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PAPERS of the NAACP Part Segregation and Discrimination, 15 Complaints and Responses, 1940-1955
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections General Editors: John H. Bracey, Jr. and August Meier PAPERS OF THE NAACP Part Segregation and Discrimination, 15 Complaints and Responses, 1940-1955 Series B: Administrative Files UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA PAPERS OF THE NAACP Part 15. Segregation and Discrimination, Complaints and Responses, 1940-1955 Series B: Administrative Files A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections General Editors: John H. Bracey, Jr. and August Meier PAPERS OF THE NAACP Part 15. Segregation and Discrimination, Complaints and Responses, 1940-1955 Series B: Administrative Files Edited by John H. Bracey, Jr. and August Meier Project Coordinator Randolph Boehm Guide compiled by Martin Schipper A microfilm project of UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA An Imprint of CIS 4520 East-West Highway * Bethesda, MD 20814-3389 Library of Congress Cataloglng-ln-Publication Data National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Papers of the NAACP. [microform] Accompanied by printed reel guides. Contents: pt. 1. Meetings of the Board of Directors, records of annual conferences, major speeches, and special reports, 1909-1950 / editorial adviser, August Meier; edited by Mark Fox--pt. 2. Personal correspondence of selected NAACP officials, 1919-1939 / editorial--[etc.]--pt. 15. Segregation and discrimination, complaints and responses, 1940-1955. 1. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People-Archives. 2. Afro-Americans--Civil Rights--History--20th century-Sources. 3. Afro- Americans--History--1877-1964--Sources. 4. United States--Race relations-Sources. I. Meier, August, 1923- . -
For Neoes on Newspapers
Careers For Neoes On Newspapers * What's Happening, * What the Jobs Are r * How Jobs Can Be Found nerican Newspaper Guild (AFL-CIO, CLC) AMERICAN NEWSPAPER GUILD (AFL-CIO, CLC) Philip Murray Building * 1126 16th Street N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036 PRESIDENT: ARTHUR ROSENSTOCK EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT: WILLIAM J. FARSON SECRETARY-TREASURER: CHARLES A. PERLIK, JR REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENTS Region 1 DANIEL A. McLAUGHLIN, North Jersey Region 4 ROBERT J. HICKEY, Son Jose Region 2 RICHARD LANE, Memphis Region 5 EDWARD EASTON, JR., New York Region 3 JAMES B. WOODS, St. Louis Region 6 WILLIAM H. McLEMAN, Vancouver VICE PRESIDENTS AT LARGE JACK DOBSON, Toronto MARSHALL W. SCHIEWE, Chicago GEORGE MULDOWNEY, Wire Service NOEL WICAL, Cleveland KENNETH RIEGER, Toledo HARVEY H. WING, San Francisco-Oakland . Ws.. - Ad-AA1964 , s\>tr'id., ofo} +tw~ i 7 I0Nle0 Our newspapers, which daily report the rising winds of the fight for equal rights of minority groups, must now take a first hand active part in that fight as it affects the hiring, promotion, and upgrading of newspaper employes In order to improve the circumstances of an increas- ing number of minority-group people, who are now turned aside as "unqualified" for employment and pro- motion, we seek . a realistic, down-to-earth meaning- ful program, which will include not merely the hiring of those now qualified without discrimination as to race, age, sex, creed, color, national origin or ancestry, but also efforts through apprenticeship training and other means to improve and upgrade their qualifications. Human Rights Report American Newspaper Guild Convention Philadelphia, July 8 to 12, 1963 RELATIONSorLIS"WY JUL 23196 OF CALFORNIA UHI4Rt5!y*SELY NEWSPAPER jobs in the United States are opening to Negroes for the first time. -
Papers of the Naacp
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections General Editors: John H. Bracey, Jr., and Sharon Harley PAPERS OF THE NAACP Supplement to Part 16, Board of Directors File, 1966-1970 UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections General Editors: John H. Bracey, Jr., and Sharon Harley PAPERS OF THE NAACP Supplement to Part 16, Board of Directors File, 1966-1970 Edited by John H. Bracey, Jr., and Sharon Harley Project Coordinator Randolph Boehm Guide compiled by Daniel Lewis A microfilm project of UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA An Imprint of LexisNexis Academic & Library Solutions 4520 East-West Highway * Bethesda, MD 20814-3389 Library of Congress Cataloglng-in-Publication Data Papers of the NAACP. Supplement to Part 16, Board of Directors file, [microform] / edited by John H. Bracey, Jr. and August Meier; project coordinator, Randolph Boehm. microfilm reels ; 35 mm.--(Black studies research sources) Accompanied by printed reel guides. Contents: 1. Supplement to Part 16,1956-1965. 2. Supplement to Part 16,1966-1970. 1. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People--Archives. 2. African Americans--Civil rights--History--20th century--Sources. 3. African Americans--History--1877-1964--Sources. 4. United States--Race relations--Sources. I. Title: Board of Directors file. II. Bracey, John H. III. Meier, August, 1923- IV. Boehm, Randolph. V. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. VI. University Publications of America (Firm) VII. Title: Guide to the microfilm edition of Papers of the NAACP. -
