「negro」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)2ページ目

negro

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1語右で並び替え

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  • ld always remember, that by whatever means the Negro, for instance, acquired his present physical,
  • Toro Negro Forest Reserve
  • He was noted as "Antoine, 38, Creole Negro gardener/expert grafter of pecan trees" for $1
  • Rio Negro Gnatcatcher, Poliptila (guianensis) facilis, f
  • hristmas party for students at the Winter Park Negro Grammar School beginning in 1938.
  • Listan Negro grapes growing in Tenerife
  • Mercer wrote, "Ebony never drew criticism from Negro groups (in fact, Eisner was commended by some
  • The term Free Negro had been extremely common in the United States
  • Since then, Joey Negro has become one of the most sought-after produc
  • few months that Francisco operated as El Gato Negro, he encountered Armando Ochoa, better known as
  • r own farm and founded a weekly newspaper, The Negro Health Journal of South Carolina, and offered
  • Institute of African American Culture, and the Negro Heritage Trail Tour.
  • A.H. Parker High School opened in 1900 as Negro High School then Industrial High School as the
  • a success quickly as Yates won the 1930 Texas Negro High School state championship.
  • ction in 1946, and in 1964 became the East Bay Negro Historical Society, Inc.
  • on was originally known as the Ebony Museum of Negro History and Art and made its debut in the livi
  • Its origins as the Ebony Museum of Negro History and Art began following the work of Ma
  • eople of Color in Louisiana", 1917, Journal of Negro History
  • igade in the Defense of Cincinnati, Journal of Negro History, XLVIII, 1963, 75-97.
  • hed Service Award from the United Committee on Negro History.
  • Wikipedia disallows the use of the term Free Negro, however.
  • 708 a duty of three pounds was placed on every negro imported into the colony.
  • an African Congress on behalf of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
  • l Companion to the Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers.
  • Universal Negro Improvement Association
  • 's father was active in Marcus Garvey's United Negro Improvement Association; Randolph attended ass
  • was a contributor and editor of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communitie
  • oppin, The Unfinished March the History of the Negro in the United States Reconstruction to World W
  • ommission would go on to publish the book, The Negro in Chicago.
  • Bowman wrote the thesis, "The Negro in the Works of Three Contemporary Louisiana W
  • e had come, she said, to pay attention “to the Negro in Mississippi, who had not even had the leavi
  • Ohio and the Color Line, by David Gerber; The Negro in Indiana, by Emma Thornbrough; Mobile Americ
  • 12 Million Black Voices: A Folk History of the Negro in the United States (New York: Viking, 1941)
  • orest vegetation in the floodplains of the Rio Negro, in Brazil.
  • Helen G. Edmonds called Young "the outstanding Negro in the state legislature during the Fusion per
  • The Negro in the Civil War (1968)
  • The Negro in American Life (1926)
  • illing his contractual obligations to Blanco y Negro in the UK and Sire/Reprise in the US, Mascis h
  • The Negro in the Making of America (1964)
  • Santa Isabel do Rio Negro, in the state of Amazonas
  • The Next Page: Going back to A Negro in the South by Bill Steigerwald for the Pitts
  • Agustin first donned the alter ego of El Gato Negro in order to form a successful career in Lucha
  • He said "if it is necessary every Negro in the state will be lynched; it will be done
  • ical study and theorizing was The Philadelphia Negro, in which a large section of the sociological
  • d other Black Seminoles known as the "Seminole Negro Indian Scouts".
  • The Seminole Negro Indian Scouts (originally a black unit despite
  • ter who he is, whether English, French, Irish, Negro, Indian, or what religion he belongs to".
  • uba, where they would have acquired Indian and Negro influences, to be reimported again in Andalusi
  • 6 Walker was elected president of the National Negro Insurance Association.
  • n Durham, North Carolina to found the National Negro Insurance Association.
  • A theme of The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual is that intellectuals must play a
  • The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual
  • t the FBI “can't seem to solve a crime where a Negro is involved.”
