Integration; Vilolence; Blacks; African-Americans; Little Rock Central High School; Lee Bullis; Black Journalists
Statement of Lee Bullis, News Editor at Little Rock televistion station KTHV, to the FBI, regarding a mob attack on a black journalist during the Little Rock Central High Crisis.
Integration; African-Americans; Blacks; Little Rock Central High School; Little Rock (Ark.)
Letter from white parents Grace and Lee Lorch, Philander Smith College, confirming their request that their daughter be enrolled in same school as her black playmates.
Integration; Civil Rights; African-Americans; Blacks; Little Rock (Ark.); John Walker
Telegram from attorney John Walker regarding Little Rock school's plans to bus black students to black schools in 1966, contrary to previous statements.
Integration; Education; Virgil Blossom; Little Rock (Ark.); Lee Lorch; Grace Lorch; Alice Lorch; Philander Smith College
Letter to Virgil Blossom, Superintendent of the Little Rock Public Schools, from Lee and Grace Lorch, requesting permission for their daughter to attend a black school.
Integration; Blacks; African-Americans; Education; Little Rock Central High School; Wesley Pruden; Journalists; Communism
Statement of Charles N. Quinn, reporter for the New York Herald Tribune, given to the FBI regarding the mob assault of a black journalist covering the integration of Central High School.
Education; Blacks; African-Americans; Integration; Conway; Arkansas State Teachers College; Joseph N. Manley; Pine Street School
Joseph Norman Manley, a 1954 graduate of the segregated Pine Street School in Conway, was accepted as the first black student at Arkansas State Teachers College (now University of Central Arkansas) in 1956.
Integration; Civil Rights; University of Arkansas; African-Americans; Blacks; Fayetteville (Ark.)
Telegram from Arkansas State Auditor J. Oscar Humphrey and State Treasurer J. Vance Clayton protesting admittance of black students to the University of Arkansas, 1948.