Prior to running for office, what role did Rev. Hill, Pastor of Hartford Memoria
ID: 357241 • Letter: P
Question
Prior to running for office, what role did Rev. Hill, Pastor of Hartford Memorial Baptist Church, Detroit, play in civil rights in Detroit and nationally (see page 160)? 1. As a Common Council (eg. City Council) candidate, what issues did Rev. Hill run on/ promise to fix (see nare 160? 2. How did Rev. Hill's role as pastor of Hartford Memorial Baptist church help his Common Council campaign? (See page 160 3. How did the Detroit ministerial alliance help Rev. Charles Hill's city council campaign? (See pg. 161)? 4. 5. What doomed the common council campaign of Rev. Hill and the black/labor coalition? See ps. 163) 6. How was religion used to divide the racial/labor coalition (See pg. 164)? After defeat, how did Rev. Hill, executive director of the NAACP in 1945, change the NAACP's strategies in pursuing civil rights? (pg. 167) 7. 8. What role did the Hill's Detroit NAACP play in the Sipes v. McGhee and Shelly v. Kramer cases on restrictive covenants? (pg. 167) 9. Rev. Hill was active in the Civil Rights Congress, a socialist leaning labor and civil rights organization founded in Detroit in 1946. What role did this organization play in advocating for a fair employment policy in Michigan (See Pg. 169)? 10. Why did the ballot initiative for fair employment fail? (See pg. 170)Explanation / Answer
Bose began extensive research aimed at clarifying factors that he saw as fundamental weaknesses plaguing high-end audio systems. The principal weaknesses, in his view, were that overall, the electronics and speaker failed to account for the spatial properties of the radiated sound in typical listening spaces (homes and apartments) and the implications of spatiality for psychoacoustics, i.e. the listener's head as a sonic diffraction object as part of the system. Eight years later, he started the company, charging it with a mission to achieve "Better Sound Through Research", now the company slogan.
In an interview in 2007 Bose talked about an early review that kept the company alive.
"One magazine in the United States, High Fidelity, a really credible magazine, had one reviewer named Norman Eisenburg who really knew his music. In those days I used to take the loudspeaker to the reviewer. I packed my son and loudspeaker in the car and went off. I put this little thing on top of the big speakers he had, turned it on, and within five minutes he said: 'I don't care if this is made of green cheese, it's the best sound, most accurate sound, I've ever heard.' He came out with a review titled 'Surround and Conquer'.[11] He was not known to do things like that. Everybody in the press knew he knew music, and it resulted in rave reviews one after another, and we were able to survive."[12]
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