Business & Professional Civil Rights Lessons B Taubman issues challenge grant; creates endowed chair at WSU. loomfield Hills industrialist and philanthropist A. Alfred Taubman has issued a $200,000 challenge grant to complete the funding required for the construction of Wayne State University Law School's Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights in Detroit. Taubman will match each new gift received by July 2011 for construction of the Keith Center, up to a total of $200,000. This challenge grant brings Taubman's total contributions to the Keith Center to $3.2 million — the largest in the law school's history. In 2006, Taubman committed $1.5 million for construction of the Keith Center and bequeathed an additional $1.5 million to provide continued support. As a result of the revised agreement involving the challenge grant, the $1.5 million planned gift offi- cially has been earmarked to establish the A. Alfred Taubman Endowed Chair in Civil Rights in the Keith Center. According to Keith Center Director Peter Hammer, just $400,000 of the $5.7 mil- lion budget is still needed to complete the building, which honors the life and legacy of Judge Damon J. Keith, LL.M. '56, by car- rying out his vision for civil rights. "The creation of the A. Alfred Taubman Endowed Chair reflects a permanent com- mitment to ensure that the Keith Center will always benefit from strong and effective lead- ership," Hammer said. Taubman, a Detroit native, is a member of the A. Alfred Taubman WSU Foundation Board. He is a trust- ee of the College of Creative Studies in Detroit, serves on the executive committee of Detroit Renaissance, chairs the Building Committee for the Detroit Institute of Arts and is president of the Detroit Arts Commission. He, along with industrialist/ philanthropist Max Fisher, was instru- mental in building the Riverfront Towers apartments, widely seen as a symbol of Detroit's resurgence and a magnet for attracting new residents to the city. Judge Keith and Al Taubman have been friends for more than three decades and have collaborated on several previous projects, including the Bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution. "I have been lucky enough to call Judge Keith my friend for more than 25 years',' Taubman said. "He is one of the fin- est individuals I have ever known; and the Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights will be a fitting tribute to his extraordinary legal career. I am Judge Damon Keith especially pleased that generations of Wayne Law students will be strengthened by his legacy of wisdom, justice and humanity Keith said, "At the Supreme Court Building in the nation's capital are the words 'equal justice under law: Those words symbolize what lawyers, judges and all Americans should strive for always; and they are principles that have guided my life. I am deeply appreciative to Mr. Taubman for the way he continues to step forward to give impetus to this important project at Wayne Law." The Keith Center will be housed in a 10,000-square-foot building will feature an exhibit area, meeting space, confer- ence space and a 60-person lecture hall. An exhibit area featuring Judge Keith's life and work and focusing on civil rights will serve as a reception area for the law school's clinics. Wayne Law broke ground on the Keith Center on May 1. The groundbreaking was attended by more than 600 guests, including Judge Damon J. Keith, U.S. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., U.S. Rep. John Conyers, D-Detroit, Gov. Jennifer Granholm, Detroit Mayor Dave Bing, Edsel B. Ford II, A. Alfred Taubman, WSU Board of Governors members, former WSU President Jay Noren and Wayne Law Dean Robert M. Ackerman. Judge Keith chose to have the ceremony on May 17 as the date coincided with the 56th anniversary of the historic Brown v. Board of Education ruling that declared separate schools for blacks and whites unconstitutional. The project is expected to be finished in the fall of 2011. ❑ Visit keithcenter.wayne.edu to learn more about Judge Keith's legacy. Contact the Wayne Law Development and Alumni Relations Office at (313) 577-3113 or am2674@ wayne.edu for information on how to give to the Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights. DESIGNS IN DECORATOR WOOD & LAMINATES, LTD. Complete kitchen and bathroom remodeling as design and installations including granite, wood, Lois Haron Allied Member ASID 248.851.6989 38 October 7 • 2010 Turn your old GOLD into CASH! We will buy ALL of your precious metals, diamonds & watches. Come see us Today. (At 14 Mile Rd. in the Broadway Plaza) (248) 855-1730 Farmington Hills, Michigan WWW-greis.com