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...American racial thinking from the first English contacts with Africans and Indians in the 16th century. It also includes an inquiry into the Kerner commission report and a reading list that includes Eldridge Cleaver's Soul on Ice, Gordon W. Allport's Nature of Prejudice and John Dollard's Caste and Class in a Southern Town...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: THE DILEMMA OF BLACK STUDIES | 5/2/1969 | See Source »

...black man in this country exists was established by and is maintained through the threat and actuality of physical violence. The means of keeping the black man in "his place" are varied: lynching, shotgun blasts, quiet murders, police brutality, and capital punishment. Every Negro in the South, as John Dollard once wrote, is under a kid of sentence of death. In Monroe, N.C. Robert F. Williams advocated meeting this white system of terror with Negro self-defense. What was the result? Federal intervention in the person of the FBI. What happened? The Negro community was completely disarmed and its leader...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE NEED FOR VIOLENCE | 3/27/1963 | See Source »

...elected to the Provincial Legislature, Dupis has been described as a Young Paul Martin, a powerful speaker with the Gallic flair of Caouette. His oratorical gesticulations have been on French television for the past six weeks in preparation for his contest in the riding of St. Jean-Iberville against Dollard Richard an influential member of the Socreds. Dupuis's line: "It's time to show that Caouette is doing nothing but fooling the French-Canadian people"; his purpose: to out-Caouette Caouette. With Lesage, Dupuis, and the Liberal machine thoroughly organized Social Credit will be plenty busy attempting to retain...

Author: By Ronald I. Cohen, | Title: Canadian Elections: Quebec | 3/13/1963 | See Source »

...human existence and more capable of realizing them . . ." It is true that a foundation must exercise careful judgment in selecting the studies and scholars it wishes to support. But having done so, it must treat the doctrine of the free enterprise of ideas as inviolate. In its 43 years, Dollard continued, the Carnegie Corporation (which has spent $253 million to improve public libraries, educational standards, etc.) has never wavered from that principle. "It is extremely important for the American tradition of free inquiry that this principle of non-interference be maintained," wrote Dollard. "At the same time, it must...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Two-Edged Weapon | 7/19/1954 | See Source »

Suggested Caution. Indeed, said Dollard, the Congress itself would do well to follow the foundations' lead. "Just as the foundations must be extremely scrupulous, so also must be the Government in not telling the scholar what to think . . . We must be exceedingly careful not to formulate the doctrine that . . . tax exemption permits either the executive or the legislative branch of the Government to control the thinking of [our] institutions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Two-Edged Weapon | 7/19/1954 | See Source »

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