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  1. Kathleen Neal Cleaver

    Kathleen Neal Cleaver

    American activist

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  1. Kathleen Neal Cleaver (born May 13, 1945) is an American law professor and activist, known for her involvement with the Black Power movement and the Black Panther Party, a political and revolutionary.

  2. Mar 29, 2022 · Kathleen Cleaver is a Black lawyer, educator, activist, and writer born Kathleen Neal on 13 May 1945, in Dallas, Texas, USA. Ernest Neal, her father, was a Wiley College sociology professor and Juette-Johnson-Neal, her mother, had a master's degree in mathematics.

  3. Jan 10, 2018 · Kathleen Neal Cleaver emerged in the late 1960s as one of the most influential leaders of the Black Panther Party (BPP). Neal was born in Memphis, Texas, on May 13, 1945. Her father, Ernest Neal, was a sociology professor at Wiley College.

  4. Aug 22, 2018 · With her insatiable fighting spirit, Kathleen Cleaver went from being a bookish child to a front-lines protestor with the Black Panthers.

  5. Aug 25, 2016 · Kathleen Cleaver (May 13, 1945) Kathleen Neal Cleaver was born in Dallas, Texas and spent much of her childhood living abroad with her family due to her father’s position in the Foreign Service. After the family returned to the United States, she attended a Quaker boarding school and later attended Oberlin College and Barnard College.

  6. INTERVIEWER: How's it going to happen, Kathleen? CLEAVER: Well, you just have to get up and do it. And everybody has to agree that that's what they want to do and there's nothing more important.

  7. Jun 17, 2000 · Thirty years ago, Kathleen Neal Cleaver, instantly recognizable by her iconic Afro and knee-high leather boots, was writing to agitate for the Black Panther Party.

  8. Kathleen Cleaver was the first woman to become a highly visible leader in the militant Black Panther Party, and one of the few women to emerge as a nationwide symbol of the black power movement. From 1967 to 1971, Cleaver was the Panthers' communications secretary.

  9. Summary. Kathleen Cleaver recalls growing up in Tuskegee, Alabama, India and the Philippines while her father worked for the foreign service. She remembers dropping out of college to work for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) as a secretary, and witnessing the dissolution of that organization.

  10. Tribute to Kathleen Cleaver. In 1970, Life magazine commissioned Gordon Parks to report—through words and images—on the Black Panthers and their leaders, with a focus on Eldridge Cleaver, then the Panther minister of information. At the time, Cleaver was living with his wife Kathleen and their 5-month-old son, Maceo, outside of Algiers ...

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