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Edward R. Feil, Edward G. Feil, Ken Feil, Beth Rubin
Summary:
Brief home movie of Eddie, Kenny, and Beth in the living room at the Feil home. Beth makes faces at the camera as Eddie plays as a horse with a carrot in his mouth.
Edward R. Feil, Edward G. Feil, Ken Feil, Beth Rubin, Leslie Feil, Ellen Feil, Naomi Feil, Nellie Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein, Susan Hellerstein, David Hellerstein, Daniel Hellerstein, Beth Hellerstein, Kathryn Hellerstein, Vicki Rubin, Amy Feil, Betsy Feil, George H. Feil, Jonathan Hellerstein, Maren Mansberger Feil
Summary:
Home movie that begins with a birthday celebration for Ellen Feil and Susan Hellerstein at the Harold Feil home. Both birthday girls are given a cake as their siblings and cousins sit around the dining room table. At the Ed Feil home, Naomi, Beth, Eddie, and Kenny eat at the picnic table in the driveway with another little boy, possibly a friend. The children then ride bikes in the driveway.
Home movie that begins with footage taken out the window of an airplane in flight. Kenny sits at the kitchen table while a maid (presumably Dasy) serves him cottage cheese. The camera then focuses on the children's artwork, which is hanging on the walls.
Ed visiting someone in Newport Beach, California (possibly a relative of Ed's). Shows the group at a marina, seeing the World's largest wind chimes outside the Robinson's department store, and children playing at a shopping center. Ends with footage of people playing shuffleboard.
An older person in a cleaning uniform is wiping off dust with a rag when she comes upon a placard that says Barney's has 60,000 fashions for men. She is in disbelief at the number and decides to count all of the suits, we see her as she makes her counting progress throughout the store. The announcer talks about all the brands and the array of options at the store.
Sally Lied documents her time as a VISTA in Newnan, Georgia in a verbal diary format. The recordings take place over her first week with the program. She discusses the goal of the work, the family she stayed with, their material conditions, other members of her VISTA group and her experience in sessions with them, as well as her day to day activities while a participant in VISTA (going to the movies, going out for dinner, taking the bus, etc.). The recording is segmented by the day that Lied recorded, then further segmented by the day that she is recalling, since often she would skip several days then catch up all at once. Additionally, any noteworthy moments were segmented by topic.
For a more thorough reflection and analysis of her time as a VISTA where she dissects racial tension and class issues, please review "Sally Lied - Experiences in Vista, March 4, 1969 (1:40:06)."