Blackwell P. Robinson (1916-1991) became a member of the history department faculty at the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina in 1957. He retired from The University of North Carolina at Greensboro as an associate professor of history in 1981. Blackwell talks about administrators Katherine Taylor and Mereb Mossman; the administrations of Chancellors Edward Kidder Graham, Gordon Blackwell, Otis Singletary and Interim Chancellor W. Whatley Pierson, his good friend; and history department colleagues Richard Bardolph, Len Wright, Magnihilde Gullander, Vera Largent and Richard Current. He describes the relationship between history and political science faculty, when they were a combined department, and his feelings that coeducation and integration lowered the academic reputation of the institution (He asked not to have black students in his classes.) He describes how faculty and prostitutes lived up and down McIver Street, where he lived; running for Congress and the administration of Consolidated University of North Carolina President William Friday.