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Explains that the Jewish view of education is based on the Jewish view of man. Man may be limited and small, but he can grow toward God because something in him corresponds to God. Answers objections and comments on a Friday night scene in a Jewish home. Featured personality is Eugene B. Borowitz, national director for the Union of American Hebrew Congregations.
Activity group therapy as developed at the Jewish Board of Guardians, New York City, by S.R. Slavson, Director of Group Therapy. Shows socially-maladjusted children 10 to 11 years old being benefited therapeutically by "acting out" their disturbances upon their environment and each other. Presents Henry's anxiety hysteria, Bob's aggressiveness, and Albert's effeminacy in a realistic situation with an emotionally neutral therapist and concealed cameras and microphones. Argues for encouraging boys to form a club and work things out for themselves. Recommended for use only by individuals or groups professionally concerned with psychiatric, social, and medical fields.
This film traces the history of rocketry and describes the use of sounding rockets as tools for scientific research in the upper atmosphere; this film discusses the need for such tools, shows how rocket experiments are accomplished, and explains what they have contributed to meteorological and ionospheric research.
Tom Belford recounts his work for Common Cause and lobbying state legislatures around the 26th Amendment, includes personal anecdotes from his time in DC.
Carolyn Coleman, née Quilloin, was a County Commissioner in the Greensboro, NC area. In this interview, she details her political and civic work, as well as her involvement in the civil rights movement as a young person in Savannah, Georgia. She describes her involvement with the NAACP Youth Council, speaks on her perspective as a Black youth in Georgia who had been able to vote since the age of 18, and how she directed a program through the NAACP Youth Council to gain that right for others. She talks about her work with civil rights leader and activist Clarence Mitchell and the NAACP's activities to get people registered to vote and the reprisals they consequently faced. She also discusses how she became involved in the 18-year-old vote movement and organized youth units in Washington, DC, to lobby members of Congress.
In the second part of this interview, Commissioner Coleman discusses civil rights activist Clarence Mitchell's concerns that focus on the 18-year-old vote might result in changes to the Voting Rights Act. She also discusses how members of the NAACP worked to overcome Mitchell's doubts. She talks about how the youth branch of the NAACP called a conference to bring students together to lobby for the 18-year-old vote, and how they developed strategies and lobbied members of Congress.
Tom Devine details his work with the Youth Franchise Coalition, his efforts registering young people to vote in Chicago, his lobbying experience, and how his work on the youth franchise went on to influence his work at the Government Accountability Project.
Dick Celeste recounts his time as an Ohio legislator during the ratification of the 26th Amendment, and gives insights into his own career and the political culture of the age, with a focus on youth participation generally.
Jacobs School of Music, Jacobs School of Music - Office of Communications, Jacobs School of Music - Music IT Services
Summary:
Backstories is a promotional series of recordings used to promote projects at the Jacobs School of Music. This installment includes videos produced for the 2023-2024 academic year.