Ebony Magazine and the Civil Rights Movement
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 5-2018 Black Business as Activism: Ebony Magazine and the Civil Rights Movement Seon Britton The Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/2659 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] BLACK BUSINESS AS ACTIVISM EBONY MAGAZINE AND THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT by SEON BRITTON A master’s thesis submitted to the Graduate Faculty in Liberal Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts, The City University of New York 2018 © 2018 SEON BRITTON All rights reserved ii Black Business as Activism: Ebony Magazine and the Civil Rights Movement by Seon Britton This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in Liberal Studies in satisfaction of the thesis requirement for the degree of Master of Arts. Date Karen Miller Thesis Advisor Date Elizabeth Macaulay-Lewis Executive Officer THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii ABSTRACT Black Business as Activism: Ebony Magazine and the Civil Rights Movement by Seon Britton Advisor: Karen Miller In the fight for justice, equality, and true liberation, African American organizations and institutions have often acted as a voice for the African American community at large focusing on common issues and concerns. With the civil rights movement being broadcast across the world, there was no better time for African American community and civil rights organizations to take a role within the movement in combatting the oppression, racism, and discrimination of white supremacy. -
Caste, Class, and Equal Citizenship
Michigan Law Review Volume 98 Issue 1 1999 Caste, Class, and Equal Citizenship William E. Forbath University of Texas at Austin Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr Part of the Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons, Constitutional Law Commons, Fourteenth Amendment Commons, Labor and Employment Law Commons, Law and Race Commons, Legal History Commons, and the Supreme Court of the United States Commons Recommended Citation William E. Forbath, Caste, Class, and Equal Citizenship, 98 MICH. L. REV. 1 (1999). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol98/iss1/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Michigan Law Review at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Michigan Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CASTE, CLASS, AND EQUAL CITIZENSlllP William E. Forbath* INTRODUCTION There is a familiar egalitarian constitutional tradition and another we have largely forgotten. The familiar one springs from Brown v. Board of Education;1 its roots lie in the Reconstruction era. Court centered and countermajoritarian, it takes aim at caste and racial subor dination. The forgotten one also originated with Reconstruction, but it was a majoritarian tradition, addressing its arguments to lawmakers and citizens, not to courts. Aimed against harsh class inequalities, it cen tered on decent work and livelihoods, social provision, and a measure of economic independence and democracy. Borrowing a phrase from its ProgressiveEra proponents, I will call it the social citizenship tradition.2 My thesis is that the seemingly separate fates and flaws of these two egalitarian constitutional outlooks are joined. -
Student Activism, the NAACP, and the Albuquerque City Anti
Student Activism, the NAACP, and the Albuquerque City Anti-Discrimination • Ordinance, 1947–1952 • LEE SARTAIN On 12 September 1947, George Long, an African American student at the Uni- versity of New Mexico, was refused service at Oklahoma Joe’s café in Albuquer- que and sparked a boycott of local businesses that did not serve racial minorities. The boycott began a five-year campaign that resulted in 1952 in the passage of the Albuquerque City Anti-Discrimination Ordinance, which outlawed racial discrimination in the city. The victory was secured through a combination of student activism, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) branch involvement, and broad community participation, including the cooperation of white civic leaders and Hispanics.1 The story of the Albuquerque campaign for a city antidiscrimination ordi- nance shows that the writing of African American history continues to expand into new frontiers. Recent scholarship has broadened historians’ understand- ing of the African American civil rights movement both in timeframe and The author wishes to thank the two anonymous reviewers, who gave very precise and helpful advice, and would also like to express his gratitude to the editor, Durwood Ball, who showed great patience throughout the development of this article. Lee Sartain’s research has focused on the NAACP and civil rights. His first book, Invisible Activists: Women of the Louisiana NAACP and the Struggle for Civil Rights, 1915–1945 (Louisiana State University Press, 2007), won the Landry Prize for best book on a Southern topic. He has also written Borders of Equal- ity: The NAACP and the Baltimore Civil Rights Struggle, 1914–1970 (University Press of Mis- sissippi, 2013) and coedited Long is the Way: One Hundred Years of the NAACP (University of Arkansas Press, 2009). -
