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For the past century, specialists at Riley Children’s have been pioneers in their field, leading pediatric anesthesiology and cochlear implantation to new and transformative heights. See how our brave patients, passionate caregivers and dedicated researchers have led the way for a brighter tomorrow. Video produced for Riley Hospital for Children's centennial anniversary.
A foremost leader in pediatric research, Riley Children’s Health has pushed the envelope to support kids with complex diagnoses for generations. As we commemorate a century of pediatric healthcare, hear from the trailblazers who led extensive research at the renowned Herman B Wells Center for Pediatric Research. Video produced for Riley Hospital for Children's centennial anniversary.
More than 20 years ago, Mark W. Turrentine, MD, a pediatric cardiothoracic surgeon at Riley Children’s Health, marks a revolutionary procedure to support a child with heart failure. Now an FDA-approved treatment, hear from the expert who made it all possible, forever changing the lives of children needing heart surgery. Video produced for Riley Hospital for Children's centennial anniversary.
This program, part of "The Newborn" series, discusses seizures and the importance of understanding them. Subleties which complicate diagnosis are described and recognition of various types is explained. Major etiologies are covered; evaluation priorities are specified; work-up is outlined; and therapy techniques are suggested. Although seizures are not common among newborns, it is important to be aware that characteristics of seizures are vastly different in the newborn than among adults. Apnea, tremors, eye-blinking, or facial twitching all can be signs of a seizure in the newborn. Since seizures in the newborn can be subtle, the presenter provides ways to differentiate between seizure activity and normal activity. Most importantly, the presenter adds that finding the cause of the seizure is more important than rushing to treatment. The video also includes an overview of different drugs and their side effects, including withdrawal.
This program, part of "The Newborn" series, is an overview of bacterial sepsis and features Richard L. Schreiner, MD. Pathogenesis, causation, indications, laboratory tests, therapy, complications, and statistics are covered. This presents accurate, standard information and displays good technical quality. Some material is specific to the area of production. The program is recommended for use. Dr. Schreiner discusses the possible causes for neonatal bacterial sepsis, potential signs for the disease, and methods of prevention. Certain perinatal events such as maternal fever, urinary tract infections, and prolonged labor may be causes for concern; the doctor should subsequently check for sepsis in the infant. It is also imperative that all medical staff wash their hands before attending to the infant to decrease the chances of developing sepsis.
Glen Fleck, Professor Thomas S. Kuhn, Laurence Harvey, Elmer Bernstein, Dr. Abraham Kaplan, Dr. Helen Wright, Dr. Albert R. Hibbs, Parke Meek, Stanley Croner, Archer Goodwin, Bill Lightfield, Virgil Mirano, Annette Del Zoppo, George Spacek, Gordon Ashby, Deborah Sussman, Robert Nakamura
Summary:
Utilizes animation and multiple-image techniques to examine the historical development of the sciences. Includes also a consideration of science as it exists today. Presents the views of several contemporary scientists, their work, and their laboratories.
George G. Mallinson, Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Hal Kopel
Summary:
Introduces and defines the words science and experiment, and demonstrates a simple experiment. Develops the idea of an orderly universe and shows a working procedure for problem solving in science.
Gullah speech and song from the Sea Islands. 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.
Taylor Burnette, IU Libraries Railsback Fellow, Carmel Curtis, Moving Image Archive
Summary:
A short "reel" used on Instagram in February of 2025 to promote an exhibition at the Indiana University Grunwald Gallery curated by Carmel Curtis, the Interim Director of IU Libraries Moving Image Archive.
Rebecca Baumann, Head of Curatorial Services at the Lilly Library, Michelle Crowe, IU Libraries Assistant Dean for Engagement and Communication, Lindsey Schaffer, IU Libraries Events and Hospitality Coordinator
Summary:
A conversation between Beverly Jenkins and Lilly Library Curator of Modern Books Rebecca Baumann in celebration of the Lilly Library’s exhibition Love in the Library: The Romance Novel in English. Beverly Jenkins is an NAACP Image Award nominee and bestselling author of over 30 historical and contemporary romance novels. Her historical novels, including Indigo (1996), Topaz (1997), and the Women Who Dare series (2019–2022) center Black characters and Black history often overlooked in the romance genre, in American popular culture, and in history classes. Many of her novels are set in the post-Civil War era, a time in which Black Americans were building their lives, their identities, and legacies for generations to come. Jenkins also writes contemporary romances, including the 2021 romantic suspense novella Rare Danger, featuring a rare book dealer as heroine.
