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FREEDEOM WAYS                 THIRD QUARTER 1966

Uncle Remus were the extent of folk tales in the South. Both J. Mason Brewer and Zora Neale Hurston have spent a lifetime collecting tales of the Negro.  Their tales are by no means the stories of "giddy clowns," but rather artistic folk-tales of a people that should not die out.  If it is left up to Langston Hughes and a few others, folk humor will remain a vital part of the fabric of American culture.  And according to Hughes the stuff of humor "is that what you wish in your secret heart were not funny, but it is, and you must laugh . . ." That is, laugh "to keep from cryin'." 
                           Miles M. Jackson, Jr.

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By C.L.R. JAMES

PARTY POLITICS IN THE WEST INDIES
   176 pp.                   $1.25

FACING REALITY
  (With Grace C. Lee and Pierre Chalieu)
   174 pp.                   $ .50

            Postage Free from

         FACING REALITY BOOK SERVICE 
                 14131 Woodward Avenue
                 Detroit, Michigan 48203




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