Color Us Black! Pt. II

Color Us Black! Pt. II

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Roots Preserved

Joined: Mar 2026

Descriptions:

Part II of a documentary film produced for NET looking at how and why Howard University (Washington D.C.) was shut down by African American students, who occupied the Administration Building over four days in March 1968. Opens with “A film by Benjamin W. Land” (intertitle) about “black awareness” and the meaning of “black power.” This is set within the context of a speech on Howard University’s campus by Maulana Ndabezitha Karenga (birth name Ronald McKinley Everett), who is described as a “black power advocate.” Kerenga is heard in the background and also seen speaking at a podium. The actors (Eric Gravett, Candice Tarplay and Sally Blumenthal) and Land (who also appears in the film) then discuss their feelings about this production and the issues being raised. Ends with views of Trustee Dr. Kenneth Clark and students reflecting on the relative success of the protest on campus.

This film was produced, written and directed by Dick McCutcheon, edited by John Carter, with Don Lenzer on camera and sound by John Payne and Eugene Smalls. Color us Black! (Part I) may also be viewed in DIVA.

 

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Color Us Black!

Overview

Overview

A documentary that examines the 1968 student strike at Howard University in Washington, D.C. The film looks at how the school’s disciplining of 39 students led to students occupying the Administration Building in protest over four days.
Cast

Cast


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Ben Land

Crew

Crew


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Dick McCutcheon

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