Home > Items Browse Items (2170 total) Sort by: Title Subject Date Added Gloria Warren "I didn’t feel that we were poor -- a lot of black people didn’t find that out until the War on Poverty – but during the time that I was growing up I didn’t feel that we were poor because we always had plenty to eat, we had clothes to wear, we could go to school, we could participate in things in… Gloria Warren Stanley Vickers "You didn't buck the system. White folks had their place, Black folks had their place, and fighting with them was just not the thing you do. You don't attack the king's kids." - Stanley Vickers Stanley Vickers Ted Stone "If this [the freedom movement] is gonna work, somebody has to be the strong one, and it's gonna have to be you. ‘Cause we've struggled too hard to get you into this position and then, after listening to speeches from Dr. King about how to survive it without violence: I just sucked I up and kept… Ted Stone Gertrude Nunn "Know that we do exist here, and the older people that left property for us, it’s a legacy...And I’m happy that I’m living enough to tell the story." - Gertrude Nunn Gertrude Nunn Judy Nunn Snipes "My fear is that people won't continue to...pass on the heritage. In black families I always felt that was the strength - what you learn from your ancestry you continue to pass on to your children." - Judy Nunn Snipes Judy Nunn Snipes Mary Scroggs "With school desegregation] they tried to make it very clear that they were all students and they were all to be treated as individuals with worth. And some teachers weren't very enthusiastic about this and resigned as a matter of fact, I remember. Most of the teachers, I think, made a real… Mary Scroggs Charlene B. Regester "I have a niece who went to Chapel Hill High and just based on some of the comments she's made to me, I have the impression that things haven't changed all that much..." - Charlene B. Regester Charlene B. Regester Zora Rashkis Zora Rashkis Rosa McMasters Prayloe Rosa McMasters Prayloe Clyde Perry Clyde Perry Karen L. Parker "Most Black students wanted to go to historically Black colleges or universities because there was a sense of belonging. Because one thing about being one of the handful of Blacks on a predominantly white campus socially you can be very isolated." - Karen L. Parker Karen L. Parker Raney Norwood "If you called me poor, even back then, I couldn't find anywhere for that word to fit into our vocabulary. My brother and I, when we sit down and talk now, we feel rich." - Raney Norwood Raney Norwood Delaine Norwood "Teachers used to talk about, "Well one day there's going to be integration. And those teachers aren't going to spend the time with you like I'm spending with you. We want to make sure you're prepared." - Delaine Norwood Delaine Norwood Stella Nickerson "You really didn't have to worry about whether or not somebody was going to be around or—it wasn't something you thought about. You always had your neighbors next door, or across the street. That's who looked out for you." - Stella Nickerson Stella Nickerson Mary Cole "My parents always taught us, 'You know who you are.' No matter what you say to me or what you call me, I know who I am." - Mary Cole Mary Cole Effie Merritt Effie Merritt Lucile McDougle Lucile McDougle Joanne McClelland "We were a very bold group of African-American students, it was just something about the African-American kids in my class; we were not going to allow certain things to happen. And so, when we got together. . .and talked about how unfair it was and how it was not right to have some of our friends,… Joanne McClelland Polly McCauley Polly McCauley John Mason "At the time I was born, Blacks could’nt be born at the hospital. So, you know, I’m 51 years old if you want to count back and see how many years ago--strange enough my brother, my youngest brother was the first Black born at UNC hospital!" - John Mason John Mason Mary Manning Mary Manning Kenneth Mann Kenneth Mann Marie Mann Marie Mann Estelle Mabry Estelle Mabry Previous Page ... 70 71 72 73 74 ... Next Page