President of the Black Student Movement on Housing Segregation
Document Description: The 1984-1985 President of the Black Student Movement, Sherrod Banks, writes in The Daily Tar Heel to explainContinue Reading
Reclaiming the University of the People
Racial Justice Movements at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Document Description: The 1984-1985 President of the Black Student Movement, Sherrod Banks, writes in The Daily Tar Heel to explainContinue Reading
Document Description: Through the 1970s and 1980s, housing administrators ignored student claims made in depositions to the U.S. Department ofContinue Reading
Document Description: Though Hinton James Residence Hall had been open less than a decade, by the early 1970s, “James Dorm”Continue Reading
Beginning in the mid-1960s, Granville Towers, a privately-owned dormitory, offered alternative housing for many students who would otherwise be assignedContinue Reading
Hinton James Residence Hall is one of four dormitories that comprise the South Campus residence community, an informal counter-space createdContinue Reading
Morrison Residence Hall is one of four dormitories that comprise the South Campus residence community, an informal community space createdContinue Reading
Ehringhaus Residence Hall (known to many residents as E-house) is another dormitory in the South Campus residence community. South CampusContinue Reading
Craige Residence Hall is one of four dormitories, along with Morrison, Ehringhaus and Hinton James Residence Halls, that comprise theContinue Reading
When the first Black students desegregated the University in the summer of 1951, the four male law students lived onContinue Reading
By the early 1970s, a housing pattern developed on the campus in which a majority of Black students lived onContinue Reading