Between the Covers Rare Books
BETWEEN THE COVERS RARE BOOKS CATALOG 230 AFRICAN-AMERICANA BETWEEN THE COVERS RARE BOOKS AFRICAN-AMERICANA #230 112 Nicholson Rd. Terms of Sale: Images are not to scale. Dimensions of items, including artwork, are given width Gloucester City, NJ 08030 first. All items are returnable within 10 days if returned in the same condition as sent. Orders may be reserved by telephone, fax, or email. All items subject to prior sale. Payment should accompany phone: (856) 456-8008 order if you are unknown to us. Customers known to us will be invoiced with payment due in 30 fax: (856) 456-1260 days. Payment schedule may be adjusted for larger purchases. Institutions will be billed to meet their [email protected] requirements. We accept checks, Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover, and PayPal. betweenthecovers.com Gift certificates available. Domestic orders from this catalog will be shipped gratis for orders of $200 or more via UPS Ground or USPS Priority Mail; expedited and overseas orders will be sent at cost. All items insured. NJ residents please current NJ sales tax. Member ABAA, ILAB. Cover image taken from item 100. © 2019 Between the Covers Rare Books, Inc. 1 (Abolitionists) Thomas P. SMITH An Address Delivered Before The Colored Citizens of Boston in Opposition to the Abolition of Colored Schools, on Monday Evening, Dec. 24, 1849 Boston: For Sale by Bela Marsh 1850 $5200 First edition. Octavo. 12pp. Original printed wrappers. Stitched text block separated from wrappers, last leaf and rear wrap soiled, very good. In 1846, George Putnam and other “colored citizens of Boston” petitioned the Boston Primary School Committee to abolish segregated public education, and to permit their children to attend the Primary Schools established in their neighborhoods. -
Black Performance and Cultural Criticism Valerie Lee and E. Patrick Johnson, Series Editors
Black Performance and Cultural Criticism Valerie Lee and E. Patrick Johnson, Series Editors Seniors_Book4print.indb 1 5/28/2009 11:30:56 AM Seniors_Book4print.indb 2 5/28/2009 11:30:56 AM BEYOND LIFT EVERY VOICE AND SING The Culture of Uplift, Identity, and Politics in Black Musical Theater • Paula Marie Seniors The Ohio State University Press Columbus Seniors_Book4print.indb 3 5/28/2009 11:30:56 AM Copyright © 2009 by The Ohio State University. All rights reserved. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Seniors, Paula Marie. Beyond lift every voice and sing : the culture of uplift, identity, and politics in black musical theater / Paula Marie Seniors. p. cm. — (Black performance and cultural criticism) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8142-1100-7 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8142-1100-3 (cloth : alk. paper) 1. African Americans in musical theater—History. 2. Musical theater—United States—History. 3. Johnson, James Weldon, 1871–1938. 4. Johnson, J. Rosamond (John Rosamond), 1873–1954. 5. Cole, Bob, 1868–1911. I. Title. ML1711.S46 2009 792.6089'96073—dc22 2008048102 This book is available in the following editions: Cloth (ISBN 978-0-8142-1100-7) CD-ROM (ISBN 978-0-8142-9198-6) Cover design by Laurence Nozik. Type set in Adobe Sabon. Text design by Jennifer Shoffey Forsythe. Printed by Thomson-Shore, Inc. The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the Ameri- can National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. ANSI Z39.48-1992. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Seniors_Book4print.indb 4 5/28/2009 11:30:56 AM This book is dedicated to my scholar activist parents AUDREY PROCTOR SENIORS CLARENCE HENRY SENIORS AND TO MIss PARK SENIORS Their life lessons and love nurtured me. -
Public Relations, Racial Injustice, and the 1958 North Carolina Kissing Case
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Carolina Digital Repository Public Relations, Racial Injustice, and the 1958 North Carolina Kissing Case Denise Hill A dissertation submitted to the faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the School of Media and Journalism. Chapel Hill 2016 Approved by: Barbara Friedman Lois Boynton Trevy McDonald Earnest Perry Ronald Stephens © 2016 Denise Hill ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT Denise Hill: Public Relations, Racial Injustice, and the 1958 North Carolina Kissing Case (Under the direction of Dr. Barbara Friedman) This dissertation examines how public relations was used by the Committee to Combat Racial Injustice (CCRI), the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), North Carolina Governor Luther Hodges, and the United States Information Agency (USIA) in regards to the 1958 kissing case. The kissing case occurred in Monroe, North Carolina when a group of children were playing, including two African American boys, age nine and eight, and a seven-year-old white girl. During the game, the nine-year-old boy and the girl exchanged a kiss. As a result, the police later arrested both boys and charged them with assaulting and molesting the girl. They were sentenced to a reformatory, with possible release for good behavior at age 21. The CCRI launched a public relations campaign to gain the boys’ freedom, and the NAACP implemented public relations tactics on the boys’ behalf. News of the kissing case spread overseas, drawing unwanted international attention to US racial problems at a time when the country was promoting worldwide democracy. -
