Kistler Building
…It was equipped to seat over 200 people around the dance floor in seats of the latest vinyal (sic) plastic upholstering material, for easy, comfortable seating. On one side of…
Continue reading →…It was equipped to seat over 200 people around the dance floor in seats of the latest vinyal (sic) plastic upholstering material, for easy, comfortable seating. On one side of…
Continue reading →…new multi-tower array described as at 102nd and Bloomington Freeway/Lyndale Freeway/35W. See the new transmitter here courtesy www.radiotapes.com Photo by Zac Helmberger Aerial shot of the 9-tower…
Continue reading →…won’t try to explain everything about the very complicated topic of Prohibition, but will go through some basic milestones and some peculiarities in the Twin Cities. This information comes from…
Continue reading →…Minnesota Historical Society database, the RiverCentre website, and a search of the Minneapolis newspapers. All comments, additions, photos, and corrections are welcome; please feel free to contact me. THE…
Continue reading →…chantuse, perched atop the piano. Minneapolis Tribune, Sunday, June 2, 1946 LOOK AMATEUR SWING BAND CONTEST In April 1946, Look Magazine decided to run a national contest to…
Continue reading →…rock station, the complete opposite of what it actually was. Freed: KDAN, being a daytimer, was a perfect station to shoot at because it was off the air from sunset…
Continue reading →…I have also done a search through the St. Paul Recorder, a weekly newspaper for the black community. Jeremiah Ellis, a descendant of Mance Ellis, has requested, and rightly so,…
Continue reading →…23, 1940, winners of these competitions met on Nicollet Avenue for a final dance competition. Then 10,000 people participated in a street dance on three blocks of the closed-off street….
Continue reading →…end of it and an invitation to…Come on down. ‘If you suffer from lusterless, uninteresting radio, etc., etc., come on down and put a little color in your life.’ Then,…
Continue reading →…before the Committee on Student Behavior, which was composed of five professors and two students. Floyd handled his own defense, saying that his actions were constructive and that the University…
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