Racist Sororities at the University of Alabama

In 1963, in the midst of the heated debate over the desegregation of American schools, the University of Alabama announced that it would for the first time allow African Americans to enroll. Fifty years later, in September 2013, two University of Alabama sororities rejected an African American student because of her race. As a result, an anti-racist student group called the Mallet Assembly and other members of the community took action to prevent segregation within the university's Greek system.

Check out "The KKK vs. the Crips vs. Memphis City Council" in Part 2.

Subscribe to VICE here! http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE
Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos
Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com
Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice
Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice
Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com

KEEP OUR LIBRARY FREE
$5/month keep us freely available to all. No paywalls for 99% of content, no ads, just people-powered media. Subscribe here.
Social Issues Explore All
Videos Under Five Minutes
Trending Videos Explore All
Trending Articles Explore All
Recent Documentaries Explore All
Video Deep Dives Explore All
What People Are Watching Now
Cities are the Ideal Scale to Focus Solution-Efforts
Recently Added
Support independent media that amplifies real voices and movements. 



Subscribe for $5/month to become a patron and watch over 50 patron-exclusive documentaries.

Share this: