 | Lloyd Chiasson - 1995 - 255 ˹éÒ
...complained that American news media have "failed to communicate." They have not communicated to the majority of their audience — which is white —...ghetto. They have not communicated to whites a feeling for the difficulties and frustrations of being a Negro in the United States. They have not shown understanding... | |
 | Phyllis Rauch Klotman, Janet K. Cutler, Indiana University Press - 1999 - 483 ˹éÒ
...grievance."8 The Kerner Commission's mandate was twofold: to communicate to the majority white audience "a sense of the degradation, misery, and hopelessness of living in the ghetto" and to show "understanding or appreciation of ... a sense of Negro culture, thought, or history."4... | |
 | Al Smith - 2007 - 462 ˹éÒ
...civil disorders and on the underlying problems of race relations. They have not communicated to the majority of their audience — which is white —...sense of the degradation, misery and hopelessness of life in the ghetto. These failings must be corrected, and the improvement must come from within the... | |
 | United States. Federal Communications Commission - 1970
...communications media, ironically, have failed to communicate. . . . They have not couuntmicated to the majority of their audience — which is white —...hopelessness of living in the ghetto. . . . They have not shown understanding or appreciation of — and thus have not communicated — a sense of Negro culture,... | |
 | United States. National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders - 1968 - 425 ˹éÒ
...civil disorders and on the underlying problems of race relations. They have not communicated to the majority of their audience — which is white —...sense of the degradation, misery, and hopelessness of life in the ghetto. These failings must be corrected, and the improvement must come from within the... | |
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