This volume of Black Rap touches on the issue of the lack of Black student enrollment in college, and federal funding for higher education. Also the paper discusses the topic of White professors teaching in historically Black colleges, and the…
This issue of Black Rap is shorter than most. It includes articles that discuss topics relating to the experiences and lives of African people. One article discuses the idea of Pan-Africanism and the African struggle to unite. While another article…
This issue of Black Rap includes articles about a student's experience with an internship in a women's clinic, the expansive arrival of new students of color, and the noble position of being an R.A. (Residential Assistant). There are also other…
This volume of Black Rap is a small kind of tribute to the greatness that has emerged up from the Black community. The paper begins with multiple pieces from different influential African Americans, such as, Martin Luther King Jr., Whitney M. Young,…
This issue of Black Rap is a volume of poetry and short writings that expresses the social discontent and questioning Black students had about their lives and placement as Black people in the world.
This volume of Black Rap discusses several pressing issues that Black students have been noticing or facing in college life, and in life outside of the educational institution. They speak on issues such as using and selling drugs among Black youth;…
This is a six-page tabloid issue, with a subtitle but no masthead or listing of staff, though responsibility continues to be attributed to A.S.A.L., the campus black student organization.
Topics continue to center on political topics in Africa and…