Word: racially
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...widespread support for Boston School Committeewoman Mrs. Louise Day Hicks is the result of a vague popular resentment toward "unsettling change," not of outright racial bigotry, according to a study conducted by Thomas F. Pettigrew, professor of Social Psychology...
...problem is more social and economic than racial, believe me," Brooke said. "The Negro in Watts is just as bitter against the successful Negro businessman as the white man. They are people sitting on the side of the road rebelling against society...
Lillian Smith carried her advocacy of nonviolence into the political field, joined the fledgling Congress of Racial Equality in 1946 and worked alongside the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. "The means," she insisted, "must be full of truth and love and wisdom." This summer, sickened by the rise of the black-power movement, she angrily disavowed both organizations, charging that S.N.C.C. had been perverted by "a mixed-up mess of 19th century anarchism and 1930s Communism...
Botswana's strongest asset is its first president, Sir Seretse Khama, 45, a burly, blueblooded Oxonian who has become one of Africa's staunchest advo cates of racial harmony. Eighteen years ago in London, Seretse cast away his paramount chieftainship of the powerful Bamangwato tribe to marry a blonde English clerk named Ruth Williams. The marriage embarrassed both Seretse's despotic uncle, Tribal Regent Tshekedi Khama, and the Labor government of Clement Attlee, which hustled Seretse into an exile that lasted eight years...
Died. Lillian Smith, 68, Southern gentlewoman author and front-line campaigner for racial equality; of cancer; in Atlanta (see THE NATION...