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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.
When Susan, who is about eight years old, moves to a new neighborhood, the children invite her to play with them; however her dog Skipper refuses to go along, because he does not like the looks of their dogs. When he falls into some paint, he learns that it is not only looks that count.
Demonstrates the actions of a dog from which the cortex of the brain has been surgically removed. Shows changes in posture, walking, obstacle-meeting, eating, reactivity to stimuli, and conditioned learning. Presents comparisons with a normal dog.
WTHI-TV
Karen Rariden, anchor
George Eisele, reporter
Clinton Indiana is having money problems and the town is looking run down. Ball State University students are unveiling some recommendations on how Clinton can improve the look of the town. People in town are interviewed about what should be done to improve Clinton, including cleaning up downtown buildings, alleys, and streets.
Mike Conway, photographer (his first story as photographer)
WTHI-TV team coverage of tornadoes that went through Central Indiana. Karen Rariden is anchor. First video from Terre Haute area. First package is Mike Conway, reporter/intern, Brian Cundiff, photographer. Video, including aerial shots of Clay County, especially Center Point. Interviews with two people who saw tornado. Second story is from Greg Todd of WRTV about a tornado that hit west of Bloomington in Monroe County.
Conway Library Tape Twelve
Log Sheet/metadata
Tape log from 12/22
PART ONE ---------------
00:10 WTHI Weekend Sports 8/21/83
Anne Ryder, anchor. Mike Conway, sports
MLB
H.S. Football ranking for different classes
PGA -Curtis Strange
LPGA
High Jump record
03:15 WTHI Sports Toss 8/21/83
Anne Ryder, anchor/diver. Mike Conway, sports
03:35 WTHI Promo
Tony Leita promoting WTHI Midday Report
04:10 WTHI Weekend Sports 8/28/83
Nebraska First in College Football
NL East -Pittsburgh Pirates
-in the midst of sportscast, lightening hit the station antenna
5:55 WTHI Weather 8/28/83
Bill Pelletier starts as weekend weather anchor
07:00 Vigo County Home Fundraiser 8/93
Rod Andrews, reporter
Don Morris Band played a fundraising concert at the Vigo County Home
Interview with Mike Leistner, Activities Director for Vigo Co. Home
Interview with Don Morris
-audio issues in story
8:47 WTHI Bloopers
-Chyron problems during Early Morning News -Jann Ingmire
-Camera problems during newscast teases -Anne Ryder/Bob Ramsey/David
Goodnow/Karen Rariden
-Krash Kruis. Pat Kruis & Mike Conway in the front seat when Pat hits the car in front of
her
-Bryce Thomas of WTWO standup problems
-Chris Minor as Kermit the Frog
-Bob Koob having trouble with his standup
-Tired Koob. Marty Joseph & Bob Koob toss.
-WTWO News Open with Johnny Palmer & Debbie Reynolds
-WTWO Handicapped Spot. -Alden Taylor showing how WTWO news car was in a
handicapped parking spot
-Weather sprint. During WTHI weather toss from Bob Koob to Anne Ryder, someone
runs across the studio
-Hazy Dan Day. Dan Day on the phone for a story with an out-of-focus photo of him
while he’s talking to anchor Tony Leita
-Dog problems. Howard Powell is shooting video when a dog approaches him and he
says “back off.”
