Government under pressure over school sports fields sell-off
Government under pressure over school sports fields sell-off; GIR: Iwan Thomas interview SOT - almost criminal if we're getting rid of more school playing fields
CANAL CRISIS DEVELOPS
Various. <br/> <br/>GV. Inside shed at quayside, Southampton, Hampshire. Troops picking up kit and preparing to walk to waiting ship bound for Cyprus. LV. Troops going up gangplank into "Dilwara" SV. Pan, armoured vehicles on roadside on Newport - Cardiff road waiting to move off to docks. CU. Soldier sitting in vehicle. LV. Towards and past, scout cars move off to docks. SV. Troops going up gangplank and into "Dilwara". SV. Families on quayside waving to troops on boat. LV. Docks lined with waving troops. SCU. Young woman crying while older one comforts her. LV. Boat going out to sea. <br/> <br/>SV. Egypt's President Abdel Nasser entering Cairo press conference. SV. Part of audience standing applauding him. SCU. Nasser speaking at table, & SCU. SV Part of audience listening. CU. Nasser speaking and thumping fist. SV. Cabinet Ministers being issued with rifles. SV. Men lined up with rifles. CU. Two men fiddling with rifle and discussing parts. SV. Women walking out holding rifles - teachers from Cairo schools. SCU. Woman fiddling with rifle and being instructed by man. <br/> <br/>GV. London Airport. SV. Towards, Krishna Menon, High Commissioner for India, arriving for the 22 nation Suez Conference, & CU. He is greeted by two Indian friends. CU. Mr Thomas Macdonald New Zealand's Minister of Defence and Exterior Affairs. SV. Mr John Foster Dulles, American Secretary of State, coming down from plane. SV. Mr Dmitri Shepilov, Soviet Foreign Minister, coming down from plane followed by Soviet Ambassador Jacob Malik. SCU. Mr Shepilov. <br/> <br/>SV. Major Salah Salem, Egyptian Minister of National Guidance, having arrived at airport and walking toward interview room. Inside interview room, Major Salem sits down with interviewer, Reginald Bosanquet. SV. Press taking notes. <br/> <br/>SCU. Major Salem speaking (natural sound): "Nasser helped to nationalise the company which is an Egyptian company, nothing more..." I interview carries on as Mr Salem talks about readiness of the Egyptians to protect what they feel is theirs. <br/> <br/>GV. Several Britannia planes lined up at Hurn airport. SV. Line of troops marching out towards plane. CU. Troops going on board aircraft. LV. Aircraft takes off. SV. More troops boarding another Britannia aircraft. GV. Troops boarding another Britannia plane. SV. Inside, aircraft full of troops waving at camera. <br/> <br/>LV. General John Glubb (Glubb Pasha) sitting at writing table on terrace of his house at Mayfield, Sussex. SV. General John Glubb writing, he takes his glasses off and starts talking (natural sound): "Colonel Nasser has based his claim to nationalise the Suez canal... many other nations nationalised their services... to prevent capitalist... from owning these services... Nasser is trying to become a capitalist economist... Suez Canal should be controlled by its users, the maritime nations of the world." SCU. & CU. Glubb Pasha speaking. <br/> <br/>(Neg & F.G.) (Title Scenes "I", "J", "H") (Orig "N")
MINORITIES
LATE 1960s SIOUX RESERVATION LIFE, THOMAS WHITEHAWK BIO, 1950s AMERICAN INDIANS IN NEW MEXICO, AMERICAN SOUTHWEST BETWEEN TWO RIVERS RFK visiting Indian boarding school, boys lined up along bunks, Sioux Indians dancing, drummers, powwow Thomas James White-Hawk being arrested, Sioux Falls prison, old barn, small farmhouse, farm equipment, liquor store ;Indians leaving liquor store, sheriff gets into car, jail cell, Indian teens hanging out, kids in juvenile hall cell Shack, man sits down inside shack, little kids, abandoned boarding school, pile of books, 'Dick & Jane' book lying open Log cabin next to ranch house, sled, bicycle, Indian rancher driving calves, Chicago el-train, ghetto, litter Shack, abandoned car, headstone, church service, Church Army badge, hymnals, Thomas pole-vaulting Parochial school campus, pole-vaulting, University of South Dakota college campus, Coca-cola sign over cafe Men hanging out on sidewalk, Jewelry store, POV walking down fire escape, subjective POVs Newspaper article, prison wall, Baxter Barry at hearing, badlands AMERICAN INDIANS AS SEEN BY D.H.LAWRENCE century plants, cacti blooming, portrait of Lawrence, bldgs in countryside ;Fence along stream, pueblo, old woman wrapped in blanket, cemetery, boy crawls into cubbyhole, shaman beating drum ;Kachinas dancing, women wearing headdress dancing, medicine man carrying rattlesnake, ceremonial dance, women dance Desert, brush, girl eating cotton candy, carnival, traditional 'quadruped' dancing, old men beating drum, dark clouds over mtns Dancers wearing eagle costumes, bald eagle in flight, perched eagle
THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL B-ROLL (1996)
NEWSNIGHT
/n00:00:00:00 /nLEAD STORIES: Witnesses Come Forward in Airline/Secret Service Agent Case; Pakistan Deploys Troops on Indian Border; SAARC (South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation) Summit ...
India:
ISSUE_NO = 348 NO_OF_ITEMS = 11 ITEM_NO = 2 DESCRIPTION : The Viceroy's Tour and the Aga Khan's Jubilee. CARD_FILE = 4224 CARD_TITLE : The Viceroy's Tour and Aga Khan's Jubilee. SHOT_LIST : Close shots of Lord and Lady Willingdon touring. Shots of big dam opened by Lord Willingdon. Lord and Lady Willingdon taking tea. This is a garden party. Native population seen taking tea at the Garden Party also. Various shots of the Viceroy and Vicerene with Native personalities. Lady Willingdon opens school for girls. Shot of statue of a great cricketer (Ranjisinghi) of India. The Aga Khan with natives. Indian women wearing their Saris. Pan shot of Indian men wearing all manner of dress. The Aga Khan walking to camera. Shot of him being weighed in gold. Close shot of the gold. Shot of the Aga Khan speaking into 'mike'. SOUND : Commentator KEYWORDS : Personalities - Politicians; Personalities - Relatives; Entertainment and Leisure; Food, Drink and Cooking; Indigenous People; Children; Personalities - Sport; Buildings, Landmarks and Monuments; Freeman Freeman-Thomas, Lord Willingdon; Cricket; Fashion and Costumes; Aga Khan III, Aga Sultan Sir Mahomed Shah; Royalty; Social Events; Ceremonies - Inauguration; Personalities - Religious MATERIAL : Can 479 Viceroy - 97ft Aga Khan 58ft Combined Dupe Negative 05196 LENGTH_SHOT = 155 DATE_SUBD = 00/00/0000
NEWS; 1945-1950
13:00:47:00,War planes on United States aircraft carrier prepare for takeoff, Deck crewman gestures (repeat), CU pilot in cockpit, CU men watch, Deck crewman gives thumbs-up sign, Plane taxis (repeat), Takeoff (repeat), Rear view POV from plane of carrier during takeoff, Aerial of plane over carrier, Planes in formation, Aerial of wing, ocean in background, Aerial of planes in formation (repeat), Pilot in cockpit, Planes peel off (dive into action), Plane lands on carrier (phone narration indicating the war is over), Pilot's POV as plane lands on carrier, White House, Crowds wave at passing camera, White House in background, MP's control White House crowd, President Harry Truman tells news conference of Japan's acceptance of surrender terms, unconditional surrender, words on soundtrack, Reporters run from conference, Reporters on phones, Boy with newspaper ("EXTRA! IT'S PEACE!"), Soldier jumps, WAC jumps, Women run, cheer, Crowds wild in street, TImes Square mobbed, United States flag waved, Man holds baby, baby holds small United States flag, Radio announcer above crowd, Dancing in street, Servicemen on lamppost, CU people mug, Man wears Japanese battle flag as hula skirt, does hula, Men lift pretty girl, People lift man, Pretty girl on sailor's shoulders, Sailor kisses girl, almost on ground, Woman slugs beer, Hand points to soldier's stripes, Soldier drinks, Man shampoos self with champagne, Soldier, girl kiss (repeat), Sailor, girl kiss, Soldier, woman dance, Revelers in car, flags, Ticker tape, Big United States flag, People drown each other in ticker tape, Huge mess, Church steeple, United States flag, Small town street, Empty sidewalk, trees, Dad home from work, child runs to him, Kids play under sprinkler, Kids' jumping feet, Kid in mud, Boy drinks from hose, Girl drinks from hose, Hose squirts boy in face (CU), Hose squirts girl in face, Boy helps dad mow lawn, Boys fix wagon, Little girl helps mom hang wash, CU girl shakes clothes (CUTE), Bored boys sit on curb, Small town Main Street, Men talk on street, Boys hang out, Women talk on street, Woman writes in notebook, Sign: NOTICE THE POINTS ARE MARKED ON THE ARTICLE & SHELF OF ALL RATIONED FOOD, Grocer, customer, Store window ("NO MILK, NO EGGS, NO LARD, NO BUTTER"), Half-empty shelves, Sign on shelf: SORRY NO MORE PINEAPPLE, Sign: PLEASE DO NOT ASK FOR BUTTER TODAY, Sign: NO BEEF TODAY, Women buy food, CU ration stamps, Grocer counts stamps, CU hands count stamps, Butcher sharpens large knife, Butchers cut meat, Crowded meat market, Smiling butcher holds up chicken, Steak on scale, Smiling woman takes bag (repeat), Price tags changed, 78c to 95c, 59c to 74c, etc, Gas station, sign: GAS RATIONING OFF NO STAMPS REQUIRED, Men fill up tank, Pump ("THIS SALE $2.33"), Man tears up card, CU hand scrapes "A" decal off windshield, Aerial of aircraft carrier, deck crowded with men, Soldiers in foreground see lower Manhattan skyline, Soldiers look, New York City pier, banner reads "WELCOME HOME", Troops on ship wave, CU smiling woman waves, Soldier waves from porthole, Grandma waves, woman hugs her, Women wave to aircraft carrier, Servicemen run off ship, Man, woman hug, kiss (famous shots), Woman runs to hug man, Sailor picks up little boy, Aerial of troop ship, War brides, babies wave, CU brides, babies (NICE, repeat), Women off ship, luxury liner at sea, Men kiss babies, Statue of Liberty, People on ship see Statue, Crowd at pier waves, Refugees on ship, CU women show concentration camp tattoos, just barely visible, Refugees leave ship, People kiss, hug (VERY TOUCHING, MOVING), Army camp, sign: SEPARATION CENTER, Group of soldiers, one steps forward at a time, gets discharge in front of United States flag, Soldiers wave hats, Soldiers wave discharges, Rows of quonset huts (military buildings), Man takes bedding into quonset hut, Child, man take belongings from car, Women hang laundry, Tethered child plays, man reads paper in front of quonset hut, Young men leave school, meet wives, kids, Couples walk with babies, People walk home to tiny trailers, Rows of hundreds of warplanes (repeat), Rows of plane engines, Bomber ("DEADEYE II"), Bomber ("CALAMITY JANE", nose art), Bomber with kill markings, Bomber ("OUR BABY"), Bomber ("DRAGON LADY"), Bomber ("EVASIVE ACTION"), Bomber ("FOREVER AMBER"), Crane stacks planes on end, Welders dismantle plane, Molten steel poured, steelworkers shovel, Men, machines make cars, Car engine hoisted along, Men weld cars (car manufacturing), Men put door on car, Men paint car (repeat), Car body hoisted along, Car finished, Car driven out of factory, Cars drive, Textile bobbins spin, Nylons being made, Women mob "Sultana Hosiery" store, Woman inspects nylons as crowds watch, Man buys nylons, Crowds run through street, Women mob man under sign: WE ARE GIVING AWAY NYLONS, People scramble, Man throws nylons to crowd, Crowd dives, fights for nylons, Person, stretcher loaded into ambulance, Crowd of women don nylons on street, CU legs, "Cheesecake", Models parade, nylons emphasized, Women raise skirts (a little), drop them (a little), "New look" long skirts, Models at lunch, CU Christian Dior, Legs, skirts, Line of models in bikinis, Bikini babes parade, Crowd watches Henry Ford's funeral procession, Woman cries (repeat), Onlookers, Sad boy in baseball uniform, New York City Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia's funeral procession, LaGuardia, Bud Abbott, Lou Costello on steps of New York City City Hall, LaGuardia, Abbott, Costello up steps, Costello trips on purpose, LaGuardia with fire chief, Firemen spray hoses, CU LaGuardia, LaGuardia runs steam shovel, with Casey Stengel (I think), Steam shovel, Walks in parade with General Dwight Eisenhower, With Eisenhower in motorcade, man in weird costume runs up, hands unofficial key to city to Ike, Speaks on radio (WNYC), Reads, dramatizes funnies on radio (SOT, very long version), LaGuardia waves, Original Yankee Stadium, United States flag at half mast in foreground, Game at stadium, Ruth walks on field past uniformed boys, CU Ruth grips bat, Ruth homers, Ruth signs autographs for crowd of kids, CU older Ruth, Ruth waves goodbye to kids, Sickly Ruth at Yankee Stadium for his farewell speech, Crowd, Kids watch, Ruth applauded at microphones, Mel Allen in background, CU Ruth says farewell in pitiful, raspy voice, Mel Allen on verge of tears, Crowd, Ruth smiles (CU), Stadium, United States flags at half mast, Crowd enters Ebbets Field, Man sells programs, wears hat lettered ("BROOKLYN"), Crowd cheers, jeers, calls players "bums", fan gets hat pulled down over his face, CU Jackie Robinson smiles, Fan Hilda Chester with sign "HILDA", CU Robinson (repeat), Robinson gets hit, Fans cheer, Robinson greeted after homer, Crowded street, pushcarts, CU fish put on scale, Fish market, Signs: KNISH 10C, KNOCKWURST 10C, Man eats hot dog, items taken off scale, Strollers, Street scene, Engineer's POV as train passes train, Engineer, Train crosses bridge, POV from train as fields pass, United Kingdom Prime Minister Winston Churchill leaves train, Churchill, President Harry Truman into car, Car moves, secret service on fenders, Two leaders in motorcade, Churchill makes famous Iron Curtain speech at Fulton, Missouri (SPEAKS NICE, long version), Audience, Flags at United Nations headquarters, United Nations headquarters, "NEW YORK CITY BUILDING AT FLUSHING MEADOW PARK, NOW AN ICE RINK!!", Marines guard building, VIP's enter, Cars pull up, exit Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, United Nations Security Council session, Soviet representatives, including Andrei Gromyko, Soviets walk out of session, CU Soviet seats empty, Parade, Marchers carry sign: WAKE UP AMERICA PEEKSKILL DID, Poster advertising concert by Paul Robeson, Protesters, Cops control crowd, Enter more cops, Crowd, Sign: OUST THE COMMIES, Cops search man, Cops confiscate baseball bats, Cops, crowd push each other, Man arrested, CU Gary Cooper testifies at HUAC congressional session, Coop says he doesn't like Communism (speaks), Crowd (repeat), Crowd, press, Women knit, Reporters (repeat), CU Ronald Reagan testifies, says no Communist ever used films for ideology, stands up for movie industry, Chairman raps gavel, Herbert Biberman testifies, is asked whether he is a Communist, defies committee, criticizes committee's purpose, refuses to cooperate, Photographers, Hostile witness, don't know who (Hollywood 10 member), CU Congressman Richard Nixon, Committee, Alger Hiss sworn in, Hiss speaks, no sound, Whittaker Chambers testifies, accuses Hiss, speaks, CU Hiss, CU Chambers, Astor Theatre in New York City, huge sign for premiere of "THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES", CU Myrna Loy, CU Virginia Mayo (at opening of movie), CU Dana Andrews, Photographers flash bulbs (VERY NICE), Shirley Temple weds John Agar, CU couple, Fans wild, Fans rush Rita Hayworth-Aly Khan wedding, French cops, crowd, Couple in car (CU), Fans, CU couple CU, Photographers, Couple, violinists, Ingrid Bergman, Roberto Rosselini walk on street, Couple drink in cafe, CU Bergman smiles, Princess Elizabeth marries Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, couple in carriage, crowds watch, Crowds rush palace gates, Multitude, Couple, family wave from balcony, Crowd, Extended royal family, CU King George VI, Queen Mary, CU Elizabeth, Philip, Ext. United States Capitol Dome, Newspapers on printing press, Secretary of State George Marshall at committee hearing, speaks of Marshall plan committee, Street scene, Woman hangs out wash, Women talk, Men talk, Men talk in diner, Crowd, announcer at microphone, Woman says Joe Louis and Joe Walcott should fight again, Black man expresses opinion on fight, Crowd on golf course, Enter Bob Hope, Hope jokes, words on soundtrack, Hope gets set to drive, Crowd, Hope drives, hams it up, Future President Dwight Eisenhower on golf course, tries to hit out of sand trap, CU Ike, Ike, press, Ike refuses once again to run for president, CU Ike (NICE), Truman leaves White House with bodyguard, Truman, bodyguard walk (repeat), Truman's legs, cane, Shakes hands with woman, Shakes hands with man, Photographers, Shakes hands with black man, others, House Speaker Joe Martin bangs gavel at 1948 Republican Convention, Indian chief, South Dakota sign, Men, Kansas sign, Aged Herbert Hoover waves, Signs for Taft, CU Robert Taft, Confetti, Balloons, Drum majorette, Man wears goofy-looking mask, Photos of Dewey, Signs for Dewey, New York Governor Thomas Dewey waves (repeat), Papier mache donkey head, Democratic Convention, "ILLINOIS" sign, Delegates fan themselves, Man, towel around head (FUNNY), Sign: WE ARE MILD ABOUT HARRY, Sign: THE WORLD'S HOPE TRUMAN, Delegates, Sign: TRUMAN FOR PRESIDENT, Delegates make noise, Man looks like beardless Gabby Hayes, Fat lady dances, Signs, delegates (repeat), Truman on dais, Truman, Vice President candidate Alben Barkley hold hands aloft, Seal of the President, Truman waves from train observation car, Kids cheer, Truman leaves on train, People wave, POV from train town passes, CU Truman, Dewey writes on train, CU Dewey, CU from train as countryside passes (repeat), Crowd hears Dewey speak, Crowd, CU Truman speaks at microphones, Old man watches, Old couple watch, Old lady with funny hat, CU Dewey speaks at microphone, Truman holds bouquet, Boy holds flag, Dewey gets stick of fish, Dewey waves, POV from train of crowd waving, Reporters work on train, Truman in motorcade, People go to town hall, Sign: TOWN HALL, People enter building, Voters line up, Workers help voters, Couple with baby vote, Voter at machine, X for Dewey, Man casts ballot, X for Truman, Woman casts ballot into ballot box, Truman votes, People vote, Dewey votes, NBC news room, Sign: POPULAR VOTE TABULATORS, Bob Trout broadcasts (repeat), Worker marks STATE CHART (repeat), H.V. Kaltenborn speaks (repeat), Operators at switchboards, Workers use adding machines (repeat), Tote board, Reporters type various broadcasters broadcast, Times Square (NIGHT), Times Building news ticker: TRUMAN TAKES LEAD AWAY FROM DEWEY (SIC), Banquet crowd applauds, Couple hug, celebrate, Empty Dewey headquarters, Glum group (four people look very disappointed), CU sad woman, CU sad man (repeat), Political cartoon of man with ass marked "ALL US POLITICAL EXPERTS" says "KICK ME", Banquet, Truman on dais, Crowd rises, applauds, Truman speaks, makes fun of, does accurate, mocking impression of Kaltenborn and his predictions of Truman's defeat, Nuclear bomb tests, Flashing sign ("DANGER"), Men in bizarre safety suits work with hazardous materials, Flashing sign ("RADIATION AREA"), Robot hands handle chemical in beaker, Worker moves radioactive material, Glow, Scientist works equipment, Man looks through eyepiece, Men work with radioactive chemicals (repeat), Chemical bubbles, Man smokes pipe, Instrument lights flash, Instruments operate, Blindfolded man in G-Force test, face horribly distorted (WEIRD!), Rocket sled speeds (repeat), Man in sled under G-Force, almost as weird, People look at sky with binoculars (repeat), Cat looks up (CUTE), Soldiers look at sky, Soldier on microphone, People talk to Air Force investigators, CU airline pilot, Pilots talk near jet fighter (trying to find flying saucers), CU Air Force pilot, People on sidewalk look into "Today" show window, CU men smoke, People look in store window, Early TV screen, wavy lines (repeat), Bartender, CU mug of beer, Men drink in bar, Horse race on TV, Man laughs, Bartender consoles patron, TV antennas all over roofs, People watch TV, Sid Caesar, Imogene Coca do skit, CU Dave Garroway, Faye Emerson, Kukla, Fran, and Ollie, Milton Berle dances with Carmen Miranda (guess which network made this film), TV studio, Microphone boom operator, Camera WNBT NBC, CU Albert Einstein speaks of danger of nuclear suicide, Thermometer reads 97 degrees, Crowded beach, People on beach blanket, Kids run on beach, Woman, child with bare ass (the child, not the woman) on beach, Girl plays in surf, Crowds on Coney Island beach, People descend on parachute jump, People on revolving swing ride at Steeplechase Park, POV from front seat as people ride roller coaster, Starter waves flag at auto race, Autos race, Race accidents, End of horse race, Crowd, Bob Richards does pole vault, People at fair, CU balloons, Carnival rides, Barker barks, Man hits bell with mallet, People watch, Cotton candy made, Kid with cotton candy, Man holds son, Rides, CU clown, CU boy with father, Goats on leash, Truman says goodbye to wife at plane, Plane engine starts, Truman onto plane (repeat), People wave, Airliner taxis, Aerial of airliner in air, Aerial of Washington, DC, CU landing gear goes down (NICE), POV from plane as it lands, Plane taxis ("INDEPENDENCE"), Secretary of State Dean Acheson in parking lot (A COUPLE OF FRAMES ONLY), Truman exits plane, Truman's car leaves, Men raise flags at United Nations, Sign: COUNCIL IN SESSION, United Nations Security Council session, Soviet seat empty, Korean representative, empty USSR chair, Korean refugees flee battle (repeat), Refugees, building burns in background, Burned buildings, Naked baby cries, Legs of marching soldiers, Troops march to ship, Troops board ship, Dog watches, Troops up gangway ("SAN FRANCISCO PORT OF EMBARKATION"), Hand beats drum ("SAN FRANCISCO PORT OF EMBARKATION"), Navy band plays, Crane removes gangway, Men untie ship, Smoke from funnel, Ship leaves, People wave, Men wave from portholes, Troops wave (repeat), Woman waves, CU baby waves, Aircraft carrier at dock, Ship in harbor, View from ship, Soldier on ship, CU sailor, CU soldiers, sailors, Aircraft carrier at sea
AA: SUIT FOCUSES ON POOR CONDITIONS IN URBAN SCHOOLS
COVERAGE IN HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT FOR A BILL BLAKEMORE CS VO FOR THE AMERICAN AGENDA ABOUT A DESEGREGATION LAWSUIT TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF INNER CITY SCHOOLS. 11:00:31 B ROLL FTG. MWS FOUNTAIN IN FG W/ STATE CAPITOL BUILDING IN BG. 11:00:52 MWS GOTHIC STYLE GOLD DOME TOPPED STATE CAPITOL BUILDING. 11:01:21 PUSH IN PAST FOUNTAIN TO MWS CAPITOL. 11:01:33 CU GREEN COPPER TOMAHAWK. 11:01:40 PAN DOWN COPPER INDIAN STATUE. 11:02:04 PULL OUT TO WS COPPER INDIANS ADORNING FOUNTAIN IN FG W/ CAPITOL BUILDING IN BG. 11:02:14 MWS MODERN OFFICE BUILDINGS W/ LAWN IN FG. 11:02:54 PAN ACROSS MODERN GLASS AND STEEL OFFICE BUILDINGS. 11:03:19 MWS DOWNTOWN AREA AS CARS CROSS BUSY INTERSECTION. 11:03:47 MS CLOCK IN OVERPASS WALKWAY. 11:03:54 PULL OUT TO MWS. 11:04:08 LOW ANGLE MLS UP HIGHRISE OFFICE BUILDING. 11:04:15 PAN DOWN TO MWS CARS BELOW. 11:04:29 COMPRESSION MS PEDESTRIANS WEARING WINTER COATS WALKING TOWARD CAMERA. 11:04:53 COMPRESSION MS BEHIND MORE PEDESTRIANS. 11:05:23 MWS MILLER GENUINE DRAFT BEER TRUCK DRIVING PAST. 11:05:27 CU NOAH WEBSTER SCHOOL SIGN. 11:05:35 PULL OUT TO MWS NOAH WEBSTER SCHOOL. 11:06:02 CU SIGN. 11:06:07 MWS YOUNG BOYS PLAYING IN SCHOOL PLAYGROUND. 11:06:26 MLS DOWN ROW OF MODEST TWO STORY WOOD FRAME HOMES W/ SMALL FRONT LAWNS. 11:07:01 PULL OUT TO MWS TAN HOME. 11:07:13 CU NOAH WEBSTER SCHOOL NAME CARVED INTO MOLDING OVER ENTRANCE. 11:07:23 PULL OUT TO MWS SCHOOL BUILDING W/ YELLOW SCHOOL BUS VAN PARKED IN FRONT. 11:07:56 MWS HOMES. 11:08:05 PULL OUT TO WS SCHOOL. 11:08:31 SAME SHOT AGAIN. 11:08:47 CU PICTURES HANGING IN SCHOOL'S WINDOW. 11:08:52 MS SUPERIOR COURT BUILDING. 11:09:07 PULL OUT TO WS ARCHITECTURALLY DULL BOXY RED BRICK BUILDING W/ TRIM HEDGES AND BARREN WINTER TREES IN FG. 11:10:05 MWS ENTRANCE. 11:10:10 WS ENTRANCE OUTSIDE ANOTHER SCHOOL. 11:10:15 PULL OUT TO WS SPRAWLING RED BRICK WHITING LANE SCHOOL BUILDING W/ WIDE LAWN IN FG. 11:10:52 MWS WELL MAINTAINED THREE STORY WOOD FRAME HOMES W/ DRY FRONT LAWNS. 11:11:49 MWS WHITING LANE SCHOOL NAME. 11:11:54 PULL OUT TO WS SAME SCHOOL. 11:12:16 MS ENTRANCE TO THOMAS J MCDONOUGH SCHOOL. 11:12:26 PULL OUT TO WS LARGE BRICK SCHOOL BUILDING. 11:12:45 PUSH INTO MS SCHOOL ENTRANCE. 11:12:55 CU MCDONOUGH NAME OVER ENTRANCE. 11:13:07 PULL OUT TO WS LARGE BUILDING W/ AMERICAN FLAG FLYING ON POLE. 11:13:26 CU NEW WINDOWS IN BUILDING. 11:13:33 COMPRESSION CU THOUGH BARREN WINTER TREE BRANCHES FLAG WAVING GENTLY IN BREEZE AGAINST COLD, GRAY WINTER SKY. 11:14:14 PULL OUT TO WS SCHOOL BUILDING. 11:14:30 LOW ANGLE HEADON WS SAME SCHOOL. 11:14:58 HEADON MS MODERN WINDOWS OVER NAME. 11:15:04 PULL OUT TO LOW ANGLE WS. 11:15:14 LS APARTMENT BUILDINGS AND MODEST HOMES ON QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD STREET. 11:15:58 PULL OUT FROM MS HOMES TO MLS LONE CAR DRIVING DOWN STREET AWAY FROM CAMERA.
1980s TV SHOWS
