Sweatt Entrance to T. Painter Hall as the main entrance. Painter Hall will be redesigned to include an exhibit and gathering place telling the story of the U.
Supreme Court case of Sweatt v. The University plans to honor the Precursors, the first Black undergraduates to attend the University, by commissioning a monument on the East Mall as a part of a larger space dedicated to students and faculty who worked to make the University more inclusive.
Hartzell said the University will educate the community and visitors about the history of names remaining on campus, such as Littlefield, Hogg and Belo, through the form of plaques and a website. We encourage open communication and flexibility so the room can be fairly utilized.
Liberal Arts faculty and staff are eligiable to reserve rooms in RLP for meetings, conferences, and other events. Most rooms in RLP are equipped with a full media console with projector , speakers, blue ray player, laptop connections, and ceiling-mounted document cameras.
Student must use their UT identification cards to access the space. If you have are a Liberal Arts major with a valid UT ID and cannot access the control panel located next to entrace , you may request access by filling out the access request form. Please allow hours for your card to activate. The Wagner Workroom can seat up to 20 people and may be reserved by student groups for meetings and other events. To inquire about the availability of the Wagner Workroom, please send an email to the Office of Student Affairs.
Photography and filming is permitted within public spaces of RLP for departmental or course related projects. Camera crews should avoid blocking emergency egress areas. Connect Facebook. Physics, Math and Astronomy Building 4. Austin, Texas Email: pma lib. University of Texas Libraries. Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube.
By all historical accounts, Robert L. Moore was a white supremacist who always punched down. He did not affirm women or non-white people as human beings. He was more interested in adding numbers than in the welfare of his black students. That is reason enough to warrant his removal.
But to demand renaming is not simply to express moral outrage at a cartoonishly racist individual, pat ourselves on the back and move on. To demand UT rename its building is to call into question the subtle ways that the system of white supremacy is quietly etched into our world — in the buildings we think, the language we use, the kinds of people we memorialize and so on.
By historicizing instead of moralizing, we understand Moore represents a small node in a vastly expansive network of domination. A network that reserves resources and power for whiteness, where wealth buys public spaces, a system in which Robert Moore spawns countless other polite, racist white people.
0コメント