623 research outputs found

    Spartan Daily, May 10, 1937

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    Volume 25, Issue 130https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/2614/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, February 4, 1935

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    Volume 23, Issue 76https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/2255/thumbnail.jp

    Spartan Daily, May 15, 1935

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    Volume 23, Issue 135https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/2312/thumbnail.jp

    Spectator 1969-11-16

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    Spectator 1969-11-16

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    Spartan Daily, March 21, 1994

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    Volume 102, Issue 37https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/8537/thumbnail.jp

    The Script, Vol. 01 No. 26, January 18, 1947

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    Brevard County\u27s Only Colored Newspaper containing church, social, and news of general interest. Circulation in Cocoa, Merritt Island, and Mims every Saturday. The Script Collection includes volume I, number 1 from July 13, 1946, through February 8, 1947 totally twenty-nine issues with contributions from Harry T. Moore. Moore (1905-1951) was the founder of the first branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in Brevard County, Florida.https://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-thescript/1025/thumbnail.jp

    How Abe Lincoln Lost the Black Vote: Lincoln and Emancipation in the African American Mind

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    No other American president has wielded the power of words with greater skill than Abraham Lincoln. No one can read Mr. Lincoln\u27s state papers without perceiving in them a most remarkable facility of \u27putting things\u27 so as to command the attention and assent of the people, wrote Henry J. Raymond, editor of the New York Times in 1864, and Raymond had an editor\u27s unerring eye for this sort of thing. Massachusetts congressman George Boutwell, reminiscing for Allen Thorndike Rice twenty years after Lincoln\u27s death, thought that Lincoln\u27s fame would be carried along the ages by his writings, and especially the three great papers ... the proclamation of emancipation, his oration at Gettysburg, and his second inaugural address. [excerpt

    Sets in Order: the magazine of square dancing. Caller\u27s edition.

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    Published monthly by and for Square Dancers and for the general enjoyment of all

    Sets in Order: the magazine of square dancing. Fashion issue.

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    Published monthly by and for Square Dancers and for the general enjoyment of all
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