Trouble in Our Community: The Issue in Black and White : a Manual of Readings for Adult Discussion, Issues 400-402W. M. Phillips, Ethel D. Kahn Cooperative Extension Service, College of Agriculture and Environmental Science, Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey, 1970 - African Americans - 375 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 39
Page
... neighborhoods in Cleveland , Negro families made major gains between 1960 and 1965. Average incomes rose , the incidence of poverty and the number of broken families were reduced . But in the poorest neighborhoods , all of these social ...
... neighborhoods in Cleveland , Negro families made major gains between 1960 and 1965. Average incomes rose , the incidence of poverty and the number of broken families were reduced . But in the poorest neighborhoods , all of these social ...
Page
... neighborhood association and social groups of one kind or another ; all told the organizations represented in TWO have a membership of about 30,000 . As the first broad representative organization to be created in a Negro neighborhood ...
... neighborhood association and social groups of one kind or another ; all told the organizations represented in TWO have a membership of about 30,000 . As the first broad representative organization to be created in a Negro neighborhood ...
Page
... neighborhood which social workers and urban planners assume can never help itself . Yet Woodlawn is helping itself ... Neighborhood Council , which turned the stockyards area into one of the most desirable working - class neighborhoods ...
... neighborhood which social workers and urban planners assume can never help itself . Yet Woodlawn is helping itself ... Neighborhood Council , which turned the stockyards area into one of the most desirable working - class neighborhoods ...
Contents
EQUALITY IN WHAT? PAGE | |
TABLE OF CONTENTS | |
ALLEGORY OF INDIVIDUALISM | |
6 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accept action Africa American Negro areas attitudes become behavior believe black community BLACK PANTHER PARTY black power block Board central cities Chicago churches civil rights colonial culture of poverty decentralization Detroit develop discrimination economic effect Elijah Muhammad employment ethnic groups families feel force ghetto going Hiram housing income increased individual institutions integration Jews Klan Ku Klux Klan labor leaders live major means metropolitan middle-class militant movement Muslim NAACP Nation of Islam Negro Negro community Negro population neighborhood niggers nonwhite organization patterns percent person police policeman political poor problems programs Puerto Rican race racial racial segregation racism Rap Brown riots segregation slum social society South Spanish Harlem Stanton Street status Stokely Carmichael Street talk teachers things tion told United urban violence welfare Woodlawn workers York youth