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DESCRIPTION:African American History at Kent State originally started out
  as a much broader exhibition idea that was executed for Kent State&rsqu
 o\;s centennial celebration in 2010. While researching the great perform
 ances and the major icons that had visited Kent State University over th
 e previous 100 years\, exhibit curator Jason Prufer kept coming across a
  thread of materials showing some of the truly greatest African American
  icons making well publicized appearances here at KSU during many their 
 most vital periods. These included original and long unseen advertisemen
 ts and photographs by the likes of Aretha Franklin\, Bill Cosby\, Jesse 
 Jackson\, Odetta\, Dizzy Gillespie\, Maya Angelou\, Sly and the Family S
 tone\, Stevie Wonder\, Muhammad Ali\, Dion Warwick\, Duke Ellington\, Ra
 y Charles\, Louis Armstrong\, Sun Ra and many many others. Prufer who is
  a lifelong resident of Kent and virtually grew up on Kent State&rsquo\;
 s campus couldn&rsquo\;t believe that nobody had ever taken the time to 
 give the material any major attention so he set about himself to compile
  this collection to help celebrate Black History month on campus and to 
 show that Kent State had been celebrating this kind of diversity for dec
 ades.&nbsp\;  &ldquo\;I didn&rsquo\;t come to create this exhibit as any
  kind of expert on African American history but I certainly knew of the 
 gravity and the authenticity of these images as I kept uncovering them. 
 I just couldn&rsquo\;t ignore this thread. I had to make it as part of m
 y next show or I felt this incredible history would die.&rdquo\; Prufer 
 continued &ldquo\;Plus let&rsquo\;s face it. This stuff is cool&hellip\;
 long lost photos of Stevie Wonder performing in what is now the MAC Cent
 er back in 1972 are just really cool. And if you do the research you wil
 l know that when he showed up here\, he was at the peak of his creative 
 and commercial powers. You&rsquo\;ll find that with so many of the icons
  in this exhibit.\n&ldquo\;We have a great poster advertising a Sly and 
 the Family Stone performance on campus that occurred within just a few m
 onths of their legendary headlining 1969 gig at Woodstock and an awesome
  old Daily Kent Stater ad showing Herbie Hancock playing the Student Cen
 ter Ballroom in February of 1975 with his groundbreaking fusion group Th
 e Headhunters. Plus we are showing some rare images of Jesse Jackson spe
 aking on the old commons at the one year commemoration of the May 4\, 19
 70 shootings. These are all incredible little slivers of history and it&
 rsquo\;s really amazing that we had these events right here in the Midwe
 st at Kent State!&rdquo\;  It must be noted that most of the materials P
 rufer put together for this exhibit were found in the holdings of Specia
 l Collections and Archives right here in the Kent State University Libra
 ry and not floating around in various corners of the Internet. &ldquo\;I
  have to give a huge credit to the Department of Special Collections and
  Archives for holding every single issue of the Daily Kent Stater and Ch
 estnut Burr Yearbooks going back to the very birth of this University. H
 ad they not kept these materials this valuable history would have been l
 ost.&rdquo\;&nbsp\;  Jason Prufer is a lifelong resident of the city of 
 Kent and has worked in the Kent State University Library for 14 years. F
 rom 1999 to 2003 Jason worked as a student worker in the Student Multime
 dia Studio while he pursued (and eventually received) a BA in Art Histor
 y. &nbsp\;In 2004 Jason Prufer was hired as a full time employee in the 
 library and now works as a Library Associate at the main Circulation Des
 k.&nbsp\;\n&nbsp\;
URL:http://kent.patch.com/events/african-american-icons-at-ksu
SUMMARY:African American Icons at KSU
LOCATION:Kent State University Libraries: 1125 Risman Drive\, Kent\, OH
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