Viewing page 90 of 100

This transcription has been completed. Contact us with corrections.

FREEDOMWAYS           FIRST QUARTER 1968

illustrated with photographs and engravings. $5.50. (A biography of the man chosen in 1862 to command the First South Carolina Volunteers, the first freed slaves allowed to fight in the Civil War. By the author of Let Us Have Peace, 1966, a biography of Ulysses S. Grant, and editor of a paperback edition of Higginson's Army Life in a Black Regiment. A recent biography of Higginson is Anna Mary Wells's Dear Preceptor. The Life and Times of Tomas Wentworth Higginson, 1963.)

Montgomery, David. BEYOND EQUALITY: LABOR AND THE RADICAL REPUBLICANS, 1862-1872. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. $10.00.

Murphy, Raymond J. and Elinson, Howard (editors). PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS OF THE NEGRO MOVEMENT. Belmont, Calif.: Wadsworth Publishing Co. 440 pp. $4.50. (Has 32 articles on the current Negro movement.)

Newby, I. A. CHALLENGE TO THE COURT: SOCIAL SCIENTISTS AND THE DEFENSE OF SEGREGATION, 1954-1966. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. xii; 239 pp. $6.50. (How racist psychologists, sociologists and biologists have attempted to rationalize and justify racial segregation. By the author of Jim Crow's Defense: Anti-Negro Thought in America, 19000-1930 [1965].)

Oakes, Theresa and Weiss, M. Jerry. THE UNFINISHED JOURNEY: THEMES FROM CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE. New York: McGraw-Hill. 344 pp. $4.80. (An anthology that includes "Wings on His Shoulders" by Arna Bontemps, "Letter to My Nephew" by James Baldwin and "Letter from Birmingham Jail" by Martin Luther King, Jr.)

Panger, Daniel. OL' PROPHET NAT. Winston-Salem, N.C.: John F. Blair. 159 pp. $4.95. (A first novel by Daniel Panger of San Francisco and an "expert" in race relations. A look into the heart and mind of Nat Turner.)

Reed, Ishmael. THE FREE-LANCE PALLBEARERS. New York: Doubleday. 155 pp. $3.95. (A way-out book and a first novel by the young Negro poet whose poems have been published in Walter Lowenfel's book Where is Vietnam? American Poets Respond, 1967, and in several magazines.)

Salk, Erwin A. (compiler and editor). A LAYMAN'S GUIDE TO NEGRO HISTORY. New, enlarged edition. New York: McGraw-Hill. xviii; 196 pp. $5.95. (The first edition was published by Quadrangle Press, Chicago, in 1966.)

Smith, Ed. WHERE TO, BLACK MAN? Chicago: Quadrangle Books. 221 pp. $4.95. (An American Negro's African diary.)

Stone, Chuck. TELL IT LIKE IT IS. New York: Trident Press. $4.95. (Essays on the American racial scene by the well-known Negro journalist and assistant to Congressman Adam C. Powell.)

Thomas, Jesse O. MY STORY IN BLACK AND WHITE: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF JESSE O. THOMAS. Foreword by Whitney M. Young, Jr. New York: Exposition Press. 300 pp. $6.00. (Jesse O. Thomas, a Mississippian, was the first Negro professional administrator hired by the National American Red Cross. He is also founder of the Atlanta University School of Social Work.)

88

Transcription Notes:
---------- Reopened for Editing 2024-02-12 21:45:53 ---------- Reopened for Editing 2024-02-13 21:17:16 ---------- Reopened for Editing 2024-02-14 11:56:28