![Jim R. Bounds FILE - In this Friday, Sept. 17, 2010 photo, from left, Ralph Frasier, John Lewis Brandon, center, and LeRoy Frasier, the first black undergraduate students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, in the 1950's, pose for photographs in Chapel Hill, N.C. Ralph Frasier, the final surviving member of a trio of African American youths who were the first to desegregate the undergraduate student body at North Carolina's flagship public university in the 1950s, died May 8, 2024, at age 85 at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., according to son Ralph Frasier Jr. (AP Photo/Jim R. Bounds, File)](https://mapi.associatedpress.com/v2/items/5248f299364e408f9de8f602a6d55d4b/preview/preview.jpg?s=680x)
FILE - In this Friday, Sept. 17, 2010 photo, from left, Ralph Frasier, John Lewis Brandon, center, and LeRoy Frasier, the first black undergraduate students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, in the 1950's, pose for photographs in Chapel Hill, N.C. Ralph Frasier, the final surviving member of a trio of African American youths who were the first to desegregate the undergraduate student body at North Carolina's flagship public university in the 1950s, died May 8, 2024, at age 85 at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., according to son Ralph Frasier Jr. (AP Photo/Jim R. Bounds, File)
![Jim R. Bounds FILE - In this Friday, Sept. 17, 2010 photo, Ralph Frasier speaks about being one of the first black undergraduate students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, in the 1950's, in Chapel Hill, N.C. Frasier, the final surviving member of a trio of African American youths who were the first to desegregate the undergraduate student body at North Carolina's flagship public university in the 1950s, died May 8, 2024, at age 85 at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., according to son Ralph Frasier Jr. (AP Photo/Jim R. Bounds, File)](https://mapi.associatedpress.com/v2/items/658581770dc843e1934fbbae68a12455/preview/preview.jpg?s=680x)
FILE - In this Friday, Sept. 17, 2010 photo, Ralph Frasier speaks about being one of the first black undergraduate students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, in the 1950's, in Chapel Hill, N.C. Frasier, the final surviving member of a trio of African American youths who were the first to desegregate the undergraduate student body at North Carolina's flagship public university in the 1950s, died May 8, 2024, at age 85 at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., according to son Ralph Frasier Jr. (AP Photo/Jim R. Bounds, File)
![Rudolph Faircloth FILE - Three African-American undergraduate students, from left, John Lewis Brandon, and brothers Leroy and Ralph Frasier, who were admitted to the University of North Carolina, check their grades between semesters at their home in Durham, N.C. on Feb. 8, 1956. Ralph Frasier, the final surviving member of a trio of African American youths who were the first to desegregate the undergraduate student body at North Carolina's flagship public university in the 1950s, died May 8, 2024, at age 85 at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., according to son Ralph Frasier Jr.(AP Photo/Rudolph Faircloth, File)](https://mapi.associatedpress.com/v2/items/5f9751b3d31b4c3f8c27a4e8c4d10959/preview/preview.jpg?s=680x)
FILE - Three African-American undergraduate students, from left, John Lewis Brandon, and brothers Leroy and Ralph Frasier, who were admitted to the University of North Carolina, check their grades between semesters at their home in Durham, N.C. on Feb. 8, 1956. Ralph Frasier, the final surviving member of a trio of African American youths who were the first to desegregate the undergraduate student body at North Carolina's flagship public university in the 1950s, died May 8, 2024, at age 85 at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., according to son Ralph Frasier Jr.(AP Photo/Rudolph Faircloth, File)