INTERVIEW CONTINUES: David Susskind The war is thought to have been a class war in a sense that people in colleges generally didn't go. Blue color, men went and blacks and minority groups went. Now, though, the Army Defense Department says the actual statistic was about 12.8 of the men who served 2,000,000.9 2,900,000 people served Americans in Vietnam, and 7500 women 2.9 million men and 7500 women. The army says that Marine Corps and everybody says that only 12.8% were blacks, Lawrence Smith that's not true. It's 22% of the population population will go black and hispanics. Also Indian Chinese, you know, other ethnic groups David Susskind that what percentage do you think were black or otherwise? Lawrence Smith 22% Well, black fought in the Vietnam David Susskind Well, that happens to be the statistic that they represent in the national census. But nobody sat down do you think it's so we want Lawrence Smith Well if you look on the fton line, you will see it. You look on the front line you will see the blacks there Thomas Leckinger Take a look at the statistic Yeah, you can say 22% What you really need to look at is how many of those guys were Combat Roll that bush infantry. It's gonna jump up to 30 or 40%. That's David Susskind on the line living and dying Thomas Brinson As their role and function combat as their direct mission David Susskind Did you see many college kids white college kids? Thomas Leckinger I had a couple of lieutenants who were ROTC lieutenants infantry that came. ROTC college for 4 years came through, I would suspect in my platoon of 25 or 26, we may be the entire time I was there. Two or three college graduates, the great some of them had college and had left got bored, got themselves drafted. But the greater majority more high school well, an awful lot of for some reason, I don't know why. But my company wound up in an awful lot of Southerners. A lot of people from Tennessee on south down in there, now southerners are patriotic, the Thomas Brinson I don't know about patriotic again, it's not so much a matter of black white, but it's really class. It's really low economic blue collar. David Susskind Did You see any upper middle class upper Thomas Brinson in your in your career officers? Yeah. And in my platoon, I had to turn 45 men. And I would say that, out of that 45, I had about 10 blacks and probably about eight or nine Hispanic Hispanics. The rest were blue collar I had that I can recall one or two college graduates either out of out of 45. Thomas Leckinger The interesting thing is, they keep quoting a statistic and they try to come down and I don't know what everybody else is experiencing. But I was in late. I was in 1970. And again, up in the jungles and stuff and everybody, you know, try sometimes to classify this as a race thing. Yeah. Where they're not there was none. Absolutely none. When I was there, David Susskind How much drug use was there Lawrence Smith I didn't see none. Because we're too busy fighting. We had no time be high Thomas Leckinger I suspect that that's certainly my experience. John Catterson And you didn't didn't mess with those kinds of substances when your your life depended on everybody else. I mean, there was there was a significant amount of beer when you were in a rear area. And you could go out you got a beer ration two beers, they were warm. You could compile that David Susskind How was the food, John Catterson but for the most part is dependent on whatever you have. You're out to sea rations, the original packages of food that you cooked over heat pellets they gave you. Thomas Leckinger I think the best I saw was maybe a couple of guys doing a joint back in the rear. But that was it. I mean David Susskind nobody on the firing line, nobody in the woods. Thomas Leckinger Absolutely not Thomas Brinson not not in in the real forward combat areas. And again, when I was in the rear Eric cocoate, earlier in an urban area on the coastline, most of the time, and there was some drug involvement there was we had a classic store, which was a liquor store that was well stocked we had cases upon cases of beer. We had we had company parties, they when the American army moved in Vietnam, we moved the American society into Vietnam. And for for most of the soldiers that were over there, they had in their base camps in their fire support camps. full supplies David Susskind You said in my office, but not to me to somebody on the staff that you could identify the the men in your platoon that would survive that would live. Did you say? How could you tell who would be who would and who would die? Thomas Brinson I don't know. Our sixth sense, a intuition and intuition. John Catterson I had had a feeling the day I was wounded. And I was I just had that feeling Thomas Brinson and you never knew though, David, you never know. And it was such a you know, the third truck would go by and three trucks go by and the fourth truck would get blown out. Yeah. And it was purely a war stance and circomstance Lawrence Smith You could feel the tension Thomas Leckinger You didn't know Sometimes if there was there were people that just weren't comfortable is an infantryman out there and stuff. And you knew that sooner or later into the Unknown Speaker Who the hell could be comfortable out there John Catterson you just got to a point where you could adapt to your surroundings. Exactly. Human can adapt. Yeah. David Susskind And you can tell that, you know, in in World War Two, the war I had you we rehearse so much invasions. We just rehearsed. And you didn't. we'd rehearse for months and landing Marines on islands. And then we always rehearse in Hawaii or Saipem or something. Then you will almost hoping for the battle. You know, you were so bored. Yeah. Did you guys get bored? Thomas Brinson Oh yeah it was there many, many. Thomas Leckinger We mentioned that. Before that there was a lot of times over there. You'd be. We never had any rehearsals. I mean, basically we were we set ourselves up as bait. You'd go walking through the jungle until somebody shot at you and then you've got your fire. But many times you're walking around with 80 pound rucksack on your back. You got a 23 pound machine gun, you got ammo hanging all over you. It's hotter than hell. You're tired, you're going up and down. Leeches, mosquitos I mean, basically say, Man, I need to rest and the company is moving. You're moving with it and sooner. I can remember thinking 19 years old can remember thinking Oh God, I wish we get in a firefight. So I get a chance to take a break currently Oh, John Catterson jump up or down and shoot at somebody and then you Thomas Leckinger Get your labor portion of it. I John Catterson think that's what they describe as being 30 seconds of sheer terror followed by hours and day of Thomas Brinson hours of boredom and drudgery David Susskind You know how many men were killed in Vietnam? Almost 58,692. And the wounded must have been 300,300. I think about 287,000. And you always thought every day every night that you might be one of those, you could be statistics John Catterson I don't know, I I guess I thought at the time, I was immortal. I got I carried that with me a lot. I never thought I would be killed in Vietnam. There were a lot of people in my platoon who I thought, as Tom has said, weren't going to make it. I can remember the day before we left Vietnam, we were in California at El Toro the the Air Force, the Marine Corps Air Station in California. And we were calling home. And I had a friend who called his home, got off the phone and he was crying. And he said to me, I'm not coming back to Vietnam. And I'll never forget that he didn't. His name is on the wall in Washington. And in fact, he went to accompany David Susskind the monument with the names of the 57,692 men. John Catterson He was part of a company within my battalion and their their position was overrun, and my company moved into his area and we evacuated bodies and one of the bodies I evacuated and found was his body. And I've just never forgotten that. He told me he wasn't coming back and he didn't come back, Thomas Leckinger which says immortality. Lawrence Smith I don't know about immortality. I had constant fear. When I was there. I think we were such non combat a lot of times that the fear was tremendous. You just couldn't be John Catterson It wasn't any John Wayne, Going in there thinking I was bulletproof. But I but I would just walk out Lawrence Smith No od Murphy. no, John Wayne, was the other guy. John Catterson That's right. It always seemed like it was the other guy. And then we got to a point where you just you could feel if something was going to happen. You could recognize a bullet being fired 100 yards away as being friendly fire or hostile fire. You knew the cyclical way, the enemy machine guns. You knew that it was David Susskind No the war was gruesome. Horrific. Thomas Brinson Yeah. And any war is David Susskind Did you come back thinking you've done God's work that the communists have been stuck there? John Catterson Yes. I have a long time. I did. Did you really try for a long time? Thomas Brinson I came back I was, I flew back I happen to fly back into the great px land in the sky on the day that Martin Luther King was shot. David Susskind you came home that day. Thomas Brinson That day, I flew into Washington, DC, and locked out the Washington monument at the Capitol and Washington burning. And I said, Wait a minute, what says that was 15,000 miles over there? My country was in flames as the country that I had left that day. That day that Martin Luther King was was yes, yes. Yes. And and I came home with such a sense of what did I go there and, quote fighte, And I didn't do much fighting I had very, very little active actual combat in the area that I was and I said, What is it all about? And and I said in your office that I came back feeling that my service to country was somehow tainted? David Susskind Did you feel that Thomas Leckinger I was shot and that's why I'm I want to talk to John a little bit about this because our experience was basically the same we went to an evacuation hospital Vietnam, Japan and then St. Albans here in New York City. As did Larry. And I think that's where really where it came home to me I had again at that point seen some people hurt some people killed but not a lot. And when I went to Japan and just saw ward after ward after ward after ward with hundreds of guys who had lost limbs last legs quadric you know quality amps and stuff like that I just wasn't quite ready for us to come by me that just did me and I'm convinced today that some of the reasons that I've not had some of the difficulties of the Vietnam veterans experience is because of the decompression I had in hospital I spent seven months in hospital and I'm convinced that that helps yeah, here we there obviously Vietnam and and Anchorage and down to Walter Reed. I think that helped a lot you know, as opposed to the guys who were going to get up on scan you know, one day we're in London the next day they were in San Francisco 48 hours in the jungle firefight to in a concoction. There's no way your body can ever adjust. Make that kind of adjustment. David Susskind Do you think you did God's work. Do you think you stopped the communists? Or was it a rotten war between North and South Vietnam Thomas Brinson Not one square inch to Honolulu much less to San Francisco today. Thomas Leckinger I just I never gave it a thought. I mean, they said here's your machine gun Knock yourself out this guy's gonna try to kill you. You got to get him first. I never gave any thought at all to the political aspects of national aspects of it David Susskind You think the war now. I always thought the war was fall obscene immoral. I'm think you you feel that war was worth fighting? Thomas Leckinger Absolutely. not David Susskind was it worth one man's death, one man with an eye gone are leg gone? Thomas Leckinger no, it's probably the greatest tragedy that this country has ever Thomas Brinson And David is that the country does not want to deal with that. Our society does not want to listen to our experiences, and to learn from them David Susskind maybe you ough to go and talk to President Reagan and Secretary of State. Thomas Leckinger How do you say exactly? You know, you made the point when we're invading the terror to people, you cannot explain to people how, what it feels like to be laying there and getting shot knowing that 18 year old 19 years old, you're gonna die? How do you explain it to somebody like Reagan or Schultz or a few of these people? And say to him, do you understand what you're doing? You understand where you're bringing this country to David Susskind I don't think Reagan served in World War Two. Thomas Brinson I don't I don't think he I don't know. I think he David Susskind I think he may have done a little us. So I saw be funny in a nightclub. Thomas Brinson Again, David. It's it's the it's a real trying to define the uses of American power. And what is there to fight for our country. There's a it's a film that smothering dreams that has the opening of it. If you were to see this man with the whites of his eyes, and the blood gushing gurgling from him, and you would say, to belie the method of dying for one's country that was written by a need in the Iliad 2500 years ago, it's the same perpetuation of duty on a service, which yes, there is a need for but when they are actually coming in, and the back door, so to speak. And John Catterson 300 Men blown up blown up in a building in Beirut. Yes. And the President of the United States next day says we can't withdraw. We're looking I mean, words to the effect we need peace with honor. We need to wait to get out of Lebanon, we just can't withdraw. So we spent a few more lives thank God somebody came to their senses and got our Marines out of there David Susskind the pole said America is not ready to go to war. Do you think anything in sight at the moment that we sit here is no one is worth going to war about? Absolutely. Absolutely. Not. For you unanimous? Absolutely. I agree with you. Hold on. We'll be right back.
6:30 CALCUTTA MASTER
00:00:00:00 - RX 46 TERESA/DESTITUTE &amp; DYING ANITA PRATAP PKG AND NAT CNN AROUND THE WORLD, MOTHER TERESA IS SEEN BY MANY AS A LIVING **FED AS NATSOT SAINT. NOTHING HAS CONTRIBUTED MORE TO THAT BE ...
