Part 44 (2/2)

facsims., maps, tables. E185.93.F5P7 Based on thesis (M.A.)-University of Florida.

Bibliographical references included in ”Notes” (p. 113-124).

Bibliography: p. 125-128.

1441 Price, Margaret W. The Negro and the ballot in the South.

Atlanta, Southern Regional Council, 1959. 83 p. tables.

JK1929.A2P7 Bibliographical footnotes.

1442 Record, Wilson. The Negro and the Communist Party. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1951] 340 p. E185.61.R29 Bibliographical references included in ”Notes” (p. 317-331).

1443 Riley, Jerome R. The philosophy of Negro suffrage. Hartford, Conn., American Pub. Co., 1895. 110 p. port. E185.61.R57

1444 Schechter, Betty. The peaceable revolution. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1963. 243 p. illus. HM278.S35

1445 Smith, Samuel D. The Negro in Congress, 1870-1901. Port Was.h.i.+ngton, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1966, c1940] 160 p. E185.6.S64 1966 Bibliography: p. 145-151.

1446 Strong, Donald S. Negroes, ballots, and judges; national voting rights legislation in the Federal courts. University, Published for the Bureau of Public Administration, University of Alabama, by University of Alabama Press [1968] 100 p. KF4893.S8 Bibliographical footnotes.

1447 Taper, Bernard. Gomillion versus Lightfoot. New York, McGraw-Hill [1963] 131 p. (McGraw-Hill paperbacks, 62855) JK1348.A2Z5 1963 Charles G. Gomillion, a Tuskegee professor, _v._ Mayor Philip M. Lightfoot, in a singular case, argued before the Supreme Court the denial of Negro voting rights in Tuskegee, Alabama.

1448 Tatum, Elbert L. The changed political thought of the Negro, 1915-1940; with a foreword by Lawrence A. Davis. New York, Exposition Press [1951] 205 p. JK2275.N4T3 Bibliography: p. 195-205.

1449 U.S. _Commission on Civil Rights._ Voting; hearings. Was.h.i.+ngton, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1959. 325 p. forms. JK1929.A4U5 Hearings held Dec. 8, 1958, to Jan. 9, 1959, in Montgomery, Alabama.

1450 Vander, Harry J. The political and economic progress of the American Negro, 1940-1963. Dubuque, Iowa, W. C. Brown Book Co.

[1968] 111 p. illus. JK2275.N4V3 Includes bibliographies.

1451 Wallace, Jesse T. A history of the Negroes of Mississippi from 1865 to 1890. Clinton, Miss., 1927. 188 p. E185.93.M6W2 Thesis (Ph. D.)-Columbia University, 1928.

Vita.

Bibliography: p. 185-187.

1451a Wardlaw, Ralph W. Negro suffrage in Georgia, 1867-1930. [Athens, Ga., 1932] 91 p. ([Georgia. University] Phelps-Stokes fellows.h.i.+p studies no. 11) E185.5.G35 no. 11 Bulletin of the University of Georgia, v. 33, no. 2a.

Thesis (M.A.)-University of Georgia.

Bibliography: p. 86-91.

1452 Watters, Pat, _and_ Reese Cleghorn. Climbing Jacob's ladder; the arrival of Negroes in Southern politics. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [1967] xvi, 389 p. JK1929.A2W3 Includes bibliographical references.

1453 Weeks, Stephen B. The history of Negro suffrage in the South.

Boston, Ginn, 1894. p. [671]-703. JK1929.A2W5 Reprinted from _Political Science Quarterly_, v. 9, no. 4.

1454 Weinberg, Kenneth G. Black victory; Carl Stokes and the winning of Cleveland. Chicago, Quadrangle Books, 1968. 250 p. facsim., ports. F499.C6S85

1455 Wilson, James Q. Negro politics; the search for leaders.h.i.+p.

Glencoe, Ill., Free Press [1960] 342 p. JK1924.W5 Bibliographical references included in ”Notes” (p. 319-333).

31-PRESS

1456 The Black American and the press [by] Armistead S. Pride [and others]. Edited by Jack Lyle. Los Angeles, W. Ritchie Press [1968] xviii, 86 p. E185.615.B53 Report of a symposium developed by the Department of Journalism, University of California at Los Angeles.

Bibliographical footnotes.

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