3,087,695 research outputs found

    Eclipse;Black Hills Scenes;

    No full text
    This is a 7x5 glass plate of leafless trees and multi-story buildings beneath a planetary body with a circular halo surrounding an ecliptic shape. Title(s) by Carpenter, L.397 H86-038 Lester Black Collection Vault 334-417 Box 5 of 8 Glass plates H86-037 Lester Black Collection Black Hills Trip Black Hills (Editors Convention) 1923 - Fish Hatchery Spearfish- Camping at Hot Springs on Evans Heights - Game Lodge 1922 - S. Dak. Editors on train up Mystic canyon 1922 - Black Hills Scenes - 397 Eclipse? 3

    New Directional Players present Black theater, a new direction

    No full text
    Program from New Directional Players presentationNew Directional Players present Black Theatre: A New DirectionNo Photos include

    Report of accomplishment, Emergency Flood Restoration Project, Black Hills National Forest

    No full text
    "Report of accomplishment, Emergency Flood Restoration Project, under Section 216 Flood Control Act of 1950 - PL 534, Eastern Flank - Black Hills National Forest." Prepared by Black Hills National Forest staff. Enclosed map not scanned

    Cedar Pass - Badlands;Cedar Pass - Black Hills Scene;

    No full text
    This is a 7x5 glass plate of an individual in an automobile with eroded buttes in the distance. Title(s) by Carpenter, L.392 H86-038 Lester Black Collection Vault 334-417 Box 5 of 8 Glass plates H86-037 Lester Black Collection Black Hills Trip Black Hills (Editors Convention) 1923 - Fish Hatchery Spearfish- Camping at Hot Springs on Evans Heights - Game Lodge 1922 - S. Dak. Editors on train up Mystic canyon 1922 - Black Hills Scenes - 392 Badlands 3

    Some Reactions to the Black Manifesto (Johnson), 1969

    No full text
    Editorial in the National Baptist Forum newspaper, by Reverend Dr. Louis Johnson, Pastor of Friendship Baptist Church, Detroit, MIchigan, titled "Some Reactions to the Black Manifesto," delivered aloud by the author of the manifesto, James Forman, at the annual meeting in Kansas City, Missouri in 1969. Claude W. Black, Jr. was editor at the time

    BCC presents Brown Sugar, eighty years of America's Black female superstars, a lecture and slide presentation by Donald Bogle

    No full text
    Flyer about Donald Bogle’s lecture (front); Ahmad Jamal and his Trio perform (back)Donald Bogle give lecture, “Brown Sugar: Eighty Years of America’s Black Female Superstars” (front); Homecoming concert featuring Ahmad Jamal and his Trio, sponsored by the Black Cultural Center (back)Photo of Donald Bogle; placed randomly in back of binder;Photo of Ahmad Jamal; placed randomly in back of binde

    [2nd Annual Weekend Festival of Black Dance, tape 2 of 2]

    No full text
    Video recording from The Black Academy of Arts and Letters recorded during their 2nd annual weekend festival of black dance held over the weekend of May 10-11, 2006. The footage shows the performance held on May 11th begins directly after the intermission with the second act of the Dallas Black Dance Theatre. The tape ends with brief post-performance audience interviews

    [Black horizons newstory on JBAAL versus the city of Dallas 1984]

    No full text
    Video footage provided by The Black Academy of Arts and Letters recorded during a news section on the conflict between the city of Dallas and the academy over a new location in the developing Dallas arts district. The story outlines the conflict taking place between January and June of 1984 over the Austin street building that was awarded to the academy being uninhabitable, unsuited for the organizations, and ultimately to be torn down in five years. The issues addressed were unkept promises by city officials and misinformation. The footage shows an in-depth interview of Curtis King and the mayor's political consultant Judy Amps

    ["Junior Black Academy vs Dallas" documentary video, 2]

    No full text
    Video footage provided by The Black Academy of Arts and Letters recorded during a news section on the conflict between the city of Dallas and the academy over a new location in the developing Dallas arts district. The story outlines the conflict taking place between January and June of 1984 over the Austin street building that was awarded to the academy being uninhabitable, unsuited for the organizations, and ultimately to be torn down in five years. The issues addressed were unkept promises by city officials and misinformation. The footage shows an in-depth interview of Curtis King and the mayor's political consultant Judy Amps
    corecore