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  1. Jack Donald Foner (December 14, 1910 – December 10, 1999) was an American historian best known for his work on the labor movement and the struggle for African-American civil rights. A professor of American history with a doctorate from Columbia University, he established one of the first programs in black studies in the United ...

  2. 16 de dic. de 1999 · Jack D. Foner, a professor of American history who established one of the country's first programs in black studies and later became a victim of political blacklisting, died on Friday at the...

  3. 17 de dic. de 1999 · Jack D. Foner, 88, pioneer in Afro-American studies and champion of civil liberties who was blacklisted in the 1940s. Foner started teaching history in 1935 at the downtown branch of the City...

  4. 10 de oct. de 2011 · Jack D. Foner. Publication date 1974 Topics United States -- Armed Forces -- Afro-Americans Publisher Praeger Collection printdisabled; internetarchivebooks; inlibrary Contributor Internet Archive Language English. Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2011-10-10 18:57:04

  5. Jack Donald Foner, who established the first Black Studies program at a New England college, died December 10, 1999, in New York City. Born in Brooklyn in 1910, Foner attended public high school and graduated from City College in 1929. Starting in 1935 he taught history at the downtown branch of City College, now Baruch College.

  6. than the two volumes under consideration here. One of these, Jack D. Foner's Blacks and the Military in American History, is a tightly written interpretive survey of the black military experience from the colonial era and the War for Independence through the Vietnam War to the present all-voiunteer army.

  7. military experience, Jack D. Foner dismissed the Mexican War service in a brief statement: "Blacks served in the Mexican War only as body servants. Pre-Civil-War America saw the black as cowardly and childlike, with little fighting ability."6 One can hardly criticize scholars for ignoring participation in a war