Ongoing weekly radio newsmagazine focusing upon minority issues and broader issues from a minority perspective. Produced by independent producers and includes commentaries and reviews by established critics, artists and writers.|CROSSROADS / produced by Elizabeth Perez-Luna. - Ongoing weekly radio newsmagazine focusing upon minority issues and broader issues from a minority perspective. Produced by independent producers and includes commentaries and reviews by established critics, artists and writers. - CONTENT: pt.1. Conditions on the Mexican-United States border : part 1 / Lex Gillespie (5:09) -- pt.2. Hip-Hop jazz performed by English artists / Randall Grass (4:32) -- pt.3. Ethnic poetry as a basis for paintings : the work of Glenn Ligon / profiled by Charlene Koh (3:51) -- pt.4. The Only Native American urban housing developmet in the United States : Little Earth / Tom Fudge (4:51) -- pt.5. The Father of contemporary Dub Poetry : Linton Kwesi Johnson / reviewed by Malcolm Howard (5:32). BROADCAST: Satellite, 8 Jan. 1993. Tapes are comprised of two sections. The first is the produced newsmagazine. The second are the separate stories in unproduced form.
pt.1. Conditions on the Mexican-United States border : part 1 / Lex Gillespie (5:09) -- pt.2. Hip-Hop jazz performed by English artists / Randall Grass (4:32) -- pt.3. Ethnic poetry as a basis for paintings : the work of Glenn Ligon / profiled by Charlene Koh (3:51) -- pt.4. The Only Native American urban housing developmet in the United States : Little Earth / Tom Fudge (4:51) -- pt.5. The Father of contemporary Dub Poetry : Linton Kwesi Johnson / reviewed by Malcolm Howard (5:32).
pt.1. Conditions on the Mexican-United States border : part 1 / Lex Gillespie (5:09) -- pt.2. Hip-Hop jazz performed by English artists / Randall Grass (4:32) -- pt.3. Ethnic poetry as a basis for paintings : the work of Glenn Ligon / profiled by Charlene Koh (3:51) -- pt.4. The Only Native American urban housing developmet in the United States : Little Earth / Tom Fudge (4:51) -- pt.5. The Father of contemporary Dub Poetry : Linton Kwesi Johnson / reviewed by Malcolm Howard (5:32).
