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    <programscontent>
      <author-id>0</author-id>
      <created-at>2007-09-07T12:37:03-04:00</created-at>
      <description>A directory of currently available museum programs.</description>
      <event-date></event-date>
      <event-location></event-location>
      <id>1</id>
      <link-target></link-target>
      <link-type></link-type>
      <parent-id></parent-id>
      <project-name></project-name>
      <title>Exhibitions and Programs</title>
      <updated-at>2009-04-13T23:49:12-04:00</updated-at>
      <uuid></uuid>
    </programscontent>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <content>
      <author-id>0</author-id>
      <created-at>2007-09-07T12:37:19-04:00</created-at>
      <description>As the museum's inaugural exhibition, the collection of the National Portrait Gallery represents African American resistance across 150 years of U.S. history.</description>
      <event-date></event-date>
      <event-location></event-location>
      <id>2</id>
      <link-target></link-target>
      <link-type></link-type>
      <parent-id></parent-id>
      <project-name></project-name>
      <title>Let Your Motto Be Resistance</title>
      <updated-at>2009-05-26T11:44:05-04:00</updated-at>
      <uuid></uuid>
    </content>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <content>
      <author-id>0</author-id>
      <created-at>2007-09-07T12:37:25-04:00</created-at>
      <description>1889-1979</description>
      <event-date></event-date>
      <event-location></event-location>
      <id>3</id>
      <link-target></link-target>
      <link-type></link-type>
      <parent-id></parent-id>
      <project-name></project-name>
      <title>A. Philip Randolph</title>
      <updated-at>2009-04-14T12:20:05-04:00</updated-at>
      <uuid></uuid>
    </content>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <memory>
      <city></city>
      <comment>I found great inspiration in the lessons from Booker T Washington, W.E.B. Du Bois, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King.  There were numerous others but growing up these were the people that helped to shape my thoughts.</comment>
      <commentable-id>103</commentable-id>
      <commentable-type>Section</commentable-type>
      <country>South Africa</country>
      <created-at>2007-05-07T00:00:00-04:00</created-at>
      <id>6</id>
      <postal-code>20882</postal-code>
      <state></state>
      <title>Growing up in South Africa in 1960 - 1980</title>
      <user-id>7</user-id>
    </memory>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <content>
      <author-id>0</author-id>
      <created-at>2007-09-07T12:37:35-04:00</created-at>
      <description></description>
      <event-date></event-date>
      <event-location></event-location>
      <id>7</id>
      <link-target></link-target>
      <link-type></link-type>
      <parent-id></parent-id>
      <project-name></project-name>
      <title>Elizabeth Catlett</title>
      <updated-at>2007-09-07T12:37:37-04:00</updated-at>
      <uuid></uuid>
    </content>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <memory>
      <city>Cascade</city>
      <comment>In October 1962, my parents filed a federal law suit against the State of Virginia to win admission for my oldest sister, Hazel Ruth Adams Hairston,  into the Patrick Henry Community College Campus of the University of Virginia at Charlottesville.</comment>
      <commentable-id>103</commentable-id>
      <commentable-type>Section</commentable-type>
      <country>United States</country>
      <created-at>2007-05-07T00:00:00-04:00</created-at>
      <id>9</id>
      <postal-code>00000</postal-code>
      <state>Virginia</state>
      <title>Negro Girl Changes the Color of Classrooms</title>
      <user-id>10</user-id>
    </memory>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <content>
      <author-id>0</author-id>
      <created-at>2007-09-07T12:37:55-04:00</created-at>
      <description>1815 - 1882, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution</description>
      <event-date></event-date>
      <event-location></event-location>
      <id>13</id>
      <link-target></link-target>
      <link-type></link-type>
      <parent-id></parent-id>
      <project-name></project-name>
      <title>Henry Highland Garnet</title>
      <updated-at>2007-09-07T12:37:59-04:00</updated-at>
      <uuid></uuid>
    </content>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <memory>
      <city>Pietermaritzburg</city>
      <comment>Lonnie reminisces about the words of Nelson Mandela.</comment>
      <commentable-id>103</commentable-id>
      <commentable-type>Section</commentable-type>
      <country>South Africa</country>
      <created-at>2007-05-11T00:00:00-04:00</created-at>
      <id>14</id>
      <postal-code>00000</postal-code>
      <state></state>
      <title>Lonnie Bunch Remembers Nelson Mandela</title>
      <user-id>15</user-id>
    </memory>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <bookmark>
      <bookmarkable-id>43</bookmarkable-id>
      <bookmarkable-type>Section</bookmarkable-type>
      <created-at>2008-11-07T10:06:05-05:00</created-at>
      <id>24</id>
      <title>Road to Freedom</title>
      <user-id>683</user-id>
    </bookmark>
  </tagged-item>
  <tagged-item>
    <memory>
      <city>Indianapolis</city>
      <comment>http://emancipation2000.com
Featuring the largest and most Unique collection of rare and hard to find black historical art prints. Overe 300 available sizes 11*17 and 24*36</comment>
      <commentable-id>103</commentable-id>
      <commentable-type>Section</commentable-type>
      <country>United States</country>
      <created-at>2007-12-17T21:27:51-05:00</created-at>
      <id>44</id>
      <postal-code>46235</postal-code>
      <state>IN</state>
      <title>Emancipation online </title>
      <user-id>490</user-id>
    </memory>
  </tagged-item>
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