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- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_ct_0017_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_ct_0020_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_ct_0021_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_ct_0018_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_ct_0019_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_ct_0022_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_nc_0014_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_nc_0015_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_nc_0016_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Newly Elected President Aristede Holds A Press Conference
- Date
- 2000-11-27
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide holds a press conference after winning the Haitian presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 27, 2000. Aristide, a former priest and president who founded the Lavalas party, returned to power after his successor, Rene Preval, was unable to turn around Haiti's economy.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_nc_0017_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Person performs the limbo with dancers in the background
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Caribbean Area -- Social life and customs; Dance -- Caribbean Area
- Local Identifier
- v3p01-02
- Type
- Slides (photographs)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- Collection
- Photographic Material and Other Art Work of Herbert E. Striner
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-96199
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Pipe Bomb Found As Haitians Prepare To Vote In Presidential Elections
- Date
- 2000-11-25
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A special police bomb squad prepares to remove a pipe bomb hidden in a cardboard box on a street of the upscale Petionville neighborhood one day before the country's presidential election in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on November 25, 2000. Nearly a dozen pipe bombs have exploded in the weeks leading up to the elections. Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide was running for his third chance and would eventually be declared the winner.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_nc_0002_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Pipe Bomb Found As Haitians Vote In Presidential Elections
- Date
- 2000-11-26
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Bomb-squad police show a pipe bomb to journalists on Election Day in Port-au-Prince on November 26, 2000. Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide was running for his third chance and would eventually be declared the winner. The election was boycotted by all the opposition parties and marred by numerous pipe bomb explosions.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean; Media
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_nc_0001_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Pipe Bomb Found As Haitians Vote In Presidential Elections
- Date
- 2000-11-26
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Bomb-squad police carry a box away containing a pipe bomb for deactivation on Election Day in Port-au-Prince on November 26, 2000. Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide was running for his third chance and would eventually be declared the winner. The election was boycotted by all the opposition parties and marred by numerous pipe bomb explosions.
- Subject
- Poverty; Voting; Caribbean
- Country
- Haiti
- Local Identifier
- haiti_nc_0005_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- Seven dancers performing behind a limbo bar
- Date
- [date of publication not identified]
- Creator
- Striner, Herbert E.
- Publisher
- American University Library. Archives and Special Collections.
- Subject
- Caribbean Area -- Social life and customs; Dance -- Caribbean Area; Popular music -- Caribbean Area
- Local Identifier
- v3p01-01
- Type
- Slides (photographs)
- Physical Location
- American University Library
- Collection
- Photographic Material and Other Art Work of Herbert E. Striner
- URI/handle
- http://hdl.handle.net/1961/2041-96198
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- St. Kitts And Nevis, Tourists And Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A man cuts rows of sugar cane a few miles from Basseterre, St. Kitts on June 21, 2002. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates
- Country
- St. Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_ct_0010_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- St. Kitts And Nevis, Tourists And Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A man cuts rows of sugar cane a few miles from Basseterre, St. Kitts on June 21, 2002. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates
- Country
- St. Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_ct_0011_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- St. Kitts And Nevis, Tourists And Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-20
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- The entrance of a converted sugar mill belonging to Yale University, June 20, 2002, known as the Biomedical Research Foundation is situated outside of Basseterre, St. Kitts on June 20, 2002. Yale's St. Kitts facility uses the island's vervet monkeys in stem cell research, Parkinson's disease research, alcoholism, epilepsy, gene therapy and neuro-degenerational disorders. The monkeys were first brought over by the British as pets and soon escaped. Monkey trappers scour the island attempting to trap the green vervet monkeys. Yale's St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation pays trappers $50-$150 depending on specific requirements for research.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates; Beaches; Trapping
- Country
- St. Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_ct_0003_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- St. Kitts And Nevis, Tourists And Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- Three vervet monkeys groom themselves at Turtle Beach, St. Kitts on June 21, 2002. A troop of vervet monkeys show up daily at Turtle Beach resort for food and passion fruit juice served to them at the local bar. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys. The monkeys were first brought over by the British as pets and soon escaped. The St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation uses the monkeys in stem cell research, Parkinson's disease research, alcoholism, epilepsy, gene therapy and neuro-degenerational disorders. A green vervet monkey can sell for up to $500 USD to overseas laboratories. Yale's St. Kitts Biomedical Research Foundation pays trappers $50-$150 depending on specific requirements for research.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates; Beaches; Trapping
- Country
- St. Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_ct_0006_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image
- Title
- St. Kitts And Nevis, Tourists And Monkeys
- Date
- 2002-06-21
- Creator
- Nickelsberg, Robert
- Description
- A man cuts rows of sugar cane a few miles from Basseterre, St. Kitts on June 21, 2002. St. Christopher, as St. Kitts is formally known, was named after Christopher Columbus who first visited the volcanic island in 1493. Sugar cane was planted soon after and became the island's main export and resulted in the importation of slave labor. The island is home to thousands of African vervet monkeys.
- Subject
- St. Kitts; Caribbean; Tourism; Monkeys; Stem Cell Research; Parkinson's Disease Research; Sugar Cane; Yale University; Biomedical Research; Green Vervet Monkeys; Primates
- Country
- St. Kitts and Nevis
- Local Identifier
- st_kitts_ct_0007_web.tif
- Collection
- The Photographic Archive of Robert Nickelsberg
- mods_typeOfResource_mt
- still image