  • The pasilla chile or chile negro is the dried form of a variety of Capsicum ann
  • Cavaleiro Negro is a 1923 Brazilian silent adventure film dire
  • The New Negro is divided into two sections: "The Negro Renai
  • Scaptia lata, coliguacho or tabano negro is a large horse fly whose range includes sout
  • Mercado negro is a 1953 Argentine film.
  • Valle negro is a 1943 Argentine film.
  • The Negro is free, whether we like it or not; we must re
  • The magical Negro is an archetype which was first applied to pre
  • According to Ehrenstein, the magical Negro is a non threatening black hero in the popular
  • San Carlos de Rio Negro is a town in Venezuela's Amazonas State.
  • zil, Colombia and Venezuela, including the Rio Negro, Jamari, Preto da Eva, Urubu rivers and upper
  • of the song appears on the album 2010 Genuine Negro Jig by the Carolina Chocolate Drops.
  • Bonus Download: Snowden's Jig (Genuine Negro Jig) (live) (Traditional) - 4:07
  • s, except Hale, he thought it proper to have a Negro judge preside at this particular trial.
  • They subsequently signed to the Blanco y Negro label, releasing two further singles, the seco
  • s Party of America and later into the National Negro Labor Congress.
  • Negro labor in the western cattle industry, 1866-190
  • Negro Labor: A National Problem (1946)
  • La negra (The Negro Lady)
  • of the Annual Conference of the Presidents of Negro Land-Grant Colleges, 1933
  • 911 as the "Alabama Reform School for Juvenile Negro Law-Breakers", was changed to the "Alabama Ind
  • 1911 as the Alabama Reform School for Juvenile Negro Law-Breakers, was changed to the Alabama Indus
  • nor, Wilson advocated the humane reform of the Negro Laws and backed the incorporation of the Medic
  • He called for "an army of negro lawyers of strong hearts, cool heads, and sane
  • y 7. Vice president of the Regional Council of Negro Leadership and an NAACP worker, Lee had been u
  • M. Howard, the head of the Regional Council of Negro Leadership (RCNL), a leading civil rights orga
  • t annual conference of the Regional Council of Negro Leadership (a civil rights organization), held
  • John Preston "Pete" Hill, Negro league baseball player and member of the Baseb
  • He began his Negro league career in 1933 with the Brooklyn Royal
  • at 44th and Parkside is the Philadelphia Stars Negro League Memorial Park.
  • d League championship three times and the 1925 Negro League World Series.
  • For the Negro league baseball player and manager, see Candy
  • In 1942 Day set a Negro league record when he struck out 18 Baltimore
  • Airy Baseball honors the Negro league team by calling its senior and tourname
  • into how a baseball field dedicated to fellow Negro League player John Henry Lloyd (better known a
  • Homestead Grays, named Brooks to his all-time Negro league baseball all-star team.
  • He was the first pitcher to pitch in the first Negro League World Series.
  • He was the captain of the 1926 Negro League Champion Chicago American Giants.
  • e trolling to me, so I am going to restore the Negro league heading.
  • Durkee Field was home to the Negro League and minor league baseball teams.
  • Side Park became the home of the newly-formed Negro League baseball team called the Chicago Americ
  • Many of them including Luque also played Negro League baseball with integrated teams from Cub
  • d with the Southern News Services All-American Negro League Baseball Team.
  • helping former Major League, Minor League, and Negro League players, as well as scouts, umpires, an
  • d stealing 23 bases in a typically abbreviated Negro League season.
  • n 1944 also listed Hill as one of the greatest Negro League outfielders.
  • Whiteside was an expert on Negro league baseball, and was one of the first Amer
  • He was among the 94 Negro League figures on the Baseball Hall of Fame ba
  • The Washington Black Senators were a Negro League team based in Washington, DC.