-Persistent Kid. While Mike Conway is interviewing people for an Easter Egg hunt story,
a little guy is very curious
Late for the Hunt. While the kids are lined up for the Deming Park Easter Egg Hunt,
WTHI photographer Mark Davidson is working on his equipment behind the news
vehicle
-Scotty’s Waterbed commercial with Mark Burnett
16:20 CBS News Anniversary 9/6/83
Dan Rather, reporter
20 year anniversary of expansion of newscast to 30 minutes
-Don Hewitt, interview
-film of Cronkite at start of first 30-minute newscast
Interview with John F. Kennedy
Civil Rights coverage
Eric Sevareid commentaries
18:35 Little 500 Race, Bloomington 4/23/83
Mike Conway, reporter/photographer
Acacia winners
20:45 Bill Pelletier Weather Magic 9/11/83
Trouble with chroma key during WTHI weathercast
21:40 Conway final sportscast 9/11/83
10pm Newscast. Anne Ryder, anchor. Mike Conway, sports, Bill Pelletier, weather
End of Mike Conway’s final sportscast at WTHI before moving to Traverse City, MI
-end of newscast with music
----------
22:30 WGTU/WGTQ Newsource 29&8 Newscast 9/30/83
Bill Wagman, anchor. Johnny Williams, weather
Leelanau Dump
James Watt controversy
Boyne City administrator
Michigan school funding
Michigan Conservation Corps. Idea
Breakup of Bell Telephone system hearing -Jolene Carpenter, reporter
Story Mix-up 10/3/83
Low Vision Clinic at Munson Medical Center -John Ciolino, reporter
Higher Costs for License Plates -Mike Conway, reporter/photographer
PART TWO--------------
00:10 Newsource 29&8 Newscast Open & Lead Story 10/6/83
News Open with Bill Wagman, Johnny Williams, Randy O’Brien
M-31 Acme Road Widening Public Hearing -Mike Conway, reporter/photographer
-expand highway from 2 to 5 lanes
03:15 WDIV-TV Lansing Bureau Tour 7/14/83
Producer Chip Drake
20:00 Newsource 29&8 Weather Segment 10/10/83
Johnny Williams, weathercaster
Hi East Jordan
Tops In Toys commercial
Bill Wagman, anchor
25:55 Moody Blues “Sitting at the Wheel” music video
These are 10 health stories that Marilyn Schultz reported for WRC-TV, the NBC affiliate in Washington, DC and/or for NBC News. These stories are from the 1970s, before she left NBC in 1976.
EARLY EYE TESTS FOR CHILDREN
:30 Importance of early eye tests for children
1:46 Marilyn standup -ends w/ “News 4, Washington
BELLY DANCER
2:10 WRC TV News 4 Insert, “Belly Dancer” Shultz, Health (on title card)
2:10 belly dancing as a healthy exercise
3:40 standup
PRE-SCHOOL & HEAD START
3:58 WRC-TV News 4 Insert, “Pre-Schoolers,” Shultz, Health (on title card)
4:06 Head Start tests
5:17 Marilyn standup
BODY MASSAGE AND EXERCISE FOR RELAXATION
5:37 WRC-TV News 4 Insert, “Body Massage,” Shultz Health (on title card)
5:42 massage and exercise for relaxation
8:26 Marilyn Schultz standup close
CYSTIC FIBROSIS TESTS
8:45 WRC-TV News 4 Insert “Cystic Fibrosis,” Shultz Health (on title card)
8:54 story -testing for cystic fibrosis
9:30 Video of newborns in hospital
10:18 interview w/ doctor
10:34 Marilyn standup close
LOSING WEIGHT BY WIRING MOUTH SHUT
10:55 WRC-TV News 4 Insert “Wired Mouth,” Shultz-Health
11:06 story -wiring mouth shut to cut down on eating
-woman wants to lose 100 pounds
12:14 Marilyn standup close (ends w/ NBC News Washington)
RED CROSS VOLUNTEERS
12:37 WRC-TV News 4 Insert “Red Cross,” Shultz, Health (on title card)
12:46 Red Cross story
-volunteers drive people to their doctor appointments
-Red Cross needs more volunteers to drive people to their appointments
13:57 Marilyn Schultz standup close
HOSPITAL FLOWERS HEALTH ISSUE?
14:12 WRC-TV News 4 Insert “Hospital Flowers,” Shultz, Health (on title card)
14:30 story -do hospital flowers cause health issues when in hospital room?
