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UConn building 'black-only' living space to promote scholarship.
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Feb 2, 2016 18:48:31   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for black males, the University of Connecticut is trying something it calls bold -- and critics call. segregation. The school's main campus in Storrs has launched a program slated for fall in which 40 black male undergraduates live together in on-campus housing. Proponents believe the students can draw on their common experiences and help each other make it to commencement. But others cringe at the idea of black-only housing, saying it turns decades of hard-fought racial progress on its head.

"Forget about this nonsense and just treat students without regard to skin color," President and General Counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity Roger Clegg told Insidehighered.com. "If there are students of color who are at risk or who could use some access to special programs, that's fine, but schools shouldn't be using race as a proxy for who's at risk and who's going to have a hard time as a student. There are lots of African-American students who come from advantaged backgrounds. And lots of non-African-American students who come from disadvantaged backgrounds."

ScHOLA²RS House - which stands for "Scholastic House of Leaders who are African American Researchers and Scholars" - was designed so UConn could more effectively marshal resources for black males, similar to other learning communities at the school that live as a group. When ScHOLA²RS House launches, it will be located in a new facility, Next Generation Connecticut Hall, along with seven other learning communities. Niger Innis, the national spokesperson for the Congress of Racial Equality, said UConn may be unintentionally creating an atmosphere where black students are "the other." "If they wanted to go to an all-black institution, there are plenty of historically black colleges that still exist," he told FoxNews.com. "But if they want to go to an institution that is racially diverse and integrated, then racial diversity and integration is part of it. To have a university-sanctioned segregation or separation is, to me, a bit troubling."

Some minority students have expressed irritation at the narrow focus of ScHOLA²RS House. While black females are "encouraged" to apply to other learning communities, according to the UConn website, that solution doesn't appear to satisfy everyone. "My immediate thought was 'What?'" Haddiyyah Ali, an Africana studies and political science major, told Daily Campus. "I know there had to be a lot of research that went into it…but just for me coming from a student perspective, my initial thought was, 'What about black women and girls - what about us?'" Vice Provost Sally Reis rejected critiques of the program. "It's no more segregated than putting individuals with an interest in entrepreneurship together because they have common interests," Reis told FoxNews.com. But while students with interests in engineering and public health and female students with a focus in math, science and engineering majors also have their own learning communities, a race-based cluster is new.
Erik Hines, a UConn professor set to serve as faculty advisor to the ScHOLA²RS House students, said that while the only current race-based group was for black males, the administration could add learning communities based on other races, genders or cultures. "We have all types of learning communities," he told FoxNews.com. "If they bring forth a proposal to our Office of Programs and Learning Communities they will be considered by our executive director." Hines said about 13 students had already applied for ScHOLA²RS House. Male students "who identify as African American/Black or mixed-race will be prioritized in selection, however any student interested in engaging in topics related to the experience of black males in higher education is invited to apply," according to the UConn website. "In predominantly white institutions, some of the experiences that African-American males face on campus is a little different than some of the other populations," Hynes said. "In some of your courses you can be the only African American male in your class. It could be stressful and that's a huge burden to shoulder." Reis pins most of the pushback so far on "misinformation." "I've actually heard people saying, 'You're building a dorm for African-American males only?'" she said. "We're not building a separate dorm. It's not even a separate floor. It's a portion of a new residence hall."

Puppetry major Isaac Bloodworth told Daily Campus that opposition could be rooted in racism. "The white portion of the University of Connecticut is probably not ready for it," he said. "You have people who are going to go against it because they are just racist and they see this as a form of segregation or that we're getting better things than they are."

http://apple.news/A8z2jpyLpQMeSyZQCihGgOg

Reply
Feb 2, 2016 18:52:58   #
Little Ball of Hate
 
Worried for our children wrote:
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for black males, the University of Connecticut is trying something it calls bold -- and critics call. segregation. The school's main campus in Storrs has launched a program slated for fall in which 40 black male undergraduates live together in on-campus housing. Proponents believe the students can draw on their common experiences and help each other make it to commencement. But others cringe at the idea of black-only housing, saying it turns decades of hard-fought racial progress on its head.

