A shuttered bowling alley at the center of a 1968 integration protest where state police killed three Black students is being remade into a civil rights center
ORANGEBURG, S.C. (AP) Big plans are being realized for a once-segregated bowling alley that stands dark and dusty 54 years after state troopers fired into a crowd of Black students in the killings now known as the "Orangeburg Massacre.”
A shuttered bowling alley at the center of a 1968 integration protest where state police killed three Black students is being remade into a civil rights center
Big plans are being realized for a once-segregated bowling alley that stands dark and dusty 54 years after state troopers fired into a crowd of Black students in the killings now known as the Orangeburg Massacre.
ORANGEBURG, S.C. (AP) — Big plans are being realized for a once-segregated bowling alley that stands dark and dusty 54 years after state troopers fired into a crowd of Black