  • hosted many barnstorming all-stars, including Negro League teams like the Baltimore Elite Giants,
  • Jacksonville's only Negro League team, the Jacksonville Red Caps, a team
  • eball player who played first base for several Negro League teams from 1938-1954.
  • er 6, 2006) was a first baseman and manager in Negro league baseball, most notably in the Negro Ame
  • ve hosted a "Judy Johnson Night - A Tribute to Negro League Baseball" since 1996 in which the team,
  • The Jacksonville Red Caps were a team in Negro League Baseball in 1938 and 1941-1942, playing
  • ctively campaigns for recognition of deserving Negro league veterans.
  • Paige was snubbed by other Negro league players and fans when he was not select
  • irst played for the Chicago American Giants in Negro league baseball and also played professional b
  • Longtime Negro League pitcher "Pud" Flournoy pitched for the
  • The Active Club of Philadelphia was a Negro League baseball team which played in Philadelp
  • 7 Radcliffe was inducted into the "Yesterday's Negro League Baseball Players Wall of Fame" at Count
  • The Bacharach Giants, a Negro League baseball team that played in Atlantic C
  • Ben Taylor: former Negro League professional baseball player from 1908
  • They ended up losing three Negro League World Series to the Homestead Grays tha
  • It was also home to a few Negro League teams, as well as a Continental Footbal
  • Considered one of the better pitchers in negro league history, he was also known for serious
  • Johnny Washington, a former Negro League player and friend of Johnson, said: "Du
  • nuary 20, 1920 - October 31, 1997) is a former Negro League baseball and Major League Baseball play
  • e played for the Indianapolis Clowns, a former Negro League team which was now competing as an inde
  • Beckwith was a great player and battled fellow Negro League third baseman Jud Wilson for supremacy
  • Toni Stone - first woman to play Negro League Baseball; one of the first women to pla
  • "The Knife" Pride, and 28 other living former Negro league players were "drafted" by each of the 3
  • made US$25 a game and sometimes played against Negro league teams.
  • 31, 2010) was a shortstop in Major League and Negro league baseball who was an all-star for the Bi
  • baseball team that played in the Florida State Negro League in the 1940s.
  • Barney Brown - Negro league pitcher 1931-1949
  • lla was regularly hazed by veteran players and Negro League Baseball star Buck O'Neil who put shavi
  • WikiProject Baseball / Cubs / Negro league baseball
  • obile, Alabama - May 17, 2002) was an American Negro League baseball player.
  • ed with the semi-pro Mobile Tigers with fellow Negro league players Satchel Paige and Ted Radcliffe
  • Game One of the Negro League World Series occurred on October 3, 192
  • He was also the first Negro League pitcher to pitch at historic Hinchliffe
  • being denied pensions while a small number of Negro League players were being given this benefit.
  • helping former Major League, Minor League, and Negro League players through financial and medical d
  • For the Negro League baseball pitcher, see Ray Brown (Negro
  • The Atlanta Black Crackers were a professional Negro league baseball team which played during the e
  • Darby fielded Negro League teams from 1910 to 1932.
  • He was one of Negro league baseball's foremost ambassadors until h
  • rivals in Jamestown, who were also featuring a Negro league ace pitcher, Barney Brown.
  • is edition of the Crawfords to be the greatest Negro league team of all time, featuring the four Ha
  • torian Bill James identified Benson as the top Negro League player of the 1944 season.
  • d Caps apparently continued as an unaffiliated Negro league team playing at Durkee Field.
  • helping former Major League, Minor League, and Negro League players through financial and medical h
  • The Negro League "Black Pelicans" also played in the par
  • On May 1, 1926, Paige made his Negro League debut.
  • was a member of the Board of Directors of the Negro League Baseball Players Association.
  • He was scouted by Negro League veteran John Beckwith who signed him to
  • Johnson had a friend, legendary Negro League player Ted "Double Duty" Radcliffe, who
  • arted as an independent, then joined the Texas Negro League followed by the Texas-Oklahoma Negro Le
  • The Indianapolis ABCs were a Negro League baseball team that played both as an in
  • n third baseman, first baseman, and manager in Negro league baseball.
