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Keywords: Negroes
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Journal Article
Nutrition Reviews, Volume 36, Issue 5, May 1978, Pages 133–134, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-4887.1978.tb03727.x
Published: 01 May 1978
... © 1978 International Life Sciences Institute 1978 Abstract Milk supplementation of school children showing a high prevalence of lactose intolerance as usually defined has no untoward nutritional effects. lactose intolerance Negroes milk feeding programs CLINICAL NUTRITION...
Journal Article
Emeka G. Olisa and others
American Journal of Clinical Pathology, Volume 66, Issue 3, 1 September 1976, Pages 537–544, https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcp/66.3.537
Published: 01 September 1976
... classification of Hodgkin’s disease has been applied to 143 previously untreated cases of Hodgkin’s disease in Negro patients seen in four hospitals in Washington, D. C , during a 16-year period (1959–1974). The frequencies and age distributions of histologic subtypes were compared with those in American and two...
Journal Article
J. KOVI and M. Y. HESHMAT
American Journal of Epidemiology, Volume 96, Issue 6, December 1972, Pages 401–413, https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a121473
Published: 01 December 1972
...J. KOVI; M. Y. HESHMAT cancer, breast, cervix uteri, colon, esophagus, lung, pancreas, prostate carcinogens, environmental Negroes neoplasms sarcoma, Kaposi's AMEBICAJI JOUBNAL or EPIDEMIOLOGY Vol. 96, No. 8 Copyright O 1973 bj The Johns Hopkins University Printed in U.S.A...
Chapter
Published: 15 September 2013
... cogitation on the critical Negro Question was a preoccupation and emerging was a logical corollary of the conflation of the problems of Africans, be they in North America or Africa itself—the so-called Black Belt thesis, or the idea that U.S. Negroes were entitled to self-determination, up to and including...
Chapter
Published: 15 September 2013
... with proletarians, it was more eye-catching for a self-respecting Marxist-Leninist than a relatively less-endowed Manhattan. Still, the abjectly horrible conditions faced by the Negro working class—including many abodes bereft of water or even toilets—were suggestive of the fact that there was much work to do...
Chapter
Published: 01 June 2010
... Court Yale College Ballard Jethro Charlton Jasper Church of England Eason Jesse Newbern N C Perry Jesse Whedbee Whidbee George Wright Christopher North Carolina Yearly Meeting Act to Prevent Domestic Insurrections manumission manumitted slaves Negroes The North Carolina Yearly Meeting's...
Chapter
Published: 01 June 2010
... Slave trade abolition of in the United States Standing Committee North Carolina Yearly Meeting manumission mankind Negroes After the act of the North Carolina legislature that established grounds for re-enslaving those the Quakers had set free and after the county court proceedings that went...
Chapter
Published: 14 May 2012
...It was about fifteen centuries from the time the Negro disappeared from the page of the world's history until his reappearance. In the vast system of militia and “minute-men” that guarded the young colonies in America against the savage depredations of the aborigines, the Negro bore an honorable...
Chapter
Published: 14 May 2012
...During the War of the Rebellion, the South took the initiative in employing Negro soldiers. However, they were free Negroes, and many of them owned large interests in Louisiana and South Carolina. A law was passed on June 28, 1861 conferring upon the black man military privileges and duties...
Chapter
Published: 14 May 2012
.... It was eminently fitting, then, that the first shot fired at slavery by Negro soldiers should be aimed by the ex-slaves of the haughty South Carolina rebels. It was poetic justice that South Carolina Negroes should have the priority of obtaining the Union uniform, and enjoy the distinction of being the first Negro...
Chapter
Published: 01 July 2013
... it the county of Illinois. The chapter also looks at a man who played a major role in consolidating the opposition to slavery and to lead this opposition effectively: James Lemen. Finally, it considers the controversial Black Laws, or Black Codes, which treated the territory's Negroes and mulattoes as taxable...
Chapter
Published: 01 July 2013
...This chapter focuses on some of the occupations of the Negroes in Illinois after the Civil War. Even after the Civil War, colored persons were mostly confined to the field of domestic and personal service—as butler, coachman, maid, cook, housekeeper, valet, or janitor. Others who were gainfully...
Chapter
Published: 01 July 2013
...This chapter focuses on the Great Migration, when Negroes from the South descended on northern states in search of better opportunities after World War I. As in the 1870s, news of a better land lying to the north began to spread more generally shortly after the outbreak of the first world war...
Chapter
Published: 01 July 2013
...This chapter discusses the role of the black press in the history of Negroes in Illinois in the early decades of the twentieth century, led by the Chicago Defender. The great majority of Illinois Negro newspapers have been published in Chicago, have been weeklies, and, with a few...
Chapter
Published: 01 July 2013
...This chapter examines the rising tide of racial consciousness in Chicago during the early years of the twentieth century. It begins with a discussion of early efforts by Negroes to return to their ancestral homeland, some of them resorting to emigration outside the borders of the United States...
Book
Published online: 24 May 2018
Published in print: 28 November 2017
...The purpose of this manuscript is threefold. First, it will serve as a cultural biography of Dr. James Edward Shepard and the National Religious Training Institute and Chautauqua for the Negro Race and later the North Carolina College for Negroes (which became North Carolina Central University...
Chapter
Published: 26 February 2018
... Black press Carolina Times Charlotte NC Imperialism Nazism Brown Earl Communism France Germany Great Britain North Carolina College for Negroes NCCN Shepard James E Broughton J Melville Camp Butner Jeffers Margaret Jenkins Clifford Lynchings Morrow Anna Winborne Stanley Wright Cleo...
Chapter
Published: 03 December 2014
...This chapter presents an essay by W. E. B. Du Bois on the Talented Tenth. It argues that the Negro race, like all races, is going to be saved by its exceptional men. The problem of education, then, among Negroes must first of all deal with the Talented Tenth; it is the problem of developing...
Chapter
Published: 01 March 2011
...Seven ships and caravels departed Santo Domingo in July 1543 for Spain. Among them was a ship of Portugal that had come to the city with a cargo of Negroes to sell. In Santo Domingo these slaves were valuable and necessary for farms and services to the residents, for working the fields and gold...
Chapter
Published: 27 November 2012
... by the Yearly Meeting's advice of 1730 “to be very cautious” about buying imported slaves. By 1761, Quakers on both sides of the Atlantic had agreed to prevent Friends from taking part in “the unchristian traffick of dealing in negroes.” In just eight years, the views of abolitionist Friends in the Delaware...