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Title:

"Dorothy Height speaks about efforts to create a memorial to Mary McLeod Bethune"

Date:
November 30, 1972

Synopsis

In a press conference at the Los Angeles Hilton, Dorothy Height, president of the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW), speaks about the need for a memorial in Washington, D.C., honoring the contributions that Black men and women have made to American life. The NCNW is working to erect a memorial of noted educator and activist, Mary McLeod Bethune, in Lincoln Park in Washington, D.C., which would be the first such monument to a Black American in the nation's capital. Height details Bethune's accomplishments, the symbolic importance of a monument honoring Black Americans in the century following the Emancipation Proclamation and the difficulties, opposition, and racism NCNW has faced from the federal government in this effort.

Note: The KTLA newsfilm collection at UCLA consists of cut and unedited stories, outtakes and fill footage, originally shot on 16mm reversal film stock with magnetic soundtrack. Some footage, particularly material not used for broadcast, may be without sound.


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