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Word: slaving (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...sermon on power. "There's a freedom train acoming," he intones. "But you got to be registered to ride." Amen! "Get on board! Get on board!" There is fire in his eyes, a pin in his starched collar, a finger in the air. "We can move from the slave ship to the championship! From the guttermost to the uppermost! From the outhouse to the courthouse! From the statehouse to the White House!" The well-dressed congregation of the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in Los Angeles erupts with the same chant that has resounded in the Delta country of Mississippi...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Seeking Votes and Clout | 8/22/1983 | See Source »

...Frazier law will not clear up some other outstanding legal problems, in particular those of Susie Phipps, though it was her well-publicized legal fight over her racial label that had prompted the legislative change. Phipps, 49, whose great-great-great-great-grandmother was an 18th century black slave, is "colored" according to the state of Louisiana. Phipps, who is married to a wealthy white crawfish merchant, only found that out in 1977, when she applied for a passport and learned that her birth certificate called her colored. She claims she has always considered herself white...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Color Bind | 7/18/1983 | See Source »

...does it remotely resemble Top Girls, her study of the modern career woman's adaptive skills at the Big Business pastime of cat-kills-mouse. The women of Fen seem primordially immune to change, though Churchill would doubtless argue that they have been ensnared in a capitalistic slave...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Tragedy in an Aching Stoop | 6/13/1983 | See Source »

...father. The man pulls off his belt, preparing to punish his son. The final frame reveals the dark-skinned boy, his eyes bulging out in fear. Hudlin was advised that this shot might be offensive to some Blacks, a remainder of the stereotype of the bug-eyed Black slave afraid of the whip...

Author: By Kathleen I. Kouril, | Title: Making Black American Films | 6/9/1983 | See Source »

...Board of Education for Action, are opposed to Harvard University's usage of the name John J. McCloy for the new Kennedy School scholarship. We find it inappropriate that Mr. McCloy, who during World War Il opposed bombing rail lines to Auschwitz, gave clemency to German capitalists who used slave labor, and commuted the death sentences of convicted Nazi criminals, be honored with such a scholarship Most recently in a April 10, 1983 New York Times editorial. Mr. McCloy defended the decision to intern Japanese-Americans just as he had as Franklin D Roosevelt's Assistant Secretary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: McCloy | 6/6/1983 | See Source »

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