Articles
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"William Greaves, Pioneering African American Filmmaker," by David Pitts, from the Washington File. The first of four articles to mark Black History Month 2002
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"Harlem Institution Focuses On People Of African Descent," by David Pitts, from the Washington File. The second of four articles to mark Black History Month 2002
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"Bush Administration Increases Support For Black Colleges," by David Pitts, from the Washington File. The third of four articles to mark Black History Month 2002
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"U.S. Postage Stamp Honors Harlem's Langston Hughes," by David Pitts, from the Washington File. The fourth of four articles to mark Black History Month 2002
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"The King We Left Behind," by Charles Johnson, from CommonQuest. The author discusses how the absence of King and his vision in our public life reverberates three decades later.
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"Traveling the Long Road to Freedom, One Step at a Time," by Donovan Webster, from Smithsonian magazine. When historian Anthony Cohen set out to retrace a route on the Underground Railroad, he recovered a piece of American history.
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"The Autobiography of a Conductor: A Rare Look at the Underground Railroad," by Rachanee Srisavasdi, from The Chronicle of Higher Education. The author describes research that led to the biography of a former-slave who helped others escape via the Underground Railroad.
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"Carter G. Woodson, Father of Black History," by Lerone Bennett, Jr. from EBONY.
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"A Homeric Life: A Comprehensive Biography of W.E.B. Du Bois". A review by Jim Zook from The Chronicle of Higher Education.
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"Black Museums: Keeping the Legacy Alive," from EBONY.
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"A Pioneering Black Film Maker," by Scott Heller, from The Chronicle of Higher Education.
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"The Nonstop from Durham," by Frank McCoy, from Black Enterprise.
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"Writing a New Chapter in BookPublishing," by Carolyn M. Brown, from Black Enterprise.
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"Terry McMillan: When a Movie Becomes a Cross-Cultural Women's Event," by Gayle Pollard Terry, from the Los Angeles Times of January 14, 1996.
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