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Short on time: clock is ticking for national African American museum. (National News).


A commission chartered by Congress last year to study the creation of a National Museum of African American History and Culture This article or section contains information about a planned museum.
It is likely to contain information of a speculative nature and the content may change as the construction and/or completion of the museum approaches.
 in Washington, D.C., is nearing its deadline.

The 23-member panel must present a report to President George W. Bush and Congress in April detailing where they believe the museum should be built and how they plan to raise the estimated $200 million-$500 million needed to do so. The commission is likely to call on black America's corporate titans, entertainers, and professional athletes for help.

"We will be seeking corporate funding, looking at Fortune 500 companies that make a lot of their profits from the African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  community," says Andrew McLemore Jr., an executive at a Detroit construction firm and chairman of the museum's fund-raising and budget committee.

Experts say that raising the money necessary for making a national black history museum a reality will be difficult. "That's very, very hard," says William H. Billingsley, president of the National Afro-American Museum & Culture Center at Wilberforce University Wilberforce University, at Wilberforce, Ohio, near Xenia; African Methodist Episcopal; coeducational; chartered and opened 1856. Wilberforce provided one of the first opportunities for African Americans to pursue advanced academic training. . "Large organizations that used to donate to things like that are downsizing (1) Converting mainframe and mini-based systems to client/server LANs.

(2) To reduce equipment and associated costs by switching to a less-expensive system.

(jargon) downsizing
. Companies are having problems and that means they're not giving."

However; the committee is undeterred. At stake is an effort to create the nation's first official collection of artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 of the black American experience--an effort that begun in 1929. Since that year, when Congress authorized the first national commission to study building a national memorial, there have been four other federally chartered boards that have studied the idea.

But before even seeking funding, the committee has a few tasks to perform. One of them is to create a report that addresses areas such as: (1) the feasibility of building the museum; (2) the availability and cost of collections to be housed there; (3) the impact of the facility on African Americans; (4) potential locations for the museum on the National Mall National Mall: see National Parks and Monuments (table). ; (5) its organizational structure This article has no lead section.

To comply with Wikipedia's lead section guidelines, one should be written.
; (6) how it could be affiliated with the Smithsonian Institution; and (7) the cost of converting the Smithsonian's Arts & Industries Building in Washington, D.C., into the museum.

After the commission presents its report .to the president and Congress in April, it will be decided if another law or executive order for the actual construction of a museum will be signed. A museum commission that met in 1990 recommended the Arts & Industries Building, which now hosts a rotating collection of exhibits on art, history, science, and culture.

Claudine Brown, director of the New York-based Nathan Cummings Foundation The Nathan Cummings Foundation was endowed by Nathan Cummings (1896-1985), founder of Consolidated Foods, now called Sara Lee Corporation. Cummings was also a prominent art collector and supporter of Jewish causes.  and vice chair of the presidential commission studying the creation of a national museum, acknowledges the challenges her commission faces. But she also hopes that the government--which authorized the work--will give them a jump-start financially as well.

"It's my hope that at the end of the year legislation will be passed to authorize the building of an African American history African American history is the portion of American history that specifically discusses the African American or Black American ethnic group in the United States. Most African Americans are the descendants of African slaves held in the United States from 1619 to 1865.  museum, and I also hope it includes appropriations for funding" she says.
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Author:Reed, K. Terrell
Publication:Black Enterprise
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2003
Words:484
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