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 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 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 issue of Black Rap is focused on youth, and how they are the future of our nation. This piece is accompanied by several others, and then preceded by student poetry and other short writings.
This issue of Black Rap is about the case of Angela Davis, a popular Black activist during the time period. The idea of self-defense is discussed in depth as well. These pieces are accompanied by several others, and then preceded by student poetry…
This issue, after a hiatus since the previous May (1972), does not list an editorial board, but does make mention of an international editorial staff. This is the second half of the paper that was printed.
This is a sixteen-page Chicago pamphlet reprinting of the July 1, 1862 approved Act leading to the creation of the Union Pacific Railroad and the construction of the first transcontinental rail line to the Pacific Ocean in California. It also…
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.
A co-editor of this issue of Black Rapis Barbara Holden-Smith, then Barbara Smith, now vice dean and professor of law, Cornell University. For her biography, see: http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/faculty/bio.cfm?id=35
In the 1990s Dean Holden-Smith…