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MEDT 7470: Rosa Parks materials list/bibliography | Tina Launey, 6/24/2009ImageFile nameSourceDownload dateImage captioncivil_rights1United Streaming: 6/20/20098/24/1964-Atlantic City, NJ: Some 100 civil rights demonstrators kept an all-night vigil before the Democratic Convention Hall in an attempt to seat members of the Freedom Democratic Party. In the center of the picture is Mrs. Rita Schwerner, widow of Michael Schwerner who was slain near Philadelphia, Mississippi this summer.civil_rights2United Streaming: 6/20/2009A photograph of protesters at the landmark civil rights demonstration, the March on Washington, in 1963.klan1United Streaming: 6/20/2009A part of the nearly 30,000 Ku Klux Klan members from Chicago and northern Illinois who took part in a midnight ritual in 1922. The KKK resurgence was not limited to the South; by 1924 its members formed a powerful political force in California, Oregon, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. Embracing prohibition, fundamentalist religion, "true Americanism," and opposition to Catholics, Jews, immigrants, radicals and African Americans, the KKK grew to nearly five million members by 1925.klan2United Streaming: 6/20/2009A Mississippi KKK initiation, 1923. A reactivated Ku Klux Klan was responsible for some of the violence against African Americans and immigrants in both the South and North in the 1920s. Outlawed and discredited for its excesses during Reconstruction, the KKK was reborn in 1915 under the evangelistic direction of William J. Simmons, an Atlanta insurance salesman. Although sneered at by H. L. Mencken as a chance to dress the village bigot up in a white sheet while allowing him to pretend he was a knight in an invisible empire, the elaborate regalia, solemn ceremony, and white solidarity appealed to many Americans.parks_bus_replicaEBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009ROSA PARKS VIEWING- Visitors to the St. Paul AME church in Montgomery, Al. on October 29, 2005, line up to make a brief tour of a replica of the bus where Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white male passenger in December of 1955. Her defiant act led to the U.S. Supreme Court decision in 1957 declaring segregated busing unconstitutional. Ms. Parks, who became a civil rights icon, died of natural causes at age 92 in her Detroit home on Monday, October 24, 2005. Her body was brought here, her home church, for a public viewing and memorial. (UPI Photo/John Dickerson)parks_bus_seat1Pics 4 Learning: 6/16/2009seat on a city bus in San Antonioparks_bus1Kitzu: 6/16/2009This is the actual bus where Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat, now on display in a Dearborn, Michigan, museum.parks_fingerprints1EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009NATIONAL ARCHIVES DISPLAY OF ROSA PARKS-An exhibit highlighting the arrest of civil rights activist Rosa Parks is on display at the National Archives in Washington on November 23, 2005.The display contains photographs, Parks' police report, and her fingerprint chart, the exhibit will run until mid December. (UPI Photo/Kevin Dietsch)parks_funeral1EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009Caption: ROSA PARKS BODY ON DISPLAY IN THE CAPITOL- The hearse carrying the body of Rosa Parks, and a 1950's replica of the famous bus in which Parks refused to give up her seat to a white man, leaves the U.S. Capitol after a 15 hour public viewing in Washington on Oct. 31, 2005. Parks, who died last Monday at the age of 92, is the first woman and the second African-American to lie in honor in the Capitol Rotunda. (UPI Photo/Kevin Dietsch)parks_funeral2EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009ROSA PARKS VIEWING- Latrice Price signs the visitors/guest log at St. Paul AME church in Montgomery, Al., October 29, 2005, moments before paying her respects to civil rights icon Rosa Parks. Ms. Parks died of natural causes at age 92 Monday, October 24, in her Detroit home and was brought to her home church here for a public viewing and memorial service. Ms. Price is in the U.S. Air Force, stationed at nearby Maxwell AFB. (UPI Photo/John Dickerson)parks_funeral3EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009ROSA PARKS BODY ON DISPLAY IN THE CAPITOL- The casket containing the remains of civil rights icon Rosa Parks lies on display in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington on Oct. 30, 2005. Parks, who died in Detroit on Monday at the age of 92, will lay in honor until Tuesday afternoon. (UPI Photo/Kevin Dietsch)parks_funeral4EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009ROSA PARKS BODY ON DISPLAY IN THE CAPITOL- The casket containing the remains of civil rights icon Rosa Parks lies on display in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington on Oct. 30, 2005. Parks, who died in Detroit on Monday at the age of 92, will lay in honor until Tuesday afternoon. (UPI Photo/Kevin Dietsch)parks_funeral5EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009ROSA PARKS VIEWING- A horse-drawn carriage carrying the body of Rosa Parks in Montgomery, Al., begins a short, symbolic journey to her home church here on Saturday, October 29, 2005. The civil rights icon died at age 92 on Monday, October 24, 2005, in her Detroit home. Family and caretakers brought her body here to the St. Paul AME Church for a public viewing and memorial service. (UPI Photo/John Dickerson)parks_highway1EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009SLP2000110214- 02 NOVEMBER 2000- ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI, USA: Workers with the Missouri Department of Transportation