The 90's, episode 209: KIDS, SCHOOLS, AND LEARNING
01:53 ""Plamondon School"" by Kathie Robertson. On Chicago's West Side, Principal Guadalupe Hamersma talks about the troubles facing low income urban schools. ""It's a mistake excusing ignorance because of poverty. I really feel that if you have high expectations and find ways to help kids meet those expectations, kids will achieve."" She also feels that these kids should not be concentrated in poor schools but instead should be integrated into schools in wealthier communities. ""I feel it's important for kids have to get out of their neighborhood because the resources are so limited."" 10:07 ""Sebastian & Molly"" by Dee Dee Halleck. Two kids sing parodies of children's songs that have been altered to feature the demise of teachers. Sebastian sings: ""On top of the chalkboard, all covered with blood, I shot my poor teacher with a .44 slug..."" Molly adds a tune dedicated to her teacher Miss Owens: ""Row, row, row your boat gently down the stream, throw your teacher off the boat and listen to her scream!"" 18:54 Leon Lederman commentary by Ricki Katz. Lederman, a Nobel Prize winning physicist, speaks about the poor state of education in America. ""In the '60s we were making the best cars, the best machines, and then all of a sudden we weren't anymore. School systems around the world were getting better than us. Something happened to this country in the late '60s to do with the Vietnam War. It created a malaise in our students, it created a dropout mentality. I don't think you can blame it on one thing, but that was a sort of milestone, one from which we have never recovered. Our text books were watered down, we neglected our teachers' salaries. Right now we're spending more per capita per year than any other country - $380 billion a year on higher and lower education. We have to turn the education system around, but we have to 'leverage' money very carefully in order to fix it."" 29:24 Bill Ayers commentary by Jim Morrissette. Ayers, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago and former member of the radical group The Weather Underground, speaks about education. ""In many ways schools are very effective. They function as large sorting machines, sorting kids out along class, racial and gender lines. We complain but we never fix them. I want them to not train people to fit into hierarchies, I want them to train students to participate fully in a democratic society."" 31:18 ""Harbor College"" by Nancy Cain. In Los Angeles, Cain visits a ""college"" for grade school kids that teaches stock market history, finance and business. 34:50 Murray Bookchin commentary by Luana Plunkett. Writer / activist Bookchin speaks about the misconceptions people have about education. ""Education today is confusing the accumulation of information and data with the pursuit of wisdom. We are not becoming wiser, we are learning a lot of data that has no meaning, no relevance. Education should provoke, should stimulate the student to thinking. What we call education to day is, in my opinion, nonsense!"" 40:32 Bill Ayers commentary continued. ""Most teachers teach for the right reasons - they're altruistic, optimistic and they love kids, or they love the world, they love art, mathematics, or music enough that they want to share this with kids. Their motivation is transformation. But they go to colleges of education where they effectively ignore that or beat it out of them. So they become involved in structures which reward obedience, conformity and being a clerk. School systems are becoming enormous bureaucracies toppling under their own weight."" 44:13 ""William Wilson"" by WTTW. Wilson, a music teacher at Hubbard High School in Chicago, won a Golden Apple Award for excellence in teaching. His philosophy: ""I never accept the word can't. I say 'erase that 'T''."" His students report on Wilson's unique teaching style. ""He treats everyone like his own child. So we have three parents: mother, father, and Mr. Wilson."" 47:18 ""Public Education: It's a Bull Market"" by Hobart Swan. This tape traces the history of business involvement in education. In April 1990, the California State Assembly made a historic recommendation allowing Channel One, a commercial news station, to broadcast in public school classrooms. If this recommendation becomes law, commercials for candy bars and potato chips will become part of daily curriculum. However, this may not necessarily be a new thing. Public school children have always watched industrial films produced by private companies. In years past, children learned about electricity from electrical companies, ecology from lumber companies, and nutrition from sugar companies. 55:54 More from Leon Lederman. ""TV is a tremendous force. It could do a lot of things. The typical scientist is portrayed as a weirdo stroking a cat and talking with an accent. TV owes an obligation both to entertain and to teach. We need he roes in science, we need good role models so kids can say this is not a nerd operation."
Grey-haired man in suit congratulating 2 young male graduates (1 Black) outdoors
1980s NEWS
04 MAY 1990 HUNTER COLLEGE DEMONSTRATION -SIGNS IN COLLEGE DORM, STUDENTS SIT AT TABLE -INTERVIEW WITH IAN MCGOWAN, CUNY STUDENT, DISCUSSES BUDGET CUTS IN CUNY COLLEGES, AND CAROL BERNARD OF HUNTER COLLEGE TALKS ABOUT FUNDING CUNY -PLEA TO GOVERNOR MARIO CUOMO, STUDENTS MARCH AND CHANT -HUNTER COLLEGE EXT, NYC 1990S, BANNERS HAND IN COLLEGE WINDOWS, FIST PUMPING
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA REMARKS IN KNOXVILLE - STIX
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA DELIVERS REMARKS ON COLLEGE EDUCATION AT Pellissippi State Community College IN KNOXVILLE, TENNESSEE - STIX. ALSO REMARKS BY VICE PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN WITH SECOND LADY DR. JILL BIDEN President Obama remarks at Pellissippi State DC SLUG: 1200 WH TN PATH1 RS33 73 AR: 16X9 DISC #023 NYRS: WASH3, WASH6 14:05:00 PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Hello, everybody. Hey, thank you. Thank you so much, thank you. Thank you, everybody. Thank you. Everybody, please have a seat. Please have a seat. Well, it is good to be back in Tennessee. I hope you guys aren't getting tired of me. I've been -- I've been coming around a lot, lately. (Laughter.) Because there's a lot of good stuff happening, here. 14:05:28 I want to begin by thanking Joe and Jill Biden. They're not just good friends and good partners, but they really believe in the power of education. And they really believe in creating those kinds of ladders to opportunity that gave all three of us and Michelle the chances, the incredible opportunities that we've had today. And they understand the promise of America's community colleges. Well, Jill really understands it -- (laughter) -- and Joe, he doesn't really have a choice. (Laughter.) 14:06:08 But, before I get into the reason that I'm here today, I want to begin by saying just a few words about the tragic events that we've watched unfold in France over the last several hours and days. And because events have been fast-moving this morning, I want to make sure to comment on them. 14:06:23 I just spoke to my counterterrorism advisor. We have been in close touch with the French government throughout this tragedy. The moment that the outrageous attack took place, we directed all of our law enforcement and counter-intelligence operations to provide whatever support that our ally needs in confronting this challenge. 14:06:52 We're hopeful that the immediate threat is now resolved, thanks to the courage and professionalism of the French personnel on the ground. 14:07:00 But the French government continues to face the threat of terrorism and has to remain vigilant. The situation is fluid. President Hollande has made it clear that they're going to do whatever is necessary to protect their people, and I think it's important for us to understand. France is our oldest ally. I want the people of France to know that the United States stands with you today, stands with you tomorrow. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families who have been directly impacted. We grieve with you. 14:07:32 We fight alongside you to uphold our values: the values that we share: universal values that bind us together as friends and as allies. 