Civil rights

NIA-Purpose Publication Circulates Dickinson For the First Time

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Date: 
October 6, 1971
10/06/1971

The Congress of African Students (CAS) circulated it's first issue of their group's publication, "NIA-PURPOSE."

3rd Annual Black Student Union Conference Held At Dickinson

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Date: 
September 27, 1980
09/27/1980

Sponsored by the Congress of African Students (CAS), the 3rd Annual Black Student Union Conference was held at Dickinson on September 27, 1980.The Conference's keynote speaker was Dr. Marion Oliver, who spoke on the topic of "1980's: Challenge to Succeed" in the Social Hall. After Dr. Oliver's address, attendees of the Conference broke off into small discussion groups, ate a buffet dinner, and then had a "Disco" as a closing social event.

Dickinson Student Involved in SCOPE; Committed To Anti-Racist Work

SCOPE
Date: 
October 15, 1965
10/15/1965

Su Kenderdine, a Dickinson senior, spent 11 weeks in Barbour County, Alabama volunteering with SCOPE (Summer Community Organization for Political Education). Kenderdine joined other Northern college students in the South with the goal of helping "Negroes better their lives by arousing an interest in education and government." As part of their work, Kenderdine and other SCOPE volunteers set up schools in counties across the South and tried to "better job opportunities for Southern Negroes."

Free Speech & Concepts of Harm

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Date: 
February 2, 2009
02/02/2009

In response to the posters put up by an anonymous student in protest of the Roe v. Wade anniversary posters of the Women's Center, Susannah Bartlow of the Women's Center created this lunch forum sponsered by the Women's Center, Office of Campus Life, Office of the Dean of Students, and Institutional and Diversity Initiatives.

"Personal Adventures in Race Relations : We Need Atomic Understanding!"

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Date: 
1946
01/01/1946

"Personal Adventures in Race Relations" by Esther Popel Shaw (class of1919), Dickinson's first African American female graduate, was published in 1946. It addresses the sources of prejudice and racism, and she urges in her introduction that cooperation is necessary to overcome these detrimental assumptions regarding African Americans. "At a time when all our energies are needed to meet and solve together the crucial problems of the postwar period, we find a large element of the population torn by resentment, suspicion and hatred.