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Judge Lashes NAACP For Depriving Rights

December 15, 1960

Describes that Supreme Court Judge Joseph A. Mallery believed the NAACP worked against judges who did not advocate for civil rights.

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Nobel Prize: To American Negro

October 12, 1950

Highlights that Dr. Ralph Bunche, the UN mediator who aided in resolving a conflict in the Middle East, was the first Black man to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

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Editorial Grist: Good Bye Huck Finn!

October 17, 1957

Describes the belief that banning racially offensive music and books, such as “Old Black Joe” by Stephen Foster and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, takes away from cultural values.

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Editorial Grist: We Are Not Outnumbered

October 17, 1957

Notes that others agree with the southern stance on segregation, including Governor of North Dakota Arthur Davis and others who attended a demonstration at Craig Air Base.

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Editorial Grist: Adlai On Location In Harlem

October 18, 1956

Describes the civil rights efforts of Adlai Stevenson, previous Governor of Illinois and also notes the divisions within government officials on the issue of segregation.

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Editorial Grist: Rights For Whites

October 27, 1960

Describes the belief that the rights of white Americans needed to be protected by the federal government because Black Americans were granted more freedoms.

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Voice Of The People: No Mystery

October 30, 1958

Describes a speech about integration given by Rev. Charles Kelly of Tuskegee Institute and argues the belief that Black Americans are treated well in the south.

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Editorial Grist: The Integration Showcase Of America

November 26, 1964

Describes that efforts to integrate schools in Washington DC seemingly failed and questions the success of desegregation.

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Negro-Sponsored Institute Assailed By Council Speaker

December 13, 1956

Describes that many southern leaders, including Congressmen, disagreed with the Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v Board decision and held a meeting in which they aimed to discuss their concerns.

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Editorial Grist

September 18, 1958

Briefly describes the Supreme Court’s decision to desegregate immediately. (Also, mentions specific names, likely referring to Supreme Court Justices Earl Warren and Hugo Black, whose votes influenced the Brown v Board decision.)

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Editorial Grist: Where Negroes Own Cadillacs

October 10, 1957

Describes the belief that Black Americans had better ownership abilities in the south and notes that Bishop Addison of the African Universal Church believed efforts for integration to be negative.

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Request To Enter Negro In Mobile School Denied

September 20, 1956

Describes that a white woman named Mrs. Dorothy D. Daponte attempted to enter her Black foster daughter, Carrie Mae McCants, into an all-white public school and was denied.

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Editorial Grist: Cloud Of Lunacy Begins To Break

October 10, 1963

Describes a boycott (The Birmingham Campaign) that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. planned to conduct in Birmingham and notes that two Black men, Gaston (a funeral home owner) and Gaston (a lawyer), did not support the efforts.

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Asks Negroes Seek God’s Aid, Advice

September 21, 1950

Describes that Bishop W.J. Walls of the African M.E. Zion Church called upon Black Christians to pursue God in their fight against injustice.

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States (typo) Rights Issue Worries Politicians

September 22, 1949

Notes the divide in the Democratic Party between those who advocate for states’ rights and those who pledge themselves to the national party.

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Alabama Declines To Present Segregation Briefs

September 23, 1954

Explains that Alabama planned to defy the Supreme Court’s request to desegregate public schools.

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Editorial Grist: For Whom Does He Speak?

September 24, 1959

Explains that Ozark Mayor Douglas Brown could lose support from voters due to his attempts to obtain voting equality for Black Americans.

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Editorial Grist: Greater Segregation By 1975?

September 24, 1959

Describes the statements from Joseph D. Lohman, treasurer of the state of Illinois and sociologist, that highlighted that segregation in residential areas across the country could become worse in the future. Also, notes the belief that segregation is human instinct.

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Editorial Grist: Kennedy Integration

September 26, 1963

Notes that the Black child (Avery Hatcher) of Associated Press Secretary Andrew Hatcher would attend school with Caroline Kennedy.

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Editorial Grist: Example Of How The South Treats The Negro

September 28, 1961

Describes the belief that southerners treat Black Americans with respect because a Black man called “Uncle” Bob Pague was given needed medical treatment and assisted by two white women.

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Tables For Negroes Held Constitutional

September 30, 1948

Briefly describes that the federal district court upheld Jim Crow’s segregation policy in railroad dining cars.

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Abernathy Scores Folsom’s Stand On Segregation

September 30, 1954

Describes a statement from the GOP nominee for governor, Tom Abernathy, who opposed the remark that segregated schools were unequal, which was made by the democratic nominee for governor, James E. Folsom.

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Civil Rights Molisters (typo) Denounced By Mansfield

September 30, 1965

Describes new guidelines, outlined by South Magazine, that police officers needed to follow in order to avoid being accused of brutality by civil rights’ activists.

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Farm Bureau Favors Separate, Equal Facilities

October 2, 1952

Describes that the Alabama Farm Bureau Federation voted to provide separate but equal schools and examines how taxes needed to be implemented in order for farmers not to bear the brunt of the cost.

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