This was a group interview of four members of the Black American Movement (B.A.M.) of Armstrong State College expressing their views on the movement in Savannah.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/happiness-lane/1014/thumbnail.jp
Robert Johnson, Class of 1971, talks about his first visit to Bowdoin in 1967 with a friend, and bei...
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This was a group interview of four members of the Black American Movement (B.A.M.) of Armstrong Stat...
Dr. Love Henry Whelchel, Professor Emeritus at the Interdenominational Theological Center, begins th...
The anomalous position of black people in the United States, following the first World War, set the ...
Symone Howard ’15, Ashley Musana ’16, Briana Cardwell ’17, and Rebkah Tesfamariam ’18 were four cons...
With the total cost of the trip underwritten by the Arlin M. Adams Center for Law and Society, in Ma...
Videotaped interviews with four Armstrong alumni about their experiences as students at Armstrong an...
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Amos Gordon was a music teacher and musician in Birmingham. In this interview, he discusses Birmingh...
Robert Johnson, Class of 1971, talks about his first visit to Bowdoin in 1967 with a friend, and bei...
James L. Jones, aka Buddy Jones, was born in Union Springs, Alabama, in 1912, the son of a sharecr...
Video interview, and oral history of Cleveland Sellers, American educator and veteran civil rights a...
This was a group interview of four members of the Black American Movement (B.A.M.) of Armstrong Stat...
Dr. Love Henry Whelchel, Professor Emeritus at the Interdenominational Theological Center, begins th...
The anomalous position of black people in the United States, following the first World War, set the ...
Symone Howard ’15, Ashley Musana ’16, Briana Cardwell ’17, and Rebkah Tesfamariam ’18 were four cons...
With the total cost of the trip underwritten by the Arlin M. Adams Center for Law and Society, in Ma...
Videotaped interviews with four Armstrong alumni about their experiences as students at Armstrong an...
During the 1960\u27s Mrs. Dixion took part in the integration efforts in Savannah. Now a wife and mo...
Gyraud Wilmore introduces speaker Lawrence N. Jones (dean of Howard University School of Divinity) a...
Rev. Herman K. Harris II (1939-1988) discusses his family background, growing up in Heath Springs, S...
Alvin Hall ’74 begins with a brief anecdote on how he helped bring together Geoffrey Canada and Stan...
Black Georgia in the progressive era is an interview with authorJohn Dittmerabout African American h...
Amos Gordon was a music teacher and musician in Birmingham. In this interview, he discusses Birmingh...
Robert Johnson, Class of 1971, talks about his first visit to Bowdoin in 1967 with a friend, and bei...
James L. Jones, aka Buddy Jones, was born in Union Springs, Alabama, in 1912, the son of a sharecr...
Video interview, and oral history of Cleveland Sellers, American educator and veteran civil rights a...