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    been told to correct his feature about myself many times. I am nice looking to others but not quite as “perfect” as other people would prefer. I have been given hair products and suggestions without asking for it. I have even been asked to what heritage I was from because my hair is dark and curly. I have been asked to correct my only non-White feature. There is something not quite right about me in the eyes of other Whites. The sociologically theory that other researchers have used to describe

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    the 19th century there were two black leaders who had completely different opinions on how blacks should accomplish these goals. Booker T Washington urged blacks to uplift themselves through vocational training and economical self-reliance. W.E.B Du Bois‚ on the other hand‚ was an advocate of complete racial equality. More recently‚ a similar dilemma occurred among blacks. Martin Luther King‚ Jr. Believed in acquiescence‚ while Malcolm X felt that blacks should attain equal rights ’by any means necessary’

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    Two great leaders of the black community in the late 19th and 20th century were W.E.B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington. These men offer different strategies for dealing with the problems of poverty and discrimination facing Black Americans. Booker T. Washington?s gradualism stance gives him wide spread appeal among both blacks and whites‚ although W.E.B. Du Bois has the upper hand when it comes to his philosophy in dealing with economic prosperity and education among Blacks. These men had different

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    advocated for educating adults because she planed to make them literate and through literacy they could move from unskilled labour into skilled labour positions‚ which would improve their social advancement in society. Cooper’s ideas were closely tied to Du Bois’ ideas of a liberal arts education because she believed that a liberal arts education was a tool for self-improvement and social change among the Black community. Cooper believed that when adults pursued a liberal arts education they had potential

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    Booker T. Washington was born a slave and was nine years old when slavery ended. When booker T. Washington was older he created the Tuskegee institute in Alabama. He was the principal their and he taught blacks about the industry and industrial skills. He was a politician and also a good public speaker‚ he was able to get whites and blacks to donate to his school. Booker T. Washington was a better and stronger advocated for rights of African Americans than W.E.B. Dubois was because Washington wasn’t

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    Obtaining an education was one of the many goals emancipated slaves were eager to gain as the Reconstruction era came to an end. Most white people in the South considered the education of a black person to be pointless. During the late 19th and early 20th century‚ Booker T. Washington and W.E.B DuBois came to be known as two of the great leaders in civil rights movement and more importantly in the education of the black community. Although Booker T. Washington and W.E.B DuBois have the common goal

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    Your morals mostly come from the way you are brought up. They way you were brought up also defines you as a person. It forms the way you view things‚ handle or approach certain situations. W.E.B. Dubois and Booker T. Washington were raised completely different ways. Some may even go as far to say that they are polar opposites. That is why their approach on getting equality for African Americans are completely different. I agree with both of their approaches for many reasons but I also disagree with

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    Alonzo Herndon was born into slavery because he was son of his master Frank Herndon and mother Sophenie. At age seven he was emancipated and began to work with his family members in social circle Georgia as a sharecropper. 13 years later he left and started a barber shop in Clayton County. After his business thrived he decided to invest in real estate‚ and then entered the insurance world. While pursuing a job in insurance he made Atlanta Life Insurance Company which had branches in Florida‚ Kansas

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    Booker T. Washington uses the metaphor of the fingers and the hand to alleviate the pressures felt by both whites and blacks. Whites did not want to feel forced into interaction while a lot of blacks would have probably felt resentment towards having to interact with whites. In the passage preceding this declaration‚ he states‚ "we shall stand by you with a devotion that no foreigner can approach…interlacing our industrial‚ commercial‚ civil and religious life with yours in a way that shall make

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    Booker T. Vs. W.E.B. DuBois Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois were both prominent figures in the African American Community following radical reconstruction. Although they were both very powerful members of the African American community‚ they held polar opposite views. Booker T. believed that if Blacks formed a strong work force and became essential to the Southern economy‚ that whites would have no choice but to give equal rights and equal respect to them. W.E.B. DuBois on the other

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