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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
21, No. 16, March 21, 2002
Shelley honored with Chancellors
Medallion
By Kesha Green,
News Bureau Staff Writer
(217) 244-0470; k-green3@illinois.edu
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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honors Clarence
Shelley, a former dean of students and associate vice chancellor,
is being awarded the campus's highest honor, the Chancellor's
Medallion. Shelley is being recognized for 33 years of exemplary
service to the UI and the Champaign-Urbana community. |
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Clarence Shelley,
a former dean of students and associate vice chancellor, will receive
the Chancellors Medallion March 22 for his 33 years of exemplary
service to the UI and the Champaign-Urbana community.
The medallion, the third the UI has awarded, recognizes outstanding
work on behalf of the campus. The award is given to exceptional people
whose contributions to the campus go beyond expectation and precedent.
Shelleys legacy of work includes not only the mentoring and counseling
of thousands of students, but also his calm leadership when the UI instituted
a ground-breaking equal opportunity program during his first year.
"The Chancellors Medallion honors the courage and leadership
Clarence Shelley displayed during a critical period in Urbana-Champaign
campus history," Chancellor Nancy Cantor said. "It also recognizes
the decades of service he gave to Illinois students, encouraging them
to believe in themselves and to retain their focus on earning a degree
at a world-class university. He deserves the highest honor we can give
him for his past service, but Im also thrilled that he will continue
to serve the university, its students and alumni."
The presentation will take place March 22 during an invitation-only
dinner on campus.
Shelley, 70, came to the UI in July 1968 as the director of the Special
Educational Opportunities Program (SEOP). About that time, Jack Peltason,
who then was the chancellor, decided to increase the number of African-American
students at the UI by 500 for the 1968-69 academic year. The university
was given four months to recruit the students.
The SEOP, also known as Project 500, succeeded in tripling the African-American
student population, but the university lacked a comprehensive support
system to accommodate the new students.
Because Shelley had no staff resources at his disposal, his duties involved
those of an entire office. And because the African-American Cultural
Program did not exist at the time, he quickly became the students
only support system on campus.
Most of the African-American students who arrived on campus found that
the UI had yet to deliver on its promises of housing and grants. They
also experienced culture shock as they adjusted to a place different
from their urban and primarily African-American communities. Shelley
not only helped alleviate the students concerns, but he also worked
to garner support and assistance from Champaign-Urbana residents.
Shelley served as a mediator between the administration and students,
beginning with a student protest at the Illini Union the Sunday before
classes started. Shelley struggled to help people understand each others
concerns and perspectives during other potentially volatile situations
that year.
"The university owes a great debt to Clarence Shelley for having
the wisdom and the fortitude to face the situation and persist in bringing
change," said Patricia Askew, the current vice chancellor for student
affairs.
True to his role as a problem-solver, Shelley realized that addressing
the needs of the African-American students would require an inclusive
community effort. He pushed for every staff or faculty member to feel
accountable for the success and personal development of the students.
Likewise, he encouraged the students to value their education.
"A frequent question Dean Shelley would ask students who visited
him in his office was, Do you know where the library is?
"Askew said. "This simple question conveyed the point that
Shelley wanted the students to remember above all else
that earning a college degree requires tremendous personal effort."
Shelley held multiple roles on campus, including serving as dean of
students for 11 years, assistant vice chancellor of student affairs
for seven years and associate dean of students for nine years. He was
the first African American to hold all those positions on campus. After
its first tumultuous year, the SEOP has become one of the largest comprehensive
support programs in the nation. It has since expanded to serve students
from various ethnic backgrounds.
Even in retirement, Shelley has not stopped working as an advocate for
minority students. This year he became a special assistant to the chancellor.
He works directly with her on projects that focus on campus diversity
initiatives and related issues. Shelley will develop an ongoing campuswide
program that features discussion groups about diversity issues. He also
will work as an ambassador to minority alumni.
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