Could not complete log in. Possible causes and solutions are:
Cookies are not set, which might happen if you've never visited this website before.
Please open https://media.dlib.indiana.edu/ in a new window, then come back and refresh this page.
An ad blocker is preventing successful login.
Please disable ad blockers for this site then refresh this page.
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.
Suone Cotner, now a progressive activist and nonprofit leader, was at the time of the campaign, a core part of Student National Education Association. She details her experience in D.C. generally, describes how young people were motivated at the time, provides details of the NEA's attempt to get the Attorney General to resign, and reveals her experience as one of the first to hear about Kennedy's plan to lower the voting age through the Voting Rights Act.
Gonzales describes his involvement with the student National Education Association, his transition to the Youth Citizenship Fund, his efforts to register young people to vote, and the general state of the country which allowed for the passage of the 26th Amendment.
Charles Koppelman on acting as an organizer for the Youth Franchise Coalition, the YFC's financial and staffing struggles, and the influence of his experience on his later life
Immediately after the overthrow of the Czar in 1917 the Kerensky government was formed, the short-lived and only democratic national government Russia has ever known. Dr. Sworakowski provides a detailed and carefully analyzed description of the reasons why Kerensky’s government fell so quickly. He also reads a letter from an eye-witness of the overthrow. Again, dramatic episodes alternate with commentary and narration over photographs and documents, as a picture of Lenin’s strategy and attack in the November Revolution is built up.
We see the original owner of Barney's in the 1920s waiting outside of a medium-sized store. He leads a man into the store and helps him find a suit, doing all of the selling and prep work himself. We then jump to the 1970s where the store is much larger with more foot traffic. We see the owner as an older man as he helps a young boy with a suit and his mother stands nearby with a smile.
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.
Discusses the contribution of stage costumes to the art of the theater. Follows the costume designer through the initial analysis of the play, the drawing-board, the costume workshop, and to the actual wearing of the costumes. Stresses four basic considerations of costume design: unity, identification, projection, and functionalism. Outlines problems related to action, setting, lighting, and make-up.
Camera tests performed by the Moving Image Archive staff using the Bolex 16mm camera prior to sending the camera out for Century of 16mm commissioned films project. Filmed in and around Wells Library on June 6, 2022, the film shows Jamie, Maddye, and Caleb experimenting with variable speed, stop motion, and double exposure.
Camera tests performed by the Moving Image Archive staff using the Bolex 16mm camera prior to sending the camera out for Century of 16mm commissioned films project. Filmed in and around Wells Library on May 23, 2022, the film shows Carmel, Charlie, Maddye, and Caleb experimenting with variable speed, stop motion, and double exposure.
In this program, Stoessinger points out the continuity of imperialism from Czarist Russia to Russia today, Russia’s attitude toward nationalism being that it should be ruthlessly crushed. The Soviet’s techniques of empire building are several including playing nationalistic groups against each other and exploiting anti-fascist resistance to its own gain. In the past, nationalism has caused many blocks to Communism and they have constantly had to change their techniques. A former Albanian freedom fighter is interviewed.
Pat outlines her motivations for getting involved with the youth vote, her activism at the time, the youth vote's path from Congress to Supreme Court to constitutional amendment, and the Nixon signing ceremony.
Former Congressman Norm Dicks, a one-time legislative assistant to Senator Warren Magnuson, talks about how the legislation for lowering the voting age came to be drafted. Dicks discusses the dilemma between drafting is as a stand-alone constitutional amendment or as an amendment to the reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. He discusses some of the objections that civil rights leaders expressed about its inclusion in the VRA, its quick passage through Congress, and the Supreme Court's negative decision about its constitutionality.
At Multiamory, we generally discourage people from building their relationships on a basis of strict, primary-secondary hierarchy. However, primary-secondary relationships are still very common in the polyamorous community. All three of us have engaged in these kind of relationships at one point or another, for better or worse. In this episode, we talk about the experience of being a secondary partner, and we give our advice to secondaries for crafting relationships that will keep them safe, happy, and sane. - Multiamory Podcast Website
In the second segment of his interview, Congressman Norm Dicks discusses the roles played by Senators Edward Kennedy, Warren Magnuson, Mike Mansfield, and Jennings Randolph in getting legislation to lower the voting age passed through Congress, as well as the bipartisan support of Republican members of Congress. At the end of the interview, he comments on contemporary controversies about voting, about state legislatures' attempts to restrict peoples' right to vote, and about President Trump and election denial.
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.
"Future Directions in Ethnomusicology" panel discussion. Descriptive information presented here may come from original collection documentation. Please note collections of historical content may contain material that could be offensive to some patrons.