Shows how money is used in place of the exchange of goods and services. Illustrates early use of snake skins, claws, and fishhooks for barter. Demonstrates by contrast how a pig can be traded for a horse on the farm, but cannot be traded for a dress in town. Traces a marked dollar bill given by a newsboy to a storekeeper as it passes through many hands until it is finally returned to the newsboy by a housewife.
A 1937 U.S. Works Projects Administration (WPA) newsreel, "Work Pays America," featured Riley Hospital's hydrotherapy pool (dedicated on October 7, 1935) used for therapy for children with polio and other neuromuscular conditions that was modeled after President Franklin Roosevelt's therapeutic pool at the Warm Springs Foundation in Georgia. During President Roosevelt's September 5, 1936 visit to Indianapolis, one of his stops was to Riley Hospital for Children where he greeted patients, talked with staff and saw the hospital's hydrotherapy pool, made possible, in part, by WPA funds.
An experimental film created by Norman McLaren and Evelyn Lambart in which a sheaf of lines, constantly gyrating, group and regroup harmoniously in accord with music composed and played on wind and string instruments by folk musician Peter Seeger.
Footage of the Stillman College-IU Cultural Exchange circa 1964. Footage features the IU delegation traveling by plane, the meet and greet between IU and Stillman College, Stillman College Orchestra practice, and music lessons provided to the Stillman College students.
This film opens in a classroom, showing a music teacher working through a piece with a group of string musicians. He goes on to talk about an influential teacher he had at Virginia State College named Undine Moore. Quipped the "Dean of Black Women Composers," Undine Eliza Anna Smith Moore was a notable and prolific American composer and professor of music in the twentieth century. Much of her work was inspired by black spirituals and folk music. She was a renowned teacher, and once stated that she experienced “teaching itself as an art.” Towards the end of her life, she received many notable awards for her accomplishments as a music educator.
In this film the cinematographic space becomes itself an active element of the dance rather than being an area in which the dance takes place. The dancer shares with the camera and the cutting a collaborative responsibility for the movements themselves. Recommended for use only by groups interested in the cinematographical element of the dance.
Describes Marian Anderson's life, from her early years in Philadelphia through her New York Town Hall recital, and presents her as a concert artist singing Begrüssung by Handel; the Negro spirituals Oh, what a beautiful city; He's got the whole world in His hand; Crucifixion; and Deep river; the traditional song Comin' through the rye; and Ave Maria by Schubert.
Contains aerial photography, animation, and charts to show methods used by Indianapolis to effect slum clearance. Pictures city officials as they cite the need for rebuilding slum areas and tells of the founding in 1945 of the Indianapolis Redevelopment Commission outlining plans for future development as well as picturing results of past achievements. Points out the cooperative efforts of Flanner House as residents are assisted in the building of new homes, summarizes the accomplishments of the Commission, and views future plans for slum clearance.
Helga Winold research footage studying the movement of cello players - both in real time and slowed down.
Helga Winold is a concert cellist and former Professor of Music in the Jacobs School of Music. She was also the first IU student to receive her Doctorate of Music in the Cello (1967) and was appointed to the faculty of the Jacobs School of Music in 1969. She performed research into "the analysis of movement in string playing and the translation of thought into movement". With IU psychology professor Esther Thelen, Winold used computers to track and analyze students' movements as they played the cello resulting in better teaching methods and articles in scientific journals. She was awarded the President's Award for Distinguished Teaching in 2008.
Helga Winold IU biography: http://info.music.indiana.edu/news/page/normal/7812.html
Helga Winold Website biography: https://www.winoldsmusic.com/about-us
Helga Winold President's Award: https://honorsandawards.iu.edu/search-awards/honoree.shtml?honoreeID=4236
Esther Thelen Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esther_Thelen
Esther Thelen Obituary: http://www.psych.nyu.edu/adolph/publications/2005AdolphVereijken%20ThelenObit.pdf
Patterns of light reflected from variColored plastics dance and flicker, giving the impression of an abstract ballet. There is instrumental and vocal accompaniment. Made by Jim Davis, an American artist in plastics.