14:07:44 And in the streets of Paris, the world's seen once again what terrorists stand for. They have nothing to offer but hatred and human suffering. 14:07:54 And we stand for freedom and hope and the dignity of all human beings. And that's what the city of Paris represents to the world. And that spirit will endure forever, long after the scourge of terrorism is banished from this world. So -- (applause) -- so that's important. 14:08:19 Now, I'm in Knoxville not only because I just like Knoxville. (Laughter.) But I'm here today because one of my resolutions is to make sure that folks across this great country feel like they are coming back. And there is no doubt, thanks to the steps we took early on to rescue our economy and to rebuild it on a new foundation, America is coming back. Now - (applause) -- I'm not running for office anymore. (Laughter.) So, let me just present the facts. I promised that 2014 would be a breakthrough year for America. This morning, we got more evidence to back that up. In December, our business has created 240,000 new jobs. Our unemployment rate fell to 5.6 percent, which is the lowest in six and a half years. What that means is, 2014 was the strongest year for job growth since the 1990s. Unemployment - (applause) -- unemployment fell in 2014 faster than any year since 1984. Now, think about that. It's been 30 years since unemployment fell as fast as it did last year. And, most importantly, we're seeing faster job growth in industries that provide good-paying jobs -- traditionally, middle-class jobs -- than anything else. 14:10:05 Since 2010, the United States of America has created more jobs than Europe, Japan, and every other advanced economy combined. (Applause.) American manufacturing is in its best stretch of job growth since the 1990s. We're actually seeing companies insourcing instead of outsourcing. They're realizing, "We want to be here, with American workers making American products." America's now the world's number one producer in oil, gas. We've doubled the production of clean energy. And, by the way, you're saving about $1.10 a gallon at the pump over at this time last year. (Applause.) 14:10:58 Although I keep on reminding folks, gas prices -- they go up and they come down, and then they go up. So -- (laughter) -- I just want everybody to know that you should enjoy this. Take the money you're saving. You know, pay off the credit card or go get a new appliance or buy a fuel-efficient car -- (laughter) -- so that when prices go back up, you're still well positioned. 14:11:46 Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, about 10 million Americans have gained health insurance over the past year. (Applause.) And by the way, we -- we've done this while cutting our deficits by about two-thirds. Everybody thinks that they -- they did a survey. In every survey, they ask, "is the deficit going up or going down?" And 70 percent of Americans say that the deficit's going up. The deficit has come down by two-thirds since I took office. (Applause.) So meanwhile, thanks to the hard work of students and educators, drop-out rates are down, graduation rates are up, and after 13 long years, our war in Afghanistan has come to a responsible end, and we've got more troops that were home this holiday season. (Applause.) So I say all this because, you know, these six years have demanded a lot of hard work and a lot of sacrifice on everybody's part. And as a country, we've got every right to be proud of what we've got to show for it. America's resurgence is real. And now that we've seen calmer waters economically, if we all do our part, if we all pitch in, then we can start making sure that all boats (ph) are actually lifted again, and wages and incomes start rising again. And we can make sure that the middle class is the engine that powers America's prosperity, just as it always has. 14:13:19 So, that's going to be the focus of my State of the Union address in a couple weeks. I wanted to give you a little preview. Don't tell anybody I said this. (Laughter.) I'm giving you the inside scoop. That's the -- that's going to be the essence of my message. How do we build on the progress that we've made? And I figured, why wait for the State of the Union? (Laughter.) Why stand on formalities? Let's get the ball rolling right now. 14:13:45 Two days ago, I visited Michigan, where workers have brought the auto industry roaring back. And we've talked about what else we can do around advanced manufacturing. Yesterday, I was in Arizona, where I announced new actions to make the dream of home-ownership a reality for more middle class families. Later today, Joe and I are going to head to a company in Clinton to take action that will develop high-tech industry even further here in Tennessee. And right here, right now, at Pellissippi State, I'm going to announce one of my most important State of the Union proposals, and that's helping every American afford a higher education. (Applause.) 14:14:40 Now part of the reason -- part of the reason I wanted to come here was because Tennessee is at the forefront of doing some really smart stuff. And we've got some -- we've got some -- (applause) -- we've got some proud Tennesseans who, you know, can take some credit for the great work that's been done. First, your governor, Bill Haslam, who's here. (Applause.) You have two very fine senators. You've got Bob Corker. (Applause.) And your senior Senator Lamar Alexander, who is a former secretary of education himself, so he knows a little bit about this. (Applause.) You've Congressman John Duncan. (Applause.) Your mayor, Mayor Rogero - (applause) -- and we've got Pellissippi's president, Anthony Wise. (Applause.) And we've got all of you. (Laughter.) Now, Jordan (ph) and Jill both already touched on these themes, but -- but let me just amplify them a little bit. 14:16:09 Here in America, we don't guarantee equal outcomes. Some folks work harder. Some folks don't. Some folks take advantage of opportunities. Some folks don't. Some people have good luck. Some people have bad luck, and, you know, things don't always work out where everything's perfectly. But we do expect that everybody gets an equal shot. We do expect everybody can go as far as their dreams and hard work will take them. We don't expect anybody to be bound by the circumstances of their birth. If they were, I wouldn't be here, and neither would Jill. Jill, she's so accomplished, she wouldn't succeeded no matter what. (Laughter.) But we expect everybody to get a fair shot, and in exchange, we do our fair share. That's the basic bargain at the heart of this country: If you work hard, you can get ahead. It shouldn't matter what your last name is or what we look like or what family we were born into or how we worship. What matters is effort and merit. That's the promise of America. 14:17:34 And the way we deliver on that is making sure that our education system works on behalf of every person who lives her. America thrived in the 20th century, in large part because we made high school the norm. And then we sent a generation to college on the G.I., including my grandfather. Then we dedicated ourselves to cultivating the most educated workforce in the world, and we invested in what's one of the crown jewels of this country, and that's our higher education system. And dating back to Abraham Lincoln, we invested in land-grant colleges. We understood that this was a hallmark of America, this investment in education. 14:18:30 But eventually, the world caught on, and the world caught up, and that's why we have to lead the world in education again. That's why my administration's working to make high-quality early-childhood education available to all of our kids. We know - (applause) -- if we invest in them early, it pays dividends on the back end. That's why we're working to bring high-speed broadband to 99 percent of America's students within the next four years. We want to make sure every child is plugged in. That's why we're recruiting more highly trained math and science teachers. That's why we're working to raise standards and invest more in our elementary and middle and high schools, so that every young person is prepared for a competitive world. And this work is not easy. Sometimes it's controversial. It's not going to be the same in every state. But in places like Tennessee, we're seeing incredible strides as a consequence of these efforts. Over the past few years, Tennessee students have improved their reading scores and math scores more than any other state in the country. (Applause.) 