"Forget about this nonsense and just treat students without regard to skin color," President and General Counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity Roger Clegg told Insidehighered.com. "If there are students of color who are at risk or who could use some access to special programs, that's fine, but schools shouldn't be using race as a proxy for who's at risk and who's going to have a hard time as a student. There are lots of African-American students who come from advantaged backgrounds. And lots of non-African-American students who come from disadvantaged backgrounds."

ScHOLA²RS House - which stands for "Scholastic House of Leaders who are African American Researchers and Scholars" - was designed so UConn could more effectively marshal resources for black males, similar to other learning communities at the school that live as a group. When ScHOLA²RS House launches, it will be located in a new facility, Next Generation Connecticut Hall, along with seven other learning communities. Niger Innis, the national spokesperson for the Congress of Racial Equality, said UConn may be unintentionally creating an atmosphere where black students are "the other." "If they wanted to go to an all-black institution, there are plenty of historically black colleges that still exist," he told FoxNews.com. "But if they want to go to an institution that is racially diverse and integrated, then racial diversity and integration is part of it. To have a university-sanctioned segregation or separation is, to me, a bit troubling."

Some minority students have expressed irritation at the narrow focus of ScHOLA²RS House. While black females are "encouraged" to apply to other learning communities, according to the UConn website, that solution doesn't appear to satisfy everyone. "My immediate thought was 'What?'" Haddiyyah Ali, an Africana studies and political science major, told Daily Campus. "I know there had to be a lot of research that went into it…but just for me coming from a student perspective, my initial thought was, 'What about black women and girls - what about us?'" Vice Provost Sally Reis rejected critiques of the program. "It's no more segregated than putting individuals with an interest in entrepreneurship together because they have common interests," Reis told FoxNews.com. But while students with interests in engineering and public health and female students with a focus in math, science and engineering majors also have their own learning communities, a race-based cluster is new.
Erik Hines, a UConn professor set to serve as faculty advisor to the ScHOLA²RS House students, said that while the only current race-based group was for black males, the administration could add learning communities based on other races, genders or cultures. "We have all types of learning communities," he told FoxNews.com. "If they bring forth a proposal to our Office of Programs and Learning Communities they will be considered by our executive director." Hines said about 13 students had already applied for ScHOLA²RS House. Male students "who identify as African American/Black or mixed-race will be prioritized in selection, however any student interested in engaging in topics related to the experience of black males in higher education is invited to apply," according to the UConn website. "In predominantly white institutions, some of the experiences that African-American males face on campus is a little different than some of the other populations," Hynes said. "In some of your courses you can be the only African American male in your class. It could be stressful and that's a huge burden to shoulder." Reis pins most of the pushback so far on "misinformation." "I've actually heard people saying, 'You're building a dorm for African-American males only?'" she said. "We're not building a separate dorm. It's not even a separate floor. It's a portion of a new residence hall."

Puppetry major Isaac Bloodworth told Daily Campus that opposition could be rooted in racism. "The white portion of the University of Connecticut is probably not ready for it," he said. "You have people who are going to go against it because they are just racist and they see this as a form of segregation or that we're getting better things than they are."

http://apple.news/A8z2jpyLpQMeSyZQCihGgOg
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for bla... (show quote)


Oh brother. So what these people are saying is that blacks are unable to integrate and must remain segregated in order to achieve what others are able to do. I say it's time for them to put on their big boy pants and get to work. :hunf:

Reply
Feb 2, 2016 19:07:26   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
[quote=Worried for our children]Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for black males, the University of Connecticut is trying something it calls bold -- and critics call. segregation. The school's main campus in Storrs has launched a program slated for fall in which 40 black male undergraduates live together in on-campus housing. Proponents believe the students can draw on their common experiences and help each other make it to commencement. But others cringe at the idea of black-only housing, saying it turns decades of hard-fought racial progress on its head.

"Forget about this nonsense and just treat students without regard to skin color," President and General Counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity Roger Clegg told Insidehighered.com. "If there are students of color who are at risk or who could use some access to special programs, that's fine, but schools shouldn't be using race as a proxy for who's at risk and who's going to have a hard time as a student. There are lots of African-American students who come from advantaged backgrounds. And lots of non-African-American students who come from disadvantaged backgrounds."

