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The Attack into the Unknown: German Troops Advancing on Stalingrad, from Signal Magazine
Single page from Signal magazine shows a Nazi flag, soldiers and a tank. Text at the bottom of the image has the title "El asalto en lo desconocido" and the text: "El corresponsal de guerra de "Signal" PK. Artur Grimm describe en las páginas siguientes la cooperación alemana entre Infantería, Ingenieros y Caros de Combate."
Dive Bomber and Tank
No Description Available.
Interior with Etruscan Vase
Painting depicting interior with Etruscan vase.
Interior with Etruscan Vase
detail with woman
Number 02: The World War had caused a great shortage in Northern industry and also citizens of foreign countries were returning home.
No Description Available.
Number 04: The Negro was the largest source of labor to be found after all others had been exhausted.
No Description Available.
Number 06: And the migrants kept coming.
No Description Available.
Number 08: They did not always leave because they were promised work in the North. Many of them left because of Southern conditions, one of them being great floods that ruined the crops.
No Description Available.
Number 10: They were very poor.
No Description Available.
Number 12: The railroad stations were at times so overpacked with people leaving that special guards had to be called to keep order.
No Description Available.
Number 14: Among the social conditions that existed which was partly the cause of the migration was the injustice done to the Negroes in the courts.
No Description Available.
Number 16: Although the Negro was used to lynching, he found this an opportune time for him to leave where one had occured.
No Description Available.
Number 18: The migration gained in momentum.
No Description Available.
Number 20: In many of the communities the Negro press was read continually because of its attitude and its encouragement of the movement.
No Description Available.
Number 22: Another of the social causes of the migrants' leaving was that at times they did not feel safe, or it was not the best thing to be found on the streets late at night...
No Description Available.
Number 24: Child labor and a lack of education was one of the other reasons for people wishing to leave their homes.
No Description Available.
Number 26: And people all over the South began to discuss this great movement.
No Description Available.
Number 28: The labor agent who had been sent south by northern industry was a very familiar person in the Negro counties.
No Description Available.
Number 30: In every home people who had not gone North met and tried to decide if they should go North or not.
No Description Available.
Number 32: The railroad stations in the South were crowded with people leaving for the North.
No Description Available.
Number 34: The Negro press was also influential in urging the people to leave the South.
No Description Available.
Number 36: In Chicago and other cities they labored in the steel mills
No Description Available.
Number 38: They also worked in large numbers on the railroad.
No Description Available.
Number 40: The migrants arrived in great numbers.
No Description Available.
Number 42: Sometimes the [labor] agents disguised themselves to avoid arrest, but the migrants were often taken from railroad stations and jailed until the trains departed
No Description Available.
Number 44: Living conditions in the North were better.
No Description Available.
Number 46: Industries attempted to board their labor in quarters that were oftentimes very unhealthy. Labor camps were numerous.
No Description Available.
Number 48: Housing for the Negroes was a very difficult problem.
No Description Available.
Number 50: Race riots were very numerous all over the North because of the antagonism that was caused between the Negro and white workers.
No Description Available.
Number 52: One of the largest race riots occured in East Saint Louis.
No Description Available.
Number 54: One of the main forms of social and recreational activities in which migrants indulged occured in the church.
No Description Available.
Number 56: Among the last groups to leave the South was the Negro professional who was forced to follow his clientele to make a living.
No Description Available.
Number 58: In the North the Negro had better education facilities.
No Description Available.
Number 60: The trains were packed continually with migrants.
No Description Available.
Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair
No Description Available.
Usonian Style Pope-Leighey House
The view is of the house in a foliage dense setting.
Usonian Style Pope-Leighey House
The view of the exterior facade in the sunlight shows the pierced overhang view from the northeast.
Usonian Style Pope-Leighey House
The view of the exterior includes a large glassed space so some interior is visible.
The Balcony
Painting of a man and a woman seated on a balcony overlooking the sea.
The Beautiful Bird Revealing the Unknown to a Pair of Lovers,
No Description Available.
The Cock
The cock is seen from a back view with scroll-like trellises seen to the right and left of the cock. There is a grouping of pink flowers to the left of the cock. The painting is in hues of red, yellow, blue, pink, and purple.
Coffee Maker
The view of the glass coffee maker is from an angle showing the lid. The two screws holding the wooden handle are also visible in this view.
The Divers II
No Description Available.
Garden at Sochi,
No Description Available.
Head of a Woman: Dora Maar
Moderne, Total from front left
Head of a Woman: Dora Maar
Moderne, Total from front right
Landscape with Wild Horses
A landscape painting with trees, a river, and wild horses.
Little Spanish Prison
This oil painting has twelve vertical stripes in alternating hues of yellow and grey with one red horizontal stripe crossing three horizontal stripes on the upper left area of the painting.
Movement: Sky and Grey Sea
No Description Available.
The New Rich
Painting of red, yellow, blue, green, white and gray featuring ten figures performing various tasks such as cooking.
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