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1969232001969. Black Panther PartyBlack Radicalism Newton Huey P. ed. The Black Panther March 3 1969 issue of the Black radical newspaper a periodical linking international antiwar solidarity prisoner defense labor boycott campaigns branch reporting and local documentation of police violence. Rather than concentrating on a single event this issue shows the paper functioning across several fronts at once: the cover prints "President Ho Chi Minh's New Year's Message" interior pages announce a "Free Huey Birthday Rally in Kansas City" advocate a "California Wine Boycott" carry branch news under "San Diego Branch Reports" and frame police abuse through "Pig Harassment" and "Harassment of Blacks in Sacramento White Front Store." The result is a clear record of how Black Panther print culture operated in early 1969 as an instrument of coordination instruction agitation and ideological alignment within the wider Black Power movement.<br /> The Black Panther. Vol. II No. 24. San Francisco CA: The Black Panther Party Monday March 3 1969. Large newspaper format with pagination visible through page 7 in the supplied photographs. Front page features a large photographic portrait of Ho Chi Minh above a printed text block beginning "Following is President Ho Chi Minh's New Year's message" paired with the line "For Independence for Freedom Let's fight so the Yanks quit and the puppets topple." Other visible contents include "The Genius of Huey Newton" "Editorial. Nation Celebrates Huey's Birthday" "Message from Huey" "Honoring Brother Malcolm" "Berkeley Benefit Rally" "Cultural Nationalism" "Puppet Hayakawa V.S. Bootlicker Willie Brown" "Black Man Stands Off 5" "Workers Continue Strike in Defiance of Tyranny" "Washington / Moscow Collaboration Intensified" and "Black Women and the Revolution." The photographed interior also preserves period advertisements and graphics including a "Gramma Books" advertisement for "Complete Marxist Works" and a hand-captioned rally image reading "A Sold Session at the Harambee."<br /> Issued weeks after Richard Nixon's inauguration and during the intensification of both the Vietnam War and the national campaign to free Huey P. Newton this number places the Panthers' local and national work within an openly international revolutionary frame. Its juxtaposition of Ho Chi Minh farmworker boycott coverage campus confrontation Sacramento police harassment and women's political writing shows the newspaper organizing readers across anti-imperial labor educational and community defense struggles rather than addressing them as separate subjects. Folded as issued with horizontal center crease light to moderate toning. Overall very good condition. A strong single issue for documenting the Black Panther Party's newspaper as an operational organ of movement politics in early 1969. unknown
1971232081971. Black Panther PartyBlack Radicalism Newton Huey P. The Black Panther December 11 1971 issue the organ by which the Black Panther Party reported on race and class struggle including welfare policy police violenceand public health. Rather than isolating these matters as separate news issues the paper presents them as interlocking struggles. Front page attacks the Rockefeller welfare proposal under the headline "Cash In On Your Family" while interior coverage follows the death of Mark Allen in police custody raids and prosecutions tied to narcotics policing the continuing trial of Huey P. Newton and the operation of the Mark Clark People's Free Medical Clinic. The newspaper was a central tool used by the group to circulate political analysis mobilize support document repression and publicize aid programs.<br /> The Black Panther. Vol. VII No. 36. Saturday December 11 1971. San Francisco CA. Newspaper. The masthead reads The Black Panther Intercommunal News Service priced at 25 cents with copyright credited to "Huey P. Newton" and publication identified as "Published Weekly by The Black Panther Party." Front page headline "Cash In On Your Family" with subhead "Rockefeller Welfare Proposal Cuts Back On Survival"; "The Hanging Of Mark Allen"; "L.A.P.D. Annual Pre-Holiday Assault"; "Coke Raids"; "Another Vet Wounded At 'Home'" alongside a large notice for "The Third Trial Of Huey P. Newton Servant Of The People Has Begun"; pages 7-8 "From The People"; and page 9 "'Brotherly Love' Can Kill You" an article on the Mark Clark People's Free Medical Clinic in Philadelphia. The issue is illustrated throughout with halftone photographs of families damaged buildings bullet-marked walls defendants and community members and clinic-related imagery all reinforcing the paper's documentary and agitational function.<br /> By December 1971 The Black Panther had become one of the central print organs of the Black Power era operating as an important communications structure through which the Party could disseminate information on policing welfare restructuring imprisonment and medical care as intersecting fronts of the same political ideology. The issue presents failures of state power through coroners police courts and narcotics enforcement and the community response of legal mobilization political education and free health service. Minor losses at the margins not affecting text; wear and toning consistent with circulated newsprint of this age; overall very good condition. A strong single-issue example of the Black Panther Party's use of print to coordinate analysis publicity and community defense across multiple fronts of struggle. unknown