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT and the NEGRO in the 1930' S EARLENE
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT AND THE NEGRO IN THE 1930' s By EARLENE KELLY PARR v Bachelor of Arts Oklahoma State University Stillwater, Oklahoma 1965 Submitted to the faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS August, 1969 ·· IJ\r'+;l.:r\litU llJi M :'s1ATE vN1v~~~11J 'LIBRARY 1'MtW :o \iws FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT AND THE NEGRO IN THE 1930's Thesis Approved: Dean of the Graduate College ii PREFACE The purpose of' Franklin ~o Roosevelt ~~"Negro .!!!. ~ 123Q!J! is to attempt to show the relationship between Roosevelt and the Ne~ De&l, c:n the one ha~d, and the NegrC!> and his civil rights m.~ement oin the other., The time span 19'.30 t¢:li 1940 wa.s chosen because it allow the in.. @lusion of the effeets of the Depression on the black man and hi~ in,., volvem.ent in the ~am.prlgn and eleetion of 19320 Sin~e the major New Deal programs and their immediate effects ha4 be~n experienced by 1940, it w.s selected as the final date., Also, from 1940 until Roosevelt0 s death in 1945 the emphasis of the administration was by necessity plaeed on diplo:mati~ and military rather th~n on domestic affairso Da'.l':1.ng this period of concentrated domestic refol"M, the Negro built an important foundation in his civil rights movement for gains that are p~rhaps eulminati:ng in the late 1960Wso 81:1.eeess came through eourt de= eisi@:rn; in NoAoAoC.,Po=Sp~nsored eases, and through the attainment of po= litieal and legislative reeognition, both as a by=produet of specific -
White Is and White Ain't
WHITE IS AND WHITE AIN’T: REPRESENTATIONS AND ANALYSES OF WHITENESS IN THE NOVELS OF CHESTER HIMES Scott M. Walter A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy December 2005 Committee: Dr. Ellen Berry Advisor Dr. Michael T. Martin Graduate Faculty Representative Dr. Donald McQuarie Dr. Donald Callen © Scott M. Walter All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT Dr. Ellen Berry, Advisor This dissertation borrows and paraphrases for its title from the marijuana-dream sermon in Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man. As Ellison avers that “Black is, an’ black ain’t,” so too, I contend, “White is, and white ain’t.” Racial constructions are irrevocably embedded in each other. I trace this through selected novels of Chester Himes, who offers a specific way of reading whiteness, through his deployment and ultimate disruption of hard-boiled conventions, a style that other scholars have convincingly argued is a literary epitome of white male perspective. Chapter One is a biographical sketch, focusing upon those points in Himes’s life which best inform his representations and analysis of whiteness. Chapter Two engages Himes’s first published novel, If He Hollers Let Him Go in order to locate those tropes and figures of whiteness in both narrative and style which will later manifest themselves in his Harlem Cycle. Chapter Three moves to the Harlem Cycle itself. A Rage in Harlem is a transitional text of sorts, from the “social protest” conventions to the more absurdist aspects of the later novels. -
BLACK and WHITE: the STORY of a FAILED FILM PROJECT Galina
FORUM FOR ANTHROPOLOGY AND CULTURE, 2017, NO. 13 BLACK AND WHITE: THE STORY OF A FAILED FILM PROJECT Galina Lapina University of Wisconsin Han Hise Hall, Linden Drive, Madison, WI, USA [email protected] A b s t r a c t: In 1931 Mezhrabpomfi lm, a Soviet-German fi lm studio fi nanced by Comintern, came up with the idea of producing a propaganda feature fi lm Black and White about racism in the United States and invited a group of Afro- Americans to take part in the production. The arrival of the fi lm group that included Langston Hughes and other young intellectuals was widely discussed in the leftist American press and used by the Soviet propaganda apparatus to promote the image of the USSR as the defender of the oppressed minorities. The production was abruptly stopped by order of the Politburo, because the project had been found to be offensive by infl uential American professionals and businessmen participating in the industrialisation of the USSR and interested in establishing diplomatic relations between the two countries. Although the Soviet authorities tried to hide the truth about the sudden abandonment of the project, several members of the group did not believe offi cial explanations and were loud in their protests against the cancellation of the fi lm, accusing the party leadership of compromising with American imperialism and betraying a progressive ideology for the sake of pragmatic interests. Nevertheless, the majority of the members of the fi lm group chose not to support the protest and agreed with the offi cial version.