16:06 Marilyn standup close
UTERINE CANCER
16:22 WRC-TV News 4 Insert “Uterine Cancer,” Shultz, Health (on title card)
16:34 story
-new machine to check for cancer
-interview with doctor
-Marilyn reverse question
17:45 Marilyn standup close (NBC, Washington)
HOSPITAL BURN UNIT
18:08 WRC-TV News 4 Insert “Burn Unit,” Shultz, Health (on title card)
18:20 story – video of patient in burn unit
-many are victims of drinking/smoking in bed
-graphic film of burned skin
20:24 Marilyn standup bridge in scrubs
"There's No Place Like Kansas" weekly feature
KAKE-TV, Wichita-Hutchinson
Mike Conway, reporter/photojournalist
Profile of 91-year-old Frances Brownlee of Stafford County, KS. She has been writing a weekly column for the Stafford Courier newspaper for decades. She writes about the town that her family helped found, Zenith, KS, as well as the view outside her window.
She writes her weekly column at a diner in Stafford each week. She also visits the people who live at the Leisure Homestead Nursing Home. They rely on here weekly columns to keep up with what is happening in Zenith and Stafford County, KS.
WTHI-TV, Karen Rariden anchor
Anne Ryder, reporter
Sullivan County Highway Department workers on strike. Interview with striking worker Randy Putoff. The strikers are camping across the street from Highway Dept. County says it will start hiring to replace strikers the next week.
Dumpsters are all full of trash to residents are told to take their trash to the dump.
Mike Conway, photographer
Presents the principles to be followed in completing a medical verification of death. This film also demonstrates how diagnosis entered on the death certificate influences statistics commonly used in planning public health programs and medical research.
Presents a political history of Japan from its early autocracy to the formation of its democratic government under the direction of the U. S. in 1945. Explains how Japan operates on two levels politically--outwardly it is a democracy, but beneath lies a spirit still predominantly authoritarian, expressed in bitter antagonism between the political parties. | Presents a political history of Japan from its early autocracy to the formation of its democratic government under the direction of the United States in 1945. Explains how Japan operates politically--outwardly as a democracy, but the dominant "domestic" spirit is authoritarian.
Uses scenes from Japanese narrative scrolls of the 12th, 13th, and 14th centuries to tell the story of an innocent man, unjustly accused of a capital crime, who wins his vindication. The spoken text is derived from authentic sources, and original music provides the backgrounds.
Mr. Mikami teaches the art of drawing a human figure using the Japanese equivalent of a “baby sitter” as an example. The figure he draws is a young Japanese girl carrying a small baby on her back. She carries a rattle in her hand to amuse the child and wears a long kimono, Japanese zori sandals, and delicate hair ornaments.
This is a legend about the sun goddess – on whom the world depends for light – who became angered and hid in a celestial cave and refused to shed her light on the world. A rooster’s crow, a fire and a big mirror were used to lure her from her cave. Mr. Mikami illustrates the story with a brush painting of a rooster.
Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., Lawrence K. Frank
Summary:
Contrasts the various parental attitudes toward children's questions, and shows the effects on a child's personality of interest and concern about his questions, or a negative, rejecting attitude on the part of parents. Demonstrates typical reactions to children's questions about death, birth, illness, and policeman on the corner.
Historical documentary about living in Indianapolis, Indiana in the 1950s
Written and Produced by Dave Stoelk;
Executive Producer: Michael Atwood;
Videographer: Tim Swartz;
Associate Producer: Amy Sterner;
Original Music Composed and Produced: Tim Brickley;
Chief Editor: Andrew Birkhead;
Narrated by Mike Ahern;
Associate Producers: Marshall Curry, Rick Maultra & Melissa Lingwall Swartz;
Post Production: Mark O. Bradley & David Tarr;
Videography: Frank Konermann & Sean Murphy Gilson;
Production Coordinator: David DeMunbrun;
Film Logging/Research: Kurt Christopher;
Visual Research: Deborah Markisohn & Pete Bailey;
Primary Research: Amy Sterner & Marshall Curry;
Film Transfer: Tom Barker;
Director of Photography: Karl L. Hall Koch;
Dolly Grip: Tom Pielemeier;
Assistant Director: Kent Smith;
Audio/Rear Screen: Rodney Myers;
Production Assistance: John O'Connor, Erik A.D. Sears, Bob Gill & Melissa Nash
----------
Indy in the 50s
Video (2:00:43)
Notes by Jessica VanAllen
Synopsis: This video is a a special narrated by Mike Ahern about Indianapolis in the fifties. We learn about the good and bad things that happened in the era after WWII, focusing on suburban life, segregation, youth, and technology.