Shows the development of Negro education. Emphasizes that such a development was slow and difficult from the schoolhouse with broken windows and the teachers only a few steps ahead of the pupils to the modern school which spreads its influence beyond the confines of its four walls through training 9in home economics, machine shop, and handicrafts. Ends with shots of Negroes in universities, as surgeons and nurses in hospitals, and in the Army.
Five African university students discuss present African leaders, African students, chances for African unity and Africa as a major power. An American tells of the problems of the Negro in the United States. The film stimulates class and audience discussion on problems of contemporary Africa. The students are from: Dahomey, Cameroun, and the Central African Republic.
Shows the relationship of the Constitution to organized labor. Presents the case of Whitaker et al v. North Carolina, in which a group of unions challenged the constitutionality of a state ban on the closed shop, union shop and other "union security provisions. Traces the role of the fourteenth amendment in labor struggles. Photographed in Ashville, N.C., and other cities. (Center for Mass Communication of Columbia University) Film.
Animation and a musical background are used to locate incenters, circumcenters, centroids, and orthocenters in a number of triangles. The film was created on the Tektronics 4051 Graphics Terminal.
Portrait of a woman who was born without arms, yet leads a normal and productive life. Follows her through a typical day as she cares for her home and family, and explains her thoughts about her handicap and life.
Professor Sears Crowell's interest in marine biology began when he took classes at the Children’s School of Sciences in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. As a teenager, he worked at the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, where he completed most of his research throughout his career. He focused his investigations on hydroids, sea anemones, and jellyfish.
Highly involved in the science community, Dr. Crowell served as trustee for the Marine Biological Laboratory and was named trustee emeritus in 1979. He also served two terms on their executive committee and was secretary of the board of trustees for two years. He was the first program officer for the American Society of Zoologists and the first managing editor of their publication, American Zoologist. Dr. Crowell also served as chairman of the zoology section of the Indiana Academy of Science from 1949 to 1950. He was a member of the Indiana University faculty for 31 years.
Limited to a Bolex, a tripod, a light meter, and 100 feet of Kodak 16mm B&W reversal film, we captured the film digitization phase of the Media Digitization and Preservation Initiative (MDPI) at Indiana University in Bloomington, IN. The film was shot in chronological order of the MDPI film digitization process and all editing was done in camera.
Third in the "Are You Ready or Service?" series. A young man in the service writes to his high-school-age brother about the importance of good citizenship. Voting, paying taxes, serving on juries, and accepting responsibility in community organizations are cited as examples of good citizenship. Military service is described as the greatest contribution we can make, one for which we can prepare by fulfilling other responsibilities that help to protect our rights.
Camera-less film made by participants at an event 'Action + Agency: Storytelling + Filmmaking' held at the Grunwald Gallery of Art on Thursday March 6, 2025.
This multi-faceted event featured live interviews facilitated by Alex Chambers, host of WFIU’s Inner States podcast, about moments that embody a resistance to the status quo. Attendees had the option to participate in experimental camera-less filmmaking, creating art inspired by the action and agency in the stories told from Amy Oelsner, Stephanie Littell, and Ileana Haberman. At the end of the evening, the strips of film were spliced together and projected in the gallery.
This event was part of the YOU (probably) HAVEN’T SEEN THIS BEFORE exhibit which was held at the Grunwald Gallery of Art from January 17 - March 8, 2025.
Richard Yoakam Tribute Dinner
Radio-TV Collection
Department of Telecommunications held a tribute dinner for Richard Yoakam to commemorate the start of the Richard Yoakam Technology Fund. The dinner was held in the Radio-TV studio and recorded.
June 13, 1998
00:30 Music starts, wide shot of RTV studio w guests
00:45 Ken Beckley at the lectern, Yoakam sitting at a table to his left
John Gutowsky & Ken covering an IU football game for Yoakam to critique
Beckley says he was describing queen and court at halftime
Yoakam said “Jesus Christ Beckley, I asked you to cover a football game, not a
fashion show.”
