In the book, The American College Town, author Blake Gumprechet claims that college towns are often seen as spaces that are more progressive and open-minded than the surrounding areas. However, a look through the Marshall University Archives reveals that this wasn\u27t always the case for Huntington\u27s campus. This presentation discusses the ways that representations and discussions of minority student groups have changed over the course of Marshall’s history. By looking at a collection of articles published in The Parthenon during the 1960’s, my paper is able to discuss some of Marshall\u27s past. This paper follows The Parthenon storyline of the Civil Interest Progressives, a student ran Civil Rights group who held a variety of function...
The traditional American “college town” is often depicted as an idyllic place where the academic com...
SERVING THE CAUSE pus unrest and protest, which in themselves were largely negative, into constructi...
Building on a 2003 pilgrimage to a dozen sites important in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950\u2...
In the book, The American College Town, author Blake Gumprechet claims that college towns are often ...
In 1963, the shock waves of the sit-in movement and the growing black unrest throughout the country ...
Matthew D. Kelley Acceptance Over Time Equals Change Author Blake Gumphrect in his book, The America...
Bluefield State College (BSC) is a member institution in the category of Historically Black Colleges...
WORKERS AND STUDENTS: AN INTRODUCTION TO MILITANT MOVEMENTS IN 20TH CENTURY HUNTINGTON, WV As a ...
The black student movement at Pittsburg State University, 1967-1978, highlights academic reform with...
In 1970, in the North End of Hartford, Connecticut, a multicultural research action group named Educ...
The scholarly research and writings regarding Black students and student activism on community colle...
In October of 1971, students from the Black Student Association, Wooster Christian Fellowship, and t...
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with The Haverford News in 1968 to form the Bi-college N...
The progress of Negro Land-Grant Colleges in Mississippi, Missouri, West Virginia and Texas has perh...
Money and privilege no longer describe college students who, books in hand, stroll across campuses. ...
The traditional American “college town” is often depicted as an idyllic place where the academic com...
SERVING THE CAUSE pus unrest and protest, which in themselves were largely negative, into constructi...
Building on a 2003 pilgrimage to a dozen sites important in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950\u2...
In the book, The American College Town, author Blake Gumprechet claims that college towns are often ...
In 1963, the shock waves of the sit-in movement and the growing black unrest throughout the country ...
Matthew D. Kelley Acceptance Over Time Equals Change Author Blake Gumphrect in his book, The America...
Bluefield State College (BSC) is a member institution in the category of Historically Black Colleges...
WORKERS AND STUDENTS: AN INTRODUCTION TO MILITANT MOVEMENTS IN 20TH CENTURY HUNTINGTON, WV As a ...
The black student movement at Pittsburg State University, 1967-1978, highlights academic reform with...
In 1970, in the North End of Hartford, Connecticut, a multicultural research action group named Educ...
The scholarly research and writings regarding Black students and student activism on community colle...
In October of 1971, students from the Black Student Association, Wooster Christian Fellowship, and t...
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with The Haverford News in 1968 to form the Bi-college N...
The progress of Negro Land-Grant Colleges in Mississippi, Missouri, West Virginia and Texas has perh...
Money and privilege no longer describe college students who, books in hand, stroll across campuses. ...
The traditional American “college town” is often depicted as an idyllic place where the academic com...
SERVING THE CAUSE pus unrest and protest, which in themselves were largely negative, into constructi...
Building on a 2003 pilgrimage to a dozen sites important in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950\u2...