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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 2: Accessible Civil Rights Heritage

Marez Endnote 26

The Gater incident prepared the way for similar events at California State College, Los Angeles, just a few days later when BSU members confronted the editor of the student paper and demanded it use “black” or “Afro-American” instead of “Negro.” No violence was reported, but according to the school’s public relations director, “in view of Monday’s attack on the San Francisco State College newspaper staff by militant young Negroes,” the administration called in the Los Angeles Police Department to reinforce campus police. Subsequently, the two white student newspaper editors met for a telephone conversation to “pinpoint common problems.” See the Associated Press story, “L.A. College Editor Threatened for Printing of Word ‘Negro,’” and Wynn Cook, “LA, SF Editors Confer on Negro, Press Problems,” in San Jose State College’s Spartan Daily, November 13, 1967, 1. https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5006&context=spartandaily.

 

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