Showing 421 - 430 of 4391 Items

Bowdoin Alumnus Volume 16 (1941-1942)

Date: 1942-01-01

Access: Open access



Personal Recollections of the Museum of Art and the Department of Art at Bowdoin College

Date: 1991-01-01

Creator: Philip C Beam

Access: Open access

"Published with the assistance of the John Sloan Memorial Foundation"--T.p. verso


Bowdoin Alumnus Volume 32 (1957-1958)

Date: 1958-01-01

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Alumnus Volume 28 (1953-1954)

Date: 1954-01-01

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Alumnus Volume 12 (1937-1938)

Date: 1938-01-01

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Alumnus Volume 11 (1936-1937)

Date: 1937-01-01

Access: Open access



Descriptive Catalogue of the Bowdoin College Art Collections

Date: 1903-01-01

Access: Open access

Includes indexes.


Interview with Symone Howard (Class of 2015), Ashley Musana (Class of 2016), Briana Cardwell (Class of 2017), and Rebkah Tesfamariam (Class of 2018) by Nate DeMoranville

Date: 2019-11-10

Creator: Symone Howard, Ashley Musana, Briana Cardwell, Rebkah Tesfamariam

Access: Open access

Symone Howard ’15, Ashley Musana ’16, Briana Cardwell ’17, and Rebkah Tesfamariam ’18 were four consecutive presidents of the African American Society. They were the last to preside over the organization before the name changed to Black Student Union. They discuss the numerous challenges each encountered during their time here, which coincided with large scale instances of cultural appropriation, including Cracksgiving, the Gangster Party, and the Tequila Party. Musana, who was president for both parties, recounts the long hours spent working with students and administrators to sustain and support community. All four presidents recognize the tremendous burden placed on them as individuals, but all express gratitude for having created such a close knit community.


Interview with Randy Stakeman by Marcus Williams

Date: 2019-11-10

Creator: Randy Stakeman

Access: Open access

Randy Stakeman came to Bowdoin in 1978, not as a student, but as a member of the faculty. He discusses the history of the Africana Studies program, which he chaired from 1989 until his retirement in 2006. Stakeman also discusses his position as Acting Dean of Students, which he held for a brief period of time early in his career. He worked diligently to help bridge the achievement gap between black and white students. Stakeman partnered with faculty across the college to give special attention and support to underachieving students. He remembers fondly the role of the John B. Russwurm Center, where black students could congregate and find support. He says the house created a community, which he cherished.


Interview with Robert Johnson (Class of 1971) by Aisha Rickford

Date: 2019-11-10

Creator: Robert Johnson

Access: Open access

Robert Johnson, Class of 1971, talks about his first visit to Bowdoin in 1967 with a friend, and being involved with BUCRO, the Bowdoin Undergraduate Civil Rights Organization. There, he met Virgil Logan, president of BUCRO and an instrumental face on campus and in the Bowdoin African American Society. Johnson details how Afam came about after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr out of a desire to form community. Johnson then became the first President of the AfroAm at Bowdoin College. Johnson talks about how critical AfAm was for him and fellow black students isolated from their respective communities and drove black students to organize, and change racist systems. He shares stories of activism and resistance carried out on campus, specifically one where the black students on campus went silent and marched across campus to protest the lack of action on part of the Bowdoin administration as far as ensuring racial diversity in future classes. He also talks about racial incidents at Bowdoin and how Bowdoin shaped him in the years during and after graduation.