ScHOLA²RS House - which stands for "Scholastic House of Leaders who are African American Researchers and Scholars" - was designed so UConn could more effectively marshal resources for black males, similar to other learning communities at the school that live as a group. When ScHOLA²RS House launches, it will be located in a new facility, Next Generation Connecticut Hall, along with seven other learning communities. Niger Innis, the national spokesperson for the Congress of Racial Equality, said UConn may be unintentionally creating an atmosphere where black students are "the other." "If they wanted to go to an all-black institution, there are plenty of historically black colleges that still exist," he told FoxNews.com. "But if they want to go to an institution that is racially diverse and integrated, then racial diversity and integration is part of it. To have a university-sanctioned segregation or separation is, to me, a bit troubling."

Some minority students have expressed irritation at the narrow focus of ScHOLA²RS House. While black females are "encouraged" to apply to other learning communities, according to the UConn website, that solution doesn't appear to satisfy everyone. "My immediate thought was 'What?'" Haddiyyah Ali, an Africana studies and political science major, told Daily Campus. "I know there had to be a lot of research that went into it…but just for me coming from a student perspective, my initial thought was, 'What about black women and girls - what about us?'" Vice Provost Sally Reis rejected critiques of the program. "It's no more segregated than putting individuals with an interest in entrepreneurship together because they have common interests," Reis told FoxNews.com. But while students with interests in engineering and public health and female students with a focus in math, science and engineering majors also have their own learning communities, a race-based cluster is new.
Erik Hines, a UConn professor set to serve as faculty advisor to the ScHOLA²RS House students, said that while the only current race-based group was for black males, the administration could add learning communities based on other races, genders or cultures. "We have all types of learning communities," he told FoxNews.com. "If they bring forth a proposal to our Office of Programs and Learning Communities they will be considered by our executive director." Hines said about 13 students had already applied for ScHOLA²RS House. Male students "who identify as African American/Black or mixed-race will be prioritized in selection, however any student interested in engaging in topics related to the experience of black males in higher education is invited to apply," according to the UConn website. "In predominantly white institutions, some of the experiences that African-American males face on campus is a little different than some of the other populations," Hynes said. "In some of your courses you can be the only African American male in your class. It could be stressful and that's a huge burden to shoulder." Reis pins most of the pushback so far on "misinformation." "I've actually heard people saying, 'You're building a dorm for African-American males only?'" she said. "We're not building a separate dorm. It's not even a separate floor. It's a portion of a new residence hall."

Quote:
Puppetry major Isaac Bloodworth told Daily Campus that opposition could be rooted in racism. "The white portion of the University of Connecticut is probably not ready for it," he said. "You have people who are going to go against it because they are just racist and they see this as a form of segregation or that we're getting better things than they are."

http://apple.news/A8z2jpyLpQMeSyZQCihGgOg


"Puppetry major".....R E A L L Y? :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:

Reply
 
 
Feb 2, 2016 19:12:21   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
Little Ball of Hate wrote:
Oh brother. So what these people are saying is that blacks are unable to integrate and must remain segregated in order to achieve what others are able to do. I say it's time for them to put on their big boy pants and get to work. :hunf:


👍👍👍👍


Next thing you know, they'll just hand out honorary degrees to black students because, hey they tried.

Reply
Feb 2, 2016 19:14:06   #
Little Ball of Hate
 
Worried for our children wrote:
👍👍👍👍


Next thing you know, they'll just hand out honorary degrees to black students because, hey they tried.


Or a participation award? LOL!

Reply
Feb 2, 2016 19:52:42   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
AuntiE wrote:
"Puppetry major".....R E A L L Y? :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:





Lol, I was so dizzy from all the other nonsense, I missed that particular nonsense; nice catch AuntiE !!! 👍👍👍

Reply
Feb 2, 2016 19:54:07   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
Little Ball of Hate wrote:
Or a participation award? LOL!




Hahaha!! I like that; participation degrees. Lol 👍👍👍

Reply
 
 
Feb 2, 2016 19:59:51   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
Worried for our children wrote:
Lol, I was so dizzy from all the other nonsense, I missed that particular nonsense; nice catch AuntiE !!! 👍👍👍


If this person's parents are paying, they need help of the psychiatric variety!🤔🙄😳🙃

Reply
Feb 2, 2016 20:09:22   #
Worried for our children Loc: Massachusetts
 
AuntiE wrote:
If this person's parents are paying, they need help of the psychiatric variety!🤔🙄😳🙃




Looks like another job for Gloucon! 😳😳😜

Reply
Feb 2, 2016 20:15:36   #
Loki Loc: Georgia
 
Worried for our children wrote:
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for black males, the University of Connecticut is trying something it calls bold -- and critics call. segregation. The school's main campus in Storrs has launched a program slated for fall in which 40 black male undergraduates live together in on-campus housing. Proponents believe the students can draw on their common experiences and help each other make it to commencement. But others cringe at the idea of black-only housing, saying it turns decades of hard-fought racial progress on its head.

