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"Pressing the Holdouts": The Integration Sit-ins of 1963/1964
Left to right: Sally Greene (moderator), Quinton Baker, Karen Parker, Braxton Foushee, and Erika Stallings
"Pressing the Holdouts": The Integration Sit-ins of 1963/1964
Moderator, Sally Greene, shows some pictures of the Chapel Hill Civil Rights movement
"Pressing the Holdouts": The Integration Sit-ins of 1963/1964
Left to right: Sally Greene (moderator), Quinton Baker, Karen Parker, Braxton Foushee, and Erika Stallings
"Pressing the Holdouts": The Integration Sit-ins of 1963/1964
Left to right: Sally Greene (moderator), Quinton Baker, Karen Parker, Braxton Foushee, and Erika Stallings
"Pressing the Holdouts": The Integration Sit-ins of 1963/1964
Left to right: Sally Greene (moderator), Quinton Baker, Karen Parker, Braxton Foushee, and Erika Stallings
"Pressing the Holdouts": The Integration Sit-ins of 1963/1964
Left to right: Sally Greene (moderator), Quinton Baker, Karen Parker, Braxton Foushee, and Erika Stallings
"Pressing the Holdouts": The Integration Sit-ins of 1963/1964
Panelists speak to a full house in the Pleasants Family Room at Wilson Library
"Pressing the Holdouts": The Integration Sit-ins of 1963/1964
Karen Parker listens as current student Erika Stallings offers her perspective
"Proclamation by the Governor."
"Professor Hedrick's Defence." 4 October 1856. The North Carolina Standard.
"Reddy" Grubbs '41
"Report of a New Chemical Hazard," December 15, 1966; New Scientist, London, United Kingdom
"Robeson County is Going Down"
Poem by Melanie Sampson, published in The Carolina Indian Voice on March 10, 1988.
"S.S.O.C. Monday Night"
"Shaves and Shines, Not Rats and Rouge"
"Shuffling through the Halls of Academe circa 1921," A Handbook for Women, Fall 1971
"Shuffling through the Halls of Academe circa 1921," A Handbook for Women, Fall 1971. Performed by Gwendolyn Schwinke.
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
UNC President Emeritus William C. Friday
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
President Friday and Ferrel Guillory
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
The evening's moderator, Ferrel Guillory, gives some background to the Speaker Ban controversy
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
Tim West recognizes honored guests present at the event
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
A full house in the Pleasants Family Room at Wilson Library
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
Ferrel Guillory, moderator for the panel, introduces the Speaker Ban
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
Catherine Smith asks a question of the panelists. The discussions that followed the presentation elicited a number of great comments.
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
Left to right: Ferrel Guillory (moderator), President Bill Friday, James Medford, Lou Lipsitz, and Stephen Lassiter
"Speaking Out of Bounds": Communism, Race, and the Speaker Ban Controversy of the Mid-Sixties
Fellow panelists listen as current student Stephen Lassiter gives his perspective on current sentiments on campus
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