02:16 -that ended my sports career
-Ernie Nims, Bill Orwig, and Bill Cameron
03:02 Ernie Nims, at lectern speaking
(Chip Drake in audience)
06:23 (Mary Bob Yoakam in audience)
06:50 (Legene White in audience, she set up the event)
07:30 Legene White at lectern, Dept. of Telecommunications Alumni Affairs
She thanks the alumni committee
09:40 Legene introduces Telecommunications Faculty & staff
10:57 (Margaret Joseph & Barrie Zimmerman in audience)
11:05 (Betsi Grabe & Eric Bucy in audience)
11:40 Legene introduces School of Journalism faculty
(Dan Drew, Will Counts in audience)
14:00 Ernie Nims back at lectern
14:50 Nims talks about sports remote w/ Dwight Smith
-don’t say what you don’t want on air
16:02 Next up are tributes on tape for Yoakam
16:55 Dick Enberg audio tribute to Richard Yoakam
-they both arrived in 1957. Yoakam changed his life
-hanging out at Nick’s
-hero is someone I would like to be
19:30 John “Gordon” Gutowsky, NBC Sportscaster audio tribute
21:10 Jane Pauley video tribute to Yoakam from NBC Time & Again Studio
-she says she started the phrase “bad hair day”
-crazy makeup when she worked at WISH-TV, w/ chroma key
-Thanks to Yoakam for helping her get to NBC New York
23:26 parody video of Bill Clinton honoring Yoakam
24:42 Phil Jones, CBS Correspondent video tribute
-I wouldn’t be at CBS without you
-teacher and even agent, and good friend
26:00 Steve Smith, KHOU TV news anchor in Houston video tribute
-thank you for my career
30:10 Joe Angotti, NBC News, Class of ’61 talking from lectern
-couldn’t make it to Yoakam’s retirement because of Tiannamen Square
32:16 watching “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” movie while a grad student, so Joe had his own
party & invited Dick & Mary Bob Yoakam
-I wish your news judgment was as good as your party judgment
-worked at WMAQ in Chicago. He met Keith Klein there
34:40 Keith Klein, Cook Group PR, talking from lectern, Class of ‘66
-talked about Arnie Hahn (sp ?) who they worked with
-Byron Smith
-Flash documentaries,
(shot of Byron Smith in audience)
39:40 -talking about Adlai Stevenson death and getting a recording
40:45 -Yoakam throws a milkbone at Klein and told him to chew on it.
41:41 talking about Dwight Smith covering Gary mayor race w/ Hatcher
(Dwight Smith in audience)
43:00 Bill Orwig & Ernie Nims doing IU basketball games
44:40 covering Little 500 race w/ telex
45:50 Marilyn Schultz was in the pace car w/ wireless transmitter
But signal got crossed w/ construction crew building library
47:10 Huntley-Brinkley Report -Marilyn Schultz working on newscast
49:00 Marilyn Schultz & Playboy Playmate
49:30 Marilyn Schultz, UT-Austin Professor at lectern for tribute
-got first job at NBC thru Russ Tornabene
-Vietnam war protests. Student shaved his head and had an American flag around
his naked body, Yoakam asked him if he got glasses
51:40 -facts & truth of story aren’t always the same
52:00 Yoakam has always been a technological visionary
-Tell them a story.. no matter what you’re doing
53:30 John Butte, Ohio News Network at lectern for tribute, Class of ‘70
57:03 -looking for files from his Yoakam’s classes for memories
-can’t find his notes
1:00:00 -Yoakam’s stories taught him everything
-news religion -preacher in the church of news
-the stuff of news & journalism
1:02:45 TAPE ENDS -during Butte talk
Marilyn R. Schultz was a pioneer in broadcast journalism, dedicating herself to the fight for women's rights in the industry and, later, to educating future journalists as a college professor.
Schultz, who died in 2010, earned three IU degrees: a bachelor's in radio and television in 1967, a master's in telecommunications in 1990 and a doctorate in mass communication in 1993.
She began her career at NBC News in New York City, where she worked for nine years. Affectionately referring to her by her nickname, "Schultzie," former "NBC Nightly News" anchor Tom Brokaw recalled Schultz's impact on women in journalism in a traditionally male-dominated environment.
"First there was the name — "Schultzie," Brokaw said at the time of Schultz's death. "If that didn't get your attention, her attitude did. Schultzie worked in the newsroom when it was an all-white-male den of machismo, cigar, pipe and cigarette smoke, bawdy manners and profane speech. What everyone quickly learned is that Schultzie didn't need any of those props to hold her own.
