Home / Full timeline / Clarence Thomas, the Black chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, expresses concerns for Black colleges over the effort to desegregate the nation’s colleges.
Clarence Thomas, the Black chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, expresses concerns for Black colleges over the effort to desegregate the nation’s colleges.
1983 (Aug 23)
Clarence Thomas, the Black chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, told a group of faculty and staff at Clark College in Atlanta, Georgia, that Black colleges had become “the victim” in the effort to desegregate the nation's colleges. He added that the "threat” to Black colleges stemmed “from a misguided philosophy of desegregation that focuses on numbers rather than quality education for Blacks. ... If the goal of desegregation is to have every Black student sit next to a White student then there is no room in education for Black colleges,” he said. “If the goal is for quality education,” Thomas asserted, “then there is plenty of room.” Thomas also said that as the former assistant secretary for civil rights in the Department of Education, he became “terrified by the prospective effects of desegregation on Black colleges,” but added "they were not the ones doing the discriminating.”
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.