  • ven, Connecticut, that scheduled games against Negro League and major league teams.
  • ent in 1937 only to eventually lose out to the Negro League all-star delegation featuring Satchel P
  • r League Baseball's color barrier in 1947, the Negro League as well as the Black Crackers continued
  • fielder for the Chicago American Giants of the Negro League
  • American second and third baseman and coach in Negro League and Major League Baseball who spent his
  • Born in Austin, Texas, he began his Negro League career late in 1922 with the Kansas Cit
  • ) was an American third baseman and manager in Negro league baseball.
  • lor managed the Homestead Grays to their first Negro League World Series title, repeating their suc
  • 27, the program has won its share of four PVIL Negro League State titles and the UIL state title in
  • Brown (born 1896) was a left-handed pitcher in Negro league baseball.
  • Moore was a player in the Negro League, appearing with many different teams bu
  • 1948 Boston Royal Giants uniforms to honor the Negro league.
  • 7, Grant went on to become a hugely successful Negro Leaguer for the Cuban X Giants, Big Gorhams an
  • He is the son of Sammy Hairston, a former Negro Leaguer who later became the first black playe
  • g the fastest baserunners of his generation of Negro Leaguers, his most remarkable season was his 1
  • Like many Negro Leaguers, Bostock wanted to play in Major Leag
  • n American professional baseball player in the Negro Leagues and a college football coach.
  • professional baseball team which played in the Negro Leagues between 1910 and 1932.
  • ional baseball for Birmingham, Alabama, in the Negro Leagues from 1920 to 1960 when the Major Leagu
  • pa Bay Rays and Pittsburgh Pirates honored the Negro Leagues by wearing uniforms of the Jacksonvill
  • y 17, 2001) was an infielder/outfielder in the Negro leagues and a utilityman in Major League Baseb
  • Veeck's plan was to sign players from the Negro leagues to make the Phillies competitive.
  • Today at 44th and Parkside is a Negro leagues memorial park.
  • From 1949 to 1951, he played in the Negro leagues before joining the baseball minor leag
  • Otha Bailey (born 1931) was a former Negro Leagues baseball player.
  • In 1943, he had his best season in the Negro leagues in the United States, when he was sele
  • ning a reputation according to Voices from the Negro Leagues as perhaps "the best fielding basement
  • After hitting in the Negro leagues for high marks of .422
  • Leonard led the Negro leagues in batting average in 1948 with a mark
  • American outfielder and manager in baseball's Negro Leagues from 1899 to 1925.
  • 1965) was a baseball player and manager in the Negro Leagues from 1905 to 1943.
  • er left fielder and right-handed batter in the Negro leagues and Major League Baseball who played w
  • professional baseball team that played in the Negro leagues from 1920 to 1950.
  • ith Yankees' PA announcer Bob Sheppard, former Negro Leagues player Buck O'Neill and long-time Tige
  • He played in the Negro Leagues with the New York Black Yankees, Balti
  • Because of the opposition the Negro leagues faced, and because of the lack of reli
  • ed the Newark Eagles baseball franchise in the Negro Leagues with his wife from 1935 to 1946.
  • His lifetime batting average in the Negro Leagues was .350.
  • an American left-handed pitcher in baseball's Negro leagues in the 1920s and 1930s, and had a care
  • The Complete Book of Baseball's Negro Leagues by John Holway
  • lack Barons and the Indianapolis Clowns of the Negro Leagues and played part of one season (1951) w
  • Josh Gibson (1911-1947), baseball great of the Negro Leagues
  • City, Missouri, in a building also housing the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, it preserves the hist
  • ed to supporting black baseball players in the Negro Leagues and honoring those who played for Majo
  • r Eddie Collins allowed three players from the Negro Leagues to try out for the Red Sox.
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