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Representatives of nine Black colleges charge the Nixon administration with failure to support Black higher education.
1970 (Sep 3)
Representatives of nine Black colleges charged the Nixon administration with failure to support Black higher education. The educators met in Detroit, Michigan, under the leadership of President Lucius H. Pitts of Miles College, and called for increased government and private funds to strengthen the more than one hundred Black colleges and universities. Vivian Henderson, President of Clark College in Atlanta, Georgia, accused the Nixon administration of an "utter lack of sensitivity" to the needs of Black colleges and said that this fed "the flames that already roar in the hearts of many Black students." About two billion dollars was cited by Vernon Jordan, Head of the United Negro College Fund, as the minimum amount necessary to maintain Black colleges. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, in a letter to Pitts, reminded the educators of a July 23 pledge by the administration to increase support for their colleges.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.