Studying German Lieder from a personal friend of Brahms
Article in the Ursinus College Bulletin Summer 1968 detailing the life of Marion Gertrude Spangler and her career in music
(Author unknown)
Ursinus College Bulletin Summer 1968
Ursinus College Bulletin
Summer (August) 1968
Ursinus College Digital Commons
Found in an anthology of Ursinus College Bulletins
Article
"College Becomes Owner of Five Properties"
Article from the Ursinus Alumni Journal March 1957 about the acquisition of Studio Cottage, 646 Main Street, 724 Main Street, 942 Main Street, and 944 Main Street.
Author Unknown
Ursinus College Alumni Journal March 1957
Ursinus College
March 1957
Ursinus College
Obituary of Marion Gertrude Spangler
Article from Ursinus Bulletin Spring 1971 announcing the death of Miss Marion Gertrude Spangler.
Author Unknown
Ursinus Bulletin Spring 1971
Ursinus College
Spring 1971
"Cottage Now Counseling Center"
Article from the Ursinus College Bulletin January 1985 about Studio Cottage's transition from dormitory and music studio to a counseling center.
Author: Debra Kamens (Director of Communications 1957)
Ursinus College Bulletin January 1985
Ursinus College
January 1985
Ursinus College
UC Town Hall Meeting proved a bit disappointing
An op-ed by James Shelton describes his disappointment with how a recent town hall meeting on the discussion of racism at Ursinus was conducted
James Shelton
Ursinus Grizzly
Thursday, February 10, 2011
PNG scan of print
Hate crime discussed during meeting
Report on a town hall meeting discussing the vandalizing of an African-American teacher's podium with a racial epithet.
Katie Callahan
Ursinus Grizzly
Thursday, February 4, 2011
PNG scan of print
Admission of Negro Girls Provides Difficult Situation
Outreach for black women in 1960's
This article acknowledges the difficulties for Admission to initiate inclusion of black women on Ursinus College campus. In 1968, Ursinus and its students speculate how to outreach for black women to provide inclusion and diversity on campus.
Linda Richtmyre
Archives
The Ursinus Weekly
May 23, 1968
college newspaper
English
Inclusion of diversity at Ursinus College
Race at Ursinus
Race at Ursinus
Spring Semester opens with 'MLK Week'
Inclusion and Equity programming
Institute for Inclusion and Equity launch caps week of programming at Ursinus College. It was noted in the article of the reflection of interdisciplinary research on campus related to inclusivity and equity needing to identify and openly discuss issues of racial discrimination across disciplines. MLK programming during this week concluded with panel discussions on teaching diversity texts.
Naseem Syed
Archives
The Grizzly
February 1, 2018
college student newspaper
English
newspaper article
MLK week at Ursinus College
newspaper article of MLK week of programming
Finally, Ursinus creates an arena for race relations
A screening of the film "Traces of the Trade" at Ursinus leads to a "dialogue about white guilt and white privilege"
Tracie Johnson
Ursinus Grizzly
Thursday, October 28, 2010
PNG scan of print
Ursinus Weekly on the Sit In Movement
Commentary on the Sit-In Movement
In an Ursinus Weekly newspaper article from May 9th 1960, an unknown author commentates on the Sit-In movement which began earlier that year in February, when four black students from North Carolina A&T sat down at a Woolworth lunch counter in Greensboro that was designated for white people to sit and black people to stand. After increasing their numbers the next day, seating more black students at the same store, news broke out and the movement sparked an uprising of Sit-Ins, not only for students but people of color. The article reports scattered incidents that brought a multitude of controversy to the North and South, which followed the movement’s occurrences as many blacks in Raleigh, North and South Carolina, and Nashville, were were arrested for participating in the movement. This article mentions the emergence of the KKK targeting black colleges and racial equality groups such as CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) and EPIC (Emergency Public Integration Committee) which were organizations that coordinated these movements and campaigned to raise funds to notify other U.S. colleges, (specifically Northern ones), including Ursinus, where news of the stoic Sit In movement inspired many to support, protest the southern stores, and raise funds for the arrested black individuals who had participated in the Sit-Ins. In Spring of 1960, the idea of racial equality at universities was certainly evident as Ursinus students protested these Southern Woolworth stores, and alumni such as Connie Hoover an Ursinus graduate of the Class of 1958 and member of the Union Theological Seminary, gave two chapel talks that advocated for and favored the Sit-In movement actions and purpose, as well as three Ursinus students, Barbara Bogel, Mary Dassler, and Lynne Habel who had interest and opinions on racial equality leading them to attend a convention of the United States Student Association in Washington, D. C. in hopes to provide insight towards the movement and its peaceful tactics.
unknown
Ursinus Weekly Newspaper Article
Ursinus Weekly
1960
Ursinus College
412 KB
english