"Forget about this nonsense and just treat students without regard to skin color," President and General Counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity Roger Clegg told Insidehighered.com. "If there are students of color who are at risk or who could use some access to special programs, that's fine, but schools shouldn't be using race as a proxy for who's at risk and who's going to have a hard time as a student. There are lots of African-American students who come from advantaged backgrounds. And lots of non-African-American students who come from disadvantaged backgrounds."

ScHOLA²RS House - which stands for "Scholastic House of Leaders who are African American Researchers and Scholars" - was designed so UConn could more effectively marshal resources for black males, similar to other learning communities at the school that live as a group. When ScHOLA²RS House launches, it will be located in a new facility, Next Generation Connecticut Hall, along with seven other learning communities. Niger Innis, the national spokesperson for the Congress of Racial Equality, said UConn may be unintentionally creating an atmosphere where black students are "the other." "If they wanted to go to an all-black institution, there are plenty of historically black colleges that still exist," he told FoxNews.com. "But if they want to go to an institution that is racially diverse and integrated, then racial diversity and integration is part of it. To have a university-sanctioned segregation or separation is, to me, a bit troubling."

Some minority students have expressed irritation at the narrow focus of ScHOLA²RS House. While black females are "encouraged" to apply to other learning communities, according to the UConn website, that solution doesn't appear to satisfy everyone. "My immediate thought was 'What?'" Haddiyyah Ali, an Africana studies and political science major, told Daily Campus. "I know there had to be a lot of research that went into it…but just for me coming from a student perspective, my initial thought was, 'What about black women and girls - what about us?'" Vice Provost Sally Reis rejected critiques of the program. "It's no more segregated than putting individuals with an interest in entrepreneurship together because they have common interests," Reis told FoxNews.com. But while students with interests in engineering and public health and female students with a focus in math, science and engineering majors also have their own learning communities, a race-based cluster is new.
Erik Hines, a UConn professor set to serve as faculty advisor to the ScHOLA²RS House students, said that while the only current race-based group was for black males, the administration could add learning communities based on other races, genders or cultures. "We have all types of learning communities," he told FoxNews.com. "If they bring forth a proposal to our Office of Programs and Learning Communities they will be considered by our executive director." Hines said about 13 students had already applied for ScHOLA²RS House. Male students "who identify as African American/Black or mixed-race will be prioritized in selection, however any student interested in engaging in topics related to the experience of black males in higher education is invited to apply," according to the UConn website. "In predominantly white institutions, some of the experiences that African-American males face on campus is a little different than some of the other populations," Hynes said. "In some of your courses you can be the only African American male in your class. It could be stressful and that's a huge burden to shoulder." Reis pins most of the pushback so far on "misinformation." "I've actually heard people saying, 'You're building a dorm for African-American males only?'" she said. "We're not building a separate dorm. It's not even a separate floor. It's a portion of a new residence hall."

Puppetry major Isaac Bloodworth told Daily Campus that opposition could be rooted in racism. "The white portion of the University of Connecticut is probably not ready for it," he said. "You have people who are going to go against it because they are just racist and they see this as a form of segregation or that we're getting better things than they are."

http://apple.news/A8z2jpyLpQMeSyZQCihGgOg
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for bla... (show quote)


PUPPETRY MAJOR? You can go to a major university and get a degree in fucking puppetry?? Is this a consolation major for the ones who can't color inside the lines?

Reply
Feb 2, 2016 20:21:26   #
markinny
 
Worried for our children wrote:
👍👍👍👍


Next thing you know, they'll just hand out honorary degrees to black students because, hey they tried.


lol :thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:

Reply
 
 
Feb 3, 2016 05:43:46   #
crazylibertarian Loc: Florida by way of New York & Rhode Island
 
Worried for our children wrote:
👍👍👍👍


Next thing you know, they'll just hand out honorary degrees to black students because, hey they tried.
.

