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Editorial Grist: Supreme Court Ruling On Segregation

May 20, 1954

Expresses rage toward the Supreme Court for enforcing desegregation in certain areas across the United States.

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Supreme Court Grants Stay In Integration Order For State Jails

March 23, 1967

Describes the order for Alabama prisons to be integrated as the result of a Supreme Court ruling and explains the push back from Governor Lurleen Wallace and Attorney General Gallion.

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Southerners Make Headway On Ike’s Civil Rights Bill

May 23, 1957

Describes the belief that legislative efforts to end segregation, such as the anti-poll tax, anti-lynch, and FEPC, would ultimately fail because they were anti-south and expresses the idea that civil rights efforts were becoming less popular across the nation.

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South Lost Influence

March 25, 1948

Explains that the south objected President Truman civil rights program. Also, describes the voting process and provides statistics for how the electoral college functions.

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Editorial Grist: What About The Negroes Themselves?

May 27, 1954

Describes the belief that Black children would not benefit from integrated schools because they would still not be treated as equals.

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Editorial Grist: Qualifications For The Right To Vote

March 25, 1965

Exhibits the perception that voting rights were already guaranteed to Black Americans if they meet the qualifications and explains that no other civil rights legislation is necessary.

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Editorial Grist: Playing Into Their Hands

June 1, 1961

Expresses the belief that violence against Civil Rights activists, particularly those known as the “Freedom Riders”, would not be productive in the effort to legally maintain segregation.

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Alabama Exhibit At Chicago Is Predicted

March 15, 1965

Describes that Governor Wallace visited Chicago for an Alabama travel exhibit and that protests broke out, many under the direction of CORE. Also, explains that Wallace expressed gratitude to the policeman who guarded the exhibit from picketers.

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Editorial Grist: Advancement In Harmony

March 31, 1960

Explains the belief that the non-violent civil rights movement is dangerous and that there is no need for a civil rights movement of any kind because the south is a harmonious place for both Black and white Americans.

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Editorial Grist: Governor Wallace Leads The Fight

April 2, 1964

Explains the belief that Governor Wallace running for president would bring attention to the opposing side of the civil rights bill.

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Editorial Grist: Fiery Crosses Burn Again

April 14, 1960

Explains the belief that the Ku Klux Klan is not any worse than those advocating for civil rights within the NAACP.

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Editorial Grist: Onward

April 15, 1965

Describes the perception that race relations were functional within Alabama, specifically in regard to education. Also, presents a statistic that Black teachers were paid more than white teachers.

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Letter to Editor: Businessmen Oppose Rights Bill

April 19, 1965

Describes the disapproval of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 by The Business and Professional Men’s Association of Birmingham. Also, explains that they plan to send the included resolution to members of Congress.

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Constitutional Rights

April 22, 1948

Argues that President Truman’s efforts to implement civil rights legislation is unnecessary.

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South’s Negro Leaders Hit Disobedience

April 22, 1948

Describes that there were discrepancies between Black leaders on how to handle segregation within a potential military draft.

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Learn Why Truman’s Civil Rights Program Will Destroy Alabama: Listen to Local Broadcast

April 22, 1948

Contains an advertisement for a speaker named Walter F. Miller on a local radio station in Florence, AL called WJOI.

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State May Have To Turn To Private Schools To Avoid Integration, Patterson Says

May 5, 1960

Describes that Alabama Governor Patterson studied the private school system in Prince Edward County, Virginia in case integration was forced onto schools in Alabama.

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Editorial Grist: The Story of Selma

February 11, 1965

Depicts a belief that the King-led fight for the ballot in Selma was an act of resistance that compares to communism and that those working within that cause were the aggressors and oppressors.

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Patterson to Ask U.S. Congress To Leave Schools Under Local Control

March 19, 1959

Describes the efforts of Governor Patterson and Senator Talmadge to create an amendment that would allow states to decide whether or not to integrate their schools.

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Governors Dodge Truman’s Plans

February 12, 1948

Describes the efforts of multiple southern governors, especially Mississippi Governor Wright to avoid implementing Truman’s civil rights program by creating and maintaining facilities that were separate but equal.

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Editorial Grist: Racial Agitation Becomes Widespread

March 19, 1964

Conveys the belief that the migration of Black Americans caused problems for white Americans in those areas, that the effort to integrate schools was unfounded, and that Black leaders within the civil rights movement were uninformed.

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Integration Makes Slow Progress

February 13, 1964

Explains the perception that the implementation of laws regarding integration by the Supreme Court were unwanted by white Americans across the nation and that Congress needed to focus on other important issues.

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Editorial Grist: The Other Way Around

February 14, 1963

Explains the belief that Attorney General Kennedy was unjust toward white Americans in his efforts to desegregate schools and federally fund integrated schools.

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Civil Rights Lost

February 16, 1950

Briefly explains the belief that President Truman’s civil rights program would fail in Congress.

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