Home / Full timeline / Minority students at the University of Massachusetts protested and asked school officials to designate Columbus Day as a time to study discrimination against non-white societies after an earlier attack on a Black student.
Minority students at the University of Massachusetts protested and asked school officials to designate Columbus Day as a time to study discrimination against non-white societies after an earlier attack on a Black student.
1992 (Oct 6)
Alarmed by an earlier attack on a Black student, minority students at the University of Massachusetts protested and asked school officials to designate Columbus Day as a time to study discrimination against non-white societies. Students occupied offices of a building during a visit by South African clergyman and Nobel Prize-winner Desmond Tutu. The protest culminated two weeks of racial turmoil that began on September 25 with an attack on a Black dormitory assistant by a white man who allegedly punched him and shouted racial insults. The assistant later found feces dumped outside his room and racial epithets written on his door.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.