Contents
Foreword by Cornel West • ix
Preface by Dave Zirin • xi
Introduction: To Sleep with Anger • 1
One: Harlem World • 5"
Two: Street Level Protest: You Have Forty-Eight Hours . . .•
33"
Three: Trouble in Texas • 59
Four: 1968 • 77
Five: The Medal Stand • 103
Six: The Unraveling • 129
Seven: Efforts at Resurrection • 155
Eight: Save Your Redemption • 167
Afterword by Dave Zirin • 175
Appendix: John W. Carlos’s Track and Field Records
We will continue to work on local radio interviews with Dave Zirin
and John Carlos
Ongoing author tour (focused on Universities)
Will continue to pitch national radio and TV interviews (Democracy
Now! and Pacifica Stations)
Published to coincide with the London Olympics
John Wesley Carlos: John Carlos is an African American former track
and field athlete and professional football player. He was a
founding member of the Olympic Project for Human Rights and won the
bronze-medal in the 200 meters race at the 1968 Summer Olympics.
His black power salute on the podium with Tommie Smith caused much
political controversy. He went on to equal the world record in the
100 yard dash and beat the 200 meters world record. After his track
career, he enjoyed brief stints in the National Football League and
Canadian Football League but retired due to injury. He became
involved with the United States Olympic Committee and helped to
organize the 1984 Summer Olympics. He later became a track coach at
a high school in Palm Springs, where he now resides. He was
inducted into the USA Track & Field Hall of Fame in 2003. "John
Carlos Memoir" is his first book.
Dave Zirin is the author of four books, including Bad Sports, A
Peoples' History of Sports in the United States, What's My Name
Fool! and Welcome to the Terrordome. He writes the popular weekly
column "The Edge of Sports" (edgeofsports.com) and is a regular
contributor to SI.com, SLAM, The Los Angeles Times, and The Nation
where he is the publications first Sports Editor. He lives in
Washington, D.C..
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