14:19:57 That's a credit to their hard work, their teachers' hard work, Governor Haslam's hard work, leaders from both parties. It's been a bipartisan effort. Every Tennesseean should be proud of that. And today in a 21st century economy where your most valuable asset is your knowledge, the single most important way to get ahead is not just to get a high school education. You've got to get some higher education. That's why all of you are here. 14:20:31 Now, the value of an education is not purely instrumental. Education helps us be better people. It helps us be better citizens. You came to college to learn about the world and engage with new ideas and to discover the things you're passionate about. And maybe have a little fun. (Laughter.) And to expand your horizons. That's terrific. That's a huge part of what college has to offer. But you're also here now more than ever because a college degree is the surest ticket to the middle class. It is the key to getting a good job that pays a good income, and to provide you the security where even if you don't have the same job for 30 years, you're so adaptable and you have a skill set and the capacity to learn new skills, it ensures you're always employable. 14:21:38 And that is the key not just for individual Americans. That's the key for this whole country's ability to compete in the global economy. In the new economy, jobs and businesses will go wherever the most skilled, best educated workforce resides because businesses are mobile now. Technology means they can locate anywhere. And where they have the most educated, the most adaptable, most nimble workforce, that's where they're going to locate. And I want them to look no further than the United States of America. I want them coming right here. I want those businesses here and I want the American people to be able to get those businesses -- get those jobs that those businesses create. So that's why we've increased grants and took on a student loan system that was funneling billions of taxpayer dollars through the big banks, and said, "Let's cut out the middle man; let's give them directly to students instead; we can help more students." We've increased scholarships. We've cut taxes for people paying tuition. We've let students cap their federal student loan payments at 10 percent of income so that they can borrow with confidence, particularly if you're going into a job like nursing or teaching that may not pay a huge salary, but that's where your passions are. We're creating a new college rating system that will give parents and students the kind of clear, concise information you need to shop around for a school with the best value for you, and gives us capacity to recognize schools that offer a great education at a reasonable price. On the flight over here, Lamar and I were talking about how we can do more to simplify the application process for federal student loans, which is still too complicated. (Applause.) So -- so we've done a lot of good work over the last six years. We're going to keep at it. But today, I want to focus on a centerpiece of my education agenda, and that's the community colleges, like this one. 14:23:41 For millions of Americans, community colleges are essential pathways to the middle class, because they're local, they're flexible, they work for people who work full-time. They work for parents who have to raise kids full-time. They work for folks who've gone as far as their skills will take them and want to earn new ones, but don't have the capacity to just suddenly go study for four years and not work. Community colleges work for veterans transitioning back into civilian life. Whether you're the first in your family to go to college or coming back to school after many years away, community colleges find a place for you and you can get a great education. Now, Jill has been teaching English at community colleges for 20 years. She started when she was like 15 - (laughter) -- and she's still full-time today. And she sees, you know, I talk to her, and she talks about her students. And she can see that the -- the excitement and -- and the promise, and sometimes the fear of -- of being a -- you know, a 32-year old mom who's gone back to school and never finished the degree that she had started, and life got in the way, and now she's coming back, and suddenly getting a whole new skillset and seeing a whole range of career options opening up to her. It's exciting. 14:25:19 And that's what community colleges are all about: the idea that no one with drive and discipline should be left out, should be locked out of opportunity, and certainly, that nobody with that drive and discipline should be denied a college education just because they don't have the money. Every American, whether they're young or just young at heart, should be able to earn the skills and education necessary to compete and win the 21st century economy. So today, I'm announcing an ambitious new plan to bring down the cost of community college tuition in America. I want to bring it down to zero. (Applause.) We're going to. I want to. I want to make it free. 14:26:32 I want to make it free. Community colleges should be free for those willing to work for it. Because in America, a quality education cannot be a privilege that is reserved for a few. I think it's a right for everybody who's willing to work for it. Now, the good news is, you already do something like this in Tennessee. You call it Tennessee Promise. (Applause.) So -- so you call it Tennessee Promise and we thought, why not just build on what works? So we're going to call it America's College Promise. (Applause.) And the concept is simple. America's College Promise will make two years of community college free to responsible students who are willing to work for it. Now, I want to underscore that last clause: "everybody who's working hard for it." There are no free rides in America. You would have to earn it. Students would have to do their part by keeping their grades up. Colleges would have to do their part by offering high-quality academics and helping students actually graduate. States would have to do their part, too. This isn't a blank check. It's not a free lunch. But for those willing to do the work, and for states and local communities that want to be a part of this, it can be a game-changer. Think about it. Students who -- who started at community colleges during those two years, and then go on to a four-year institution, they'd essentially get the first half of their bachelor's degree for free. People who enroll for skills training will graduate ready -- already ready to work and they won't have a pile of student debt. Two years of college will become as free and universal as high school is today. Now, we're also taking another page out of Tennessee's playbook and making investments to expand technical training programs at community colleges, much like you do through your 27 colleges of applied technology. (Applause.) You know, Joe did a terrific job running a task force that we put together just to look at the job training and technical training systems all around the country. And at a time when jobs are changing and higher wages call for higher skills, we've got to make sure workers have a chance to get those skills. We want young people to graduate with real world training that leads directly to good jobs. And we want older workers to get retraining so they can compete. And we want more women and minorities to get jobs in fields that traditionally they've been left out of, like science and technology and engineering and math. And we want to connect community colleges with employers. Because when that's done right, these partnerships pay off for everybody. Students learn on the job, and employers get access to talent. Colleges get help designing courses that actually prepare people for the workplace. All of which creates better pathways to today's middle class. So, we're going to find the programs that work and we're going to help them grow. 14:30:05 Now, in a few weeks, I'm going to send to Congress my plan for free community colleges. I hope that Congress will come together to support it. Because opening the doors of higher education shouldn't be a Democratic issue or a Republican issue. This is an American issue. Governor Haslam is a Republican. (Applause.) Governor Haslam's a Republican. And thanks to his leadership last year, Democrats and Republicans came together and made Tennessee the first state in decades to offer free community college to its students. Meanwhile, up in my hometown of Chicago, Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who is a Democrat, is now offering free community college. And they're pairing students with growing sectors of the economy so they graduate with good jobs. So, if a state with Republican leadership is doing this and a city with Democratic leadership is doing this, then how about we all do it? Let's do it for our future. (Applause.) 