Mississippi -- Race relations; Silver, James W. (James Wesley), 1907-1988
Article describing James Silver's speech at the University of Mississippi's fourth Chancellor's Symposium on Southern History, held in 1978, in which Silver expresses pleasure at the progress made toward racial equality in Mississippi
School integration -- United States; Public administration -- Corrupt practices
Article revealing that Mississippi Welfare Commissioner Fred Ross used public funds to print and distribute copies of his speech titled "Racial Amalgamation Versus Segregation and Racial Coperation [sic]," which contends, among other things, that...
Silver, James W. (James Wesley), 1907-1988; Mississippi -- Race relations; United States -- Race relations; Communism -- United States -- History -- 20th century
Article detailing the views of University of Southern Mississippi president Dr. William D. Cain that racial tension in America will create vulnerability to communism
Lucy, Autherine, 1930-; College integration -- Alabama -- History; Segregation in education -- Southern States
Article discussing college integration in the South, particularly at the University of Alabama, and responding with distress to mounting racial tensions in the region
Barrett's analysis of the social idiosyncrasies that made racial dynamics in Mississippi more turbulent than in other states, with a description of the integration of the University of Mississippi
College integration -- Mississippi -- Oxford; Meredith, James, 1933-; Silver, James W. (James Wesley), 1907-1988
Speech describing the events surrounding the integration of the University of Mississippi, and giving Barrett's assessment of racial problems in Mississippi
Mississippi -- Social life and customs; Mississippi -- Race relations
Article describing a speech to University of Mississippi law students made by J. O. Emmerich, editor of the McComb (Miss.) Enterprise Journal, urging them not to think that racial problems were the only problems in Mississippi
Henry, Aaron, 1922-1997; Hate crimes -- Mississippi
Article about two men, Theodore A. Carr and Aubrey Cauthen, who were tried and acquitted of firebombing the home of Aaron Henry, president of the Mississippi NAACP, despite their having confessed to the crime