The American South in the twentieth century.
Record details
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Physical Description:
print
230 p. ; 20 cm. - Publisher: New York : Crowell, 1967.
Content descriptions
Formatted Contents Note: | The negro question at the turn of the century -- What the southern whites thought -- The official report on the Minnie Cox affair -- President Roosevelt gives his view -- The southern solution becomes national -- The negro refutation -- Southern democracy -- Progressive agriculture -- James E. Ferguson campaigns for office -- A fellow Texan looks at the Fergusons -- Sui generis: Huey Pierce Long, kingfish of Louisiana -- The primary: the weapon of the one-party system -- Workers and tenants in a backward economy -- Labor's view of southern mill work -- A northerner describes the southern textile strikes -- The spokesman for southern industrialization cries conspiracy -- A southern employer attempts to set higher standards -- An outline of landlord-tenant relationships -- A planter-landlord gives his view -- The STFU complains that the federal government has not done enough -- Freedom now: the southern negro at midcentury -- The state of civil rights in postwar America -- The "kids" lead the movement for freedom -- Mississippi's negroes organize a boycott -- The philosophy of nonviolence -- The South on the defensive -- A southerner in revolt -- The southern response to integration: interposition -- The southern response to integration: conspiracy -- The South betrayed -- The southern moderate speaks out. |
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Subject: | Southern States |
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Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Holdable? | Status | Due Date |
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Cranbrook Campus | F 209 .B7 1967 (Text) | 11111000134959 | CRANBROOK | Volume hold | Available | - |