The Corridors of Migration Control
On January 17, 1948, funeral home owner M. K. Fritz sat down to read his morning paper in Chicago, Illinois. In it he read about a case of racial discrimination against a Mexican national. He was so enraged by the incident that he mailed the clipping to Miguel Alemán, the president of Mexico, to let...
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Published in | Migra p. 125 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
University of California Press
01.04.2010
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Edition | 1 |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISBN | 0520257693 9780520257696 |
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Summary: | On January 17, 1948, funeral home owner M. K. Fritz sat down to read his morning paper in Chicago, Illinois. In it he read about a case of racial discrimination against a Mexican national. He was so enraged by the incident that he mailed the clipping to Miguel Alemán, the president of Mexico, to let him “get a look at the way people of color are treated here in this country of ours.”¹ Fritz did not understand racial discrimination as an aberration of life in America. “We the Negro people,” he wrote “have been subject to it for a many |
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ISBN: | 0520257693 9780520257696 |