work to unveil a new sign along Highway 55 in south St. Louis County, honoring civil rights activist Rosa Parks, November 2. The one mile stretch of highway named for Parks is the same stretch of road where the Klu Klux Klan posted their signs last year for their adopt-a-highway signs. rw/bg/Bill Greenblatt UPIparks_highway2EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009SLP2000110215- 02 NOVEMBER 2000- ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI, USA: U.S. Secretary of Transportation Rodney Slater (L) and Missouri Senator William Lacy Clay, Jr., unveil a replica of a sign that is now in place on a stretch of Highway 55 in south St. Louis County, honoring civil rights activist Rosa Parks, November 2. rw/bg/Bill Greenblatt UPIrosa_parks1EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009"American civil rights activist Rosa Parks, whose refusal to give up her seat for a white man was the catalyst for the Montgomery bus boycott. (Photo by MPI/Getty Images)" -- Image Date: 1/1/1955rosa_parks10Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009Rosa Parks, Pioneer of Civil Rights.rosa_parks11Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009Rosa Parks at a 1956 press conference.rosa_parks12Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009Rosa Parks and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.rosa_parks13Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009Rosa Parks, campaigning in 1988.rosa_parks14Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009Rosa Parks approaches the Montgomery courthouse to enter her plea.rosa_parks15Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009The struggle goes on. Rosa Parks in her seventies.rosa_parks16Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009Rosa Parks in Montgomery after the Supreme Court decision outlawing segregation on public transit.rosa_parks17Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009Rosa Parks was presented with the Congressional Gold Medal, on June 15, 1999.rosa_parks18Academy of Achievement (via NetTrekker): 6/16/2009Rosa Parks (C) riding on newly integrated bus following Supreme Court ruling ending segregation of Montgomery buses.rosa_parks2EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009WAP99011998 - 19 JANUARY 1999 - WASHINGTON, D.C., USA: Civil rights activist Rosa Parks attends President Clinton's State of the Union Address while sitting in a wheelchair in the House of Representatives, January 19. iw/Ian Wagreich UPIrosa_parks3EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009NATIONAL ARCHIVES DISPLAY OF ROSA PARKS-An exhibit highlighting the arrest of civil rights activist Rosa Parks is on display at the National Archives in Washington on November 23, 2005.The display contains photographs, Parks' police report, and her fingerprint chart, the exhibit will run until mid December. (UPI Photo/Kevin Dietsch)rosa_parks4EBSCO Image Search: 6/16/2009ST. LOUIS PLANS TO HONOR LIFE OF ROSA PARKS-St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay (L) and Harold Crumpton, president of the St. Louis NAACP, talk about details of a ceremony that will celebrate the life of "The Mother of the Modern Day Civil Rights Movement," Rosa Parks, in St. Louis on November 28, 2005. The ceremony will be held on December 1, the same day Parks was arrested for not giving up her seat on a city bus to a white man in Montgomery, AL in 1955. (UPI Photo/Bill Greenblatt)rosa_parks5United Streaming: 6/16/2009Rosa Parks (1913-2005) sits in the front of a bus in Montgomery, Alabama, after the Supreme Court ruled segregation illegal on the city bus system on December 21st, 1956. The man sitting behind Parks is Nicholas C. Chriss, a reporter for United Press International out of Atlanta.rosa_parks6United Streaming: 6/16/2009Rosa Parks, civil rights leader who started the Alabama Bus Boycott, with Reverend Thomas Kilgore Jr.rosa_parks7Kitzu: 6/16/2009As the boycott continued, Rosa was fingerprinted. One of the primary organizers of the boycott was Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.rosa_parks8Kitzu: 6/16/2009Rosa went to court with members of the NAACP. She was fined $14.00.rosa_parks9Kitzu: 6/16/2009This is Rosa on her 75th Birthday.segregation1EBSCO Image Search: 6/20/2009School segregation protestsegregation2United Streaming: 6/20/2009Teenagers in Birmingham begin a segregation protest march that ended in their being routed by high-pressure hoses and snapping police dogs.segregation3United Streaming: 6/20/2009George W. McLaurin, a 54 year old African American, sits in an anteroom, apart from the other students, as he attends class at the University of Oklahoma in 1948. The university insisted that segregation be maintained, but a Supreme Court ruling forced the institution to accept McLaurin as a student.segregation4United Streaming: 6/20/2009African American protesters seen through a paddy wagon window, sing and pray during a protest at the Birmingham Jail in Alabama.Song titleFile nameSourceDownload date40's Blues Decades of Music Vintagesoundzabound_bluesSoundzabound: 6/20/2009City Windowscity_windows_: 6/20/2009Every Timeevery_time_: 6/20/2009Karma Will Get Youkarma_: 6/20/2009Video clip titleFile nameSourceDownload dateIntroduction, Rosa Parks, American HeroIntroduction__Rosa_Parks__American_HeroUnited Streaming: 6/20/2009Interview with Rosa ParksparksinterviewAcademy for Achievement: 6/20/2009Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus BoycottRosa_Parks_and_the_Montgomery_Bus_BoycottUnited Streaming: 6/20/2009The Story of Rosa ParksThe_Story_of_Rosa_ParksUnited Streaming: 6/20/2009 ................
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