0:03 video starts, montage of clips and interviews about Indianapolis
1:45 before the 50s, starts with clips and info about the motor speedway before it became famous, explains what life was like in Indy after the Great Depression and during WWII
3:27 moves into the 50s, Mike Ahern introduces special
4:45 mayor of Indy in the 50s talking to audience,
*5:07 goal and idea of the 50s and what the veterans wanted to come home to, veterans wanted to move out of small apartments, people couldn’t afford homes, suburban housing started up, assembly line of building
9:13 G.I. bill of rights, veterans could buy a house with no down payment
10:03 suburbia was colorful and bright, unlike the gray, drab city
10:45 jobs for veterans, General Motors, AT&T sets up shop in Indy, industry and jobs made out of farmland, farms become factories, Chrysler, telephones, growth in business industry and jobs, technology and suburbia, shopping malls
*16:23 problems in the 50s, segregation, not able to live in the Suburbs (deliberately blocked or didn’t have money), lived in the inner city
*17:58 polio in Indy, Eli Lilly rushes vaccines over the world, based in Indy
18:50 motor speedway
20:04 Michael Atwood and Jim Gerard talk
28:43 cars, functional and stylish, promised a new personality, built to look pretty
30:45 baby boomers, high school in the 50s
34:50 all Black high school, Attucks, more qualified and impressive teachers
36:13 teenagers defined themselves by their appearance, fashion became a big thing, clothes become a status symbol
38:38 after school activities, drive in, cruising
43:30 Butler sectional, event of the year, excused absence from school
45:00 Attucks high school competed in 1955, used to not be allowed to play against other schools because they were Black, they dominated against the other schools, Oscar Robertson
50:00 Atwood and Gerard talk again, trying to sell VHS tapes of the show
58:51 Cold War, fear of nuclear bombs, 1956 Nixon comes to Indy, Indy was on the home front of the Cold War, chapter founded at American Civil Liberties Union, leaning towards communist views, American Legion protests
1:01:25 Edward R Murrow does documentary on the issue, controversy over communism in Indy
1:03:58 summer in Indy, pools, skating, rollercoasters, baseball, hoola hoops
1:06:11 Indy 500, Jimmy Bryan
1:11: 38 first television broadcast was about Indy 500, TV comes to Indy, jobs created, WTTV
1:15:25 Debbie Drake, exercise, Kindergarten College
*1:16:08 all local television live, Howard Caldwell talks about TV in the 50s
1:17:10 Gilbert Forbes, Howard Caldwell, Bill Crawford
1:17:55 Indy radio, “Bouncin” Bill Baker
1:20:20 Atwood and Gerard talk again
1:29:13 Rock n Roll, Elvis, pressed his albums, Bill Baker got calls from Elvis, new style of music, jazz (Indiana Avenue)
1:35:05 downtown Indy, the circle, transportation, shopping, L.S. Ayres and Co.
1:45:27 away from downtown, Ayres in Glendale, everything moves to the suburbs, Castleton (population was 258 in the 50s)
1:47:52 the end, credits start
Website clips:
[Text Wrapping Break]
This clip was interesting to me because it explains the goal of many veterans when they returned home from war: to buy a house, get a job, and start a family.
5:07 IC: “I think there existed in the minds of many people…”
8:06 OC: “their next door neighbor… and their next door neighbor”
[Text Wrapping Break]
This segment talks about the main problems during the fifties, focusing on segregation and polio. It puts the era that Caldwell started to make a name for himself into focus.
16:23 IC: “The American dream came true…”
18:18 OC: “all over the world”
[Text Wrapping Break]
We learn about television in the fifties. Caldwell talks about his experience, and Ahern explains the early days of broadcasting in Indy, with Gilbert Forbes, Caldwell, and Bill Crawford.
