web site http://www.pbs.org/weta/forcemorepowerful/.
The College of Arts and Sciences is UA’s largest division
and the largest public liberal arts college in the state, with
approximately 5,000 undergraduate and 1,000 graduate students.
The College has received national recognition for academic
excellence, and A&S students have been selected for many of
the nation’s top academic honors, including 15 Rhodes
Scholarships, 13 Goldwater Scholarships, seven Truman
Scholarships and 11 memberships on USA Today’s Academic
All-American teams.
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