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Civil rights and race relations materials, 1957-1964

What You Can Do About Racial Prejudice In Housing Page 29

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10. Grambs, Jean D. A Guide To School Integration, Public Affairs Pamphlet No. 255, 1957. Also: Klineberg, Otto. Race and Psychology, UNESCO, 1958. 11. Levine, Naomi. op. cit. 12. Black, Algernon D. op. cit. 13 It is not our intention to discuss whether racial intermixture is genetically good or bad. From our point of view, it is a social rather than a racial problem. But see Klineberg, Otto, op. cit. General opinion among authorities is that racial intermixture does not result in inferior offspring. Also that there are few people, indeed, who are "purely" of once race or another. 14. Grier, Eunice and George. op. cit. BIBLIOGRAPHY There is a great deal of excellent literature in this field. Some is expressly designed for use in the job of convincing prejudiced people that their fears are unreasonable. Other books and pamphlets delve more deeply into studies and investigations that have been done in every phase of racial prejudice, integrated housing, and neighborhood change. For the group concerned with the immediate problems of prejudice in housing, materials in the first two categories below will probably prove more useful. For groups engaged in more detailed studies, the materials listed in the third and fourth sections will prove interesting and worthwhile. 1. PAMPHLETS AND BOOKLETS: (To have with you when you call on neighbors - to show and leave with them.) 29
 
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