14:31:18 And as I said before, there -- there are a bunch of good bipartisan ideas out there. A few days ago, Senator Alexander joined forces with Democratic Senator Michael Bennet to introduce the legislation that would make financial aid forms simpler. I noticed a lot of people applauded, because it's been a while since I've filled it out, but I understand - (laughter) -- there's more than 100 questions on it. It just shouldn't be that hard to apply for aid for college. And so I've committed to working with Senator Alexander. Let's shrink it down. Let's make life a little easier for millions of families. The point is we're not going to agree on everything, but simplifying that form, that's something we should be able to agree on. Let's get that done this year. (Applause.) 14:32:15 Because in the end, nothing's more important to our country than you, our people. That's our asset. We've got very nice real estate here. We got this incredible bounty, the God-given resources that we enjoy in this country. And our greatest resources are people. And -- and I want to the -- the students here and the staff and faculty how proud I am of -- of what you guys are doing. A lot of students here, I know you had to overcome some obstacles to get here. Many of you are the first in your families to go to college. Some of you are working full time while we're going to school. But you're making this investment in you, and by doing that, you're making an investment in this country's future. 14:33:11 And I -- I just want to use one person's story as an example, Caitlin McLawhorn (sp). Where's Caitlin (sp)? Where is she? Is she here? I thought she was here a second ago, but I'm going to tell her story anyway. (Laughter.) 14:33:29 She was raised by a single mom. She helped make ends meet, getting her job almost the minute she could, two days after her 16th birthday. When it came time for college, the money wasn't there. But Caitlin (ph) lives in Tennessee, so she knew she had a great free option. She completed two years at this institution. Now she's a senior at Maryville College. She's working full time just like she has since her first day at college. And Caitlin (sp) says, "A lot of people like me got discouraged. I get discouraged. But I can look back and say, 'You've made it so far.' I've learned that things aren't always what you want, but you can make them what you want." That's wisdom. "Things aren't always what you want, but you can make them what you want." That's what America's about. We can make of our lives what we will. And there are going to be bumps, and there are going to be challenges, and we've come through some very hard times. Things aren't always what we wanted, but we have overcome discouragement, and we have overcome division and sometimes some discord, and we don't give up. We get up, we fight back, we come back stronger than before. Thanks to the hard work of the American people, the United States of America's coming back, and I've never been confident as -- in my entire life that we're going to make of our future what we want of it, thanks to you. Appreciate it, Tennessee. God bless you. God bless America. 14:35:25 [Obama, VP, Jill Biden gladhanding]
OBAMA/EDUCATION
00:00:01:15 If we want to see middle class incomes rising like they did in the 1990's, we can't afford a future where so many Americans are priced out of college; where only 20 percent of our students are prepared to take college-level English, math, and science; where millions of jobs are going unfilled because Americans don't have the skills to work them; and where barely one in ten low-income students will ever get their college degree. 10:25:00 That kind of future is economically untenable for America. It is morally unacceptable for our children. And it is not who we are as a nation. (0:50) /
ACL-3011 Digibeta; Beta SP
WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE AND LIBERATION - PART ONE
SCIENCE STUDENTS - 1990
B-ROLL OF COLLEGE STUDENTS SITTING IN A SCIENCE LECTURE
COLLEGE STUDENTS ROLLERBLADE FOR CHARITY
McMasters students rollerblade to raise awareness for campus AIDS research.
1990s University of Southern California
Various shots of University of Southern California / USC - college campus - African American students
1990s NEWS
08/09/1994 2 ALARM FIRE, TOURO COLLEGE EAST 30 ST AND LEXINGTON AVE, MANHATTAN -FDNY FIRE FIGHTERS AT NIGHT, ENTER COLLEGE AND CLIMB AERIAL TOWER, ORNATE BUILDING -EMTS WHEEL FIREMAN ON OXYGEN, LOAD INTO AMBULANCE -FLASHING LIGHTS -BYSTANDERS, WOMAN LIGHTS CIGARETTE, STUDENTS, 1990S FASHIONS -STREET SIGN: EAST 30 AND LEX -CHRYSLER BUILDING AT NIGHT
The number of abortions is increasing in Hauts-de-France
PA-1966 1 inch; PA-0153 Beta SP
Benefits of Looking Ahead, The
BILL CLINTON CHARLOTTE NC RALLY ABC UNI / HD
TVU 4 BILL CLINTON CHARLOTTE NC ABC UNI 030716 C16 Former President Bill Clinton capped a wild day of politics in the Charlotte region Monday with an appearance at Johnson C. Smith University to tout the candidacy of his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, calling her an agent of change who will help all Americans improve their fortunes. His remarks outside Biddle Hall on the historically black college's campus near uptown were part of a swing through the state in advance of the March 15 primary in North Carolina. Hillary Clinton, who has widened her lead over U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders in the Democratic race in recent weeks, is attempting to become the first female president in the nation's history. Her husband served two terms, from 1992 to 2000. Clinton arrived in Charlotte a few hours after Republican front-runner Donald Trump spoke to 3,000 backers in Cabarrus County. Trump told his audience that he "hasn't even started on (Hillary)," but promised to beat her handily in a general election campaign. Pundits expect Trump to hit the Clintons on the Monica Lewinsky affair, Whitewater and other 1990s controversies. If Trump's amped-up crowd and provocative proclamations created an environment similar to a rock concert, Clinton's raspy-voiced, 34-minute policy speech offered the ambience of a mid-tempo sermon. Clinton drew his biggest applause for declaring of the Democrats, "Our party still believes in science." Later, he received hearty approval for comparing the Republican presidential debates to a "sixth-grade food fight." Mostly, though, Clinton delved into his wife's plans to invest heavily in infrastructure, using the Flint, Mich., water crisis as an example of the need for such spending. Other issues in which he promised reform or improvement under a Hillary Clinton administration included helping small businesses by pushing banks to make more friendly loans, prison reform, reducing student-loan debt and tilting the Supreme Court in the direction of tightening corporate campaign contributions and ensuring voters aren't discriminated against. Clinton, in a speech to the NAACP last year, acknowledged his complicity as president in creating a culture of imprisonment by supporting a tough-on-crime law. TAKEN FROM CHARLOTTE BUSNIESS JOURNAL (http://www.bizjournals.com/charlotte/blog/queen_city_agenda/2016/03/bill-clinton-touts-hillary-bright-future-at.html)
dolly shot 3 female students (1 Black, 1 Asian) sitting on grass on college campus + talking / Boston, MA
1990s University of Southern California
Various shots of University of Southern California / USC - college campus - student rides bicycle - bike
Canadian Youth Business Seminar
In Scarborough, young entrepreneurs attend the Canadian Youth Business Foundation seminar at Centennial College to find mentorship, further education opportunities, and financial backing.
