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  • Subject is exactly "race relations"
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Hoover thanks Addams for her telegram about African-American leaders.
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Widegren outlines a course about how to work with minorities on peace for the Summer School.
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Kelley tells Addams of her plans to visit Chicago and asks that Edith Abbott not overburden herself with plans.
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Ewing tells Addams that Helen Culver is willing to underwrite the costs of William Thomas's book on ill-will between the races if Addams and others will promote the work.
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Addams criticizes the film Birth of a Nation as unjust and untrue and designed to foster race prejudice.
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Thomas outlines a possible book on race and immigration, focusing on how immigrants assimilate and how their customs shape their lives.
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Addams tells Thomas that she cannot write an article on race relations, but suggests that Gertrude Baer could write something on anti-Semitism.
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Morel claims that France is stationing black soldiers in Germany to rape and terrorize German women.
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Ewing tells Addams that Helen Culver is willing to underwrite the costs of William Thomas's book on ill-will between the races if Addams and others will promote the work.
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Ewing sends Addams a copy of his letter about William Thomas's proposed study.
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Ickes tells Addams of the sorry state of the Chicago Branch of the National Advancement for the Colored People and efforts to change it.
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Brown testifies on behalf of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's United States Section for a dramatic reduction in American military spending and and for universal disarmament.
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Berg and colleagues ask Carlson to sway public opinion against Black French Colonial soldiers in Germany.
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Willett demands that Colby investigate alleged atrocities committed by black French troops in Germany.
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Shaw tells Willett that the stories of Black French troops in Germany have been greatly exaggerated.
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Mathes asks Addams to investigate the State Department's dismissal of the stories of French Black troop atrocities in Germany.
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American Civil Liberties Union defines its stance on first amendment rights, labor rights, law enforcement, immigration and racial equality.
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Gund asks Addams to have the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom protest France's stationing of black soldiers in the Rhine due to reports of cruelty.
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Addams writes about the changes Blaine suggested for the Joint Committee to Secure Equal Justice for Colored Riot Defendants.
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Haldeman discusses her experiences working at her bank and shares stories of life in Girard.
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The Crisis includes Addams' comments alongside others on the "The Clansman," a play which depicts African Americans negatively.
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Addams chastises American society for failing to live up to the ideals of the Emancipation Proclamation and demands political equality for black Americans.
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Addams chastises American society for failing to live up to the ideals of the Emancipation Proclamation and demands political equality for black Americans.
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Also known as The Yellow Kid, 1905

Addams relates a story about peasants in Russia who believe that all Americans are black. It was published in several newspapers on April 16, 1905, and then also under the title of "The Yellow Kid" in an anthology of quotes from famous people.