24 Apr BLACK IN TIME: A Moment In OUR History

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United Negro College Fund




On April 24, 1944, The United Negro College Fund (UNCF) Was incorporated With 27 Member Colleges. UNCF Is The Nation's Oldest And Most Successful Minority Higher Education Assistance Organization.

It Was Actually Founded A Year Earlier By Dr. Frederick Patterson, President of Tuskegee Institute (Now Tuskegee University), Mary McLeod Bethune President of Bethune-Cookman College (Now Bethune-Cookman University) And Others. The Organization Was Founded With 27 Member Schools.

Today UNCF Supports About 60,000 Students A Year At 900 schools -- Including Students At UNCF Member Colleges And UNCF Scholarship Recipients.

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University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill



On This Same Day, In 1951, My Alma Mater, The University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill, Admitted Its First Black Student, Edward O. Diggs.

The Following Newspaper Article Appeared In The Baltimore Afro-American, May 6, 1951:

1951 – Black Student Admitted to Medical School
Baltimore Afro-American, May 5, 1951

The University of North Carolina admitted Edward O. Diggs as the first black to attend its medical school.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C.—Acknowledging that "it is best not to fight the supreme law of the land," the board of admissions of the Medical School of the University of North Carolina last week approved the application of Edward O. Diggs, 30, to enter the school and sent to him a letter of acceptance.

Diggs thus becomes the first person of his race to be accepted as a student by the University of North Carolina in its 62-year-old history. His admittance also marks the first time a Deep South state supported institution of high learning has admitted a colored student to its classes without having been ordered to do so by the courts.

The medical school's admissions committee voted 6 to 1 to admit Diggs. Approval of Diggs came three weeks after the university board of trustees voted to admit any student to a graduate or professional school "without regard to race or color" when the state does not provide separate facilities for minority races.

Glad He's Accepted

Diggs, a premedical student at A and T College, has not yet received his letter of acceptance, but he said upon learning of his achievement, "I am glad I was accepted."

A graduate of Winston Salem Teachers College in 1938, Diggs taught school before going to the service during World War II. He is the father of three children and a part-time post office worker while attending school.

"In Order For Black History To Live, We Must Continue To Breathe Life Into It." -- Hubert Gaddy, Jr.

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