FORMER COAST GUARD PROFESSOR ALLEGEDLY SEXTED STUDENT
<p><pi><b>**This package/segment contains third party material. Unless otherwise noted, this material may only be used within this package/segment.**</b></pi></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--SUPERS</b>--</p>\n<p>00:50-00:55</p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty</p>\n<p>Retired Coast Guard Lieutenant</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>02:20-2:24</p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty</p>\n<p>Retired Coast Guard Lieutenant</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>02:30-2:44</p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty</p>\n<p>Retired Coast Guard Lieutenant</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>02:47-02:55</p>\n<p>Pamela Brown</p>\n<p>CNN Chief Investigative Correspondent</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>03:43-3:47</p>\n<p>Admiral Linda Fagan </p>\n<p>US Coast Guard Commandant </p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--LEAD IN</b>--</p>\n<p>A COLLEGE PRESIDENT IS TAKING A LEAVE OF ABSENCE AFTER C-N-N STARTED ASKING QUESTIONS ABOUT HIS PAST AT THE COAST GUARD ACADEMY, WHERE HE WAS ACCUSED OF SENDING HUNDREDS OF SEXUALLY SUGGESTIVE TEXT MESSAGES TO A STUDENT MORE THAN A DECADE AGO. </p>\n<p>C-N-N'S PAMELA BROWN REPORTS.</p>\n<p><b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS</b>--</p>\n<p>RETIRED CAPTAIN GLENN SULMASY HAS HAD A LONG CAREER THAT INCLUDES BEING A LAWYER, A PROVOST, A CAPTAIN IN THE COAST GUARD.. </p>\n<p>NOW, HE’S THE PRESIDENT OF NICHOLS COLLEGE, AND SAID HE WANTS TO TURN IT INTO “THE BUSINESS COLLEGE OF CHOICE FOR WOMEN...” </p>\n<p>BUT A CNN INVESTIGATION FOUND SULMASY ALLEGEDLY SENT LEWD OR SUGGESTIVE TEXT MESSAGES TO AT LEAST TWO OF HIS STUDENTS MORE THAN A DECADE AGO, WHEN HE WAS A PROFESSOR AT THE COAST GUARD ACADEMY. </p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty, Retired Coast Guard Lieutenant: "He operates with impunity – he is untouchable" </p>\n<p>MELISSA MCCAFFERTY, A FORMER COAST GUARD CADET, SAID WHEN SHE TEXTED SULMASY AFTER GRADUATION - ASKING FOR A LETTER OF RECOMMENDATION FOR LAW SCHOOL, SULMASY SAID THIS: </p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty, Retired Coast Guard Lieutenant: "Only if you send me pictures, will I write you a letter of recommendation. It doesn't take an idiot to figure out that he was insinuating nudes. He then followed up with, and I will never forget this. I've always loved that tattoo on your left foot." </p>\n<p>TO ANOTHER FEMALE STUDENT, SULMASY EXCHANGED MORE THAN “16-HUNDRED TEXT MESSAGES” MOST OF WHICH WERE “SEXUAL OR FLIRTATIOUS” ... ACCORDING TO THIS INTERNAL COAST GUARD DOCUMENT OBTAINED BY CNN. AN ALLEGED OFFER TO “GIVE HIGH GRADES“ TO THE CADET “IN EXCHANGE FOR SEXUAL BANTER...”</p>\n<p>LISTEN TO WHAT HE WROTE: </p>\n<p>“DO U LUV TURNING ME ON...” SULMASY WROTE “U REALLY LOOKED GREAT AND THE NAILS WERE VERY HOTT…” </p>\n<p>“UR VERY PRECIOUS.... I ADORE YOU.. I REALLY DO WANT U” </p>\n<p>“I AM A GOOD BOY – NO FINAL FOR THE GODDESS” </p>\n<p>THE COAST GUARD UNCOVERED THE TEXTS YEARS LATER, AFTER SULMASY HAD RETIRED FROM SERVICE. </p>\n<p>YET THEY WERE SO CONCERNED THEY WROTE THIS 2016 “PROSECUTION MEMO” RECOMMENDING TWO COURT MARTIAL CHARGES AGAINST SULMASY – INCLUDING “WILLFUL DERELICTION OF DUTY” AND “CONDUCT UNBECOMING AN OFFICER.” </p>\n<p>THE DOCUMENT STATES THE CADET – WHO WAS 20 YEARS YOUNGER THAN SULMASY - “DENIED ANY SEXUAL CONTACT OCCURRED,” and “APPEARS TO HAVE BEEN A WILLING PARTICIPANT,” </p>\n<p>SULMASY’S ATTORNEY SAYING TO CNN THAT MEANS: “...TEXTS BETWEEN THEM .. WERE ENTIRELY CONSENSUAL BETWEEN TWO OF-AGE ADULTS.” </p>\n<p>YET THE MEMO’S CONCLUSION WAS: “PROSECUTION APPEARS TO BE THE ONLY PROPER COURSE OF ACTION.” </p>\n<p>CHARGES WERE NEVER FILED. </p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty, Retired Coast Guard Lieutenant: "he would get away with all sorts of inappropriate behavior." </p>\n<p>MCCAFFERTY SAYS HER INTERACTION WITH SULMASY WENT BEYOND TEXT MESSAGES - SHE SAYS SULMASY HARASSED HER – MAKING SEXUAL COMMENTS TO HER OR ABOUT HER. </p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty, Retired Coast Guard Lieutenant: "The made countless comments towards me about my body to my boyfriend, to me, to a classroom. He made comments about how I looked in a suit and a pencil skirt and heels." </p>\n<p>Pamela Brown, CNN Chief Investigative Correspondent: "Did you feel like the power differential between the role you had as a cadet and the role he had as a captain impacted how he was treated." </p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty, Retired Coast Guard Lieutenant: "Oh, absolutely, I brought it up to multiple people and they told // that he was too powerful, and that they could do nothing about it."</p>\n<p>SULMASY RETIRED FROM THE COAST GUARD IN 2015 AND BECAME AN ADMINISTRATOR AT BRYANT UNIVERSITY IN RHODE ISLAND.</p>\n<p>THE MEMO WARNED SULMASY WOULD “HAVE ACCESS TO STUDENTS” FOR THE REST OF HIS CAREER, AND IF NO ACTION WAS TAKEN THE COAST GUARD WOULD BE ACCUSED OF “SWEEPING THE CASE UNDER THE RUG.” </p>\n<p>YET THAT’S WHAT THE COAST GUARD DID. </p>\n<p>IT'S ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF THE AGENCY INTERNALLY EXPRESSING CONCERN ABOUT SEXUAL MISCONDUCT, BUT ULTIMATELY FAILING TO ACT. </p>\n<p>IN JUNE CNN UNCOVERED A DAMNING INVESTIGATION THAT HAD BEEN KEPT SECRET FOR YEARS – IT SHOWED ACADEMY LEADERS BURIED DOZENS OF CASES OF SEXUAL ASSAULT. </p>\n<p>Admiral Linda Fagan, US Coast Guard Commandant: "I apologize to the victims, survivors and their loved ones” </p>\n<p>AS FOR MELISSA MCCAFERTY -- SHE SAYS THE CULTURE IN THE COAST GUARD HAS BEEN ONE OF SILENCING VICTIMS. </p>\n<p></p>\n<p><pi> [00:13:06</pi>] The message was very loud and clear. It was keep your head down and shut up. And that's what I did. And I regret it. </p>\n<p></p>\n<p>SULMASY’S ATTORNEY TOLD CNN "ANY ALLEGATION MADE BY MS. MCCAFFERTY THAT MR. SULMASY “HARASSED”... HER IS CATEGORICALLY FALSE.” </p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--TAG</b>--</p>\n<p><b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--KEYWORD TAGS--</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--MUSIC INFO---</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>HERE'S CNN'S LENGHTY EDITORIAL, IN CASE YOU NEED MORE BACKGROUND:</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p>#URGENT: CNN Investigates: Coast Guard leaders shut down case against a retired captain for sexting a student at the Coast Guard Academy. He now leads a college. </p>\n<p></p>\n<p>From CNN’s Melanie Hicken, Audrey Ash, Curt Devine, Blake Ellis, Pamela Brown -</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>A college president, who wants his campus to become the business school “of choice for women,” once exchanged hundreds of sexually suggestive messages with a student he taught at the prestigious Coast Guard Academy, prompting prosecutors to recommend charges against him in military court, according to confidential records obtained by CNN.