Sit-In at South Building for the BCC Flyer
Document Description: On April 1st, 1992 BCC students supporters began a two-week long sit-in in South Building. Chancellor Hardin refusedContinue Reading
Reclaiming the University of the People
Racial Justice Movements at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Document Description: On April 1st, 1992 BCC students supporters began a two-week long sit-in in South Building. Chancellor Hardin refusedContinue Reading
Document Description: Black Ink reported on the continued protests from the Black cultural center movement, connecting them to the 1969Continue Reading
Document Description: The BCC Advisory Board and the Provost’s BCC Working Group employed Yongue Architects of Durham to make aContinue Reading
Document Description: The BCC Advisory Board and the Provost’s BCC Working Group employed Yongue Architects of Durham to make aContinue Reading
Document Description: The campus community’s allegiances divided between the case for a multicultural center versus a Black cultural center byContinue Reading
Document Description: This letter from Margo Crawford to student supporters of the BCC urges students to keep fighting for aContinue Reading
Document Description: The national coverage of the Black Awareness Council in the fall of 1992 drew the attention of SpikeContinue Reading
Document Description: After members of the Black Awareness Council and football team lead a series of public protests advocating forContinue Reading
Document Description: On September 3, 1992, an estimated 400 supporters for a free-standing Black Cultural Center marched to Chancellor PaulContinue Reading
Document Description: This correspondence from members of the Black Awareness Council to Chancellor Paul Hardin demands Hardin’s public support forContinue Reading