Fred Blackwell (4 results)
Published by Vision, 1993
- Softcover
Seller: RiLaoghaire, Knoxville, TN, U.S.A.RiLaoghaire
Contact seller5-star sellerSoft cover. Condition: Good. 111 numbered pages; just light wear to corners, edges, and spine of cover; minor rub to cover; a few minor marks to cover; a few minor scratches; stapled binding; weighs 10 ounces; measures 11 by 8.5 by .2 inches; 102908.

- Softcover
Seller: The Book House, Inc. - St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.The Book House, Inc. - St. Louis
Contact seller5-star sellerCondition: Used - Good
£ 15.31
£ 5.20 shippingShips within U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Trade Paperback. Condition: Good. Good softcover, wear to edges, a few markings.
Candide: 1956 Original Broadway Cast
Bernstein, Leonard & Boris Aplon & Max Adrian & Robert Rounseville & Barbara Cook & William Olvis & William Chapman & Irra Petina & Fred Jones & George Blackwell
Published by Sony 0
Seller: Braintree Book Rack, Cohasset, MA, U.S.A.Braintree Book Rack
Contact seller4-star sellerCondition: Used - Very good
£ 7.65
£ 4.45 shippingShips within U.S.A.Quantity: 1 available
Audio CD. Condition: Very Good. CD, booklet and case are in very good condition.

Published by Fred Blackwell/The Associated Press, Jackson/New York
- Softcover
- Manuscript
Seller: 32.1 Rare Books + Ephemera, IOBA, ESA, Princeton, NJ, U.S.A.32.1 Rare Books + Ephemera, IOBA, ESA
Contact seller4-star sellerAssociation member: IOBA
Softcover. 9 1/4" x 6 3/4." Black-and-white reproduction print of 'Civil Rights Workers Sit in at Lunch Counter' by Fred Blackewell, photographer for The Jackson [MS] Daily News. Reproduction date unknown. The original image was taken on May 28, 1963, at a Woolworth's five-and-dime store in Jackson, Mississippi. It depicts Touga…loo College sociology professor John Salter and students Joan Trumpauer and Anne Moody seated calmly while a hostile white mob pours sugar, ketchup, and mustard on them. In this event, civil rights activists conducted sit-ins at segregated lunch counters in the southern United States to protest racial segregation and discrimination. These sit-ins were a form of nonviolent protest and civil disobedience. African American activists and their allies would intentionally enter segregated establishments and attempt to order food or drinks at the 'whites only' lunch counters. When denied service, they would remain seated, often enduring verbal and sometimes physical abuse from counter staff and white supremacists. The purpose of these sit-ins was to draw attention to the injustice of segregation and to challenge the practice by peacefully defying it. The sit-ins at lunch counters were one of the many tactics employed during the Civil Rights Movement to fight for equal rights, and they were instrumental in bringing about legal changes and social reforms that eventually led to desegregation in public accommodations. Specific events, like the Greensboro sit-ins in North Carolina in 1960, played a pivotal role in popularizing this form of protest. The media, including the Associated Press [AP], played a significant role in documenting and disseminating information about these events, which helped garner support for the civil rights cause. Fine image on heavy card stock.