| David Rollin Anderson, Gladys Haddad - 1992 - 332 頁
...little brother, and me. South State Street was in its glory then, a teeming Negro street with crowded theaters, restaurants, and cabarets. And excitement...gamblers, prostitutes and pimps, church folks and sinners. The tenements on either side were very congested. For neither love nor money could you find a decent... | |
| Faith Berry - 1992 - 418 頁
...elevated railway in Chicago's crowded South Side. Nearby was South State Street, a teeming thoroughfare, "full of workers and gamblers, prostitutes and pimps, church folks and sinners." He would remember these people and one day bring them to life in his poetry. But that summer in Chicago,... | |
| Melvin Holli, Peter d'Alroy Jones - 1995 - 660 頁
...his arrival in 1918: "South State Street was in its glory then, a teeming Negro street with crowded theaters, restaurants, and cabarets. And excitement from noon to noon. Midnight was like day."37 The Chicago Whip, a black newspaper, described the district as a cosmopolitan "Bohemia of the... | |
| Carrie Brown - 2002 - 316 頁
...Chicago during the war, "South State Street was in its glory then, a teeming Negro street with crowded theaters, restaurants, and cabarets. And excitement...gamblers, prostitutes and pimps, church folks and sinners. The tenements on either side were very congested. For neither love nor money could you find a decent... | |
| Robin F. Bachin - 2004 - 445 頁
...Streets. "South State Street was in its glory then," he wrote, "a teeming Negro Street with crowded theaters, restaurants, and cabarets. And excitement...prostitutes and pimps, church folks and sinners." ' The Chicago Defender touted the Stroll as "the popular promenade for the masses and classes." Even... | |
| Gerald Leinwand - 2004 - 286 頁
...its vibrancy in 1918: "South State Street was in its glory then, a teeming Negro street with crowded theaters, restaurants, and cabarets. And excitement...gamblers, prostitutes and pimps, church folks and sinners."12 Mayor Bill Thompson shared the racial and religious prejudices of his time and place, but... | |
| Robin F. Bachin - 2004 - 445 頁
...wrote, "a teeming Negro Street with crowded theaters, restaurants, and cabarets. And excitement DD from noon to noon. Midnight was like day. The street...prostitutes and pimps, church folks and sinners." 1 The Chicago Defender touted the Stroll as "the popular promenade for the masses and classes." Even... | |
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