1:16:08 IC: “Until channel 8 got ahold…”
1:17:46 OC: “come back and do the late weather”
Conway Library Tape 26
November-December 1985
Log Sheet/metadata
Tape log from 2/23
00:10 WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News “No Time to Lose” Promo 12/85, Richard Penner
00:55 WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News Christmas Promo 12/85
Al Balcom, MC, Sandy Patton, Doug Gealey, Barbara Kerr, Steve SAckman, D’aun Walker, Pat Cantrell, Tom Reardon, Kenny Allen, Mary Ellicott, Carl Day, Pat Hiatt, Valerie
Galloway, Dan Suffoletto, Russ Larish, Steve Ross, Bill Hardert, Judi Dorsey, Darrell
Hunter, Bob Barnes, Rajean Campbell, Lori Webster, Jerry Kaye, Mary Estridge, Chris Roberts,
01:56 Holiday Giving 12/18/85 (2:35)
WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News, Carl Day-anchor, Mike Conway-reporter, Dan Cavins-photog
WDTN-TV Food for Friends, -Donna Jordan
Dayton ‘celebrities’ holiday song -Holiday Aid, Steve Tatone, car dealer “Let Them
Shine”
Salvation Army -Paul Satterlee, Kipra Hollee-emergency aid
04:37 Newscast Open & Perrine Body Found 12/23/85 (6:50)
WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News, Carl Day-anchor, Frank Lemen-weather, Don Brown-sports
Lyle Stieg -live shot at coroner’s office. Mary Perrine disappeared from Dayton Mall
Body found in a sewer
Mike Conway-reporter background on her disappearance
11:51 Hignite at Newport Hostage Scene (:50)
WLWT-TV, live shot with John London & Steve Forrest & end of newscast
Andy Hignite was near where shots were fired
13:00 NBC News Today Show 1985 Review 12/31/85 (5:20)
Bryant Gumbel, Jane Pauley
Reagan 2nd Term
South Africa
Reagan’s Star Wars project -Soviet Summit
Philly MOVE bombing fire
18:35 Noises in the Night -The Bears 12/1/85 (2:56)
WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News, Mike Conway-reporter, Dan Cavins-photographer
Adrian Belew, Rob Fetters, Gilly's
21:30 Rex Electronics Holiday Sale commercial (:30)
Gary McGill, voice over, VCR sales
22:08 New Year’s Resolutions 1/1/86 (1:50)
WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News, Carl Day-anchor
Mike Conway-reporter, Russ Larish-photographer
Joe Smith & Barbara Kerr w/ New Year’s Eve countdown
Interview with Bob Burtner on giving up smoking
24:10 Survival Game (2:30)
Andy Hignite feature, Warren County
Paintball, Mike Conway-reporter
26:37 Noises in the Night -Boys from Indiana 1/20/86 (3:03)
WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News –Joan Greig-anchor, Mike Conway-reporter, Dan Cavins-photog
Canal St. Tavern
Bluegrasss band is from Milan, Indiana
29:40 Shuttle Explosion -Rowley 1/28/86 (2:00)
as it ran on NBC’s A-2 news feed
Mike Conway-reporter, Richard Penner-photographer
James Rowley, semi-finalist for Teacher in Space program
31:45 NBC News Special Report -Shuttle Explosion 1/28/86 (2:18)
Tom Brokaw-anchor
Mike Conway-reporter, Richard Penner-photographer
James Rowley, semi-finalist for Teacher in Space program
34:04 Shuttle Explosion -Teacher followup 1/29/86 (1:28)
Mike Conway, reporter
As featured on NBC News A-2 feed
35:04 Talkback Problems with Johnny Walker
WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News
35:50 John Cougar Mellencamp “Jack & Diane” video (4:15)
40:25 John Cougar Mellencamp “Small Town” video (3:42)
44:12 Shuttle Explosion -James Rowley 1/28/86 (1:52)
Re-edit, the best version
Mike Conway-reporter, Richard Penner-photographer
James Rowley, runner-up for Teacher in Space program
46:20 James Rowley on the Today Show 1/30/86 (6:12)
Jane Pauley interviews James Rowley with WKEF-TV footage
Robert Foerster, Lafayette, IN, one of ten finalists for Teacher in Space
52:30 Myrtle Tree Baptist Church Fire Folo 11/3/85 (1:32)
(on earlier tape, still video problems at start)
Champaign County
54:15 Noises in the Night -John Cougar Mellencamp 2/1/86 (2:26)
Mike Conway-reporter, Dan Cavins-photographer
WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News
Scarecrow tour, Hara Arena
56:49 Noises in the Night -The Reducers 2/26/85 (2:34)
Mike Conway-reporter, Dan Cavins-photographer
WKEF-TV, 22 Alive News
59:44 Unclaimed Funds 2/26/86 (1:59)
Mike Conway-reporter
Flying Lizards version of “Money”
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Examines a series of routine conflict situations faced by a college student. Defines and analyzes emotional conflict according to four general classifications: approach-approach, avoidance-avoidance, approach-avoidance, and double approach-avoidance. Uses white rats in a maze to illustrate these types of conflict and relates each type in terms of human behavior.
