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New Film Highlights History of Palm Springs Black Community; Print Ephemera Lives On at Prelinger Library

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One of several articles featured on the cover of the The Desert Sun that sparked international media attention and backlash against the so-called 'racist trees' that were planted in Palm Springs in the late 1950's. (Jerry Henry)

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‘Racist Trees’ Film Explores History of Housing Exclusion in Palm Springs

Today Palm Springs is known for mid-century modern architecture and queer-friendly culture. But a new documentary on PBS’s Independent Lens explores the history of racist housing practices in the city that effectively hid a black neighborhood behind a wall of trees. “Racist Trees” covers the fight to remove the trees decades after they were planted, and asks the question: ‘Who takes responsibility for the wrongdoing of the past?’ Directors Sara Newens and Mina T. Son join host Sasha Khokha to talk about the film.

This San Francisco Library Collects Print Materials You Were Never Meant to See

Reporter Sarah Jessee takes us to San Francisco’s Prelinger Library, a treasure trove of ephemera from books full of soil samples to zines. In the 1990s, libraries started to become digital and began clearing out their catalogs. A network of like-minded librarians brought the “discards” to Rick and Megan Prelinger’s attention. The husband and wife, already collectors of print and text items, opened their library in 2004 and say ‘it’s available to any and everyone who believes our past can pave a path to a better future.’

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