1971232041971. Black Panther PartyBlack Radicalism Newton Huey P. The Black Panther November 29 1971 issue a vital organ of the Black Panther Party for political communication across prison defense campaigns anti-police brutality reporting Black military dissent community mobilization and international political education. The cover story on Norma Gist a Black mother jailed after defending her children from racist violence in Idabel Oklahoma is paired with interior coverage of Frank Nubin Black GI organizing at Fort Hood the imprisonment of Hugo Pinell racist electoral intimidation in Houston and a rear-page "Survival Week" broadside for Chicago events featuring Bobby Seale Bob Rush and Charles Koen. Rather than functioning only as a news weekly this issue shows the Party press coordinating solidarity across local cases prison activism military resistance electoral struggle and survival-program organizing while also linking domestic Black liberation politics to global realignment through the front-page notice on the People's Republic of China entering the United Nations.<br /> The Black Panther. Vol. VII No. 14. San Francisco CA: The Black Panther Party Monday November 29 1971. Supplement present. Front page printed in black and blue with large headline "If You Love Them You'll Defend Them" over an image of Norma Gist and her children behind prison bars; masthead reads "The Black Panther Intercommunal News Service" priced at 25 cents with copyright credited to Huey P. Newton. Visible interior contents include "A Potentially Dangerous Man" on Brother Frank Nubin; "We Won't Have a Nier City Council Man" on violence directed at Ovide Duncantell in Houston; "Black GIs Battle on the Home Front" concerning Fort Hood hearings on racism in military justice and promotion; and the two-page article "The Black Panther Party and Hugo Pinell" accompanied by San Quentin imagery and text on prison repression and collective resistance. The final illustrated page is a Chicago "Survival Week" announcement calling for a student strike for survival and a December 4 rally with named speakers Bobby Seale Bob Rush and Charles Koen plus notice of food distribution through the People's Free Medical Center.<br /> By late 1971 Black Panther newspapers had become one of the Party's central mechanisms for binding dispersed campaigns into a readable political structure converting local incidents into shared movement knowledge and directing readers toward defense work rallies and survival programs. This issue makes that process visible in unusually concentrated form: state violence against Black families military racism prison radicalization and community organizing appear not as separate stories but as linked fronts in the same political field while the China supplement places that field within the Party's wider internationalist frame. Closed tears and chipping to front page and folds; handling wear and toning consistent inner pages complete. Overall good condition. A strong single issue for tracing how Black Panther print culture carried information discipline and mobilization across multiple sites of struggle in late 1971. unknown
140945081Oakland & San Francisco: The Black Panther Party 1980. First edition. An extensive collection of 237 numbers in 234 issues Volume 2 Numbers 15-17 are printed in a single volume and Volume 6 Numbers 13 and 14 are as well. Intermittent run spanning from the first volume to the final volume the 20th. Newspaper changed title to The Black Panther Intercommunal News Service on March 13 1971.<p>Contents: Volume 1 Number 6; Vol. 2 Nos. 1-3 5-7 15-17 18 19 21; Vol. 3 Nos. 1 3 6 7 9-12 16 17 19-21 26 27 29 29 sic 31; Vol. 4 Nos. 3 3 sic 4 7 8 8 sic 9 12-15 17 18 18 but 19 20 21 22 22 sic 27 28 28 sic 29; Vol. 5 Nos. 4 12 13 15-18 20-25 27 30; Vol. 6 Nos. 1-6 10 11 13-14 16 18 21 23-30; Vol. 7 Nos. 1 3 8 17 19-27 29 30; Vol. 8 Nos. 1-25 28-30; Vol. 9 Nos. 1 3-8 10 12-15; Vol.10 Nos. 15 18 23 25 27 28 30; Vol. 11 Nos. 12 14 15 21 23 26 29; Vol. 12 Nos. 1 7 12 15 16 30; Vol. 13 Nos. 2 7 11 12 19 20 21 29 30; Vol. 14 Nos. 4 8 11-13 15 17 18 28; Vol. 15 Nos. 3 10-15 26-30 30 sic; Vol.16 Nos. 4 5 8-11 13 18 27-30; Vol. 17 No. 29; Vol. 18 Nos. 1 3-9 11 16-19 22-26 28 29 29 sic; Vols. 19 Nos. 3 5-7 7 sic 8 9; Vol. 20 Nos. 1 3; Extra Saturday October 5th 1968 Unnumbered. <p>A well-preserved and very substantial run of the Black Panther Party's official newspaper with the issues representing a large swath of the paper's content circulation and overall aesthetic. In terms of content Huey Newton was acknowledged as the chief theoretician of the Party and its newspaper though in terms of generating mass-appeal much of the credit goes to Emory Douglas: "Douglas's work on the Black Panther newspaper and for the party was fearless in content and style. He was the party's Revolutionary Artist graphic designer illustrator political cartoonist and the master craftsman of its visual identity. His distinctive illustrations styles cartooning skills and resourceful collage and image recycling made the paper as explosive visually as it was verbally.Part of Douglas's genius was that he used the visually seductive methods of advertising and subverted them into weapons of the revolution. His images served two purposes: to illustrate conditions that made revolution a reasonable response and to construct a visual mythology of power for people who felt powerless and victimized" Durant Sam ed. Black Panther: The Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas pp.95-96.