Pink House. 130 North Street. Back In The Day.
Fellow residents from the 1991-94 years were Clint Curtis, Shyam Patel, Raj Krishnasami, Lydia Craft, Jess Deltac, Kyle York Spencer, Caroline Rivers Hall, Mel Lanham, Michelle Sinnott, Jay Murray, N'Gai Wright, Scott Bullock (who crashed on the couch for a year before finally moving in), Bryan Ellerson, Karen Hurka, Sally Stryker, Ryan Mathias, Charlie Speight, Chris Palmatier, Trent McDevitt, and Steve William.
Besides holdovers and returnees Jay, Scott, Mel (& Laverne!), Chris, and N'Gai, residents during 1995-97 included Ian Williams, Greg Humphreys, Allen Sellars (who, like Jay, lived at both the Pink House and 401 Pritchard), Zak Bisacky, James Dasher, Linden Elstran, Jiffer Bourguignon, Grant Tennille (who first made the scene as a fixture in N'Gai's room circa summer '93), Zia Zareem, Ben Folds, Tom Holden, and Chris "Chip" Chapman.
- Erik Ose
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Remembering the Pink House, 15 Years Later
2009 marks fifteen years since I graduated from Carolina and moved out of the Pink House, the legendary off-campus crash pad located at 130 ...
Friday, April 2, 1993
Future of Black Cultural Center at UNC-CH remains unclear
BY ROBIN BERLIN
The establishment of a Black Cultural Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill still faces obstacles months after its initial approval by UNC-CH Chancellor Paul Hardin.
In a meeting of UNC's board of trustees March 26, the first time the board discussed the center, Trustee John Pope proposed a resolution rejecting the creation of a free-standing center.
No vote was taken on the resolution or on the center itself, because several members said they needed more time and information before taking a position.
"I don't want to prejudge the chancellor," said Trustee David Whichard. He said he wants to wait until he sees Hardin's recommendation about a site and details for the center before making a decision.
The controversy over the center first caught the national eye in October, when a group of students campaigned for the establishment of a free-standing black cultural center. Their action on campus included protests and an appearance by film director Spike Lee.
While the center was approved by Hardin in October, it still needs final approval from the board of trustees.
Pope's resolution states that the university should not sanction facilities promoting a single race, creed or culture.
"I do believe that the proposed separate free-standing Black Cultural Center presents a risk of resegregation of both people and ideas on the university campus," Pope said, according to the News & Observer. "It is a major step toward abandoning our single American heritage and culture which unites diverse cultures and heritages under the principle of equality of rights of the individual."
The resolution was seconded by student body president John Moody.
Charles McNair, minister of information for the UNC-CH Black Student Movement, said he was "not surprised" by Pope's proposal to reject the center. McNair alleged that Pope said in 1988 that if black students want black culture, they should go to a black school.
About a dozen students sat in on the meeting, holding pro-BCC signs.
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