A. Philip RandolphHolloway House Publishing, 1994 - 208 páginas A biography of the civil rights activist who organized the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, which acted as a labor union for Pullman car porters. |
Índice
March for Jobs and Freedom | 9 |
The Preachers Son | 21 |
3 | 38 |
A Young Man in Harlem | 53 |
The Messenger and the Message | 71 |
Struggle for the Brotherhood | 89 |
Succeeding Despite the Odds | 117 |
Dealing with the New Dealer | 127 |
Dealing with the Fair Dealer | 147 |
Breaking Barriers | 163 |
The Grand Old Man | 181 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
AFL-CIO African Americans all-black Asa and James Asa Philip Randolph Ashley Totten August Bayard Rustin became black and white black leaders Brotherhood of Sleeping BSCP City College civil disobedience civil rights Civil Rights Act Committee congress convention defense industry demand Democratic desegregation discrimination dolph Elizabeth executive order Faubus fight fired Florida Garvey Garvey's George Meany George Pullman Harlem issue Jacksonville Jobs and Freedom June justice League Lincoln Lucille Randolph Madam C.J. Walker Malcolm Malcolm X March on Washington Martin Luther King mediation Messenger Methodist Milton Webster NAACP Negro Philip Randolph political President's Pullman Company Pullman management Pullman porters racial railroad Ralph Abernathy Randolph and Owen Randolph found Republican Robinson Roosevelt Roy Wilkins segregation Sleeping Car Porters social Socialist party southern speech Street strike tion U.S. armed forces union United vice president vote W.E.B. Du Bois Walker Walter White White House workers