No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 November 2022
1 “Academic Freedom” Speech at the Capitol City Forum, Washington, D.C., October 22, 1953.
2 Ibid., pp. 5–6.
3 Winston, Michael R., Through the back door: Academic racism and the negro scholar in historical perspective. Daedalus, 1971, Summer, 678.Google Scholar
4 Telephone interview with Professor Vincent Browne, February 2, 1983.
5 One of the manuscripts has been published as The Political Status of the Negro in the Age of FDR, Grantham, Dewey W. (Ed.). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1973.Google Scholar
6 Paper presented at the APSA annual meeting in Chicago, December, 1940. Letter from Schattschneider, June 14, 1940.
7 Letter from Johnson, June 17, 1941.
8 Letter from Potter, February 1, 1946. Letter from Carr, February 5, 1946.
9 Presentation on December 28, 1949 in New York.
10 Telephone interview with Harvey Mansfield, Sr., May 4, 1983.
11 Telegram from Litchfield, December 19, 1950.
12 Letter from David Rockefeller, January 31, 1955 (Bunche Collection, UCLA).
13 Letter from Ralph Bunche to John A. Davis, May 17, 1954 (APSA Oral History Project).
14 Memorandum on Expense of Security Clearance of Congressional Fellows, 1954 (APSA Oral History Project).
15 Letter from Adlai Stevenson, October 29, 1953 (Bunche Collection, UCLA).
16 Bunche, Ralph J.. Presidential address. The American Political Science Review, Vol. LXVIII, 1954, 4, 965.Google Scholar