SITTING BULL FEATHER (2/28/2001)
A BENEFACTOR DONATES ONE FEATHER FROM THE WAR BONNET OF CHIEF SITTING BULL TO A STAMFORD SCHOOL. THE SINGLE FEATHER IS WORTH TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS.
Queens tour special
Queens tour special; New Delhi SEQ GOH as Indira Gandhi (Indian PM) visits Queen -they walk and chat Prince Philip and Queen pose for photocall with Gandhi New Delhi Mahatma Gandhi SEQ Rajgat (Phon) memorial to Queen and Prince Philip change into slippers from shoes at entrance to the memorial, sign says 'Free Service for Watching Shoes' Queen and Prince Philip follow wreath to memorial Queen and Prince Philip lay wreath Flame burning on Gandhi's memorial Old Delhi Red Fort SEQ The Red Fort - palace of Moghul emperors Queen on ramparts of Red Fort looking out on Old Delhi Old Delhi from ramparts St Thomas's School SEQ Prefects try to control junior schoolgirls at St Thomas's School for Girls Junior girls bustle and shove each other for places Dance performed by senior girls based on Gandhi's writings on the awakening of Indian womanhood Queen hops into palanquin and moves off walking inside it Senior girls in Rajasthan costumes dance along in escort
55874 YESTERDAY'S NEWSREEL CHARLES EVANS HUGHES CAMPAIGN 1916 MOONSHINERS FRANK HAWKS
This black and white film is one of the episodes of "Yesterday's Newsreels", an early 1950s TV show made from the General Newsreel collection. It features eight segments of historic highlights. Charles Evans Hughes 1916-1941 (:29). Attorney Hughes was the Republican candidate for President in 1916, shown with his wife. He lost to Woodrow Wilson, who served a second term. (:32-1:17). In 1920, he wins a case for striking mine workers. President Harding makes him the Secretary of State in 1921 (1:18-1:35). He is shown with Lord Balfour of England and Prime Minister Briand of France for the signing in 1922 of the Nine-Power Treaty, which is shown (1:36-2:00). 1923, Hughes meets to arrange payment for England’s war debt to the United States (2:01-2:32). He is part of President Coolidge’s cabinet in 1923 (2:33-2:58). In 1925, he resigns but returns to politics in 1927 (2:59-3:12). 1928, he leaves Morrow Castle to speak in Havana at a Peace Conference (3:13-3:58). 1930, President Hoover makes him a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (3:59-4:10). March 4, 1933, Hughes swears in President Franklin D. Roosevelt (4:11-4:20). From 1930 to 1941, he is shown as part of the Supreme Court before resigning (4:21-3:34). General Butler Battles Crime 1920 (4:37). General Smedley Butler is appointed Philadelphia Chief of Police. Gas grenades are used to disperse crowds and smoke out criminals (4:45-5:06). He has a gigantic search light erected on a tower overlooking Philadelphia, shown in use (5:07-5:42). Personalities (5:46). 1922, Dr. Charles Proteus Steinmetz is shown with Thomas Edison working on an electronics experiment (5:52-6:17). 1922, Molla Mallory wins the U.S. Tennis Championship for the third straight time (6:18-6:37). Carl Spaatz is just a pilot in the 1920s but in the 1945, will become a General (6:38-6:52). A Still Explodes in Brooklyn! 1928 (6:57). A moonshiners still explodes in Brooklyn, destroys the house, and breaks windows in the schoolhouse across the street, injuring children (6:04-7:46). Indians Invade Washington, D.C. 1922 (7:48). A group of tribal Indians, some dressed in traditional clothing, arrive at Washington to talk with President Harding. They are protesting a bill that would remove lands they have occupied since 1858 (7:52-8:29). Aviation 1929 (8:30). Oscar Grubb and Captain Frank Hawks set a transcontinental flight record in a Lockheed Vega Air Express (8:35-9:40). Fashions of the Day (9:44). 1920s coeds at Syracuse University hold their annual Greek pageant. Girls are shown running track and playing baseball in school sports uniforms. The new shorter bloomers in 1930 allowed them to do bicycle floor exercises and kicks without exposing their underwear (9:50-10:49). Sports 1921 (10:51). Jake Schaefer Jr., the world champion in Billiards, plays pool (10:56-11:30). Tandem canoes and war canoes race in Massachusetts. Some are showing using their hands instead of paddles (11:31-12:04). <p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
FILE: BIDEN'S CELEB LIST FOR CMTE ON ARTS &amp; HUMANITIES
&lt;p>&lt;b>--SUPERS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>File&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--VIDEO SHOWS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Lady Gaga singing and playing piano, Geoge and Amal Clooney interview, Kerry Washington on red carpet, Jon Batiste and wife Suleika Jaouad at the White House&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--LEAD IN&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>PRESIDENT BIDEN HAS NAMED &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--VO SCRIPT&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>WH: Biden appoints Lady Gaga, George Clooney and others to the President's Committee on the Arts &amp; Humanities&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>From DJ Judd&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>President Joe Biden on Thursday announced a slew of luminaries to the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities, including musicians Lady Gaga and Jon Batiste, actors George Clooney, Troy Kotsur and Kerry Washington, and former Congressman Steve Israel.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>In 2017, Biden teamed up with Lady Gaga for a PSA addressing campus sexual assault—since then, the singer campaigned for Biden’s 2020 election bid and even sang at his Inauguration. Gaga, along with producer Bruce Cohen, will co-chair the committee.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Per the White House, the committee aims to advise the President on cultural policy—traditionally, the First Lady has historically served as Honorary Chair of the Committee.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>“The PCAH will also engage the nation’s artists, humanities scholars, and cultural heritage practitioners to promote excellence in the arts, humanities, and museum and library services and demonstrate their relevance to the country’s health, economy, equity, and civic life,” the White House said in a statement Thursday.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>FULL RELEASE –&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>President Biden Announces Key Appointments to Boards and Commissions&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>WASHINGTON – Today, President Biden announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities: &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Bruce Cohen, Co-Chair&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Lady Gaga, Co-Chair&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Jon Batiste, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Constance M. Carroll, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />George Clooney, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Philip J. Deloria, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />M. Angélica Garcia, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Jennifer Garner, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Nora Halpern, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Steve Israel, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Marta Kauffman, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Ricky Kirshner, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Troy Kotsur, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Katie McGrath, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Laura Penn, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Arnold Rampersad, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Shonda Rhimes, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Kimberly Richter Shirley, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Horacio Sierra, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Anna Deavere Smith, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Joe Walsh, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Kerry Washington, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>•&lt;tab />Pauline Yu, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>The President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities (PCAH) was founded in 1982 by Executive Order to advise the President on cultural policy. The First Lady has historically served as Honorary Chair of the Committee, which is composed of members appointed by the President. Private committee members include prominent artists, scholars, and philanthropists who have demonstrated a serious commitment to the arts and humanities. Public members represent the heads of key federal agencies with a role in culture, including the Chairs of the National Endowments for the Arts and the Humanities, the Librarian of Congress, the Secretary of the Smithsonian, and the Director of the Institute of Museum and Library Services, among others. PCAH advises the President and the heads of U.S. cultural agencies on policy, philanthropic and private sector engagement, and other efforts to enhance federal support for the arts, humanities, and museum and library services. The PCAH will also engage the nation’s artists, humanities scholars, and cultural heritage practitioners to promote excellence in the arts, humanities, and museum and library services and demonstrate their relevance to the country’s health, economy, equity, and civic life. Over the past 40 years, PCAH has catalyzed federal programs and played a vital role in the advancement of arts and humanities education, cultural diplomacy, and the creative economy.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bruce Cohen, Co-Chair&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Bruce Cohen is an Oscar and Tony-winning, Emmy-nominated producer of film, theater, television, and live events. He won an Academy Award for Best Picture for "American Beauty" and earned additional Best Picture nominations for "Milk" and "Silver Linings Playbook." He produced both the feature film and Broadway musical versions of "Big Fish," won the Tony for Best Play in 2020 for co-producing Matthew Lopez’ "The Inheritance," and was Tony nominated the same year for co-producing Jeremy O. Harris’ "Slave Play." In television, he was Emmy nominated for producing the "83rd Annual Academy Awards" and executive produced "Pushing Daisies" and "Broadway at the White House."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>During the Obama-Biden Administration, Cohen served as the entertainment industry liaison for Joining Forces, First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden’s initiative supporting service men and women and veterans. With Higher Ground, President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama’s production company, he is producing "Rustin" for Netflix, directed by George C. Wolfe, starring Colman Domingo as Bayard Rustin and coming out later this year. He is a graduate of Yale University and started his film career as the DGA Trainee on Steven Spielberg’s "The Color Purple." He lives in New York City with his husband and daughter.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Lady Gaga, Co-Chair&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Stefani Germanotta, known professionally as Lady Gaga, is an award-winning singer, songwriter, actress, and philanthropist. She has sold over 170 million records, and has won 13 Grammy Awards, making her one of the best-selling most awarded female musicians in history. As an actress, she is known for her roles in “A Star Is Born,” for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress and won for Best Original Song for “Shallow,” and “American Horror Story: Hotel,” for which she won a Golden Globe, among others. She’s been recognized with the Fashion Icon award by the Council of Fashion Designers of America and has been included on Forbes’ list of the World’s Most Powerful Women and TIME’s list of the 100 most influential people in the world. In 2022, Lady Gaga launched Haus Labs, a clean and vegan color cosmetics line that develops innovative formulas that push the boundaries of clean makeup.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Lady Gaga is known for her philanthropy and staunch support of LGBTQI+ rights and mental health. She has traveled with President Biden to support the It’s On Us campaign to combat campus sexual assault, has worked tirelessly over the years to advocate for equality, and has been an outspoken champion of mental health awareness. At the beginning of the pandemic in 2020, she curated a televised concert to benefit the World Health Organization’s COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund, helping raise over $128 million. Alongside her mother Cynthia Germanotta, she founded and leads Born This Way Foundation, which supports the mental health of young people and works with them to build a kinder and braver world. Since its inception, the Foundation has demonstrated the transformative power of kindness and its impact on mental health through youth-driven initiatives, research-based programming, and high-level partnerships.