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FREEDOMWAYS                              THIRD QUARTER 1973

also written the book Lumumba.)
McManus, Edgar J. BLACK BONDAGE IN THE NORTH. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press. xiii, 236 pages. $9.95. (McManus, a white professor of history at Queens College, New York City, is the author of A History of Negro Slavery in New York [1966, 1970]. Black Bondage has documentary source material of the northern slave system.)
Major, Clarence. NO. New York: Emerson Hall Publishers. 207 pages. $7.95. (This is the prolific young Black writer Major's second novel. His first was All-Night Visitors, 1969. His other books are The New Black Poetry [anthology], Dictionary of Afro-American Slang and four books of poetry; Swallow the Lake, Symptoms & Madness, Private Line and The Cotton Club. Major teaches literature and creative writing at Sarah Lawrence College.)
Major, Reginald. JUSTICE IN THE ROUND: THE TRIAL OF ANGELA DAVIS. New York: Third Press: Viking. $7.95.
Makward, Edris and Leslie Lacy (editors). CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN LITERATURE. New York: Random House. (An anthology of various forms of African writing.)
Maquet, Jacques. AFRICANITY: THE CULTURAL UNITY OF BLACK AFRICA. New York: Oxford University Press. 188 pages. $2.50 (paper). (A similar book is Cheikh Anta Diop's The Cultural Unity of Negro Africa [Presence Africaine, France]. Maquet is also the author of Civilizations of Black Africa [Oxford University Press].)
Mazrui, Ali A. and Hasu H. Patel (editors). AFRICA IN WORLD AFFAIRS: THE NEXT THIRTY YEARS. New York: The Third Press 265 pages. $10.00. (Mazrui, a prolific African professor and writer in Uganda, is the author or co-editor of Protest and Power in Black Africa, Ancient Greece in African Political Thought, Towards a Pax Africana and other books.)
MEDIA AND THE DISADVANTAGED: INSTRUCTIONAL TECHNOLOGY AS THE EQUALIZER FOR DISADVANTAGED STUDENTS. Produced by the ERIC Clearinghouse on Media and Technology, Stanford Center for Research and Development in Teaching, Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., Spring 1973. (A portfolio that includes a transcript of The Media and Disadvantaged Conference, Dec. 3-4, 1972, in New Orleans La., instructional material and material describing the project.)
Meier, August and Elliott Rudwick. CORE: A STUDY IN THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT, 1942-1968. New York: Oxford University Press. xii, 563 pages. $15.00. (This is a lengthy study that has taken several years to write. It stops when CORE, Roy Innis and Floyd McKissick went nationalist. Meier and Rudwick have authored or edited several other books.)
Meyer, Howard N. THE AMENDMENT THAT REFUSED TO DIE. Radnor, Pa.: Chilton Book Co. $7.95. (This is a history of the important 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution which made Blacks U.S. citizens with equal protection of the laws when ratified in 1868. Meyer, a white New York attorney who writes book reviews for Freedomways and articles for other magazines, edited Integrating America's Heritage [McGrath, 1970] and wrote introductions for T.W. Higginson's Army Life in a Black Regiment [Collier, 1963] and Angelo Herndon's Let Me Live [Arno, 1970]. Meyer is the author of Colonel of the Black regiment: The Life of Thomas Wentworth Higginson [Norton, 1967] and Let Us Have Peace [1966], a biography of Ulysses S. Grant.)

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