Executive Producer: William Neal;
Supervising Producers: Andreas Kamomemberg & Gretchen Goldsmith;
Producer: Christopher Hines;
Segment Producer: Jennifer L. Paulson;
Associate Producer: Cara Casey;
Production Assistant: Ava Truitt;
Avid Editors: Andy Jones & Jan Jamotta;
Assistant Editor: Bobby Carter;
Online Editor: Cameron Coulter;
Post Production Supervisor: Grace Reamo;
Director of Production: Joanne Bornstein;
Production Coordinator: heidi Miller;
Script Consultant: Charles Winecoff;
Talent Executive: Eileen Bradley;
Rights and Clearances: Nikolaus Hoffman;
Researcher: kerrin Kuhn;
EFP Camera: Aaron Sonego, Stacey Dillon & Oscar Delgado;
EFP Audio: Don Mann & Mark Michael;
EFP Audio: Dan Russell;
Smoke Editor: Daryl Fredericks;
On-Air Design: Catherine L. White & Angela Devore;
Narrated by: Kieran Mulroney
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.
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
Presents some of the ways in which psychologists are studying the growth and development of personality and emotional behavior in children as observed in the laboratory of Dr. Robert Sears at Stanford University. Explores the interaction between parental behavior and attitudes and the emotional development of children.
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.
Illustrates the variety of environments in which plants survive, and shows adaptations developed by various plants for survival and reproduction within their own environment. The role of man as a mediator of environment is shown as he modifies living conditions of plants, and then must provide protection for them. The viewer is encouraged to search for adaptations in the plant world around him.
Pictures the work of Dr. B. F. Skinner and his associates at Harvard University Psychology Laboratories in studying animal behavior and indicates the application of principles learned to the design of teaching machines to be used in increasing human learning efficiency.
Dr. B.F. Skinner and R.J. Herrnstein demonstrate how to measure the learning and conditioning process.
Compares the nervous systems of the hydra and earthworm with the complexity of the human nervous system. Details the physiology of the reflex arc and explains the activities of certain brain centers. Pictures laboratory experiments in which the encephalograph is used and explains its functions. Shows application of knowledge to actual techniques in brain surgery.
This film takes a dramatic yet comedic look at what makes Indiana University graduates winners: faculty, facilities, courses, and the IU experience. Also discusses how technology can help graduates keep moving and keep advancing in the workplace.
In this program, criminologist Joseph D. Lohman outlines probation as a special alternative to the criminal-making influences of the prison system, stating that probation can effectively replace detention; although it is considered in the public mind as a form of leniency and improperly administered it becomes “beating the rap.” Two men with criminal experience are interviewed to illustrate this alternative. Meeker and Lohman delve into the necessary requirements to make probation an instrument for controlling criminal behavior and if its potentialities for reclaiming those who have strayed outside the social role are to be used to the fullest extent.
This program explores the man-machine relationship through the research of Paul Fitts, Julian Christiansen, and George Briggs. It examines how humans handle and process information, as well as the challenges of information feedback between people and machines. The program also looks at human behavior within complex man-machine systems and how insights from these studies have influenced the redesign of equipment to better match human capabilities. The research highlights the dynamic interaction and adjustment between human users and technological systems.