Well, look at Barack Obama receiving the Nobel Peace Prize. It was like awarding a Nobel Prize in Medicine for saying, "Gesundheit" when someone sneezed.

Reply
Feb 3, 2016 06:32:49   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
Worried for our children wrote:
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for black males, the University of Connecticut is trying something it calls bold -- and critics call. segregation. The school's main campus in Storrs has launched a program slated for fall in which 40 black male undergraduates live together in on-campus housing. Proponents believe the students can draw on their common experiences and help each other make it to commencement. But others cringe at the idea of black-only housing, saying it turns decades of hard-fought racial progress on its head.

"Forget about this nonsense and just treat students without regard to skin color," President and General Counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity Roger Clegg told Insidehighered.com. "If there are students of color who are at risk or who could use some access to special programs, that's fine, but schools shouldn't be using race as a proxy for who's at risk and who's going to have a hard time as a student. There are lots of African-American students who come from advantaged backgrounds. And lots of non-African-American students who come from disadvantaged backgrounds."

ScHOLA²RS House - which stands for "Scholastic House of Leaders who are African American Researchers and Scholars" - was designed so UConn could more effectively marshal resources for black males, similar to other learning communities at the school that live as a group. When ScHOLA²RS House launches, it will be located in a new facility, Next Generation Connecticut Hall, along with seven other learning communities. Niger Innis, the national spokesperson for the Congress of Racial Equality, said UConn may be unintentionally creating an atmosphere where black students are "the other." "If they wanted to go to an all-black institution, there are plenty of historically black colleges that still exist," he told FoxNews.com. "But if they want to go to an institution that is racially diverse and integrated, then racial diversity and integration is part of it. To have a university-sanctioned segregation or separation is, to me, a bit troubling."

Some minority students have expressed irritation at the narrow focus of ScHOLA²RS House. While black females are "encouraged" to apply to other learning communities, according to the UConn website, that solution doesn't appear to satisfy everyone. "My immediate thought was 'What?'" Haddiyyah Ali, an Africana studies and political science major, told Daily Campus. "I know there had to be a lot of research that went into it…but just for me coming from a student perspective, my initial thought was, 'What about black women and girls - what about us?'" Vice Provost Sally Reis rejected critiques of the program. "It's no more segregated than putting individuals with an interest in entrepreneurship together because they have common interests," Reis told FoxNews.com. But while students with interests in engineering and public health and female students with a focus in math, science and engineering majors also have their own learning communities, a race-based cluster is new.
Erik Hines, a UConn professor set to serve as faculty advisor to the ScHOLA²RS House students, said that while the only current race-based group was for black males, the administration could add learning communities based on other races, genders or cultures. "We have all types of learning communities," he told FoxNews.com. "If they bring forth a proposal to our Office of Programs and Learning Communities they will be considered by our executive director." Hines said about 13 students had already applied for ScHOLA²RS House. Male students "who identify as African American/Black or mixed-race will be prioritized in selection, however any student interested in engaging in topics related to the experience of black males in higher education is invited to apply," according to the UConn website. "In predominantly white institutions, some of the experiences that African-American males face on campus is a little different than some of the other populations," Hynes said. "In some of your courses you can be the only African American male in your class. It could be stressful and that's a huge burden to shoulder." Reis pins most of the pushback so far on "misinformation." "I've actually heard people saying, 'You're building a dorm for African-American males only?'" she said. "We're not building a separate dorm. It's not even a separate floor. It's a portion of a new residence hall."

Puppetry major Isaac Bloodworth told Daily Campus that opposition could be rooted in racism. "The white portion of the University of Connecticut is probably not ready for it," he said. "You have people who are going to go against it because they are just racist and they see this as a form of segregation or that we're getting better things than they are."

http://apple.news/A8z2jpyLpQMeSyZQCihGgOg
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for bla... (show quote)


Damn bigots``` :lol:

All the time spent erasing segregation and this university thinks its the answer.... :shock: :roll:

Taken from your article~~

"Forget about this nonsense and just treat students without regard to skin color," President and General Counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity"..........BINGO~~~

Instead of making excuses for low grades, how about holding these students to same standards..Do the damn work and studying needed to pass~~~

Reply
Feb 3, 2016 09:13:23   #
rebob14
 
Worried for our children wrote:
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for black males, the University of Connecticut is trying something it calls bold -- and critics call. segregation. The school's main campus in Storrs has launched a program slated for fall in which 40 black male undergraduates live together in on-campus housing. Proponents believe the students can draw on their common experiences and help each other make it to commencement. But others cringe at the idea of black-only housing, saying it turns decades of hard-fought racial progress on its head.

