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![Malcolm X - Last Message Part 1](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Malcolm X addresses the First Annual Dignity Projection and Scholarship Award Ceremony - the chilling Last Message, in which he begins by talking about his experience staying at a house in Detroit that had been bombed the night before his speech.
![Malcolm X - Last Message Part 2](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Malcolm X addresses the First Annual Dignity Projection and Scholarship Award Ceremony - done in Detroit. He discusses politics, race, and the global scene at the time.
![Malcolm X Compilation](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Malcolm X's collection of Famous Speeches during 1962-1965. Side 1: You're Gonna Catch Hell, American Nightmare, We Want to Collect on Our Investment, Field Negro, Question your tactics… Side 2: This is the Era of Revolution, By Any Means, Guerilla Warfare, Negro's Coming up, House Negro, Truth, Chickens and Duck Egg, Epilogue, I'm the Man.
![Fannie Lou Hamer - part 1](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 9/28/1965Call Number: CE 042Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Discusses conditions in Mississippi, role of the police & how the federal government won't protect peoples' civil rights. Remembers Chaney, Goodman & Schwerner murders, admires the Deacons for Defense, Malcolm X (who was to have come to Mississippi the day after his assassination). Comments on the Muslim movement, how she doesn't agree with separation, suggests that Martin Luther King and the SCLC were too middle class, is hopeful about youth and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.
![Fannie Lou Hamer - part 2](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 9/28/1965Call Number: CE 043Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Discusses her life in Mississippi, trying to organize, voting rights. Also describes her attempt to register to vote, arrest & jail - particularly how cops forced other prisoners to beat her under threat of death (they were first made to drink corn whiskey) and despite federal hearings "those same men are still wearing their guns."
![Fannie Lou Hamer](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 9/28/1965Call Number: CD 699Format: CDProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Compact discs and videos representing digitized copies of analog tapes
Discusses conditions in Mississippi, role of the police & how the federal government won't protect peoples civil rights. Remembers Chaney, Goodman & Schwerner murders, admires the Deacons for Defense, Malcolm X (who was to have come to Mississippi the day after his assassination). Comments on the Muslim movement, how she doesn't agree with separation, suggests that Martin Luther King and the SCLC were too middle class, is hopeful about youth and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.
Discusses her life in Mississippi, trying to organize, voting rights. Also describes her attempt to register to vote, arrest & jail - particularly how cops forced other prisoners to beat her under threat of death (they were first made to drink corn whiskey) and despite federal hearings "those same men are still wearing their guns."
![Interview - Horace Cayton, Arna Bontemps, and LeRoi Jones](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 1/1/1965Call Number: CE 119Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Discussion on the "Negro Identity" - writers discuss social divisions within the Black community and how these difference are being overcome in the wake of artistic rebellion. Includes separate interview with Bontemps on the emergence of Negroes in mainstream entertainment and communications media.
![Interview - Horace Cayton, Arna Bontemps, and LeRoi Jones - Part 1](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 1/1/1965Call Number: CE 120Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Discussion on the "Negro Identity" - writers discuss social divisions within the Black community and how these difference are being overcome in the wake of artistic rebellion.
![Interview - Horace Cayton, Arna Bontemps, and LeRoi Jones - Part 2 and 3](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Date: 1/1/1965Call Number: CE 121Format: 1/4 7 1/2 ipsProducers: Colin EdwardsCollection: Colin Edwards Collection
Discussion on the "Negro Identity" - writers discuss social divisions within the Black community and how these difference are being overcome in the wake of artistic rebellion.
![Interview with Malcolm Zaretsky, Alan Perlman and Dr. Gerald Rosenfield, M.D.](images/fileicons/nodigital.png)
Dr. Gerald Rosenfield, M.D. and Alan Perlman discusses their beginning involvement with SNCC through their respective universities, as well as the Civil Rights events in the Bay Area, and Mississippi.