black Ole Miss students with the chest paint

CrimsonTider

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Roll Tide, Junior. Agree to an extent, why she was doing that me and my ex have no clue. Still doesn't take away that Alabama is a racist school:camby:

Did you not read my post?

Why would a black girl want to join a white sorority? That's the most c00nish shyt I ever heard of in my life.
 

Xerces

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Did you not read my post?

Why would a black girl want to join a white sorority? That's the most c00nish shyt I ever heard of in my life.
I did read your post, did you not read mine? It still doesnt take away the fact that Alabama is a racist school. So why you chose to quote me in the first place is mind boggling.
 

Big Boss

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Many still rep them. Also the HBCUs won a settlement against the state of Mississippi in the 2000s. The state was shorting the HBCUs in millions of dollars on some racial shyt. After the HBCUs won the settlement the state said well we will pay you back this money under one stipulation. That you increase your non black enrollment to 15%. Well the majority of the state is black and white. White Mississippians are not going to HBCUs there. So what the schools did was very smart....they started recruiting them poor ass white euros from Eastern Europe. They got that enrollment up and got that money. Them racist folks in government were made as fukk that those black schools figured out a way to get paid.

:ohhh:
 

CrimsonTider

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I did read your post, did you not read mine? It still doesnt take away the fact that Alabama is a racist school. So why you chose to quote me in the first place is mind boggling.
Every white university has racist people.

But, A black girl not being accepted into a white social organization isn't evidence of that
 

Big Boss

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Damn, what's going on at U of H?

My brother graduated from there in the early 2000's and I had 2 cousins that graduated in the 90's. It was a lot of black students there back then.

The legendary stories they used to tell me about the Kappa Beach Party. :ohlawd:

My brother used to have classes with that Lyric model chick. :steviej:

lyric_4.jpg


Damn she thick:ohlawd:


 

superunknown23

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My dad was not raised in the South but he recalled a "visit" to relatives in Mississippi as a kid.

African-Americans were in line at some store, and a white man stepped ahead of them in line. My father stepped back in front of him, reminding him that they were there first.

My great-aunt snatched him back, quick, gave him a "look" that said "be quiet."
The white man shot a look at them, like they were crazy.

He didn't understand what was going on, and no one ever explained it after the fact.

Ten years ago, when he went to Laurel, MS for his aunt's funeral, he returned shell-shocked. To him, the local black people were still "afraid." Subservient. Apart. He keeps telling us "they live in another time, down there."
:snoop:
 

Creepn

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Yeah man I saw that from the get go. The city has the diversity of back home chicago, but without the neighborhood segregation. But still the same issues exist and just don't come to the surface because of the good economy and there isn't such a large separation between the haves and have nots (like Chicago).

There are still areas here where black folks aren't welcomed whether it is highland park or way out in Greenville. But DFW has that illusion of inclusion.

What are you talking about?

I live near Highland Park and never had an issue? My kid swims at the water park as well as I don't see any white kids jumping out.

I know theres is racism everywhere but I figured it's racially disappropriate because those places been for rich people with that old money. Those houses been expensive for a long ass time. They are million dollar homes so blacks find other options. Everything is just more expensive in that area so you aren't going to see many minorities there. If you have the money to buy the home, green is the only color they care about and if you aren't a sexual predator.

I'm open to hear more about your claim though.
 

El Bombi

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What are you talking about?

I live near Highland Park and never had an issue? My kid swims at the water park as well as I don't see any white kids jumping out.

I know theres is racism everywhere but I figured it's racially disappropriate because those places been for rich people with that old money. Those houses been expensive for a long ass time. They are million dollar homes so blacks find other options. Everything is just more expensive in that area so you aren't going to see many minorities there. If you have the money to buy the home, green is the only color they care about and if you aren't a sexual predator.

I'm open to hear more about your claim though.

Yeah, Highland Park is the same school that didn't want Tony Dorsett son to attend their school because he was black. Anthony Dorsett end up being a NFL player by the way.

image.php


This is the same school that had a 'Thug Day'

HP students: 'Thug Day' dress not offensive

Some say high school's theme days crossed racial line

07:52 AM CDT on Friday, October 28, 2005

By SCOTT FARWELL JOSHUA BENTON and KRISTEN HOLLAND / The Dallas Morning News


Students at Highland Park High School dressed as gang members, rap stars, maids and yard workers this month during homecoming week – a tradition one Dallas civil-rights leader says is racially insensitive.