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Jon Batiste, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Jon Batiste is one of history’s most brilliant, prolific, and accomplished musicians. Batiste studied and received both a B.A. and M.F.A. at the world-renowned Juilliard School in New York City. From 2015 until 2022, Batiste served as the bandleader and musical director of "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" on CBS. In 2018, he received a Grammy nomination for Best American Roots, and in 2020, he received two Grammy nods for the albums "Chronology of a Dream: Live at the Village Vanguard" and "MEDITATIONS" (with Cory Wong). In 2020, he won an Academy Award for Best Original Score for the Disney/Pixar film "Soul," an honor he shared with fellow composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross. Batiste’s work on "Soul" also earned him a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, an NAACP Image Award, and a Critic’s Choice Award. He is the second Black composer in history, after legendary jazz musician Herbie Hancock, to win an Academy Award for composition. Batiste’s latest studio album, "We Are," was released in March 2021 to overwhelming critical acclaim. Subsequently, he was nominated for eleven Grammys across seven different categories, a first in Grammy history. He went on to win five of those Grammys, including Album of the Year.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Constance M. Carroll, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>In 2021, Dr. Constance Carroll established and currently serves as the president of the California Community Colleges Baccalaureate Association, a nonprofit organization with the mission of providing assistance and expanding opportunities for California’s 116 community colleges to offer four-year degrees in selected workforce fields that now require a bachelor’s degree. Carroll served as Chancellor of the San Diego Community College District from 2004 to 2021, when she retired. In addition, she served as president of three community colleges: San Diego Mesa College, Saddleback College, and Indian Valley Colleges. Carroll was also Director of Freshman Academic Advising at the University of Pittsburgh and Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Southern Maine.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Carroll received a B.A. in humanities from Duquesne University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh in Classics (Ancient Greek and Latin). She earned a Certificate of Proficiency in Hellenic Studies at Knubly University in Athens, Greece, and attended the Harvard University Institute for Educational Management. Currently, Carroll serves on the National Council on the Humanities, which is affiliated with the National Endowment for the Humanities, having been nominated by President Obama and confirmed by the U.S. Senate in 2011. She is a member of the national boards of the Community College Baccalaureate Association, the College Promise National Advisory Board, and the Community College Humanities Association.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>George Clooney, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>George Clooney’s achievements as a performer and filmmaker have earned him two Academy Awards, five Golden Globes including the Cecil B. DeMille Award, four SAG awards, one BAFTA award, two Critics’ Choice Awards, an Emmy, four National Board of Review Awards, and the AFI Lifetime Achievement Award. Films from his production company with Grant Heslov, Smokehouse Pictures, include Warner Bros’ Academy Award winning drama “Argo,” “Good Night, and Good Luck,” “The Midnight Sky,” "The Tender Bar," and “The Ides of March.” “Ides,” which Clooney starred in, co-wrote, and directed, received Golden Globe nominations for Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Motion Picture Drama. In addition, the film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay. He has also starred in films such as “Out of Sight,” “O Brother, Where Art Thou,” “Syriana,” “Michael Clayton,” “Up in the Air,” “The Descendants,” “Gravity,” and the “Oceans” trilogy. Before his film career, Clooney starred in several television series, becoming best known to TV audiences for his five years on the hit NBC drama “ER.” His portrayal of Dr. Douglas Ross earned him Golden Globe, SAG, People’s Choice, and Emmy Award nominations.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Among the many honors received as a result of his humanitarian efforts was the 2007 Peace Summit Award, 2010 Robert F. Kennedy Ripple of Hope Award, and he was a Kennedy Center Honoree in 2022. Clooney has produced three telethons: "The Tribute to Heroes" (post 9/11), "Tsunami Aid: A Concert of Hope," and “Hope for Haiti Now,” the latter of which raised a record 66 million dollars from the public. In August of 2016, Clooney and his wife, Amal, launched the Clooney Foundation for Justice.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Philip J. Deloria, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Philip J. Deloria is the Leverett Saltonstall Professor of History at Harvard University, where he chairs the Committee on Degrees in History and Literature. His research and teaching focus on the social, cultural, and political histories of relations among American Indian peoples and the United States, as well as the comparative histories of Indigenous peoples in a global context. He is the author of several books, including Playing Indian, Indians in Unexpected Places, American Studies: A User’s Guide, with Alexander Olson, and Becoming Mary Sully: Toward an American Indian Abstract, and is co-editor of The Blackwell Companion to American Indian History (with Neal Salisbury) and C.G. Jung and the Sioux Traditions by Vine Deloria, Jr. (with Jerome Bernstein).&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Deloria received the Ph.D. in American Studies from Yale University in 1994, taught at the University of Colorado, and then, from 2001 to 2017, at the University of Michigan, before joining the faculty at Harvard in January 2018. Deloria served for over a decade as a trustee of the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of the American Indian, where for many years he chaired the Repatriation Committee. He continues to work toward the return of Native American ancestors and cultural patrimony and for the flourishing of Indigenous life. Deloria has served as President of the American Studies Association and the Organization of American Historians, and will begin serving as President of the Society of American Historians in May 2023. He is an elected member of the American Philosophical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>M. Angélica Garcia, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Dr. Angélica Garcia is an educational leader who is passionate about issues of access, equity, and student success in higher education. Garcia serves as the President of Berkeley City College, which is recognized as an Hispanic Serving Institution and an Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institution, both proud symbols of being the community’s college. Unapologetically, she believes community colleges provide liberatory education experiences that disrupt the status quo, especially for historically minoritized communities. She is a Co-Founder and Board Member of COLEGAS, a statewide organization focused on advocacy and development of Latinx professionals in California Community Colleges, and has a proven record of equity-minded leadership. Garcia serves on the Puente Project Advisory Board, the national LGTBQ Leaders in Higher Education Board, and previously on the Board of Directors for Higher Education Resource Services. Appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, she served as the Vice Chair for the Student-Centered Funding Formula Oversight Committee, charged with reviewing legislation, data, and its impact on the California Community Colleges. She has been a fellow with the Aspen Presidential Institute, the National Community College Hispanic Council, and the UC Davis Wheelhouse Institute, all of which are leadership programs focused on equitable student outcomes. Garcia is a proud second-generation Latina and first-generation college graduate, who earned a doctorate in Educational Leadership at San Francisco State University, a master's in social work at San Diego State University, and a Bachelor of Arts in Liberal and Civic Studies at Saint Mary’s College of California. Garcia has been appointed to be the Superintendent/President of Santa Rosa Junior College, effective July 1, 2023.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Jennifer Garner, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Award-winning actress Jennifer Garner has enjoyed a successful career at the top of her field in both film and television and has also taken on the role of philanthropist and entrepreneur. Garner is known for her versatility in a wide range of starring-roles in "Alias," "Dallas Buyers Club," "Love Simon," "Juno," and more. She recently starred in and produced the film "YES DAY," based on the children’s book by Amy Krouse Rosenthal, which became Netflix’s biggest Kids &amp; Family film release. She also recently starred in the sci-fi film "The Adam Project "for Netflix opposite Ryan Reynolds, Mark Ruffalo, and Zoe Saldana, directed by Shawn Levy. Up next, Garner executive produces and stars in the Apple TV+ limited series "The Last Thing He Told Me," based on the eponymous New York Times bestseller, which premieres on April 14th. She most recently wrapped production on the Netflix comedy feature "Family Leave," which she is also producing, and will also star and produce a sequel to "YES DAY."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Garner is a Save the Children Trustee and has worked with the organization for more than a decade. In addition to bringing Save the Children’s early childhood education programs to her home state of West Virginia, she has advocated on Capitol Hill and traveled to Arkansas, California, Kentucky, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Washington to meet with lawmakers, press, and philanthropists to raise awareness and funds for the organization. In 2014, Garner joined the global non-profit's board of trustees, deepening her commitment to issues affecting children in America and around the world. In 2017, Garner co-founded the organic food company Once Upon a Farm with Cassandra Curtis, Ari Raz, and former Annie’s president John Foraker. Together the visionaries have grown the company with a goal of providing children with the best tasting, most nutritious, and highest quality food utilizing sustainable methods. As a businesswoman, Garner has worked with major brands including Neutrogena and Capital One, and most recently joined the Virtue Labs team to amplify and raise awareness about the unique health and beauty benefits of the company’s premium hair care line.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Nora Halpern, Member &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Art historian, museum director, and curator Nora Halpern has spent her public and private life advocating for art, artists, and social justice. Since 2001, she has been a Vice President at Americans for the Arts, focusing on arts policy convenings and engaging individual thought leaders to advance the arts and arts education across America. She is co-founder of Street Scenes: Projects for DC, a public art program that provides access to the broadest possible audience by utilizing the city as a gallery space. Raised in New York City, Halpern began her career in Los Angeles as the Frederick R. Weisman Collections Curator and Founding Director of Pepperdine University’s Art Museum. She was a Los Angeles Human Relations Commission member and received the Mayor’s Award of Merit for Outstanding Volunteer Service.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Halpern has taught and lectured internationally. Among her many publications is the recent Putting the Arts to Work: 15 Years of National Arts Policy Roundtables, 2006-2020. She has curated numerous exhibitions, including a Yoko Ono retrospective in Venice, Italy. Halpern has served on the boards of the Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art, the Santa Monica Museum of Art, ArtTable, PS Arts, and Scholastic’s Alliance for Young Artists and Writers, among others. She was appointed to the Arts Commission of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2021 and was a Biden Arts Policy Committee member. Halpern received her B.A. and M.A. from UCLA and was awarded a Helena Rubinstein Fellowship in Curatorial Studies from the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Independent Study Program.