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Object Description
Interview no. | L-0322 |
Restrictions | No restrictions. Open to research. |
Project | L.2. University of North Carolina: Anne Queen and the Campus Y |
Project description | Interviews, 1990-2010, about the Campus Y and Anne Queen, its director, 1964-1975. The Campus Y, a student organization founded in 1859, was active in integrating the University of North Carolina's undergraduate program, the local civil rights movement, Vietnam War protests, overturning the Speaker Ban Law, the Foodworkers' Strikes of 1969 and 1970, anti-apartheid work, and other major social movements. Interviewees include former Y student leaders, alumni, staff, and University administrators, who focus on the significance of the Y, with reflections on social movements, the development of social consciousness, staff support, student leadership and community, and work in post-college life. |
Date | 16 October 2010 |
Interviewee | Chaney, Ed. |
Interviewee occupation | Attorneys |
Interviewee DOB | Unknown |
Interviewee ethnicity | Whites |
Interviewer |
Alsous, Zania. Davidson, Sandra. Vaughan, Hudson. Tarleton, Jonathan. |
Abstract | Overview of involvement in Campus from 1990-1994; Race Relations and Human Rights weeks; conversations over university impact in community; context for student mobilization for free-standing Black Cultural Center; controversy and opposition to Black Cultural Center; strategy of student movement lead by the Campus Y, Black Student Movement, and Student Government; sit-in in Chancellor Hardin’s office for free-standing Black Cultural Center; involvement of Campus Y staff in decision-making; splintering of Black Student Movement around issue and sit-in break up; personal roots of interest in social justice from growing up in Mississippi; community take on Black Cultural Center struggle; personal impact of the movement; work with SCALE after graduation; advice for student activists; learning at the Campus Y; work post-SCALE; leadership qualities; current social issues - inequality; reflections on Chancellor Hardin; Campus Y condemned; significance of Black Cultural Center struggle and Campus Y on rest of his life. |
Citation | Interview with [interviewee name] by [interviewer name], [interview date] [interview number], in the Southern Oral History Program Collection #4007, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Description
Interview no. | L0322_Audio |