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- "B.A.R.: Bay Area Reporter," Volume 1, Number 10, August 15, 1971 -

- August 15, 1971
- Collections - Artifact
"B.A.R.: Bay Area Reporter," Volume 1, Number 10, August 15, 1971
- Cruise News & World Report, Volume I, Number 3, circa 1965 - LGBTQ+ newspapers became more available beginning in the 1950s as organizations added print media to their activist tool kit. These newspapers were a regionally focused way to rally the LGBTQ+ community, share information, and fight discrimination. Many of these newspapers came to rely on gay bars as a location for disbursement as they were among the only private gay spaces in many cities.

- circa 1965
- Collections - Artifact
Cruise News & World Report, Volume I, Number 3, circa 1965
LGBTQ+ newspapers became more available beginning in the 1950s as organizations added print media to their activist tool kit. These newspapers were a regionally focused way to rally the LGBTQ+ community, share information, and fight discrimination. Many of these newspapers came to rely on gay bars as a location for disbursement as they were among the only private gay spaces in many cities.
- Congratulatory Letters for Rev. George Bundy's Lecture on the Late Poet Paul Laurence Dunbar, 1908 -

- December 01, 1907
- Collections - Artifact
Congratulatory Letters for Rev. George Bundy's Lecture on the Late Poet Paul Laurence Dunbar, 1908
- "A Time to Come Together" Juneteenth of Buffalo Festival, 1997 - Community organizers founded the Juneteenth Festival of Buffalo (New York) in 1976 to bring people together and spark revitalization in the city's Black business district. The annual celebration, which always featured food, art, and entertainment, expanded over the years to meet changing community needs. For the 1997 Juneteenth Festival, organizers added a health fair, job fair, and book swap.

- 14 June 1997-15 June 1997
- Collections - Artifact
"A Time to Come Together" Juneteenth of Buffalo Festival, 1997
Community organizers founded the Juneteenth Festival of Buffalo (New York) in 1976 to bring people together and spark revitalization in the city's Black business district. The annual celebration, which always featured food, art, and entertainment, expanded over the years to meet changing community needs. For the 1997 Juneteenth Festival, organizers added a health fair, job fair, and book swap.