The Locator -- [(subject = "Civil rights movements--Mississippi--History--20th century")]

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Author:
Alsup, William H., author.
Title:
Won over : reflections of a federal judge on his journey from Jim Crow Mississippi / William Alsup ; foreword by Thelton Henderson.
Publisher:
NewSouth Books,
Copyright Date:
2019
Description:
xii, 202 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Subject:
Alsup, William H.--Childhood and youth.
University of Mississippi--Students--Biography.
Cupit, Danny--Childhood and youth.
University of Mississippi.
Civil rights workers--Mississippi--Biography.
Mississippi--History--History--20th century.
Law students--Mississippi--Biography.
Youth, White--Mississippi--Biography.
Civil rights movements--Mississippi--History--20th century.
Racism--Mississippi.
Jackson (Miss.)--Biography.
Civil rights movements.
Civil rights workers.
Law students.
Race relations.
Racism.
Students.
Youth, White.
Mississippi.
Mississippi--Jackson.
1900-1999
Biography.
History.
Contents:
The billboard -- Mississippi -- The Mississippi way of life -- Separate but equal all over again -- Catastrophe -- Pals -- The right of protest -- Blowing in the wind -- Camelot and Cuba -- James Meredith at Ole Miss -- Utterly empty -- Cool like the Kennedys -- Lalime's -- A ride on the rails -- That word -- "We are for civil rights for Negroes" -- Willanna -- The murder of Medgar Evers -- Class reunion -- The summer of 1963 -- Get an education -- the ticket to somewhere -- MSU debate -- Birmingham Sunday and Dallas Friday -- Amelia Earhart Peak -- The UFO -- The summer of 1964 -- Danny Cupit -- Our visit with Charles Evers -- The Voting Rights Act -- National contenders -- The campus YMCA -- Cermette Clardy and Richard Holmes -- Road trip to Harvard -- My Harvard roommate -- Student activism and the YMCA -- MSU women! -- Tumult -- Mandate for change -- A brutal beating of a liberal guest -- The summer of 1966 -- Katrina -- A stand against evil -- A black speaker on a white campus -- The Confederate statues -- Our final season -- Reprisals -- Riding the wind -- A tank commander -- More assassinations, more protest -- Captain Jack Purvis in Vietnam -- Charles Evers at MSU -- Back in Mississippi -- Federal court in San Francisco -- An old wound, torn anew -- Abiding contemplation.
Summary:
"What was it like growing up white in Mississippi as the Civil Rights Movement exploded in the Fifties and Sixties? How did white children reconcile the decency and fairness taught by their parents with the indecency and unfairness of the "Mississippi Way of Life," the genteel euphemism applied to the pervasive Jim Crow regime? How did the Civil Rights Movement influence white kids coming of age in the most segregated place in America? Won Over, a memoir, examines these questions as it traces the journey of United States District Judge William Alsup, born white in 1945 to hard-working parents in Mississippi. They believed in segregation. But they also taught their children fairness and decency and therein lay the conflict, a struggle at the core of the human predicament in the South. As Won Over recalls near its outset, the author's earliest doubt about the system came at age twelve when what he'd thought stood as an abandoned shack in the bottom of a sand quarry turned out to be a school for black kids as he saw them playing in the mud outside its door. Won Over is a coming of age story of white boys in Mississippi, their journey on the monumental question of race in America, and how they were won over to the right side of history."--Provided by publisher.
ISBN:
1588383423
9781588383426
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1076369943
LCCN:
2018031632
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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