Johnson, Charles Spurgeon, 1893-1956 (Personal Name)
His Opportunity ... 1924-25.
English Wikipedia website, viewed May 18, 2012 (Charles Spurgeon Johnson (July 24, 1893--Oct. 27, 1956) was an American sociologist, first black president of historically black Fisk University [in Nashville, Tenn.], and a lifelong advocate for racial equality and the advancement of civil rights for African Americans and all other ethnic minorities; born in Bristol, Va.)
NUCMC data from Fisk Univ. for His Social science documents collection, 20th century? (Charles S. Johnson; b. July 24, 1893; d. 1956)
African American National Biography, accessed via The Oxford African American Studies Center online database, July 27, 2014: (Johnson, Charles Spurgeon; sociologist and educator; born 24 July 1893 in Bristol, Virginia, United States; Ph.B. degree in sociology, University of Chicago (1918); research director of the Chicago Urban League; one year in France during World War I as a sergeant-major in combat; research director of the National Urban League in New York (1921); founded and edited the league's journal, Opportunity; professor of sociology, director of the social sciences department and president (1946-1956), Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee; appointed to the first American delegation to UNESCO in Paris (1946) and to the commission for reorganizing education in postwar Japan; died 27 October 1956 in Louisville, Kentucky, United States)