You can find Monussa Hunter inside the James E. Shepard Memorial Library of North Carolina.
“Grows, I took refuge in the books. It was a guard for me,” Hunter said
“I would read something I can get my hands,” he said.
Literature love began as a child and never stopped, and now it is on the way to become a librarian.
Hunting graduates from the University of North Carolina, a master of library sciences in May. The center is the only HBCU in the country with a library scientific program accredited by the American Library Association.
I did not see myself in the library. I did not see myself representing myself there. So I never thought it could be a librarian, the hunter who said.
Since 1939, the Central University of North Carolina has reported more than 1,400 degrees in the library and information sciences, the largest producer of African American libraries in the country.
However, the area of the library still needs the advantage. Therefore, the University of North Carolina brings the next generation of librarians as Hunter and classmates.
Information from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, less than seven percent of the library, with 84 percent of the white.
“What else can we do, if you can hire, do you know, do you know? How do you know, what obstacles to the entrance,” said Dr. Chris Cunningham, Library Sciences in the University of North Carolina.
According to the North Carolina Center, 237 students are admitted to 237 students in the Library and Information Sciences School.
About 40 percent of these students are black.
“It’s a place you are pleasing,” said Cunningham. “We welcome this variety, we welcome this experience, because we welcome this experience, because we are good at the end of the day. We are all strong.”
Carla Hayden as Carla Hayden, as Carla Hayden, as Carla Hayden, Carla Hayden, who is the first African American Librarian, Carla Hayden, who is the first African American Lee, Cardla Hayden, who is today.
“We are standing in the shoulders of the giants coming before us. So we have inherited a very strong program,” said Dr. Cunningham.
Monthless Hunter hopes to continue their legacy while pulling one’s way.
“I can not only have not sold communities but also their representation. People sees me and I can accept it. I can do it. I can do it.”