STACK POWER FORUM
WEDNESDAY November 1
Tonic: BLACK POWER PAST AND PRESENT
2:00-4:00 Panel: Black Power: Means to Political Power?
■Panel members: Edwina Holly, Moderator,
Dr. Nathan Hare, Ronald Finney, Fred Patten
8:00-9:00 Lecture: The History of Black ^ower
Lecturer, Dr. Nathan Hare
9:00 Discussion Groups
THURSDAY November 2
Tooic: TFF GHETTO
2:00-4:00 Panel: Urban Renewal: Answer to Ghetto Revolt?
Panel members: Hilda Amoreaux, Howard Fuller,
James Turner, Lucien Scott Stone
8:00-9:00 Lecture: The Ghetto, A Powerless Community
Lecturer, Howard Fuller
9:00 Discussion Groups
FRIDAY November 3
Topic: BLACK POWER AND THE SELF-IMAGE OF THE NEGRO
2:00-4:00 Panel: Black Power: Racism in Reverse?
Paael members: Walter Brame, moderator
Dr. James Brewer, Charles Hopkins,
Grover Bridges, Dr. Viroil Stroud
8:00-9:00 Lecture: The Fffect of Black Dower on the
Self-image of the Negro.
Lecturer, Dr. James Brewer
9:00 Discussion Groups
The speakers ancl panel members are distinguished persons
in their fields and are well gualified participants of the forum.
The speaker for Wednesday night, Dr. Nathan Hare, is the author
of the well-known book THE BLACK ANGLO-SAXONS. The panel members
are Ronald Finney, one of the initiators of the Black Power
Resolution (N^A Congress) and President of the Black Students
Union at California State College, Los Angelos, Fred Patten,
Vice-president of the student body, California State College,
Los Angelos, and Fdwina Holly, a political science major at UNC-G.
The sneaker on Thursday night, Howard duller, is a lecturer
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Panel members
are James Turner, a student at the University of Chicago, Lucien
Scott Stone, Chairman of the Black Commission, NSA National Staff,
and Hilda Amoreaux, a state staff member of Youth Educational
Service.
The speaker on Friday nirrht, Dr. James Brewer, is a professor
of Afro-American History at the North Carolina Collecre in Durham.
Panel members are Charles Hopkins, President of Afro-American
Society, Duke University, Grover Bridaes, Vice-president of
student bodv at North Carolina College, Durham, Dr. Virgil Stroud,
Chairman of Social Science Department at A & T State University,
Greensboro, and Salter Brame, a student at North Carolina College.
* All meetings are scheduled to meet in Elliott Hall.
Black power;University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Topics
UNCG Black Power Forum, 1967
Place
Greensboro (N.C.)
Description
This is an agenda for the Black Power Forum organized by the University of North Carolina at Grensboro Student Government Association, and held November 1-3, 1967. It includes the schedule of events and discussions as well as panel members and speakers. One notable speaker is Howard Fuller, who had recently been hired amid some controversy as a lecturer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Other speakers included Dr. Nathan Hare and Dr. James Brewer. The forum generated statewide controversy. The back side of the document contains handwritten notes, presumably by Chancellor James Sharbrough Ferguson.
Type
text
Original format
programs
Original dimensions
8.5" x 14"
Original publisher
[Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified]
Language
en
Contributing institution
Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives, UNCG University Libraries
Source collection
UA2.8 Chancellor James Sharbrough Ferguson Records
NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material.
Object ID
UA002.008.0043
Digital publisher
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries, PO Box 26170, Greensboro NC 27402-6170, 336.334.5305 -- http://library.uncg.edu/
STACK POWER FORUM
WEDNESDAY November 1
Tonic: BLACK POWER PAST AND PRESENT
2:00-4:00 Panel: Black Power: Means to Political Power?
■Panel members: Edwina Holly, Moderator,
Dr. Nathan Hare, Ronald Finney, Fred Patten
8:00-9:00 Lecture: The History of Black ^ower
Lecturer, Dr. Nathan Hare
9:00 Discussion Groups
THURSDAY November 2
Tooic: TFF GHETTO
2:00-4:00 Panel: Urban Renewal: Answer to Ghetto Revolt?
Panel members: Hilda Amoreaux, Howard Fuller,
James Turner, Lucien Scott Stone
8:00-9:00 Lecture: The Ghetto, A Powerless Community
Lecturer, Howard Fuller
9:00 Discussion Groups
FRIDAY November 3
Topic: BLACK POWER AND THE SELF-IMAGE OF THE NEGRO
2:00-4:00 Panel: Black Power: Racism in Reverse?
Paael members: Walter Brame, moderator
Dr. James Brewer, Charles Hopkins,
Grover Bridges, Dr. Viroil Stroud
8:00-9:00 Lecture: The Fffect of Black Dower on the
Self-image of the Negro.
Lecturer, Dr. James Brewer
9:00 Discussion Groups
The speakers ancl panel members are distinguished persons
in their fields and are well gualified participants of the forum.
The speaker for Wednesday night, Dr. Nathan Hare, is the author
of the well-known book THE BLACK ANGLO-SAXONS. The panel members
are Ronald Finney, one of the initiators of the Black Power
Resolution (N^A Congress) and President of the Black Students
Union at California State College, Los Angelos, Fred Patten,
Vice-president of the student body, California State College,
Los Angelos, and Fdwina Holly, a political science major at UNC-G.
The sneaker on Thursday night, Howard duller, is a lecturer
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Panel members
are James Turner, a student at the University of Chicago, Lucien
Scott Stone, Chairman of the Black Commission, NSA National Staff,
and Hilda Amoreaux, a state staff member of Youth Educational
Service.
The speaker on Friday nirrht, Dr. James Brewer, is a professor
of Afro-American History at the North Carolina Collecre in Durham.
Panel members are Charles Hopkins, President of Afro-American
Society, Duke University, Grover Bridaes, Vice-president of
student bodv at North Carolina College, Durham, Dr. Virgil Stroud,
Chairman of Social Science Department at A & T State University,
Greensboro, and Salter Brame, a student at North Carolina College.
* All meetings are scheduled to meet in Elliott Hall.