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Attorneys at the Coast Guard were so troubled by Capt. Glenn Sulmasy’s actions — and by the fact that he continued to work with students — that they recommended in early 2016 that he be charged with conduct unbecoming an officer even though he had retired from the service the prior year.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“Prosecution appears to be the only proper course of action,” an attorney wrote in a February 2016 memo laying out the prosecution recommendation. Failing to act, the attorney added, could attract “significant negative publicity by the media, Congress and internal staff for the appearance of sweeping the case under the rug.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Coast Guard leaders, however, quashed the case and never prosecuted Sulmasy, which allowed his career in private academia to flourish. He now heads Nichols College, a small school in Massachusetts that focuses on business and leadership education.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Sulmasy’s attorney, Jeffrey Robbins, defended his client, calling the prosecution memo, provided to him by CNN, “ridiculous on its face.” He noted that “the intimate texts in question” with the student were characterized by prosecutors as “consensual in nature” and said that the proposed prosecution had been “rightfully rejected by the adults within the legal wing of the Coast Guard.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Following CNN inquiries, the chairman of the board of trustees at Nichols College said the school had launched an “impartial, third-party investigation into this matter” and that they take “these allegations very seriously.” In a note to the campus community last week, he said Sulmasy volunteered to take a leave of absence pending the results of that investigation.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>The case from nearly a decade ago is another hidden example of the Coast Guard internally expressing concern about alleged misconduct but ultimately failing to hold its service members accountable.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>CNN in June uncovered a secret investigation of rapes and sexual assaults at the agency’s academy, which found that dozens of assaults had been mishandled, allowing some alleged sexual predators to ascend to high-level roles in the US military. The findings of that investigation, dubbed Operation Fouled Anchor, had been withheld from Congress until CNN reporters started making inquiries. And, CNN found that the agency’s top leaders had been behind the cover-up.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>In the separate investigation into Sulmasy, Coast Guard investigators uncovered more than 1,600 texts between him and a young female student, the majority of which were of a “sexual or flirtatious nature,” demonstrating that “at best, he offered to give high grades and show favoritism in class in exchange for sexual banter, and at worst, he actually did so,” according to the internal Coast Guard prosecution memo.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>The memo said the student told investigators she had earned the grades herself and denied any sexual contact with Sulmasy. It also described the young woman as a “willing participant” in the exchanges with Sulmasy and said she had been designated as a witness to his alleged misconduct and was not being granted the benefits given to victims of a crime.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>The messages show Sulmasy, who also served as a department chair at the academy, commenting on how attracted he was to the student more than 20 years his junior, requesting photos of her and expressing his desire to “spoil” her. “I am… a good boy — no final for the goddess,” he wrote one night. “Just know that I will give u a 100,” he said about another assignment. “Do u luv turning me on…U really looked great and the nails were very hott.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Coast Guard attorneys found that the “strong” evidence against him warranted prosecuting him in a military court-martial for conduct unbecoming an officer and willful dereliction of duty around eight months after he had retired from the academy and taken on an administrator role at a private university, records show.</p>\n<p>While Sulmasy’s misconduct case centered on his interactions with one female cadet, attorneys wrote that “there are likely other students whom [Capt.] Sulmasy pursued,” saying that moving the case forward could possibly bring new women out of the shadows.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Attorneys noted in the prosecution memo that a court-martial of a retired officer was rare and said a successful prosecution for someone as well connected as Sulmasy was even more unlikely. But they argued that it was the “Coast Guard’s obligation to protect students and institutions.” If successful, such a prosecution could have stripped Sulmasy of his pension and landed him behind bars, though prosecutors noted securing the maximum punishment for the alleged misconduct was unlikely.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>In the end, Coast Guard leaders overruled the prosecutors and decided not to press charges against Sulmasy, keeping the findings of the investigation from being made public. Sulmasy worked as provost at Bryant University for a number of years before leaving to become the president at Nichols College in Massachusetts in 2021. Bryant University did not respond to multiple requests for comment.