"Now our newsrooms are fully integrated, but the first steps so long ago were Schultzie's — and she wasn't tiptoeing then or any time since."
Schultz took on the role of lead plaintiff and spokesperson for a class-action lawsuit representing 700 women against NBC. The suit, which lasted seven years, aimed to bring equal pay and opportunity to women at the company. As a result, more than 1,000 women received back pay, and women gained access to jobs previously unavailable to them.
The Washington Press Club Foundation would later name Schultz one of its 16 "American Women Who Changed the Face of Journalism (1965-1995)."
"It didn't take long to discover that she didn't just talk about changing the culture of NBC News, she acted to bring change about," said Wallace Westfeldt, Schultz's former boss and then-executive producer of NBC News, in 2010.
Schultz moved to Washington, D.C., to work as an on-air reporter for affiliate WRC-TV. There, she covered events such as the 1972 election, the Apollo 12 launch and Watergate.
In 1984, she moved to Indianapolis to work as a producer for NBC affiliate WTHR-TV. There, she covered the Mike Tyson trial and the Ryan White case, among other stories.
In the late '80s, Schultz returned to IU to pursue her master's, and later her doctorate. She accepted her first teaching position at the University of Texas at Austin, where she taught for nine years as an assistant professor and then broadcast journalism head.
From there, she took a position at St. Edward's University in Austin, where she continued to educate students for eight years until the time of her death.
The university established the Marilyn Schultz Memorial Scholarship for students studying media arts.
"Marilyn once said that 'teaching is the most important work I've ever done,' which was obvious from her interactions with her students," said Father Lou Brusatti, then-dean of the School of Humanities at St. Edward's University, in Schultz's obituary. "She was a motivation and inspiration for her students and colleagues."
SPSS is a common data analysis program for work in Social Sciences. It offers a point of access for data cleaning, description, and analyses in a user-friendly manner. Different from programs like R that require coding, SPSS provides a “point and click” interface that allows you to use the program intuitively. Behind the scenes of this “point and click” interface, though, SPSS can provide, generate and execute code FOR YOU, making it an accessible option for researchers aiming to improve transparency and replicability of their analyses. SPSS is a powerful and approachable tool for anyone looking to view, describe, clean, edit, or analyze data with simple to complex statistical analyses.
The goal of this workshop is to provide an accessible, applied, and practical understanding of how to use SPSS. The workshop will begin with a description of the software including a detailed map of how to interact with the software, how to view previously collected data, how to subsect data and create composite variables, and how to create both descriptive visuals of data. We will cover how to execute and interpret various statistical analyses (e.g. ANOVAs, correlations, and regressions). The workshop will include both the point and click method of interacting with SPSS as well as cover how to generate and work with syntax (i.e. SPSS code). Though not required, to make the most of your attendance, arrive with the SPSS software (provided for free for IU faculty, students, and staff) already downloaded.
Fifteen million families’ move each year – and three-fourths of them merely change addresses within the same county. They move because they want a better place to live; they need not only houses or shops or schools but also police, fire protection, sanitation, and many other services that can only be provided by a community. And there are more and more people moving – more and more homes built on what is, after all, only a limited amount of land. This land must be used wisely: a planning engineer, similar to ones called in by communities across the country, describes the problems that a community must deal with when its population increases five-fold in a few years, and mentions some of the steps that are taken to provide for future planning and development. Most important are the procedures taken to stop and reverse the tendency for some areas to turn into slums; the program concludes with a short outline of Federal plans for urban redevelopment, and a plea to the viewer to take more active interest in his city.
Deals with the evils of the one-crop system throughout the tobacco country of the South; then illustrates some of the ways in which the impoverished tobacco farmer can improve his lot by devoting some of his land to raising food crops, using governmental assistance, soliciting the help of local schools in community rehabilitation, and developing a community program to combat malnutrition.
Shows how Sally can, in an emergency, prepare a hot meal quickly, using her mother's ready supply of canned and frozen foods. The narrator emphasizes the correct use of the proper utensils, the time-saving advantage of a modern gas range, and the importance of intelligent marketing.