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Steve Israel, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Steve Israel served in the U.S. Congress between 2001–2017, including four years as chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee from 2011–2015. He left Washington to pursue new passions, including opening an independent bookstore, Theodore’s Books, in his historic hometown of Oyster Bay, fulfilling a lifelong dream. He also directs the nonpartisan Institute of Politics and Global Affairs at the Jeb S. Brooks School of Public Policy at Cornell University, which serves as a platform for civic engagement and bipartisan dialogue. He has published two critically acclaimed satires of Washington: The Global War on Morris and Big Guns. He proudly serves on The Library of Congress Madison Council as well as many other boards of directors.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>In Congress, he served on the House Appropriations Committee on Interior, Environment and Related Agencies, which has jurisdiction on historic preservation, fine arts, cultural arts, museums, and related activities. He also served on the Subcommittee on Defense and the House Armed Services Committee. Israel’s written commentary has appeared in The New York Times, The New York Times Book Review, The Atlantic magazine, The Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal. He writes a biweekly column in The Hill,covering the state or democracy. He lives with his wife Cara in Oyster Bay, Long Island.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Marta Kauffman, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Marta Kauffman is an Emmy and Golden Globe-winning television writer, producer, director, and showrunner. Kauffman recently finished the Netflix comedy "Grace and Frankie" starring Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin. She may be best known for creating NBC’s long-running hit "Friends" with David Crane. The iconic series ran for 10 seasons and earned 63 Emmy nominations, winning Outstanding Comedy Series in 2002. Reruns continue to delight with "Friends: The Reunion" being a ratings juggernaut. She and David Crane also created HBO's "Dream On," recognized with CableAce Awards and additional Emmy nominations. The Writers Guild of America West awarded Kauffman and Crane the 2016 Paddy Chayefsky Laurel Award for lifetime achievement in television writing. She also earned the 2016 Outstanding Television Writer award at the 23rd annual Austin Film Festival &amp; Screenwriters Conference as well as the Kieser Humanitas Award. She recently received an Honorary Doctorate from Brandeis University. Kauffman's other credits include "Georgia," "Five," "Veronica's Closet," "The Powers That Be," "Call Me Crazy: A Five Film," and the documentary "Seeing Allred." Kauffman has served on several Boards of Trustees including CalArts, Oakwood School, The Lung Cancer Foundation of America, Big Sunday, and IKAR.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Ricky Kirshner, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Ricky Kirshner is one of the entertainment industry’s preeminent producers of televised special events. During his 30-year career, he has been tasked and entrusted in imagining and implementing many of the world’s most widely acclaimed and award-winning television specials, stadium spectaculars, and conventions; producing shows for every major U.S. network and watched by millions of people. Kirshner’s Executive Producer credits include The Tony Awards, Super Bowl Half-Time Shows, The Kennedy Center Honors, Democratic National Conventions, Presidential Inaugurals/Galas, The Oscars, and many others. Throughout his career, Kirshner has collaborated with artists and performers across all disciplines of classical arts, musical and dramatic theater, cinematic arts, and the music industry, working with major stars as well as up and coming performers and amateur groups. Kirshner has been recognized by industry peers for excellence in television, receiving 26 Emmy Nominations and winning ten Emmy Awards, a Peabody Award, and an Edward R. Murrow Award. Strongly committed to Arts and Music education in schools, Kirshner supports internship programs for college students on his shows. He is also a frequent guest speaker at colleges and universities, inspiring future generations to pursue careers in television and performing arts.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Troy Kotsur, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Troy Kotsur earned the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as Frank, the Deaf&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>fisherman father of a hearing daughter who wants to be a singer in director Sian Heder’s “CODA.” The film also won the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay. Kotsur is the first Deaf male actor and only the second Deaf actor overall to win the Oscar, after his “CODA” co-star Marlee Matin for her role in "Children of a Lesser God." Kotsur also earned BAFTA, Critics’ Choice, Gotham, Independent Spirit and Screen Actors Guild awards, and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for his role in “CODA.” Other recent film credits include “Wild Prairie Rose,” “No Ordinary Hero: The SuperDeafy Movie,” which he also directed, “Universal Signs,” and “The Number 23.”&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>In television, Kotsur was most recently seen in the Disney+ series "The Mandalorian," for which he created the Tusken sign language, and was also used in the show’s spinoff series "The Book of Boba Fett." Other television roles include "CSI: NY," "Scrubs," "Criminal Minds," "Strong Medicine," "Doc," and "Sue Thomas: F.B. Eye." A native of Mesa, Arizona, Kotsur began acting in grade school, with some of his earliest performances including reenacting "Tom and Jerry" cartoon storylines to his classmates. He studied theater, film, and television at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC, and following graduation, toured with the National Theatre of the Deaf.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Katie McGrath, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Katie McGrath is Co-CEO at Bad Robot Productions. She oversees the company’s corporate culture, communications, and ancillary businesses. Prior to joining Bad Robot, McGrath was a founding partner at First Tuesday Media, a political media firm based in Los Angeles. Earlier, she served as Director of Communications at MTV Networks and as Vice President at the strategic communications consulting firm Robinson Lerer Sawyer Miller. McGrath began her professional career in Washington, DC as a legislative assistant to Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-MA). She currently serves on the transition team for Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and the boards of Pro Publica, ARRAY Alliance, and The McGrath Abrams Family Foundation.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Laura Penn, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Laura Penn has been Executive Director of Stage Directors and Choreographers Society (SDC) since 2008. Under her leadership the Union’s membership has grown over 100%, a result of her work expanding SDC’s jurisdictions, leading bold and successful negotiations, and furthering its Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion initiatives and political engagement. She serves on the General Board of the Department for Professional Employees, AFL-CIO (DPE) and is an active member of DPE's Arts and Entertainment and Media Industry Coordinating Committee. She is Co-Chair of the Coalition of Broadway Unions and Guilds, the first woman to hold a leadership position with this coalition of 18 influential unions representing workers on Broadway. Penn serves on the Tony Awards Administration Committee and is a Tony Voter. She served as a panelist for the New York State Council for the Arts, for more than a decade was a site evaluator for the National Endowment for the Arts, was Vice President of the League of Resident Theatres, and was two-term Chair of the Seattle Arts Commission. Recognized with Seattle’s Distinguished Citizen Medal, she is an advocate for civic dialogue and public participation and has been dedicated throughout her career to the idea that artistic excellence and community engagement are intrinsically connected. Penn previously served as an arts executive for Intiman Theatre and Seattle Repertory Theatre and began her career at Washington, DC’s Arena Stage, Living Stage Theatre Company. Penn currently teaches Labor Relations in the graduate program at the David Geffen School of Drama at Yale.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya is a multidisciplinary artist, educator, and community builder based in Brooklyn, New York. Born in Atlanta to Thai and Indonesian immigrants, her practice spans sculpture, textile, large-scale murals, participatory installation, and public art campaigns. Her work examines the unseen labor of women, amplifies AAPI narratives, and affirms the depth, resilience, and beauty of communities of color. Phingbodhipakkiya’s art has reclaimed space in museums and galleries, at protests and rallies, on buildings, highway tunnels, subway corridors, and on the cover of TIME magazine. She has been artist-in-residence with the NYC Commission on Human Rights and created art in collaboration with the US Embassy in Thailand. She is a 2023 Jerome Hill Artist Fellow in Visual Arts and is building community archives of AAPI stories as part of civic practice residencies with the San Francisco Asian Art Museum and Poster House. Her work has been acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Museum of the City of New York, the Museum of Chinese in America, and the Library of Congress.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Arnold Rampersad, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Arnold Rampersad is Sara Hart Kimball Professor Emeritus in the Humanities at Stanford University. A graduate of Bowling Green State University, he earned his Ph.D. in English and American Literature at Harvard. He also taught at the University of Virginia, Rutgers, Columbia, and Princeton. His books include The Art and Imagination of W.E.B. Du Bois; The Life of Langston Hughes (2 vols.); Days of Grace: A Memoir, co-authored with Arthur Ashe; Jackie Robinson: A Biography; and Ralph Ellison: A Biography. His edited volumes include The Oxford Anthology of African-American Poetry; Complete Poems of Langston Hughes; and, as co-editor, Selected Letters of Langston Hughes. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>From 2003 to 2006 he served as Senior Associate Dean for the Humanities at Stanford. Winner in 1986 of the National Book Critics Circle Award in biography and autobiography, he was later a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in biography and, in 2007, the National Book Award in non-fiction prose for his biography of Ralph Ellison. He won fellowships from the MacArthur Foundation (1991-1996), the J.S. Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the ACLS. Princeton University awarded him its Howard T. Behrman Medal for distinction in the Humanities. In 2011, he received the National Humanities Medal from President Obama at the White House. Harvard awarded him its Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Medal in 2014. He holds honorary doctorates from Harvard, Yale, Columbia, and the University of the West Indies, among other schools. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Shonda Rhimes, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Shonda Rhimes is an award-winning television creator, producer, and author, as well as the CEO of the global media company Shondaland. Rhimes is the first woman to create three television dramas - “Grey’s Anatomy,” “Private Practice,” and “Scandal” - that have achieved the 100-episode milestone. In 2017, Rhimes shifted the entertainment industry’s business model when she left network television for an unprecedented agreement for Shondaland to exclusively produce streaming content in partnership with Netflix. “Bridgerton,” Shondaland’s first scripted series with the streamer, has become a worldwide franchise with seasons one and two of the show holding top spots among English language programming for Netflix. Rhimes broadened her company’s content landscape when she launched the culture website Shondaland.com in partnership with Hearst Digital Media. More recently, she launched Shondaland Audio in partnership with iHeart Radio to produce podcast content. She’s a New York Times best-selling author for her memoir Year of Yes and has built multi-platform partnerships with such leading brands as Dove, Masterclass, Microsoft, and Mattel. Rhimes has been included three times in the TIME 100 list of most influential people and her work has been celebrated with numerous awards including induction into the Television Academy Hall of Fame.