Discussion of the George Herzog collections at the Archives of Traditional Music, of early ethnomusicologists and the development of the field, and biographical information on Herzog. Descriptive information presented here may come from original collection documentation. Please note collections of historical content may contain material that could be offensive to some patrons.
An animated cartoon which explains that there are no basic differences between the races of the world. Uses small green demons to caricature prejudice and racial hatred. Relates the history of mankind to point out that dissimilarities in peoples result from superficial environmental influences. Based on "Races of Mankind" pamphlet by Ruth Benedict and Gene Weltfish.
Long distance calling commercials. Advertisement tags featured, "Did you know, long distance rates are very low" and "Each night past six, please don't forget, long distance rates are lower yet."
Annual Stephen P. Bogdewic Lectureship in Medical Leadership featuring a conversation between David J. Skorton, MD (President and CEO, Association of American Medical Colleges) and Jay L. Hess, MD, PhD (Dean, Indiana University School of Medicine) on October 14, 2024. Dr. Skorton began his leadership of the AAMC in July 2019 after a distinguished career in government, higher education, and medicine. Shortly after his arrival, he oversaw a comprehensive strategic planning process that established a new mission and vision for the AAMC. It also introduced ten bold action plans to tackle the most intractable challenges in health and to make academic medicine more diverse, equitable, and inclusive.
The Stephen P. Bogdewic Lectureship in Medical Leadership was established to honor the contributions of Stephen P. Bogdewic, PhD, who retired in 2019 after 30 years with IU School of Medicine. The annual Bogdewic lecture aims to bring outstanding leaders to IU School of Medicine to share their insights, building on Bogdewic’s “legacy of leadership development by promoting and cultivating a leadership mindset.”
Annual Stephen P. Bogdewic Lectureship in Medical Leadership featuring a conversation between Tricia C. Elliott, MD, FAAFP (Senior Vice President, Academic and Research Affairs, Chief Academic Officer, Designated Institutional Official, JPS Health Network; Affiliate Professor, Family Medicine, UNT Health Science Center Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine) and Stephen P. Bogdewic, PhD (Executive Vice Dean Emeritus, Indiana University School of Medicine) on November 14, 2023.
The Stephen P. Bogdewic Lectureship in Medical Leadership was established to honor the contributions of Stephen P. Bogdewic, PhD, who retired in 2019 after 30 years with IU School of Medicine. The annual Bogdewic lecture aims to bring outstanding leaders to IU School of Medicine to share their insights, building on Bogdewic’s “legacy of leadership development by promoting and cultivating a leadership mindset.”
Inaugural Stephen P. Bogdewic Lectureship in Medical Leadership delivered by Robert I. Grossman, MD (Dean and Professor of Radiology, Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Physiology at New York University School of Medicine and CEO of Langone Health) on September 8, 2022.
The Stephen P. Bogdewic Lectureship in Medical Leadership was established to honor the contributions of Stephen P. Bogdewic, PhD, who retired in 2019 after 30 years with IU School of Medicine. The annual Bogdewic lecture aims to bring outstanding leaders to IU School of Medicine to share their insights, building on Bogdewic’s “legacy of leadership development by promoting and cultivating a leadership mindset.”
Patricia Treadwell, MD Women in Medicine Lecture delivered by Chemen M. Neal, MD (Executive Associate Dean for Equity & Inclusion and Chief Diversity Officer, IU School of Medicine) on February 29, 2024.
Honoring the legacy of Dr. Patricia Treadwell's 40 years of service to the IU School of Medicine community, this annual lecture series explores how the intersections of race and gender affect academic medicine and the health sciences professions, and marks the transition from Black History Month to Women's History Month.
Steven C. Beering Award for the Advancement of Biomedical Science lecture delivered by 2022 awardee, Stanley T. Crooke, MD, PhD, on September 8, 2023. Dr. Crooke is the founder, chairman, and chief executive officer of n-Lorem, a nonprofit foundation focusing on providing treatments for patients with nano-rare diseases, which he initiated in January 2020.
The Steven C. Beering Award honors an internationally recognized individual for outstanding research contributions to advancing biomedical or clinical science. The Beering Award was established in 1983, honoring Dr. Beering's important contributions to the IU School of Medicine as its dean from 1974 to 1983. Dr. Beering was the youngest dean appointed to the IU School of Medicine. He became Purdue University's president, serving until his retirement on August 14th, 2000. The award is presented annually and consists of a memento and a prize of $25,000.
This Pan Am travelogue about the Bahamas shows everything the breathtaking islands have to offer, including swimming, boating, shopping, and culture. Every visit offers a different variety of activities for tourists, and keeps them coming back.