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The page presentation framework of the Booker T. Washington papers is designed to provide researchers worldwide with searchable access to the thousands of pages comprising the fourteen volumes, most of which are out of print. Adapted from the National Academy Press's Open Book framework, this framework allows searching down to the page level, provides sorting of search results chronologically, enables easy navigation across multiple volumes, and allows page-by-page local printing (via PDF) of every page.

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The BOOKER T. WASHINGTON Papers Warren, Sapphira (Sophie) Lavinia, 3:32, *33, 178, 245 Washburn, Lucy M., 3:405, 406, *407; 7:22 Washburn-Crosby's Gold Medal Flour, 12:235 Washington, A. W., 9:442, *443, 467 Washington, Allen, 3:350 Washington, Baker T. (BTW's son). See Washington, Booker T., Jr. Washington, Bertha, 13:337 Washington, Booker C(alloway?), 2:416, 480 Washington, Booker Taliaferro: —Black newspapers and magazines: accused of hounding I. M. Barber, 8:236; accused of owning Colored American Magazine, 8:39-40; accused of subsidizing black press, 8:213-14, 224-41, 266, 274-75; advertising used to influence black press, 7:214; advises editor of New York Age, 9:90, 474-75, 616, 691-93; 10:284; advises editor on content of Colored American Magazine, 8:206; advises T. T. Fortune on ownership of New York Age, 9:396-98; advises T. T. Fortune to sell New York Age, 7:409; aids Chicago Conservator, 9:486, 505; aids New York Age, 8:469, 470-71; aids revival of Boston Advocate, 6:510-11; alliance between J. Max Barber and T. T. Fortune suggested, 9:389, 390; and Boston Colored Citizen, 8;189-92; arranges for black newspapers to be sent to O. G. Villard, 10:585; arranges for editorial denouncing critics, 9:34-35; article on Haiti in New York Age, 13:394-401; black editor vows to support BTW, 7:222-23; black editors investigate BTW's influence with black press, 7:212-13; blamed for dismissal of }. Max Barber as editor of Chicago Conservator, 9:466; Boston Guardian jeopardized by Pickens case, 7:343, 344; Boston Guardian representatives seek BTW correspondence with another black editor, 8:243-44; BTW's friends run Negro Press Bureau for Roosevelt, 9:365-66; bribe of editor W. C. Chase, 7:219; 8:581, 583-84; 10:551; 242 C. W. Anderson removes Boston Guardian from New York shops, 8:403-4; calls for support in opposing unequal treatment on railroads, 13:15-16; cautions R. W. Tyler on use of name in letters to black newspapers, 12:299; Chicago black newspapers described, 8:514; Chicago Conservator accused of misrepresenting BTW, 9:102; Chicago editor seeks reconciliation with BTW, 7:495-96; complains of editorial policy of Voice of the Negro, 8:41, 167-68, 215-16, 218, 340, 571; compliments editor of Chicago Conservator, 8:19; concerned by editorial policy of New York Age, 12:305-6; control of New York Age probed by O. G. Villard, 12:332-34, 346; controls Boston Colored Citizen, 7:384, 406, 496, 524-25; controls use of name in press, 7:312; critical of black press for pessimism, 9:184; critical of Boston Guardian, 8:175-76; critical of New York Age bickering over emancipation celebration, 12:230; criticized in Voice of the Negro, 8:154-56; criticizes advertising in New York Age, 11 :420; criticizes editor of New York Age, 10:420; 12:337; criticizes editorial policy of New York Age, 11:313; 13:98; criticizes personal habits of Fred R. Moore, 9:363-64; critics seek letters between BTW and E. E. Cooper, 8:246; cultivates editor of Chicago Defender, 12:377; cultivates owner of Chicago Conservator, 9:451-52, 460; declines to invest in M. T. Chisum's proposed paper, 13:106; declines to write article for Voice of the Negro, 8:454-55; denies any control of black newspapers, 8:43, 281, 414-15, 448; denies any financial interest in Colored American Magazine, 8:38, 44, 45-47, 280-81; denies control of editorial policy of New York Age, 10:314; denies financial assistance to T. T. Fortune, 9:396, 400, 412; denies influence over black press, 11 :94; denies subsidizing black newspapers, 7:445, 488-89; denies ownership of newspaper stock, 11:198; denies ownership of stock in