<p>Contains an over-arching glimpse of the art layout production and content of the newspaper as well as the rise and fall of the Black Panther Party with issues ranging from the earliest days through 1980. Visually stunning and innovative in its design and layout they tell the story of the Black Panthers' struggle fighting racism and institutional violence and oppression. A key publication responsible for shaping African American revolutionary thought in the twentieth century; runs this extensive are very uncommon in commerce. The Black Panther Party unknown
197026575Oakland: Black Panther Party 1970. Single newsprint tabloid sheet folded in two to make 4 pages. The first page reprints Cleaver's 'On the Constitution' the inner two pages "Message to America' by the Black Panther Party across the full sheet and the rear Huey Newton's "Towards a New Constitution'. Paper tanned as usual. horizontal fold as issued else a nice example. None located in OCLC. <br/><br/> [Black Panther Party] unknown books
196850446New York: The Militant Publishing Association 1968. First Edition. Tabloid 44.5cm; photo-illustrated wrappers; 12pp; illus. Faint horizontal fold smoothed-out at center light wear to extremities with subtle toning to wrappers else about Near Fine without postal markings. Well-preserved copy of this newspaper affiliated with the Socialist Workers Party with contents dealing with the San Francisco GI's peace march Panther leaders attacked by police in Seattle court Oakland Panthers in court victimization of NY Panthers by a mob of right-wing off-duty police Panthers framed in Indianapolis Seattle Panthers nomination of co-captain Curtis Harris for state representative and a post-trial interview with Huey P. Newton et al. The Militant Publishing Association unknown books
1968List905Emoryville: Black Panther Party for Self Defence 1968. First Edition. 23 x 35 inches linen backed. A particularly nice example professionally mounted. Fine. In one of the Black Panthers' most iconic images Minister of Culture Huey Newton sits in a chair with a shotgun and a spear a pile of spent shotgun cartridges on a zebra skin rug beneath him. The image is credited to Blair Stapp and was composed by Eldridge Cleaver. The full text on the lower left margin reads "'The racist dog policemen must withdraw immediately from our communities cease their wanton murder and brutality and torture of black people or face the wrath of the armed people.' / Huey P. Newton Minister of Defence.". Black Panther Party for Self Defence unknown books
1968143730Berkeley: Berkley Graphics Arts 1968. Collection of five vintage bumper stickers from the 1968 political campaigns run via a collaboration between the Black Panthers and the Peace and Freedom Party. <br/><br/>Each of the stickers were made for various Peace and Freedom Party political campaigns including: Mario Savio for California state senator Black Panther founders Huey Newton and Bobby Seale and Eldridge Cleaver for president and two stickers simply advertising the Peace and Freedom Party itself. <br/><br/>In 1968 the Black Panthers would move away from direct actions including their legendary confrontations with the Berkeley police department and briefly into the political sphere when they joined forces with the PFP a left-wing anti-war party advocating Black liberation women's liberation and LGBTQ rights. The campaigns were largely seen as political statements as Cleaver was a convicted felon and technically ineligible for the presidency due to his being under the age of 35 by the time of inauguration and as Newton and Seale were on trial at the time repeatedly being denied their civil liberties. <br/><br/>All items rare each with original peel-off paper backing and each between 4 x 13.5 an 4 x 15 inches. Near Fine and unused with light soil on two of the stickers and rubber stamp for the "Lancaster County Peace & Freedom Movement Organizing Committee" on the verso of one sticker. A few of these rear peel-off panels have come loose due to dryness but most are intact and the bumper stickers themselves are unaffected. Berkley Graphics Arts unknown books
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2015G1340590530I3N01Palala Press 2015. Hardcover. Good. Missing dust jacket; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Palala Press hardcover
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191887959New York: Macmillan 1918. Hardcover. Very little wear to spine head and foot gently bumped corners light soiling to boards four small dots to rear board ownership army stamp to front pastedown ownership stamp to title page few spots to front endpaper else Very good-. Small black-cloth octavo ix 487 p b&w illus front b&w plate; 19 cm. Science; Physics. Scarce. Macmillan hardcover
B9781773856186Hardback. New. hardcover
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