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The National Urban League surveys Black men and women seeking solutions to racial discrimination.
1978 (Sep 1)
The Atlanta University Center Digest reported that 74 percent of Blacks participating in a national survey favored integration, but only 29 percent of them felt that it was the best method for overcoming racial discrimination. A larger proportion, 45 percent, felt that although integration was "desirable, Blacks should have an equal voice in the control of schools and housing first." The poll, conducted by Lee Slurzberg Research, Inc., for the National Urban League, questioned more than two thousand Black men and women in the spring of 1978. Other results of the poll showed: 1) Employment/economic development were the principal Black concerns. Seventy-seven percent cited it “as a priority issue and 46 percent mentioned it as their first priority"; 2) Education/youth were cited second in importance. Sixty-four percent called it a priority issue and 20 percent mentioned it as their first priority; 3) Seventy-seven percent of Blacks felt that American society had "serious problems” and 36 percent called for “sweeping changes." Only 20 percent felt that "the American way of life was superior to that of any other country." This attitude was greatest among Blacks fifty-five and older, those living in the South, and those with less than a high school education.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.