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Kimberly Richter Shirley, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Kimberly Richter Shirley is a retired attorney and certified public accountant whose professional career specialized in providing legal and financial expertise to not-for-profit organizations and startup companies. Shirley is a trustee of the Seattle Art Museum, the Tate Americas Foundation, and the University of Washington Foundation and is a former trustee of the Pacific Northwest Ballet. She is a member of the National Gallery of Art Collectors Committee, the Tate North American Acquisitions Committee, the University of Washington Henry Art Gallery Advisory Council, and the Wellesley College President’s Advisory Council. Shirley and her husband Jon live in Medina, Washington and actively support arts, education, and human service organizations. Together they are committed collectors of modern and contemporary art with an emphasis on sculpture. Shirley received her Bachelor of Arts from Wellesley College and her Juris Doctor from the University of Puget Sound School of Law.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Horacio Sierra, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Horacio Sierra is an educator, journalist, activist, and creative writer. His research on English and Spanish Renaissance literature has been funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the U.S. Department of Education, and the University of Texas. As a tenured English professor at Bowie State University, Maryland’s oldest HBCU, he has created in-person and online courses such as Graphic Novels, Studies in Popular Music, Queer Cultural Studies, Shakespeare &amp; Film, and U.S. Hispanic Literature. The University System of Maryland awarded him their Excellence in Teaching Award for his commitment to experiential education.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Sierra’s work as a theatre and literary critic has been published in The Miami Herald, Comparative Drama, and Theater Journal. His editorials on topics such as the importance of a humanities education have been published in The Washington Post, The Hartford Courant, and The Baltimore Sun. His poems exploring the intersections of history, geography, and identity have been published in The William &amp; Mary Review, Saw Palm, and Gulf Stream Magazine. As a Miami native with strong ties to his family’s Cuban and Spanish heritage, Sierra is President of the Cuban American Democrats, Director of the Sierra Family Scholarship, and has provided college application workshops for his alma mater, Miami Coral Park Senior High. He is also an Executive Board Member of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association. Sierra earned his BS from the University of Miami and his PhD from the University of Florida. He lives in Miami with his husband, Dallas Clay Sierra.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Anna Deavere Smith, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Anna Deavere Smith is a writer and actress. She is credited with having created a new form of theater. Her plays, sometimes called “docudramas,” focus on contemporary issues from multiple points of view and are composed from excerpts of hundreds of interviews. Plays, and films based on them, include "Fires in the Mirror" and "Twilight: Los Angeles," both of which dealt with volatile race events in the 1990s; "Let Me Down Easy," about the U.S. health care system; and "Notes from the Field," which focused on the school-to-prison pipeline. Her work as an actress on television includes "Inventing Anna," "The West Wing," "Nurse Jackie," and "Black-ish." Mainstream movies include "Philadelphia," "The American President," and "Rachel Getting Married." President Obama awarded Smith the National Endowment for the Humanities Medal. She was the 2015 Jefferson Lecturer. She is the recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship, several Obie awards, two Drama Desk awards, the George Polk Career Award in Journalism, and the Dean’s Medal from the Stanford University School of Medicine. She was a runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize in Drama and nominated for two Tony Awards. She’s a University Professor at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. She has several honorary doctorate degrees including those from Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, University of Pennsylvania, Spelman College, Prairie View University, Juilliard, and Oxford.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Joe Walsh, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Multi-Grammy award winning singer, songwriter and producer, Kennedy Center Honoree and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, Joe Walsh has entertained the masses and captivated his peers for more than five decades. His classic hits like “Funk #49,” “Walk Away,” “Life’s Been Good,” “Rocky Mountain Way,” “Life in the Fast Lane,” “In The City,” “Ordinary Average Guy,” and “Analog Man” embody his American origin story, guitar genius, and lyrical wit. Born in Wichita, Kansas and raised in Ohio and New Jersey, Walsh’s musical journey began with the Cleveland-based James Gang in 1969, continued with his trio Barnstorm and then took off with the launch of his 12-album solo career in 1973. In 1975, Walsh was recruited into the Eagles who would become the highest selling American band in history and one of the top touring acts in the world to this day selling out stadiums and arenas into 2023.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Walsh has honorary doctorates in music from Kent State University and the Berklee College of Music and has been celebrated for his charitable works in the fields of music education, recovery from addiction and women’s health and safety. In 2017, Walsh founded VetsAid, an annual music festival that brings together musicians and audiences of all backgrounds to raise funds for veterans and their families. A Gold Star son himself, Walsh brought the festival most recently to his hometown of Columbus, Ohio with guests Dave Grohl, Nine Inch Nails, and The Black Keys. He has, to date, disbursed $2.7 million in grants to veterans’ services groups nationwide.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Kerry Washington, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Emmy-winning, SAG and Golden Globe-nominated actor, director, and producer Kerry Washington is a versatile and fearless multi-hyphenate who has received high acclaim for her work in film, television, and theater. Washington is a lifelong advocate and activist, dedicated to using her voice to fight for justice for all communities. She is focused on building a more equitable democracy and in service of this goal, founded Influence Change (IC) and the Vision Into Power Cohort. IC is a strategic initiative that partners with high impact non-profit organizations to increase voter turnout. The VIP Cohort, launched in partnership with Movement Voter Fund, provides ten grassroots organizations with the resources and knowledge to build civic engagement in their communities through storytelling and collective action.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>In 2022, Washington was honored as one of TIME Magazine’s 2022 Women of The Year. She has been involved with many social and political causes, including her service on President Obama’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities. She is also Co-Chair of former First Lady Michelle Obama’s When We All Vote campaign and the Black Voices for Black Justice Fund, an organization funding Black leaders who are helping to build a more equitable America. In 2021, Washington and several other industry leaders co-founded The Roybal School of Film and Television Production, in partnership with the LAUSD. It is a magnet school aiming to drive transformational change across the entertainment industry and provides education and practical training in the arts and sciences of filmmaking to marginalized communities.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Pauline Yu, Member&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Pauline Yu is President Emerita of the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), a non-profit federation of 79 scholarly organizations which she led for sixteen years. ACLS has been the preeminent representative of American scholarship in the humanities and interpretive social sciences since 1919 and has provided competitive fellowships and grants to individual scholars in those fields since 1926. Yu was previously dean of humanities at the University of California, Los Angeles for ten years, founding chair of the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures at the University of California, Irvine, and professor at Columbia University and the University of Minnesota. She received her B.A. in History and Literature from Harvard University, her M.A. and Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Stanford University, and holds five honorary degrees. In 2021, she received the award for Distinguished Service to the Profession from the Association of Departments of Foreign Languages of the Modern Language Association.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Yu has been elected to membership in two honorary societies, the American Philosophical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She serves on the Academy’s board of directors and is also a trustee of the Institute for Advanced Study. In addition, she is a member of the board of several philanthropic organizations, including The Henry Luce Foundation and The Teagle Foundation. She is the author or editor of five books and has published widely on topics in Chinese poetry, comparative literature, and the humanities.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--TEASE--&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--SUPERS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>File&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--VIDEO SHOWS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--LEAD IN&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--VO SCRIPT&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--KEYWORD TAGS--&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--MUSIC INFO---&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>
AA: SUIT FOCUSES ON POOR CONDITIONS IN URBAN SCHOOLS
COVERAGE IN HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT FOR A BILL BLAKEMORE CS VO FOR THE AMERICAN AGENDA ABOUT A DESEGREGATION LAWSUIT TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF INNER CITY SCHOOLS. 11:00:31 B ROLL FTG. MWS FOUNTAIN IN FG W/ STATE CAPITOL BUILDING IN BG. 11:00:52 MWS GOTHIC STYLE GOLD DOME TOPPED STATE CAPITOL BUILDING. 11:01:21 PUSH IN PAST FOUNTAIN TO MWS CAPITOL. 11:01:33 CU GREEN COPPER TOMAHAWK. 11:01:40 PAN DOWN COPPER INDIAN STATUE. 11:02:04 PULL OUT TO WS COPPER INDIANS ADORNING FOUNTAIN IN FG W/ CAPITOL BUILDING IN BG. 11:02:14 MWS MODERN OFFICE BUILDINGS W/ LAWN IN FG. 11:02:54 PAN ACROSS MODERN GLASS AND STEEL OFFICE BUILDINGS. 11:03:19 MWS DOWNTOWN AREA AS CARS CROSS BUSY INTERSECTION. 11:03:47 MS CLOCK IN OVERPASS WALKWAY. 11:03:54 PULL OUT TO MWS. 11:04:08 LOW ANGLE MLS UP HIGHRISE OFFICE BUILDING. 11:04:15 PAN DOWN TO MWS CARS BELOW. 11:04:29 COMPRESSION MS PEDESTRIANS WEARING WINTER COATS WALKING TOWARD CAMERA. 11:04:53 COMPRESSION MS BEHIND MORE PEDESTRIANS. 11:05:23 MWS MILLER GENUINE DRAFT BEER TRUCK DRIVING PAST. 11:05:27 CU NOAH WEBSTER SCHOOL SIGN. 11:05:35 PULL OUT TO MWS NOAH WEBSTER SCHOOL. 11:06:02 CU SIGN. 11:06:07 MWS YOUNG BOYS PLAYING IN SCHOOL PLAYGROUND. 11:06:26 MLS DOWN ROW OF MODEST TWO STORY WOOD FRAME HOMES W/ SMALL FRONT LAWNS. 11:07:01 PULL OUT TO MWS TAN HOME. 11:07:13 CU NOAH WEBSTER SCHOOL NAME CARVED INTO MOLDING OVER ENTRANCE. 11:07:23 PULL OUT TO MWS SCHOOL BUILDING W/ YELLOW SCHOOL BUS VAN PARKED IN FRONT. 11:07:56 MWS HOMES. 11:08:05 PULL OUT TO WS SCHOOL. 11:08:31 SAME SHOT AGAIN. 11:08:47 CU PICTURES HANGING IN SCHOOL'S WINDOW. 11:08:52 MS SUPERIOR COURT BUILDING. 11:09:07 PULL OUT TO WS ARCHITECTURALLY DULL BOXY RED BRICK BUILDING W/ TRIM HEDGES AND BARREN WINTER TREES IN FG. 11:10:05 MWS ENTRANCE. 11:10:10 WS ENTRANCE OUTSIDE ANOTHER SCHOOL. 11:10:15 PULL OUT TO WS SPRAWLING RED BRICK WHITING LANE SCHOOL BUILDING W/ WIDE LAWN IN FG. 11:10:52 MWS WELL MAINTAINED THREE STORY WOOD FRAME HOMES W/ DRY FRONT LAWNS. 11:11:49 MWS WHITING LANE SCHOOL NAME. 11:11:54 PULL OUT TO WS SAME SCHOOL. 11:12:16 MS ENTRANCE TO THOMAS J MCDONOUGH SCHOOL. 11:12:26 PULL OUT TO WS LARGE BRICK SCHOOL BUILDING. 11:12:45 PUSH INTO MS SCHOOL ENTRANCE. 11:12:55 CU MCDONOUGH NAME OVER ENTRANCE. 11:13:07 PULL OUT TO WS LARGE BUILDING W/ AMERICAN FLAG FLYING ON POLE. 11:13:26 CU NEW WINDOWS IN BUILDING. 11:13:33 COMPRESSION CU THOUGH BARREN WINTER TREE BRANCHES FLAG WAVING GENTLY IN BREEZE AGAINST COLD, GRAY WINTER SKY. 11:14:14 PULL OUT TO WS SCHOOL BUILDING. 11:14:30 LOW ANGLE HEADON WS SAME SCHOOL. 11:14:58 HEADON MS MODERN WINDOWS OVER NAME. 11:15:04 PULL OUT TO LOW ANGLE WS. 11:15:14 LS APARTMENT BUILDINGS AND MODEST HOMES ON QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD STREET. 11:15:58 PULL OUT FROM MS HOMES TO MLS LONE CAR DRIVING DOWN STREET AWAY FROM CAMERA.
