Home / Full timeline / Approximately 2,000 Black and White students protest the “racist” enrollment practices of University of Florida at Gainesville. The president of the university rejects their “racial quota” demands, calling it “racism in reverse.”
Approximately 2,000 Black and White students protest the “racist” enrollment practices of University of Florida at Gainesville. The president of the university rejects their “racial quota” demands, calling it “racism in reverse.”
1971 (Apr 15)
Approximately 2,000 Black and White students gathered at the home of the president of the University of Florida at Gainesville protesting what they called the school's "racist" policies and demanding the resignation of President Stephen C. O'Connell. Earlier the same day, sixty-seven Blacks, members of the school's Black student union, were arrested during a sit-in outside O'Connell's office. The Blacks and their white allies called for increased Black enrollment at the university by recruiting five hundred new students. There were at the time about three hundred Blacks out of a 22,000 total enrollment. In a television address to the students, President O'Connell said, "We have made remarkable racial progress," but he rejected the Black recruitment demands calling them "a racial quota" and "racism in reverse." Nearly one hundred Black students subsequently withdrew from the university in further protest of the school's policies.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.