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This is a collection of Thelma Thurston Gorham's personal notes and other documents relating to her teaching at Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University. It includes critics reviews, business cards, and a letter from the Tallahassee Democrat. It also contains journalism laboratory equipment lists, budget notes, reports and other correspondence and documents. There are also speech notes and drafts, including a copy of the "What is a friend" poem by C. Raymond Beran, a program for the Alpha Kappa Alpha reception for Mrs. Rosa Louise Parks, bibliographies, teaching and personal notes, reading lists, calendars, and letter drafts.
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Tabulation sheets and other notes by Thelma Thurston Gorham reviewing different newspaper presses and their articles. Many of the presses she reviews here are historically African American, such as The Black Dispatch and the Spokesman Recorder.
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Some of Thelma Thurston Gorham's notes and documents. This includes notes with magazine article suggestions and religious material, particularly the Baháʼí faith's seven lamps of wisdom. It also contains an underlined copy of S. I. Hayakawa's "The Semantics of Being Negro," and a 1961 newspaper clipping of "Questions of Misfortune of Jews Raised at Trial" by Relman Morin.
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Some of Thelma Thurston Gorham's notes and other documents relating to questionnaires and other studies. This includes different contacts, a letter with colloquium committee suggestions for equal opportunity found inside a National Education Association Now special issue, and other notes on propaganda, civil rights and the African American press. Other documents include research materials such as questionnaires, group audio screenings, and other notes on research methods in social relations. There is also a copy from a 1948 article from the American Restaurant Magazine titles "What a cup of coffee costs" by R.D. Mock, as well as some drafts of letters, notes on non-violence, materials from Alpha Kappa Alpha, and other financial documents.
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A collection of Thelma Thurston Gorham's personal notes and other documents. Some of these notes are related to her teaching and writing, as well as different contact information. There are also notes and questionnaires on race, an article draft titled "Why?" covering African American Journalism, and a speech draft on Equal Opportunity. It also includes the program for the 1970 Minnesota Equal Educational Opportunity Seminar, other personal documents and receipts from repair services.
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A collection of Thelma Thurston Gorham's personal notes and other documents. The majority of these notes are written on blue books and contain different peoples' contact information and personal reminders. There are also some notes on writing from her teaching at Florida A&M University and F.D. Moon Junior High School, where she noted things such as "Gorham's Laws." There are also pages that contain different definitions, notes from forums, listening posts, and community meetings, as well as some early drafts of articles and letters. Moreover, there are some personal documents and receipts from different services, such as repairs and airport transit.
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A folder titled "Minorities and Mass Media" collected by Thelma T. Gorham. The folder contains documents from The National Business League including a booklet titled "Building a Constituency: The New Thrust," two pamphlets, the December issue of their National Memo, a membership application, and a news release.
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An illustration drawn by Croyster, otherwise unspecified, of four portraits arranged over an outline of the state of Florida.
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A fifteen page collection of brief texts for the purpose of advising on the topic of public speaking, each accompanied by a hand-drawn illustration, titled "Problems of the Public Speaker."
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A folder of documents collected by Thelma T. Gorham. The folder includes documents related to professional/career endeavors, publishing, marketing, journalism, multiple biographical sketches, two speeches, newspaper clippings, FAMU related documents, and other miscellaneous documents. Also included is an abstract for Gorham's paper titled, "Three Great Black Women Journalists: Pioneers in the Capitol Press Corps."