Seven people sitting in a room with a coffee table, chairs, and couches. Each individual seems to be engaged in either a conversation or reading something. A Shoji Screen is present in the background.
This is the first official issue of Black Rap. It includes no issue or volume number. This first issue was constructed by the Black freshman class of 1968. This issue explores the Black college student's perspective on the progress of the Black race,…
This is the first issue of Black Rap. It discuses in depth the beauty of the Black race, what it means to be Black, and having a strong sense of Black identitiy. These messages are all conveyed through the means of poetry, prose, and short…
This is the third issue of Black Rap, from late 1968 (mention of "X-mas" gifts). This was the first full semester for Lake Forest College after the assassination of minority Civil Rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King in April of 1968, the…
This issue of Black Rap discusses issues involving the state of mind of African Americans, the longevity of their activist movements, and their place in an ever changing world. These pieces are accompanied by several others, and then preceded by…