Home / Full timeline / Twenty students occupy and barricade the administration building at predominantly Black Morris Brown College in Atlanta, Georgia, demanding better policies and services.
Twenty students occupy and barricade the administration building at predominantly Black Morris Brown College in Atlanta, Georgia, demanding better policies and services.
1989 (Apr 3)
Twenty students occupied and barricaded the administration building at predominantly Black Morris Brown College in Atlanta, Georgia. The demonstrators' demands included "a more lenient delinquent fees policy, a Pan-African studies program, better campus services [including a new cafeteria vendor] and [after a recent dormitory fire], an upgraded physical plant." The Morris Brown demonstration followed by one month a similar campus takeover at historically Black Howard University in Washington, D.C., and by a week a Black student takeover at predominantly White Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. The campus demonstrations were reminiscent of similar protests on both Black and White campuses during the 1960s, yet the young college students differed in both tone and manner from the radicals of earlier generations. For example, there was less damage to property in the current protests and little personal rage toward college administrators. At Morris Brown College, the students called their takeover "an act of love." The demonstrators did acknowledge, however, linkages to the 1960s through their quotations of both Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X, and their references to similar actions in the earlier period. Yet some observers saw the current demonstrators as having too much reverence for the radicalism of the 1960s "without a full understanding of the time in which the leaders worked." Werner Sollors, a professor of Afro-American Studies at Howard University and author of a biography of Black poet Amiri Baraka (one of the heroes of today's radicals), believed that the current campus protestors were "totally misreading the historical context of [the earlier movements], so what they're doing now seems pretty wacky."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.