"Forget about this nonsense and just treat students without regard to skin color," President and General Counsel of the Center for Equal Opportunity Roger Clegg told Insidehighered.com. "If there are students of color who are at risk or who could use some access to special programs, that's fine, but schools shouldn't be using race as a proxy for who's at risk and who's going to have a hard time as a student. There are lots of African-American students who come from advantaged backgrounds. And lots of non-African-American students who come from disadvantaged backgrounds."

ScHOLA²RS House - which stands for "Scholastic House of Leaders who are African American Researchers and Scholars" - was designed so UConn could more effectively marshal resources for black males, similar to other learning communities at the school that live as a group. When ScHOLA²RS House launches, it will be located in a new facility, Next Generation Connecticut Hall, along with seven other learning communities. Niger Innis, the national spokesperson for the Congress of Racial Equality, said UConn may be unintentionally creating an atmosphere where black students are "the other." "If they wanted to go to an all-black institution, there are plenty of historically black colleges that still exist," he told FoxNews.com. "But if they want to go to an institution that is racially diverse and integrated, then racial diversity and integration is part of it. To have a university-sanctioned segregation or separation is, to me, a bit troubling."

Some minority students have expressed irritation at the narrow focus of ScHOLA²RS House. While black females are "encouraged" to apply to other learning communities, according to the UConn website, that solution doesn't appear to satisfy everyone. "My immediate thought was 'What?'" Haddiyyah Ali, an Africana studies and political science major, told Daily Campus. "I know there had to be a lot of research that went into it…but just for me coming from a student perspective, my initial thought was, 'What about black women and girls - what about us?'" Vice Provost Sally Reis rejected critiques of the program. "It's no more segregated than putting individuals with an interest in entrepreneurship together because they have common interests," Reis told FoxNews.com. But while students with interests in engineering and public health and female students with a focus in math, science and engineering majors also have their own learning communities, a race-based cluster is new.
Erik Hines, a UConn professor set to serve as faculty advisor to the ScHOLA²RS House students, said that while the only current race-based group was for black males, the administration could add learning communities based on other races, genders or cultures. "We have all types of learning communities," he told FoxNews.com. "If they bring forth a proposal to our Office of Programs and Learning Communities they will be considered by our executive director." Hines said about 13 students had already applied for ScHOLA²RS House. Male students "who identify as African American/Black or mixed-race will be prioritized in selection, however any student interested in engaging in topics related to the experience of black males in higher education is invited to apply," according to the UConn website. "In predominantly white institutions, some of the experiences that African-American males face on campus is a little different than some of the other populations," Hynes said. "In some of your courses you can be the only African American male in your class. It could be stressful and that's a huge burden to shoulder." Reis pins most of the pushback so far on "misinformation." "I've actually heard people saying, 'You're building a dorm for African-American males only?'" she said. "We're not building a separate dorm. It's not even a separate floor. It's a portion of a new residence hall."

Puppetry major Isaac Bloodworth told Daily Campus that opposition could be rooted in racism. "The white portion of the University of Connecticut is probably not ready for it," he said. "You have people who are going to go against it because they are just racist and they see this as a form of segregation or that we're getting better things than they are."



Um........we've spent, at the "Civil Rights Activists'" insistance, untold billions on affirmative action following the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This was intended to end segration. Instead, it has enslaved an entire class of people, instigated class warfare, AND re-instituted and codified segration!!! Well done, socialists!
http://apple.news/A8z2jpyLpQMeSyZQCihGgOg
Faced with alarmingly low graduation rates for bla... (show quote)

Reply
Feb 3, 2016 09:19:14   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
Um........we've spent, at the "Civil Rights Activists'" insistance, untold billions on affirmative action following the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This was intended to end segration. Instead, it has enslaved an entire class of people, instigated class warfare, AND re-instituted and codified segration!!! Well done, socialists!
http://apple.news/A8z2jpyLpQMeSyZQCihGgOg

rebob14


:thumbup: :thumbup:

Reply
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