Dr. Alfred Moldovan, Edwin Moss, and other men consulting in the George Washington Carver Homes neighborhood in Selma, Alabama, on Bloody Sunday.
The men have radios that are using SNCC's WATS (Wide Area Telephone Service) line to communicate with Martin Luther King Jr. in Atlanta. Dr. Moldovan (center), was the lead physician of the Medical Committee for Human Rights at the event, and Moss (far right, barely visible) was a local civil r...
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Format: | Electronic |
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Alabama Department of Archives and History
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Online Access: | http://cdm17217.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/amg/id/130328 |
Summary: | The men have radios that are using SNCC's WATS (Wide Area Telephone Service) line to communicate with Martin Luther King Jr. in Atlanta. Dr. Moldovan (center), was the lead physician of the Medical Committee for Human Rights at the event, and Moss (far right, barely visible) was a local civil rights leader. (Moss was later one of Selma's first African American city councilmen.) |
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