This film describes the origin and growth of glaciers; surveys the work of glaciologists in trying to understand the structure of ice and its importance in the study of climatology, meteorology, and geology. Included are scenes of glaciologists at work in Antarctica, Greenland, Alaska, Washington, and on Mt. Kenya.
Illustrates, using animation and live-action photography, man's efforts to learn more about the structure of the earth through study of deep mine shafts, deep wells, volcanoes, and earthquakes. Describes early theories of the earth's structure and the present world-wide efforts to discover more about its structure. Points out means scientists use to study earthquakes, how this study contributes to an explanation of the structure of the earth's interior, and the use of explosion seismology to produce artificial earthquakes. The intense heat of the earth's interior is evidenced in volcanic eruptions, geysers, and bubbling mud. The plan for placing a seismograph on the moon and the "Mohole Project'' are briefly discussed.
Emphasizes that the expert worrier should talk about his troubles to only two people--his doctor or his psychiatrist or psychologist. Notes that expert worriers are more intelligent than the average person, but they must be shown that manifestations of worry originate in themselves. (Explains the differences between a psychologist, psychiatrist, and psychoanalyst. Sums up the worry emotion in terms of physical activities, their causes, and means of correction. (Hofstra College & WPIX) Kinescope.
Shows the pre-game and half-time maneuvers of the Indiana University Marching Band during two of the 1960 home football games. The band is seen in pre-game activities for the Marquette game and the half-time activities at the Northwestern game. Depicts the combined high school bands' performance during the 1960 Band Day.
Demonstrates the operation and care of the Victor 16mm sound projector. Shows in detail the steps in assembling and threading the projector, demonstrates the 10-hour cleaning procedure for the film track and the optical and sound systems, illustrates the changing of projection lamps, and shows the 100-hour lubrication procedure. Depicts the instruction manual as an audio-visual tool.
Mary L. De Give, Margaret Cussler, Social Documentary Films
Summary:
Shows the Hopi Indian as a farmer, herder, craftsman, and trader. Pictures how difficult it is for him to live on the desert, especially with some of the government controls. Gives the Indian a chance to speak about his problems in education, place in American society, and means of making a living.
Discusses and shows with charts the female and male reproductive organs and explains their functions. Discusses the role of hormones in sexual maturation and in the processes of ovulation and fetal development.
Discusses and shows the wide variety of creatures who inhabit the seashore. Explains how they are adapted to the environment in which they make their homes. Presents filmed sequences of the sand flea, clam, sea hare, snail, many kinds of crabs, and other seashore creatures.
This film shows excerpts from the three-day subcommittee hearings on patent medicine, antitrust, and prescription drug laws. The bill before Congress, number S-1552, Drug Industry Antitrust Act, is shown through the eyes of the drug industry, although both sides of the issue of overpricing is shown
Fifth in the "Are You Ready for Service?" series. Illustrates the great demands on physical strength and endurance in the service, and recommends that young men in high school consider how much time they have to get ready. Suggests a complete physical examination, having defects remedied if possible, taking tests of physical performance, and planning toward physical fitness with a program of activities.
Through free expression art activities, a teacher shows how children think, feel, and develop in a year at a Japanese school. Selects pupils from a first-grade class and traces their personality growth and development as it relates to their home life and social-school environment. Indicates that personal problems and predispositions influence the types and variety of children's artistic creations. Illustrates how children can be encouraged to remove deeply rooted fears through art activity and social participation.
Explains the effects of lenses on light, and shows the construction and use of a lens. Pictures the types of images formed by convex and concave lenses when an object is placed at varying distances from the lens. Shows the use of lenses in cameras, microscopes, and telescopes.
Pictures American folk singers in various parts of the country and discusses briefly the development of folk music here. Peter Seeger is shown singing and playing his banjo in a city setting, and then other singers, including mountaineers, sharecroppers, migratory workers, African-Americans, and railroad builders, are shown.
One in a series, this film takes a look at creativity as it is exhibited by children with hearing deficits. Each child reads a set of instructions for a creative activity, and each child interprets the instructions differently. Creativity has been defined as responses to the Circles Subtest of the MINNESOTA TEST OF CREATIVITY developed by Dr. E. Paul Torrance.