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>An academy graduate himself, Sulmasy worked at the academy for many years as an attorney, professor and eventually the head of the school’s humanities department. During the Fouled Anchor investigation, Sulmasy was mentioned by at least one woman who said he discouraged her from pursuing a rape complaint against another cadet while he was working at the school in the late 1990s, court records show. Fouled Anchor investigators found a statement she had made about her alleged attack years later in a box labeled with Sulmasy’s name.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>A previous attorney for Sulmasy told CNN his client “has no recollection of any such conversation from a quarter of a century ago, much less of having said anything that would discourage any cadet from putting another cadet on report for a serious criminal offense.” His current attorney disputed that Sulmasy had ever been in a meeting with the woman, noting she told investigators she initially met with Sulmasy at a time before he had begun working at the academy. The attorney for Sulmasy pointed CNN to a 2016 ruling by a military judge who stated that the cadet reported her rape allegation to four Coast Guard Academy authorities, none of whom were Sulmasy. That ruling described Sulmasy’s boss as a “primary” individual with whom the woman spoke about her allegation in the 1990s.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>In a 2017 court filing, however, military attorneys described Sulmasy as a “main witness” with whom the cadet talked about her rape allegation. In an interview with CNN, the woman said she specifically remembered meeting with Sulmasy about her allegation.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>In the wake of CNN’s reporting on Fouled Anchor, the Coast Guard launched a review of its policies on assault and harassment and announced changes in how allegations are handled by the agency. And former vice commandant Charles Ray, who declined comment, resigned from his position at a Coast Guard Academy leadership institute after CNN reported he helped keep Fouled Anchor secret. Both House and Senate lawmakers have slammed the agency for keeping the investigation secret and called for independent investigations, with a Senate inquiry announced just last week. And House lawmakers have introduced legislation that would increase protections for academy cadets reporting sexual assault allegations.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>CNN started asking questions and filed a public records request about the Coast Guard’s investigation into Sulmasy more than three months ago, but the agency has yet to provide any details of the investigation or explain why charges were not filed as recommended, saying last week that “legal constraints prevent the Coast Guard from commenting on personnel matters related to Mr. Sulmasy.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Melissa McCafferty, a 2011 academy graduate, says it wasn’t long after arriving on campus that she began hearing a whisper network of warnings from upperclassmen about Sulmasy.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>According to McCafferty, Sulmasy verbally harassed her, telling her she looked good in her pencil skirt and making sexual comments. As the harassment continued, she says she told a female professor at the academy, who was herself a Coast Guard sexual assault survivor, what had happened, but the woman warned that she should stay silent, saying Sulmasy was “untouchable” and that saying something could “jeopardize (her) career.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>After she graduated from the academy, McCafferty said she reached out to Sulmasy to see if he would write her a letter of recommendation for law school based on her academic performance at the academy. But in response, she remembers him texting back that he would only write her a letter if she sent him pictures of herself, telling her he had always loved her foot tattoo. “I stopped the conversation and found a letter elsewhere… It made me feel very dirty and disrespected and very dehumanized,” she said.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>She said she saved the messages for years but was never asked about them so discarded the phone when she retired in 2019. She did, however, connect CNN to a former colleague who confirmed having viewed the text messages and that they came from a captain in the Coast Guard. The colleague, however, didn’t remember the captain’s name.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Sulmasy’s attorney told CNN that McCafferty’s allegations were “categorically false.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>The Coast Guard told CNN that it had referred allegations from McCafferty to Coast Guard criminal investigators after being contacted by CNN and urged “anyone who has experienced or observed assault or harassment within the Coast Guard to make reports to their command or to the Coast Guard Investigative Service.” McCafferty confirmed to CNN that she had been contacted by Coast Guard investigators about her allegations.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Today, McCafferty, a recent Georgetown Law graduate, says she is still angry about the way she and other female students were treated and says it is unacceptable that the Coast Guard had an opportunity to hold Sulmasy accountable for his actions but didn’t.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“A lot of these people were his friends. They went to school with him,” she said. “They just wanted it to go away.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>TRIAD approved: Grabow/Gray/Kiehl</p>\n<p></p>
BUSH VISITS TENN. UNIVERSITY - 1990
B-ROLL OF COLLEGE STUDENTS DURING PRESIDENT GEORGE H. W. BUSH’S VISIT TO THE UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE, KNOXVILLE
2 male students with backpacks walking + talking on college campus / Boston, MA
1990s University of Southern California
Various shots of University of Southern California / USC - college campus - students - professors - school administrators
CONTEMPORARY STOCK FOOTAGE
