Search Results
Limit your search
Collection- Veterans History Project (116)
- Young Lords in Lincoln Park Collection (10)
- All-American Girls Professional Baseball League Interviews (7)
- Richard A. Rhem Collection (3)
- William James College Interviews (3)
- Michigan Philanthropy Oral History Project Interviews (2)
- Gi-gikinomaage-min Interviews (1)
- Living with PFAS Interviews (1)
- Oral history (135)
- Veterans (126)
- Veterans History Project (U.S.) (123)
- Video recordings (117)
- United States--History, Military (109)
- Michigan--History, Military (76)
- World War, 1939-1945--Personal narratives, American (61)
- United States. Army (48)
- Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Personal narratives, American (37)
- United States—History, Military (18)
- United States. Navy (16)
- Other veterans & civilians--Personal narratives, American (12)
- Women (12)
- China--History, Military (11)
- China. Kong jun. American Volunteer Group (11)
- Civil Rights--United States--History (10)
- Community activists--Illinois--Chicago (10)
- Lincoln Park (Chicago, Ill.) (10)
- Puerto Ricans--United States (10)
- Social justice (10)
- Vietnam War, 1961-1975—Personal narratives, American (10)
- Young Lords (Organization) (10)
- United States. Air Force (9)
- All-American Girls Professional Baseball League--Personal narratives (7)
- Baseball (7)
154 results
Your search matched in:
- Text: ...This future speaks even now in a hundred signs, this destiny announces itself everywhere; for the music of the future all ears are cocked even now. For some time now, our whole European culture has been moving as toward a catastrophe, with a tortured tension that is growing from decade to d...
Your search matched in:
- Text: ...n in Sturgis, Michigan at 220 Grove Street on March 3, 1921 -Father worked for CL Spence factory in Sturgis, but also played music -Died on Christmas Eve when Marshall was seven years old -Everybody was poor during the Great Depression -Made do with what they had -Mother remarried in 1933 -...
Your search matched in:
- Text: ...[Unknown] Yeah just real involved. He was the only person I saw… [Troost] He taught music, didn't he? [Unknown] Yeah. He's the only person I ever saw talk to everybody personally, and to the whole class at the same time. Every time he talked, you thought he was talking to y...
Joe Lange was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan on October 9th, 1947. After graduating high school, Lange married and briefly attended college before getting a full-time job and receiving his draft notice. After receiving his draft noticed, Lange went through basic training at Fort Knox, Kentucky and advanced training at Fort Belvoir, Virginia to be a generator mechanic. Once he completed the training at Fort Belvoir, Lange returned home before deploying to Vietnam to serve for a year in the 124th Signal Battalion of the 4th Infantry Division.
Oral history of Luis Acosta, interviewed by Jose “Cha-Cha” Jimenez on October 25, 2012 about the Young Lords in Lincoln Park. In the video, a Latino man in a dark sweater sits in front of a bookshelf facing the camera, while speaking to the interviewer who is off camera.
Your search matched in:
- Text: ...Why don‟t you wear that with that? Straighten up a little bit. Comb that hair.‟” (00:34:33) “What kind of music were you listening to?” (00:34:35) ”Pretty much what anyone else was listening to.” (00:34:41) “Okay. This is like the rock-n-roll era.” (00:34:44) “Credence C...
Lois Youngen was born in a small town in Ohio in 1933. She grew up playing baseball with boys from her town, and played on a boys' team for several years before switching to a girls' softball team while in high school. She learned about the All American League while visiting a relative in Fort Wayne in 1950. She joined the league the next year and played for Fort Wayne, Kenosha and South Bend as a catcher and outfielder until the league folded in 1954. She used the money she earned as a player to go to college, and eventually earned a doctorate in Physical Education and taught at the University of Oregon.
Your search matched in:
- Text: ... colleges and universities began to increase (00:41:50:00) o When Martin Luther King Jr. was shot, the Army played very soft music for three days because there was perceived to be a large amount of racial tension amongst the soldiers (00:42:06:00) o A couple of months later, Robert Kennedy ...
Your search matched in:
- Text: ...ilson It has such few attributes: Comradership of a valorous sort Self-sacrifice and loyalty come to mind And maybe marching music. It's not easy to think of others now Weigh that against the odds: Senseless destruction and waste. Using our resources and Waste of the.young-both friend ...
Your search matched in:
- Text: ...e but he was– Had a PhD in how the brain works. So his way of explaining this is he says “You know if I said do you know music?” “No, I don’t even know how to read music.” “But if I played Happy Birthday on the piano and hit all these keys and so forth and made a mist...
Your search matched in:
- Text: ...months in the hospital (01:11:12:00) o Because he had been out of touch with home for so long, cultural, everything, such as music, was new to him (01:11:36:00) The adjustment of going from the front line to the “front bed” was a little much for Johnson (01:11:47:00) o At the time o...
Your search matched in:
- Text: ...He wrote home around the time, comparing Christmas at home to his Christmas there. There were no lights, music or food. All they had were K-rations. He also remembers a night when it snowed so badly. They had whitewashed the tanks the night before so they could blend in with the snow, and t...