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...authors were Dr. John Dollard, of Yale's Institute of Human Relations, and Allison Davis, head of the social studies department at Dillard University, now lecturing at University of Chicago. Allison Davis, a lightskinned, upper-class Negro, has degrees from Williams and Harvard, studied at the London School of Economics, won so many honors at Williams that he got a prize for winning prizes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: How It Feels To Be a Negro | 8/26/1940 | See Source »

...Authors Dollard & Davis sketched in their background with a few statistics: e.g., in Natchez the average Negro family's income is less than $400 a year; one child in three is a bastard. A Pullman porter rates as middle-middle class; a family with $250 a month is upper-middle class; more than three-fourths of Negroes are lower class; a Negro's social standing rises according to the lightness of his skin, the straightness of his hair. Case histories...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: How It Feels To Be a Negro | 8/26/1940 | See Source »

...addition to the Munn and Dollard elections, Helm B. Price '35 and William Floyd, 2nd '36 were named to the Literary Board, and Gordon F. Robertson '36 and William Bentinck-Smith '37 to the Business Board...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVOCATE OUT MONDAY AS NEW MEN ARE ELECTED | 5/23/1934 | See Source »

With the election of James B. Munn '12, professor of English, and William A. S. Dollard 1G as associate editors the "Advocate" yesterday announced the varied contents of its next issue which will appear on the stands Monday. The principal article will be a memorial to Dean Briggs by Robert S. Hillyer '17, associate professor of English, who won the Pulitzer Poetry Prize short time...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVOCATE OUT MONDAY AS NEW MEN ARE ELECTED | 5/23/1934 | See Source »

...leap to the "historic publication of 'Anthony Adverse'." There is a feeling of being on hand at an excavation of the present. In a review of Smith, Mr. Cabell is swiftly and neatly disposed of; "at this date no one whom Cabell could conceivably surprise reads Cabell." Mr. Dollard evokes the generation of Noel Coward in the same detached way, and truthfully asserts that as a playwright, he is a Pseudo-Modern, "less modern even than Maxwell Anderson, Clemence Dane or any of those who write frankly historical plays...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DURAND REVIEWS NEW NUMBER OF ADVOCATE | 5/1/1934 | See Source »

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