BartelsF. L.CapiteinJacobus Eliza, 1717–1747, The Historical Society of Ghana, IV, Part I, pp. 3–13, 1959.
2.
GreeneL. J., The Negro in Colonial New England 1620–1776, Columbia University Press, New York, pp. 278–79, 1945.
3.
BondH. M., African Students in Negro Colleges, unpublished work, Atlanta, 1960.
4.
Lincoln University College Bulletin, 1895.
5.
SloanR., African Students in United States, ITE, 20: 6, pp. 38–40, 1954.
6.
Letter from Nebuwa Nwozo, Secretary, NSU to its members, New York, November 13, 1950.
7.
The Constitution of the Union of Nigeria and Cameroon Students in America, Summer, 1949. This document was printed in a pamphlet form, pocket size, London PTG Co., New York.
8.
OdumosuO. I., The Nigerian Constitution, Sweet & Maxwell, London, p. 43, 1963. For the biography of Herbert Macaulay see ThomasI. B., Life History Herbert Macaulay, 3rd ed., Lagos, 1948.
9.
Constitution of the Nigerian National Democratic Party, in Coleman'sJ. S.Background to Nigerian Nationalism, p. 198.
10.
Daily Times, Lagos, July 9, 1945.
11.
NSU, The Proposed Amendment to the Nigerian Constitution, NSU, New York, mimeographed, 1953.
12.
Daily Times, Lagos, November 25, 1953.
13.
Colonial Secretary's statement to the House of Commons, Hansard, 445, Cols. 215–222, July 24, 1956; 557, Cols. 143–144, August 1, 1956; and the Report of the Tribunal, Col. 51, 1956.
14.
Nigerian Student Union, Recommendations to the Delegations to the London Conference on the Review of the Nigerian Constitution, New York, 1957.
15.
Letter from Reginald Barrett to Mr. W. O. Uzoaga, President of NSU, Washington, D.C., January 30, 1957.
16.
NSU, Statement and Resolution on the Nigerian Constitutional Conference, New York, September 8, 1957.
17.
NSU, Annual Report on the 1957 Annual Affair of Nigerian Students in America, New York, September 6, 1957.
18.
Letter from W. Okefie Uzoaga, President of NSU to the Honorable N. Azikiwe, Awolowo, and Alhaji Ahmadu Sardauna of Sokoto, New York, July 19, 1956.
19.
Ministry of Social Services, Nigeria, letter to NSU, Lagos, September 5, 1956.
20.
KandelL., The Methodology of Comparative Education, International Review of Education, Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague, 5, p. 274, 1959.
21.
EastonD., The Function of Formal Education in a Political System, School Review, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 65, p. 304, 1957.
22.
Letter from O. F. Obi, Secretary of NSU to panel participants—Mr. Uzoaga, Mr. Odeniqwe, Miss Amadi, Mr. Udoju, and Mr. Olatunji, New York, 1956. This letter must have been written at least a month before June 17, 1956, the date for the program.
23.
NSU, letter dated September 2, 1956, to Dr. K. O. Mbadiwe, Nigerian Minister of Communications and Aviation.
24.
Editorial, Nigerian Spokesman, Onitsha, Nigeria, August 4, 1954.
25.
Daily Times, Lagos, August 3, 1954.
26.
Letter from Nigerian Liaison Office in Washington, D.C. to NSU, July 9, 1958.
27.
NwachukuA., Educational Development in Nigeria, mimeographed paper presented to the students, New York, p. 5, July 9, 1958.
28.
Western Nigeria Publication No. W1940; 10-9-59; American Trained Nigerians Assured of Jobs in Western Nigeria Public Service.
29.
NSU, Nigerian Independence, New York, October 1, 1960.
30.
NSU, Letter to All Nigerian Students in the Americas, New York, p. 2, May 4, 1964.
31.
NSU and NUNS, Away with Tribalism, Ibadan, April 9, 1964.
32.
Current Issues Society, The Nigerian Situation, Gasikiya Corporation, Kaduna, Nigeria, pp. 14–15, 1966.
33.
ColeW. S., An Interpretative History of American Foreign Relations, The Dorsey Press, Homewood, Illinois, pp. 1–8, 1968.
34.
NSU, Letter of Protest to the Prime Minister, New York, p. 2, January 11, 1963.
35.
Letter from Babtunda Ajayi, Pres. NSU, to Pres., Fed. Republic of Nigeria, State House Lagos Nigeria, Hoboken, New Jersey, December 2, 1963.
36.
Reply to above reference from Nnamdi Azikiwe, President of Nigeria, Lagos, Nigeria, December 19, 1963. (Contrary to usual Nigerian protocol, Azikiwe signed the letter instead of making a secretary to reply in his behalf. Azikiwe himself did not fail to mention this fact in the letter.)
37.
NSU, General Secretary's Omnibus Report, New York, pp. 1–2, June, 1964. The Union's General Secretary in 1964 was Mr. Donatus U. Anyanwu.
38.
NSU, Nigeria in Transition: The Problem of Economic Growth and Development, New York.
39.
These groups included the Eastern Nigerian Students Association, The Western Nigerian Alliance for Progress, and the Gentlemen for Nigerian Unity.
40.
NSU, The Annual Colloquium, Washington, D.C., p. 5, August 31-September 2, 1967.
41.
Mimeographed letter from Jacob U. Gordon, NSU National Vice-President to Governments of African nations, Washington, D.C., p. 2, December 27, 1963.
42.
Letter from the Embassy of Nigeria to Jacob U. Gordon in reply to his letter of December 27 (referred to earlier), Washington, D.C., January 7, 1964.