Describes the arts and crafts of the Bakuba people of the Congo and briefly describes other aspects of their culture. Indicates the probable origin of the Bakuba in northern Africa. Pictures weaving, embroidery, tattooing, and making of statuary. Shows trinkets used to decorate costumes and presents details of the most ornate costume of the hereditary king.
Discusses some of the more common misconceptions about mental illness. Explains why they are incorrect and what the correct version should be. Features Dr. Charles Feuss, Jr., Superintendant of Longview Hospital in Ohio, and Dr. Harry Lederer and Dr. Harold Hiatt, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Cincinnati. [Warning: Features dated, incorrect language]
Norman McLaren uses animation to interpret a modern jazz composition performed by the Oscar Peterson Trio. The slow, quiet middle section, in black and white, is in contrast with the colorful, swift-moving opening and closing sections.
Shows the community of Lantzville, British Columbia, a cross-section of nationalities and industrial groups, with a drab and neglected school. The interest of a school inspector inspires a complete transformation of the physical plant and the teaching. The pupils enter into the plans enthusiastically and accomplish a great deal; as a result they have increased interest and pride in their school.
Pictures the marshy area in England which has been reclaimed for farming purposes. Explains the problems which the people face when the soil dries and shrinks from the foundations of buildings, when they prepare the land for farming, and when they build roads.
Seventh in the "Are You Ready for Service?" series. Compares the experiences and moral behavior of two young men in the Navy. One was prepared for necessary decisions, while the other had no clear picture of himself. The latter becomes one of a group of irresponsible men, eventually becomes disgusted, seeks the help of a steadier acquaintance, and straightens out his problems. Recommends that young men get ready to make any decisions they might meet in new surroundings.
Shows the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and the Indian Government in a cooperative project to control malaria in the Terai district of India. Foreign specialists work with Indian teams making blood tests, spraying homes with DDT, and checking results. Shows the difficulty of winning the confidence of the inhabitants before improvement in the health, work, and lives of the people can result.
Demonstrates how the facilities of a large city library are made available to rural libraries. Shows the library truck from Gary, Indiana, delivering books, pictures, and other materials weekly, free of charge, upon the written request of a small-town librarian. Indicates how such cooperation results in better public service.
Explains that a globe is the best model to represent the shape of the earth. Discusses the change in man's ideas about the shape of the earth from flat, to curved to round to flattened and bulging to pear shaped. Explains the value of rockets and satellites in helping us to learn more about the shape of the earth.
WQED, Tom Coleman, Sam Silberman, Frank Stuckman, Albert B. Martin, Dr. Peter H. Odegard
Summary:
Dr. Peter H. Odegard, head of the political science department at the University of California at Berkeley, delivers the paper he prepared at the time of the inauguration of Edward H. Litchfield as the twelfth chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh. He discusses the role that the universities of the United States must play in the country’s role in the world. He places particular emphasis on the social sciences.
Illustrates various techniques and household arrangements for caring for the convalescent patient at home. Shows ways of arranging the sick room, making the beds, washing and serving the patient, caring for the thermometer, and removing soiled linens. Pictures the distribution of chores among the family members and demonstrates some necessary precautions to prevent the spread of the illness.
Presents an integrative device for the general teaching (as contrasted with the specific speech lesson) of language and speech. Describes the entire pattern as well as attempting a speech correction. Explains the GLGSP framework for making a learning situation for language or speech or both out of every communication between pupil and adult.
Explains how the developing personality of the child is influenced by the manner in which his parents provide for his basic needs and prepare him for social living.
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.
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.
Video bio of Franklin D. Schurz, Jr., inducted to Indiana Broadcast Pioneers Hall of Fame in 2014.
Produced by Scott Leiter & WSBT South Bend;
Franklin D. Schurz, Jr., was the longtime editor and publisher of the South Bend Tribune and owner of WSBT-AM/FM/TV in South Bend, Indiana. He served as general manager of WSBT-AM/FM from 1936-1946 and was editor and publisher of the newspaper from 1954-72. He was chairman of the privately owned Schurz Communications, which at the time of his death in 1987 included the Tribune and WSBT-TV in South Bend as well as television stations in Virginia, Missouri and Georgia, and four cable television systems.
--Words from the Indiana Broadcast Pioneers