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Discussing prejudice in communities with Dr. St. Clair Drake and Dr. Paul Mundy. They discuss stereotypes, racism, and race relations.
Discussing the community and prejudice with Dr. St. Clair Drake and Dr. Paul Mundy. Includes an interview with a boy named Tony discussing relations with African American people.
Interviewing in the people's park (Lincoln Park) (part 9).
Interviewing neighborhood residents in the people's park (Lincoln Park) (part 8).
Interviewing neighborhood residents in the people's park (Lincoln Park): Strange journey through a familiar land (part 7).
Studs Terkel interviews neighborhood residents in the people's park (Lincoln Park) (part 6) in Chicago.
Interviewing neighborhood residents in the people's park (Lincoln Park) with Jeff, a Puerto Rican girl, Oscar the interpreter, Mrs. Keegan an Irish lady, Pancho, Cisco, Conchita, Julie Mendez, Pat Murfin, a Puerto Rican woman, and Melba. (part 1).
Interviewing neighborhood residents in the people's park (Lincoln Park) with Father Lezak, Newbold the English Plumber, Pat Creer, Dick Brown, Harley Budd on fear and violence and Peter Bauer on fear and violence (part 2).
Interviewing neighborhood residents in the people's park (Lincoln Park) with Steve Schaumburg, Hans the puppeteer, French hand laundry owner, and architect Howard Alan (part 4).
Interviewing neighborhood residents in the people's park (Lincoln Park) with Peter Bauer, Kitty Price a homeowner, a Honduran homeowner, Italian homeowner and wife, sculptress, Mrs. O'Neill and Steve Schaumburg (part 3).
The third program of "Division Street: America" features four profiles: George Drossos, an elderly, Greek man, the Thacker family who recently moved to Chicago, Mrs. Webb, a corner store owner and Native American Benny Bearskin. George Drossos talks about first moving to Chicago and getting acclimated to the city. He recalls visiting other states for a month and then having that feeling of "nostos," or wanting to return home to Chicago. A mother of 15 children and 21 grandchildren, Mrs. Thacker said she doesn't like all the hoodlum business that goes on in Chicago.