On senior Thug Day, students wore Afro wigs, fake gold teeth and baggy jeans. On Fiesta Day, which was to honor Hispanic heritage, one student brought a leaf blower to school.

"The scary part of something like this is you have to wonder how long these kids will continue to think this way," said Bob Lydia, president of the Dallas chapter of the NAACP. "These kids will be leaders of this country one day."

No students were punished, according to Highland Park High principal Patrick Cates. Fewer than a dozen students were asked to remove some of the clothing – bandanas and gold necklaces. The student with the leaf blower was asked to put the tool in his car.

Mr. Cates said the school's leaders will monitor the student council's selection of homecoming theme days in the future. Thug Day was not sanctioned by the school, but several students said seniors have dressed in gang-style and hip-hop attire for at least three years.

"The bottom line is that we need to maintain a healthy learning environment with no disruptions," Mr. Cates said. "When a few students take the opportunity to dress up and use it to make an inappropriate statement, we have a problem, and we will address that problem."

Helen Williams, the district's communications director, said 18 students were sent to the office on Thug Day for inappropriate attire.

No students were pulled out on Fiesta Day.

Students interviewed outside the school Thursday generally thought the reaction to the theme days Oct. 3 to 7 was overblown and that the activities were not offensive to minorities.

"Thug Day's been around as long as I can remember," said senior Ben Paschal. "This is the first time people have gotten upset about it."

Senior Katie Braden, who said she wore a LeBron James jersey that day, said she had heard that other high schools have a "Highland Park Day," when students dress up to make fun of Highland Park students. She considers it all in good fun. "It's not like we called it 'South Dallas Day' or anything," she said.

Lauren Perella said she wore a "wife-beater" tanktop and tennis shoes with only one sock. "We're just having fun," she said.

Katie said the theme days had been a subject of conversation among students recently, and that she'd heard that some teachers were offended. She said the student who showed up with a leaf blower crossed a line.

"I thought it was funny, but that's probably offensive," she said.

Elizabeth Carlock, the senior class president, said there's nothing racist about Thug Day.

"We had a 'Country Club Day' last year, and I don't see any difference between dressing up in country-club style and dressing up thug," she said. "We weren't being racist. It's Highland Park tradition."

Elizabeth said she wore baggy shorts and a Portland Trailblazers jersey on Thug Day. She said a teacher demanded that she sign a form acknowledging that she was not following the expected clothing theme of the day, Western-wear. She refused and was sent to the principal's office. "I wasn't breaking dress code," she said.

Some researchers say insensitivity is a direct result of the sort of racial isolation that exists in places like Highland Park.

"The reality is that they're ignorant of the lives of nonwhites – it's like a parallel universe," said Charles Gallagher, a sociology professor at Georgia State University who studies white perceptions of race. He has tracked the recent rise of racially themed events, such as so-called "ghetto parties," on university campuses.

"You have a community of adolescents who live in a complete white bubble," Dr. Gallagher said. Many Park Cities residents refer to their community as "The Bubble."

"If they have interactions with blacks or Hispanics, it's typically someone serving them a soft drink or the Mexican who cuts their lawn."

Highland Park High's student body is about 94 percent white. The school has six black, 65 Hispanic and 32 Asian students.

Dr. Gallagher said the increasing frequency of ghetto parties is linked to the emotional distance young people feel from the civil-rights movement.

"They think America is colorblind and that racism has disappeared," he said. "Color becomes a style – if a white kid wants to put on a FUBU shirt, he can do it. They can have something like this and say, 'I wasn't being racist – I was just playing with these symbols.'"

Elizabeth said both controversial theme days should continue, but that administrators should be more vigilant about sending home students who dress inappropriately.

"I apologize for the few students who were dressed inappropriately," she said. "But we were not being racist."

E-mail sfarwell@dallasnews.com , jbenton@dallasnews.com, kholland@dallasnews.com

Online at: http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcont...k.220e85f.html
 
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