|
PSU All-Sports Museum Celebrates Black History Month Starting Friday
Feb. 5, 2010 UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.-- The Penn State All-Sports Museum at Beaver Stadium will present three features in the month of February highlighting Penn State's legacy of African-American athletes as well as others across the country. The first event is tonight at 6 p.m. with a viewing of The Express, the story of Ernie Davis. All events are free to the public. Based on the incredible true story, The Express follows college football hero Ernie Davis, the first African-American to win the Heisman Trophy. Davis was recruited by Syracuse and proceeded to break down one barrier after another on his way to becoming an icon for the burgeoning civil rights movement dividing America in the early 1960s. The film will run Friday, Feb. 5 at 6 p.m. and an encore presentation will be shown Saturday, Feb. 6 at Noon, prior to the Nittany Lion basketball game at the Bryce Jordan Center. The film runs 130 minutes.
Wrapping up the month's events at the Museum, FIGHT: The Adam Taliaferro story will be shown on February 24 at 5:15 p.m. On September 23, 2000, while playing in only the fifth game of his collegiate career, Adam Taliaferro was paralyzed while making a tackle. After spinal-fusion surgery, Taliaferro was only given a 3% chance of ever walking again. Less than a year after his injury, he led the football team with a skip and a jog onto Beaver Stadium's field for the first game of the 2001 season.
Moyer and Taliaffero will be on hand to discuss the film and the experiences the two of them went through overcoming outstanding obstacles and fighting for success. The Penn State All-Sports Museum is located at Beaver Stadium on Curtin Road next to the bookstore, across the street from the Bryce Jordan Center.
|
