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| Title | The Case of Lloyd Lionel Gaines: The Demise of the Separate but Equal Doctrine |
| Abstract | Article about the United States Supreme Court case of Lloyd Lionel Gaines, or Lloyd Gaines, an African American from Saint Louis, Missouri who was denied admission to the University of Missouri because of his race in the 1930s. The Gaines case was continued in effect in the late 1930s by Lucile Bluford, a fellow African American and journalist with the Kansas City Call newspaper. |
| Notes | Page 262: "The high court's decision in the Gaines Case forced the states providing separate education for whites and Negroes to re-evaluate that policy and to lend more than tacit support to Negro education." |
| Author | Daniel Kelleher
|
| Date | October 1, 1971 |
| Source | Journal of Negro History |
| Location | SC 73: Collection of Magazine Article Photocopies |
| Volume | 56 |
| Number | 4 |
| Page | 262-271 |
| See Also | Microfilm (Stacks) |
| Local Subject | Gaines, Lloyd L. Discrimination Race Relations Bluford, Lucile H. Segregation African Americans Desegregation
|
| Illustrations | N |
| Item Type | Magazine Article
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| Access This Item | This document is not available online. You may come to the Missouri Valley Room to view it or request a photocopy from the Library's Document Delivery service. http://www.kclibrary.org/copy-requests |
| Item ID | 209171 |
| CONTENTdm number | 20062 |