Dark Memories is the first in a series ofm\ ster\u3e nox els. It lakes place at Ole Miss and 1 researched the historv of the Oni\ ersit\ and its traditions. I\u27his included a \ arieiv of inter\ ie\\ s as w ell as reading main books, fhe stor\ examines the problem of race relations and perception, fhe no\ el contains two parallel stories; the tale of three fralernitN boys during the 1962 Integration and the contemporary homicide story. When .Iordan Teague finds the bod\ of an Ole Miss co-ed. her friend and reporter. Meg Anderson begins working w ith Delecli\ e Da\ is Heard to find the truth. .As they begin questioning students and faculty. Meg\u27s friend from her undergraduate days and FBI Crime Analyst. 1 yler White arri\ es w ilh inform...
There have been numerous works on segregation and desegregation in Mississippi schools. However, muc...
In 1954, the Supreme Court decided that a young girl named Linda Brown could attend her neighborhood...
The dead can be buried, but the past can\u27t. Quoting an un-known writer, Elizabeth Eckford stood ...
This thesis details the history of Jackson, Mississippi through the eyes of education, specifically ...
Between 1950 and the end of the 1970s, schools in Mississippi went through the formal process of leg...
On June 12 1963, NAACP field secretary Medgar Evers was shot to death in front of his home in Jackso...
The following thesis examines media coverage of a 1970 campus shooting at Jackson State University i...
This research utilized historical analysis, narrative inquiry, and oral history to document and anal...
This study examined the impact of the federally ordered school desegregation of Clinton High School ...
This qualitative research study explores the stories of Black men and women who attended Adkin High ...
In 1994, Byron de la Beckwith was convicted for the 1963 murder of civil rights activist Medgar Ever...
Many traditional historical texts of the United States are missing the voiced presence of African Am...
Twenty years later, Vernon Steve Weakley, one of the students wounded at Jackson State, recounts the...
In 1994, Byron de la Beckwith was convicted for the 1963 murder of civil rights activist Medgar Ever...
In May 1957, Bobby Cain--a black student--graduated from the newly-integrated Clinton, Tennessee, Hi...
There have been numerous works on segregation and desegregation in Mississippi schools. However, muc...
In 1954, the Supreme Court decided that a young girl named Linda Brown could attend her neighborhood...
The dead can be buried, but the past can\u27t. Quoting an un-known writer, Elizabeth Eckford stood ...
This thesis details the history of Jackson, Mississippi through the eyes of education, specifically ...
Between 1950 and the end of the 1970s, schools in Mississippi went through the formal process of leg...
On June 12 1963, NAACP field secretary Medgar Evers was shot to death in front of his home in Jackso...
The following thesis examines media coverage of a 1970 campus shooting at Jackson State University i...
This research utilized historical analysis, narrative inquiry, and oral history to document and anal...
This study examined the impact of the federally ordered school desegregation of Clinton High School ...
This qualitative research study explores the stories of Black men and women who attended Adkin High ...
In 1994, Byron de la Beckwith was convicted for the 1963 murder of civil rights activist Medgar Ever...
Many traditional historical texts of the United States are missing the voiced presence of African Am...
Twenty years later, Vernon Steve Weakley, one of the students wounded at Jackson State, recounts the...
In 1994, Byron de la Beckwith was convicted for the 1963 murder of civil rights activist Medgar Ever...
In May 1957, Bobby Cain--a black student--graduated from the newly-integrated Clinton, Tennessee, Hi...
There have been numerous works on segregation and desegregation in Mississippi schools. However, muc...
In 1954, the Supreme Court decided that a young girl named Linda Brown could attend her neighborhood...
The dead can be buried, but the past can\u27t. Quoting an un-known writer, Elizabeth Eckford stood ...