Lenoir Dining Hall
Lenoir Dining Hall, the central dining facility on the North Campus, was a critical space of resistance during the 1969Continue Reading
Reclaiming the University of the People
Racial Justice Movements at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Lenoir Dining Hall, the central dining facility on the North Campus, was a critical space of resistance during the 1969Continue Reading
When the first Black students desegregated the University in the summer of 1951, the four male law students lived onContinue Reading
Excerpt Description: Karen Parker, the first Black woman to graduate from the University, explains how she viewed her enrollment atContinue Reading
Excerpt Description: Tim Minor describes how the role of the Black Cultural Center/Stone Center has changed for Black students overContinue Reading
Excerpt Description: Floyd McKissick describes the treatment from white students he experienced as one of the first Black students toContinue Reading
Excerpt Description: Walter Jackson expresses the feeling that many of the first Black students at UNC-Chapel Hill still hold aContinue Reading
Excerpt Description: Henry Foust explains the role of Upendo Lounge for Black students through the 1970s, explaining the uniqueness ofContinue Reading
Excerpt Description: Henry Foust explains the history of attacks against the Black Student Movement and Upendo Lounge from Student GovernmentContinue Reading
Document Description: The final report from the Black cultural center planning committee, issued in February 1986, determined that a newContinue Reading