NEWSFEED: 3/2-3/7/07 HISTORICAL, PEOPLE BUYING LOTTERY TICKETS, CAR CRASHES INTO STORE, EXPLOSION IN IRAQ ;3/8/1995 U.S. DIPLOMATS KILLED IN PAKISTAN bullet holes in windshield, broken windows of van ;3/8/1990 POINDEXTER IRAN CONTRA arriving for hearings- and leaving ;TX AKA SORORITY SPOOFED black students on college campus. KIDNAPED BOY t/h ;MEGA MILLIONS customer in convenience store, convenience store during snowfall, people buying lottery tickets ;GENESIS TOUR ANNOUNCEMENT press conf. ASTRONAUT ARREST female astronaut stalker ;KS BTK HOUSE TORN DOWN clearing remains of demolished house. OR DAY CARE SEX CHARGE ;WA RUNAWAY PRIUS surveillance video of shoppers just before car busts thru window,'All of a sudden there was a car...' ;WA RIVER RESCUE-ELDERLY MAN NX rescue workers on steep bank, little hovercraft on river, paramedics drive away ;NEW JERSEY MEGA MILLION press conf ;MA BABY BORN AT GAS STATION attendant in booth.IL COMCAST LAWSUIT small house for sale, apt skyscraper ;Man installing cable tv. NUN MURDER LYNCH SENTENCED trial scene ;IRAQ ROADSIDE BOMB man talking to shooter, Pan to smoke rising from edge of highway, police arrive, helicopters in hazy sky ;Black smoke rising from fire on roadside. HEALTH CARE WORKER RALLY people seated in auditorium holding signs ;
2000 PRESIDENTIAL RACE: BILL BRADLEY CLIPREEL
DUB OF NYBA16723C - BILL BRADLEY CLIPREEL: COVERAGE OF 2000 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN / CLIPREEL #1 OF DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE BILL BRADLEY / 10:00:00 KNXV FILE FTG OF BRADLEY AS NEW YORK KNICKS BASKETBALL PLAYER CIRCA EARLY 1970S (NO AUDIO) / COLOR FTG OF BRADLEY W/ KNICKS ON MADISON SQUARE GARDEN (MSG) COURT / VS OF BRADLEY SINKING BASKETS AS HE TAKES PASSES FROM TEAMMATES INCLUDING WALT CLYDE FRAZIER / 10:00:30 TIGHT SHOT OF BRADLEY AT MSG COURT AS HE STANDS W/ WIFE ERNESTINE & RECEIVES HIS RETIRED UNIFORM NUMBER CIRCA 1990S / BRADLEY'S FORMER KNICKS COACH RED HOLTZMAN STANDS & APPLAUDS IN BG / 10:00:42 COLOR FTG OF BRADLEY W/ KNICKS DURING GAME IN EARLY 1970S (NO AUDIO) / 10:01:01 B&W FTG OF BRADLEY ON COURT AS MEMBER OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY BASKETBALL TEAM CIRCA 1960S / 10:01:36 MCU OF BRADLEY DURING PRINCETON GAME VS MICHIGAN AT NCAA TOURNAMENT / VS OF CROWD IN GYMNASIUM DURING GAME / 10:02:56 1984 SENATE VICTORY STATEMENT / SOT " WE ARE THE GREATEST ATHLETIC DEMOCRACY- ROBUST, EAGER.. OUR GREATEST TRIUMPHS LIE AHEAD " / 10:03:21 MCU OF SENATOR BRADLEY (D-NJ) AS HE DELIVERS SPEECH AT NATIONAL PRESS CLUB IN WASHINGTON, DC CIRCA 1980S / "PUBLIC HEALTH ENDANGERED" BY TOXIC WASTES (SOT) / 10:04:10 TWO SHOT OF SENATORS FRANK LAUTENBERG (D-NJ) & BRADLEY AT PODIUM AT NATIONAL PRESS CLUB CIRCA 1980S AS THEY TAKE QUESTIONS / 10:04:36 MCU OF BRADLEY CIRCA 1980S AS HE COMMENTS ON ELECTION IN THE PHILIPPINES / HE SAYS ELECTION WAS FRAUDULENT / 10:06:08 MCU OF BRADLEY DURING CAPITOL HILL PRESS CONFERENCE CIRCA 1980S / HE COMMENTS ON BATTLE FOR NEW TAX LEGISLATION / TAX REFORM / 10:07:19 vs of bradley as he delivers 87/08 speech on soviet / us relations at chautauqua institute in chautauqua, new york / US & SOVIET FLAGS APPEAR IN BG / 10:09:02 MCU OF BRADLEY IN TUXEDO AS HE DELIVERS SPEECH AT ROAST W/ DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES CIRCA 1988 AS HE JOKES ABOUT 1988 DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNOR MICHAEL DUKAKIS / 10:10:44 FILM XFER FTG OF BRADLEY W/ NEW YORK KN ICKS IN GAME AGAINST DETROIT PISTONS CIRCA LATE 1960S (NO AUDIO) / 10:11:23 FILM XFER FTG OF BRADLEY AT PRACTICE W/ KNICKS PRIOR TO DETROIT GAME CIRCA LATE 1960S (NO AUDIO) / 10:11:47 INTV ON THE COURT (CIRCA LATE 1960S) W/ BRADLEY WHO WEARS BUSINESS SUIT / SHOT PULLS INTO MCU OF YOUNG BRADLEY AS HE COMMENTS ON HIS PLACE W/ THE KNICKS / 10:14:17 VS OF BRADLEY W/ KNICKS AT MSG DURING GAME AGAINST PISTONS CIRCA LATE 1960S (NO AUDIO) / 10:15:27 TWO SHOT OF SENATOR BRADLEY & 1988 DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE DUKAKIS AT 1988 PC AT LIBERTY STATE PARK IN JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY / BRADLEY ENDORSES DUKAKIS FOR DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION / 10:18:07 B&W STILLS OF BRADLEY AS CHILD & TEENAGER W/ FAMILY MEMBERS / 10:23:18 B&W STILL OF BRADLEY HUGGING FELLOW KNICK WILLIS REED / 10:23:40 MCU OF 2000 DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE BRADLEY IN AFRICAN AMERICAN CHURCH AS HE SINGS W/ CONGREGANTS DURING CAMPAIGN STOP CIRCA 99/06/13 / 10:24:53 VS OF BRADLEY AS HE GLADHANDS CROWD DURING 99/06/12 CAMPAIGN STOP AT YWCA IN SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA / 10:26:46 TWO SHOT OF BRADLEY W/ COLLEGE BASKETBALL PLAYER ON BASKETBALL COURT IN IOWA CIRCA 99/02/02 / COLLEGE BALLPLAYER INTRODUCES BRADLEY / BRADLEY SMILES, GRABS BALL & DELIVERS CAMPAIGN SPEECH / 10:27:42 VS OF BRADLEY GLADHANDING IOWA COLLEGE STUDENTS IN ROOM CIRCA 99/02/02 / 10:28:48 CLIP OF 99/07/15 BRADLEY APPEARANCE ON NBC TONIGHT SHOW W/ JAY LENO (OFF AIR W/ BUG) / 10:31:26 VS OF BRADLEY DURING 99/05/15 TOWN HALL APPEARANCE IN CALIFORNIA / VS OF CROWD / 10:33:33 VS OF BRADLEY DURING 99/08/15 BOSTON ROUNDTABLE MEETING ON GUN CONTROL & NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH PROGRAM / 10:34:16 NWO CUTS OF BRADLEY DURING 99/08/15 BOSTON CAMPAIGN APPEARANCES (WCVB FTG) / 10:35:25 VS OF BRADLEY AT 81/07/07 SENATE COMMITTEE HEARING ON SOCIAL SECURITY / 10:35:50 VS OF BRADLEY & SENATOR WENDELL FORD (D-KY) AT 82/11/03 CAPITOL HILL PC ON 1982 ELECTION RETURNS / 10:36:40 VS OF BRADLEY W/ REPRESENTATIVE RICHARD GEPHARDT (D-MO) DURING HOTEL PC ON TAX REFORM / 10:37:29 VS OF BRADLEY AS HE EXITS OFFICE W/ MARY DECKER CIRCA 84/09/11 / 10:37:53 VS OF BRADLEY AT 84/11/27 CAPITOL HILL PC ON TAX REFORM / 10:39:13 VS OF BRADLEY AS HE WALKS OUTDOORS W/ REPRESENTATIVES GEPHARDT, CHARLES RANGEL (D-NY) & 1984 DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE WALTER MONDALE CIRCA 84/08/06 / VS OF GROUP DURING OUTDOOR PHOTO OP / PC IN MINNESOTA / 10:40:10 NEW JERSEY NETWORK CS OF BRADLEY VOTING AT POLLING PLACE IN DENVILLE, NEW JERSEY CIRCA 1980S / 10:40:24 NEW JERSEY NETWORK CS CIRCA 1980S OF BRADLEY AT CAMPAIGN VICTORY CELEBRATION IN SEACAUCUS, NEW JERSEY CIRCA 1980S / INTV W/ NEW JERSEY STATE DEMOCRATIC PARTY CHAIR JAMES MOLONEY (WHO LIES IN HOSPITAL BED) / MOLONEY SAYS BRADLEY CAN GO AS FAR AS HE LIKES AS REGARDS HIGHER OFFICE / 10:42:37 VS OF BRADLEY AT CAMPAIGN VICTORY RALLY CIRCA 1980S / (NATSOT) / 10:43:23 TWO SHOT OF BRADLEY & REPORTER DURING INTV / VS OF BRADLEY DURING INTVS DURING 1980S / 10:45:41 CLIPS OF KNICKS GAMES FEATURING BRADLEY CIRCA 1970S / 10:47:16 ABC SPORTS CLIPS OF KNICKS - LAKERS CHAMPIONSHIP GAME CIRCA EARLY 1970S FEATURES BRADLEY ON COURT / 10:56:15 TIGHT SHOT OF BRADLEY AS HE SITS W/ FORMER NBA BASKETBALL PLAYER & COACH PHIL JACKSON CIRCA 1999 DURING SANTA MONICA GIRLS & BOYS CLUB EVENT /
Return ticket: [issue dated September 10, 2023]