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  1. The Fight for Open Admissions in 1969. Students of color across the CUNY system, inspired in part by the intensification of the civil rights struggle and urban unrest and by a wider embrace of Black Power, ethnic pride, and grassroots activism, mobilized during the spring 1969 term.

  2. Liverpool Community College This page summarises records created by this Organisation The summary includes a brief description of the collection(s) (usually including the covering dates of...

  3. New York State laws passed in the postwar era emphasized community colleges as a major avenue of expanding access to higher education. Between 1946 and 1961, when CUNY was formally launched, the municipal system added four community colleges (NYC Tech, Bronx, Queensborough, and Staten Island).

  4. Jul 23, 2009 · Elation and expansion followed, as “community colleges,” until this time largely private institutions, began to be established widely under public auspices, with public funding, often as part of state systems such as the State University of New York. In 1951, the SUNY system established its first community college in Jamestown, New York.

  5. Jun 4, 2020 · The Open Admissions Strike of 1969 was a dramatic event that radically transformed CUNY. In 1969, a group of City College of New York (CCNY) students occupied campus buildings. CCNY was 97% white despite being in Harlem.

    • Junior Tidal
    • 2020
  6. In response to spring 1969 student mass rallies and confrontations over several months that culminated in student strikes and building occupations, Open Admissions allowed any New York City high school graduate to attend a CUNY college.

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  8. Exactly one year after the 1969 protest, the college offered four new courses: one within the English department (ENG 53 The Black Writer in English Literature) and three in the History department (HIS 25 The Third World and the West, HIS 37 Afro-American History, and HIS 39 History of Puerto Rico and the Caribbean). 22 Close It marked the ...