News

Temple University is set to offer an in-depth exploration of Kendrick Lamar's music and legacy in a new course launching Fall ...
From Little Africa to the jazz cafes where Josephine Baker performed, here’s where to immerse yourself in the art, food, and ...
Poetry memoir invites readers into “Blindian Country”; experimental work by 20 Black artists at F-O-K Studios; Alex Yang’s” Weaving the Hmong Legacy” at the Xia Gallery.
In case you missed it in Thursday’s Telegraph, we invite you to visit nptelegraph.com and catch up with our story on Nebraska ...
New York City is the quintessential weekend getaway for a reason. It’s just four hours from Boston (less on Amtrak’s ...
Bridges became not only the first female, but the first African American to be selected director of Jones College’s Maroon Typhoon Marching Band. Bridges said she intends to build on the ...
Osi Audu, the artist behind the exhibition “Osi Audu: The Self in African Art,” is seen with his artwork in the background at Opalka Gallery at Sage College on April 2 in Albany.
Gospel music has guided protests and political movements according to Wor Wic Community College Cultural Diversity Chair Dr. Kimberly Purvis. “The church is at the core of our roots.
One Black Vermonter is said to be the first Black college graduate in the U.S., while another became the nation’s first African-American college president.
Christopher C. Styles, the first African-American band director and music department chair at St. Petersburg College, is pictured with his trumpet in 1963. He died Jan. 22 at the age of 79.
The African American population in Louisiana was just below 700,000, and only 490 were enrolled in college. Of the Caucasian population, which was approximately 1.2 million at the time, more than ...