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Word: insing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

His criticism was based principally on an appearing last May in the final issue the academic year, and on articles in the first September issue. Gallagher said that the May editorial, entitled "Wrap-up," openly and urgently called for "the revival of the class struggle between students and faculty along...

Author: By Arthur D. Hellman, | Title: CCNY President, Student Editor Tangle in Controversy Over Alleged Marxist Leanings of College Newspaper | 10/28/1960 | See Source »

The "Wrap-up" editorial took issue with Gallagher's contention, expressed in an open letter to the student body, that a "class struggle" did not exist at CCNY. The editorial dealt with conflicts between the college administration and certain segments of the student body. Specifically, the editorial supported sit-ins...

Author: By Arthur D. Hellman, | Title: CCNY President, Student Editor Tangle in Controversy Over Alleged Marxist Leanings of College Newspaper | 10/28/1960 | See Source »

Previous successful non-violent protests no doubt encouraged the Negroes to undertake new demonstrations. Most notable of the earlier successes was the 1956 Montgomery bus boycott, which also marked the emergence of strong magnetic leadership--an essential factor in the success of any sustained social movement. In the Montgomery conflict...

Author: By Gordon A. Fellman g, | Title: A Cause of Negro Non-Violence: Desire for Middle - Class Image | 10/21/1960 | See Source »

Integration in education, via the Supreme Court decision, had become the symbolic issue of equal rights. Except perhaps for their teachers, the students were most affected and most concerned about the inferior schools they and their younger brothers and sisters attended. As college students they knew that neither their college...

Author: By Gordon A. Fellman g, | Title: A Cause of Negro Non-Violence: Desire for Middle - Class Image | 10/21/1960 | See Source »

The times, as well as the students, were appropriate for action. Sit-ins began in the border states, precisely where the implementation of the Supreme Court's 1954 school decision was evident, and where the Negro had been less intimidated than the deep South. After six years, there was "token...

Author: By Gordon A. Fellman g, | Title: A Cause of Negro Non-Violence: Desire for Middle - Class Image | 10/21/1960 | See Source »

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