INDUSTRY/MANUFACTURING
AMERICA/HENRY FORD INDUSTRIES 1900s THRU 1930s Henry Ford camping trip-man washing clothes on river bank, cooking, couple dancing, Ford hands rifle to John Burrows, ice skating with kids on frozen lake; planting garden with grandchildren, Ford & wife driving quadracycle, Ford's first car, Ford monkeying with steam engine, horse drawn farm equipment, Ford baling wheat, driving tractor (good farmer stuff-except he's wearing a suit & tie). Ten Millionth car beside first car. Steam engine locomotive train goes by. Ford examining material. Jalopy small town road. log cabin, two story house, watchmakers shop, people entering large house; 00:02:26 clock tower museum. Men cranking movie cameras filming football game, 1910's football game. Ford factory ext. Film processing, early movie making. WS countryside, crop fields. Farmers plowing land, tilling soil, baling wheat, harvesting wheat horse drawn combine, early farm machinery, people watch newfangled steam powered thresher or baler. Farm chores, housewife washing, milking cow, pumping water, churning butter while boy holds kitten, family reading by candlelight, trying to share kerosene lamp. 00:04:46 horse drawn wagon on muddy road. Wagon missing wheel. Country bumpkins kids walking to school, kids riding sleigh in winter, snowball fight, boys climbing tree. Train pulling into station, pov from train leaving station, train leaving station, pov from train crossing bridge; Washington D.C. city street scenes Pennsylvania Ave traffic, White House, INT White House; 00:06:28 outdoor market in Boston, street vendors in NYC, Italian immigrants. POV from el-train around NYC, Hippodrome. Tug boats. Upperclass passengers boarding ship, POV from boat New York Harbor, tugboats, Brooklyn Bridge, NYC skyline, battleship in harbor, ocean liners, skyline; 00:07:46 Flat Iron bldg. Faded Woolworth bldg (then tallest bldg in the world at 60 stories) peds & traffic on 5th Avenue, Riverside Drive. Grant's Tomb. Central Park, rowboats in pond. Coney Island amusement rides ('Lawsuit' written all over them), crowds frolicking on beach. Passengers coming off train, Atlantic City, elephant-shaped hotel, waves rolling in, amateur acrobats on beach, boardwalk. 00:10:24 Belle Isle Park, people canoeing in canal; woman plays piano; ice skating, professional couple ice skating. ice boats on frozen lake, toboggan sledding; auto racing; Buffalo Bill Cody, Buffalo Bill's Circus: American Indians dancing, bucking bronco; Woodrow Wilson throws first ball of baseball season, switcheroo: baseball player holding baseball autographed by president. 00:12:05 John Burroughs (old man sitting with little boy) cheering crowd. Luther Burbank; Thomas Edison; Edison w/Harvey Firestone; Joseph G. Canon; Will Rogers laughing, doing lasso trick; tourists admiring view at Glacier National Park (men seem to be arguing), wacky mtn climbing, man slips into crack in glacier; logging, felling trees; female factory workers, woman trying on hat, post office postal workers sorting mail, commercial laundry sweatshop, assembling wheels in Ford auto plant; leaving work, street scenes, trolleys; 00:16:06 Civil War veterans at camp, old men eating. World War One recruits at boot camp, soldiers training, tug-of-war, writing letters, eating in mess hall; Wilson, huge cheering crowd, Teddy Roosevelt; Military parade, American flags in parades, recruiting efforts; soldiers training with bayonets, calisthenics; female workers in engine factory (pre-Rosie the Riveter smiles at camera), Henry Ford war profiteer, battleship construction shipyard 'Eagle Boat', launching boat;00:19:43 experimental tank, tank stuck in trench. Military parade in Detroit, recruits marching, soldier smiling at camera, soldier holding puppy, soldier holding mini U.S. flag, sending the boys off to war. Experimental small tanks, tank overturned trying to cross barbed wire fence. Large tank busts thru old house. Lots of U.S. flags in parade. Early fighter plane, Martin Bomber. 00:22:14 Eddie Rickenbacker. Manufacturing planes (flying boats, see 1034!) Shipyard workers smiling at camera. Red Cross girl handing out _____; man shaving w/ straight edge, soldiers hanging out in barracks. Recruits on train, recruits leaving for Europe, battleship leaving harbor; Men righting overturned tank. 00:23:59 Lord Northcliff British diplomat driving tractor. Military parades, cheering crowds. Woman holding liberty bonds, people buying bonds. Crowded street, celebrating end of war, waving flags. Washington D.C. parade- cavalry, Warren G. Harding, General Black Jack Pershing, funeral procession for Unknown Soldier; 00:25;24 cars on rough, bumpy road, bad road, car stuck in mud, tow-truck pulling truck out of mud. Cars board ferry, ferry crossing river; road construction; cars on cement highways. Model-T car over hill, down embankment, crosses through river, through snow, on railroad tracks, on pipeline; Model T auto mfg, Ford factory (Highland Park Plant) new cars leaving factory, auto dealership, auto mechanic. Car in front of farmhouse, woman driving. 00:28:29 Truck picking up produce, dropping off cans of milk, trucks on highway, postal truck, row of trucks pulling out. Sunday drivers on highway (Columbia River Highway) car stopping in middle of bridge to enjoy view, cars driving thru tunnel, car drives thru tunnel cut in sequoia, car on bumpy road. 00:29:38 person feeding bear from car. Camping trip, picnic, women picking flowers picking wildflowers. Men sleeping in car. More Ford and his Pals on camping trip: Harding arriving in motorcade, Harvey Firestone, Ford chopping wood, men reading newspaper, Edison taking nap, Harding tries to chop wood, Edison Harding & Ford reading newspaper; 00:31:25 salesman showing man tractor, tractor plowing field; housewife does laundry with early washing machine, early vacuum machine, young woman washes face, old woman knitting while machine churns butter; city traffic, peds & traffic T/L traffic, peds. Cars parked along street, policemen direct traffic, kids crossing street, policeman saves woman from getting run over, traffic director in tower; 00:33:24 parade promoting driving safety (the Grim Reaper on float); kids playing right in the middle of busy street. Dramatization of kid getting hit by car, cart gets hit by streetcar, auto accidents w/ peds, man gets hit by car (backing up!), kid gets crushed by block of ice from ice truck, man jumps onto running board. City traffic, this might be San Francisco with trolleys, heavy traffic on residential street. 00:34:35 trolleys & Angel's Flight type trams, heavy traffic; Spirit of St. Louis, Charles Lindbergh; 1930'S early passenger flight, passEngers board plane, Stout Airlines, plane takes off, mother and little boy look out through window, Air to Air passenger plane. Supreme court building; PRELUDE TO WAR
74272 “ CAMPUS ON THE MARCH ” 1942 U.S. COLLEGES, WOMEN & AFRICAN AMERICANS IN WWII WAR EFFORT
This WW2 film "Campus on the March" showcases how colleges across the US were preparing students for war; curriculums changed in WWII as students learned about farm labor, international relations, chemical weapon preparations, aviation, wartime nutrition, cryptology and codes as well as various war industrial related training. A highlight is given to female students and African Americans taking on new roles. This was a time of patriotic enthusiasm. The film opens with a note informing viewers it was released by the Office of War Information Bureau of Motion Pictures based in Washington DC (:07). It is presented by the US Government (:14). The film was produced by the Office of War Information (:23). The statue of Thomas Jefferson sits outside the University of Virginia (:52). The camera pans over the campus courtyard (1:07). Virginia’s dawn patrol marches (1:25). A Naval ROTC unit (1:37). Virginia Cadets (1:45) learn to operate the sextant. A professor lectures students on military phrases (1:53). Future doctors and nurses learn military medicine (2:01). A professor lectures in a military government class at the Virginia Law School (2:28). Airplanes stand in the aerodynamics department (2:40). Scale models are tested in a wind tunnel (2:44). Student fliers work with the Piper J-3 (2:50) during a Civilian Pilot Training course. Indiana’s Purdue University is pictured (3:13) as they practice takeoffs. A Purdue experimental plane (3:35). Fundamentals of plane construction (3:50). Posterazzi Heavilon Hall (3:54) precedes Indian West Lafayette Elliot Hall of Music (4:02). The Mechanical Engineering Hall of Purdue (4:11). Engineering students learn how to make parts for war machines (4:14). A Signal Corps Group trains in the operation of plane and submarine detectors (4:39). ROTC student’s march; nearly 218,000 enrolled (4:55). Students learn to operate the howitzer (5:01). Sailors (5:28) compete for higher ratings as electrician mates. Female students take up courses for employment in careers vacated by men leaving for war (5:39). Female students learn farm labor (5:49) on a Farmall tractor. A busload of students arrive at Stephens College (5:59). The role of women in the industrial world was greatly changed by the war effort. Women in aviation class (6:09). A female operator answers the phone at an airline ticket office (6:28). Women receive training with radio equipment (6:33). The University of Texas's tower appears (6:44). The seal of the University follows (6:47). Students study petroleum engineering (6:58). Students learn the functionality of airplane motors in the aeronautics class (7:14). Foreign relations was another class emphasized due to the looming war (7:18). Students learn to broadcast in Spanish (7:31). Coding in various languages (7:40). Naval regulations (8:35). A Cornell ROTC unit receives instruction (8:48). The engineering department teaches students manufacturing of war instruments (9:15). High school students learn to make gliders (9:21). Cornell students work on condensing high vitamin foods for troops (9:37). Tulane University is pictured in New Orleans (10:08). Physics students study (10:24) problems of aviation. Tulane's Green Wave Flying Unit appears (10:29). The naval ROTC works with weapons (10:37). Hampton Institute of Virginia, an historically Black university, (10:52) follows. African American students study new war materials (11:09) and study codes (11:26). A plaque commemorating Eleazar Wheelock at Dartmouth college (11:37). A specialized war course sits on the steps of Dartmouth hall (11:57). Students enlist for a farm labor class (12:25). The University at North Carolina (12:47). Boxing (14:05). ROTC run through an obstacle course (14:35). Physical fitness at Harvard (14:39). An experiment is conducted at the fatigue department (14:50). Cadets stand at the famed Harvard yard (15:13) and later learn how to run Army camps (15:28). University of California (15:38). A naval ROTC unit follows (15:51). Meat and fruit are dehydrated (16:04). Female students in mechanical designing classes (16:17). Cadets assemble machine guns (16:54) and heavy coast artillery (17:01). Texas A&M (17:12) gas mask drill (17:25). <p><p>Motion picture films don't last forever; many have already been lost or destroyed. For almost two decades, we've worked to collect, scan and preserve the world as it was captured on 35mm, 16mm and 8mm movies -- including home movies, industrial films, and other non-fiction. If you have endangered films you'd like to have scanned, or wish to donate celluloid to Periscope Film so that we can share them with the world, we'd love to hear from you. Contact us via the weblink below.<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
Mascot - Controversy
RACIAL CONTROVERSY ERUPTS OVER A NORTH TEXAS HIGH SCHOOL MASCOT NAMED "COON"
Royal Canadian Academy of Arts founder Thomas Mower Martin paints and plays violin
Title card: "DEAN OF ARTISTS! T. Mower Martin, 94, founder of Royal Canadian Academy, still active" / MCU side view of T. Mower Martin, Founder, Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, painting at easel / CU Martin (high angle) / CU Martin (eye level) / MS profile view of Martin painting / CU canvas on easel, showing landscape Martin is working on / MCU Martin plays violin / PAN large painting featuring Native Americans in nature setting / Note: exact month/day not known