This issue of Black Rap is set in a somber yet celebratory tone. It is tribute to the life and death of George Jackson. This piece is accompanied by several others, and then preceded by student poetry and other short writings.
This issue of Black Rap was created around the theme of freeing Angela Davis, a popular Black activist during the time period. This piece is accompanied by several others, and then preceded by student poetry and other short writings.
This second issue of the third volume of the Lake Forest College student publication,Black Rap, is published by Black Students for Black Action, a College student group. Much of the issue's coverage is of international issues involving African…
This first still tabloid scaled issue of the third volume of Black Rap, from October 1970, continues the anti-establishment, anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist policy and content of the secdond volume, that took this focus at the outset of 1970 with…
This is the fourth issue of Black Rap for 1970, with political and campus commentary, including coverage of a visit on May 25, 1971 [sic] of Black poet Don L. Lee (1942- ), a.k.a. Haki R. Madhubuti.
This is the third issue of the second and re-purposed political opinion volume of Black Rap, an alternative newspaper produced by students at Lake Forest College, from the late 1960s to the early 1980s. It is highly politicized in content, reflecting…
This is a revised version of the Volume 2 Number 1 issue of Black Rap. It has one extra page that brings together an image from pages 4 and 5. The image is of a brain, set directly in the center of the two pages.
The beginning of this new volume, after a hiatus of almost a year (March 1969 to February 1970), of Black Rap, published by Lake Forest College African-American students (Black Students for Black Action), is printed in a new format, offset in a…