Create a free Diverse: Issues In Higher Education account to continue reading

Black Students At Indiana-Purdue To Sue Over Alleged Inequities

INDIANAPOLIS

A group of Black students at Indiana-Purdue University-Indianapolis is threatening to sue the college over alleged discrimination.

The IUPUI Black Student Union said it would file a lawsuit Monday unless officials agree to provide a new Black cultural center, more Black faculty and $78,000 for Black student groups.

The group also wants sensitivity training for administrators and an undergraduate degree program in African-American studies.

“We’re not asking for anything outlandish,” said IUPUI senior Dominic Dorsey, 24, who heads the group. “We’re asking for what’s due to us to make us feel comfortable on a Euro-centric campus.”

In a nine-page letter delivered to administrators last week, the group complained that officials turned down Black students’ requests to use a student activity fund and that some White officials have been disrespectful to Black students.

It also complained that Black students were not consulted before the Mary Cable Building was torn down this year to make room for a parking lot. Cable founded the Indianapolis chapter of the NAACP.

However, not all Blacks on campus feel discriminated against. Freshman Nashunda King, 18, said she feels more comfortable at IUPUI than she did at her predominantly White high school in Avon.

“I like this environment,” she said. “Everybody gets the same treatment. To me, it’s fair.”

IUPUI officials have made racial diversity a top goal, aiming to boost the school’s minority student enrollment from 15 percent to about 18 percent. Officials also want to boost minority graduation rates at the 30,000 student campus.

“People are working hard to make IUPUI a diversity-positive campus,” said Karen Whitney, IUPUI’s vice chancellor for student life and diversity. “We evaluate ourselves harshly, and we’ve not been satisfied.”

–Associated Press



© Copyright 2005 by DiverseEducation.com

A New Track: Fostering Diversity and Equity in Athletics
American sport has always served as a platform for resistance and has been measured and critiqued by how it responds in critical moments of racial and social crises.
Read More
A New Track: Fostering Diversity and Equity in Athletics