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Hamilton Grange National Memorial Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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Loew’s Victoria Theater Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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Studio Museum in Harlem Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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National Headquarters, March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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The Harris-Newhouse Home Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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The National Jazz Museum in Harlem Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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The Churches of Harlem Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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Schomburg Center Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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Caribe Hotel Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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The Clam House Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Case Study
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The March Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Final
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Radical Preservation: Living Memory in Harlem Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Final
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Projecting Black Harlem Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Exercise 2
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The Rent Is Due: A Toolkit for Queer Mutual Aid & Living Preservation Fall 2025 Radical Preservation Final
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El Barrio Music Center: Interview with Reinaldo Melendez
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Commemoration of the 60th Anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington Lynn Kilgore Hendy, daughter of Rev. Dr. Thomas Kilgore Jr., speaks about her father's involvement in the 1963 March on Washington and celebrates an historic marker added to the march's headquarters at 170 W 130th Street in Harlem.
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Interview with Franco the Great Jerome Haferd and Mikaila Meurer, with Anthony Carrion, interview Franco the Great AKA Franco Gaskin.
Franco the Great (born Frankin Gaskin; 1928) is a street artist based in Manhattan, New York City. He was born and raised in Panama, and is fluent in Portuguese, Spanish and English. Franco the Great is also referred to as the "Harlem Picasso".
He earned notoriety by painting storefront security gates in West Harlem neighborhoods. Original pieces of Franco's are found today on 125th Street surrounding the Apollo Theater (between Frederick Douglass Blvd. and Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd). Franco's murals on security gates are only viewable when the gates of the stores are closed.
Franco's murals have contributed to making Harlem a tourist destination. His work can also be found inside businesses across United States, France, Germany, Switzerland, Japan, Canada, Spain, Brazil, the Caribbean Islands, Senegal, and elsewhere!
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PMCI on Urban U [CUNY TV] Segment begins at 0:13:15 and continues until 0:18:50.
Urban U is a CUNY-TV magazine show about CUNY students, faculty, alumni, and programs. The stories highlight the quality and rewards of a CUNY education, one that enables people to achieve great things. As the world’s largest urban university with 24 campuses spread across New York City’s five boroughs, CUNY is as rich and diverse as the City itself. With a history of over 100 years, the university scope of Urban U stories is immense.
Urban U will inform, inspire and engage viewers by reporting on the relevant happenings within the CUNY system, but also by exploring the achievements of its body of students, faculty and alumni.
In this episode, Urban U checks out the "Generative Histories" Exhibit at Spitzer School of Architecture, showcasing the work of the Place, Memory & Culture Incubator
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Antoine Roney [Lecture] Philadelphia-born saxophonist Antoine Roney has been a distinctive voice in jazz for over four decades. After studying with Jackie McLean at the Hartt School of Music, he worked with a long line of greats including Clifford Jordan, Donald Byrd, Rashied Ali, Arthur Taylor, Freddie Hubbard, Elvin Jones, and his late brother, Wallace Roney. An accomplished bandleader with several albums to his name, he is also the father of rising jazz star Kojo Roney, who often features in his trio.
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Jerome W. Haferd [Lecture] Jerome W. Haferd is a New York–based licensed architect, public artist, and educator, known for his deep engagement with re-centering marginalized histories in Harlem's built environment.
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Elleza Kelley [Lecture] Elleza Kelley is an Assistant Professor of African American Studies and English with expertise in black geographies, and radical spatial practices that explore the intersections of literature, art, and place.
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k. kennedy Whiters: (un) Redact the Facts [Lecture] kennedy is a preservation architect, published writer, and guest speaker. She is the founder of wrkSHäp I kiloWatt, a historic preservation, and owner's representation. It is home to Black in Historic Preservation, Beyond Integrity in (X), and (un) Redact the Facts. kennedy has been featured by the Advisory Council of Historic Preservation. kennedy is also the founder of New York architecture firm studio KW Architecture, PLLC.
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Kazembe Balagun [Lecture] Kazembe Balagun is a writer, cultural critic, and outreach coordinator at the Maysles Documentary Center in Harlem. His work focuses on the intersection of Black radical thought, cinema, and community organizing.
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Imani Rashid [Lecture] Imani Rashid is an entrepreneur, teacher, visionary, event planner, Godmother to many, leader, Yoruba Priestess, mentor, friend and sister to others and a founding member of Salsa Soul Sisters (the oldest Black lesbian organization in the United States). Imani has dedicated her life to enriching and expanding the education of young children using the principles of Kwanza and creative practices such as drumming and aviation. Imani founded the Yoruba Cultural Center of New York City in Harlem in 1990 to gather Afro-diasporic people, primarily of the NJ-NY-CT area, to share history, language, divination, songs and dances of the Orishas, and the cosmology of the Yoruba People of Southwest Nigeria. The Yoruba Cultural Center closed in 1993, but its community-building and impacts have been lasting, and the center will resume its Saturday Night Lecture Series on Saturday, February 15, 2025.
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Glenn Hunter [Lecture] Glenn Hunter is the Co-Founder and Co-Executive Director of Harlem Cultural Archives, a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit historical society dedicated to gathering important oral history from the Harlem community. To date, the organization has conducted videotaped interviews with nearly 200 accomplished Harlem residents. Glenn is a career educator specializing in math and information technology. In addition to his role as an Adjunct Lecturer at Baruch College, Glenn is a dedicated community organizer and advocate.