Depicts the five major groups of algae, showing growth, movement, reproduction, and nutritional patterns. Describes the tremendous size range of algae from the giant kelp to the minute forms found in a drop of pond water. Discusses the evolutionary development and the economic and ecological importance of the algae.
Presents a record of the successful experiments in resuscitating dead animals conducted at the Institute of Experimental Physiology and Therapy at Veronezh, U.S.S.R., by Dr. S. S. Bryukhonenko. The Institute makes use of apparatus called the "autojector" to carry out the functions of the heart and lungs, and years of pioneering in the technique of resuscitation are climaxed in the sequence showing reanimation of a dog that has been killed. Recommended for use only by individuals or groups professionally concerned with the advancement of science.
Discusses the care of the mother after delivery and demonstrates exercises designed to aid the mother in rapid and thorough recovery. Points out the changes which occur in the mother's body and emphasizes her needs for rest and for proper diet.
Shows the variety of ways animals obtain food and their different types of digestive cavities--fully closed, one opening, and two openings. Examines digestive organs in an earthworm, grasshopper, frog, cat, and bird. Looks at peristalsis in a dog's stomach and the action of the villi in a pigeon's small intestine.
Demonstrates the operation and care of the RCA 400 16mm sound projector. Presents detailed instructions for setting up the Junior and Senior models and for initial adjustment, threading, operating, rewinding, and packing up projectors. Demonstrates the cleaning and lubrication procedures for the two projectors and the replacement of tubes in the amplifier section.
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.
Shows excerpts from four tests: two six-year olds (I.Q.s 104 and 156) and two ten-year-olds (I.Q.s 100 and 80). Indicates techniques of rapport and standardized administration. Concepts and computation of M.A. and I.Q. presented in detail. An introduction to Stanford-Binet; not intended to teach competent administration.
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.
Shows scenes of Indiana state parks during the various seasons. Stresses the facilities available for camping, boating, fishing, hiking, studying nature, horseback riding, picnicking, and participating in individual and group games. Includes sequences on Clifty Falls, Spring Mill, McCormick's Creek, Shakamak, Dunes, Brown County, and Pokagon State Parks. Describes the early development of the park system and its role in the conservation of Hoosier wildlife.
Explains the set-up and operation of the Kodak Pageant motion picture projector. Shows proper placement of components for effective use, threading, focusing, and centering the picture on the screen. Shows techniques for rewinding, forward and reverse opertion, cleaning, and lamp replacement.
Uses photomicrography and time-lapse sequences to reveal the research technique of nuclear transplantation. Shows how nuclei are transplanted from donor body cells into activated eggs.
This is the story of a little girl no bigger than a thumb who is carried away from her home by a frog to be the bride of the frog's son. Thumbelina escapes from the Frog with the help of a rabbit. Mrs. Mouse takes Thumbelina into her home to keep house. Thumbelina finds a bird whose wing is broken and nurses him back to health. When Mrs. Moose decides that Thumbelina should marry Mr. Mole, the bird carries the little girl back to her mother. Mr. Mole then decides to marry Mrs. Mouse. Marionettes are used to tell this all-time favorite.
Uses newsreel footage to outline the important events preceding the Second World War. Explains Stalin's efforts to build his personal image. Reviews the non-aggression pact signed with the German Reich. Discusses the German invasion of Russia and the joining of the Allies by the U.S.S.R. Tells how Stalin maneuvered at Teheran, Yalta, and Potsdam to make the best possible terms for the Communists. Concludes with Russia's continued build-up of strength and influence throughout the world.
Discusses such topics as superstitions about birth marks and deformities, how to relieve morning sickness, changes in clothing, and how to relax and rest. Contains suggestions for relieving constipation, shortness of breath, and dizziness as they effect the expectant mother.
Uses drawings and dissected specimens to compare the nervous systems in hydra, planaria, earthworms, and grasshoppers and shows the response of a paramecium, euglena, amoeba, hydra, and planaria to stimuli. Points out the spinal cord, spinal nerves, and parts of the brain in a freshly dissected pig and makes comparisons between the parts of the brain in frogs, birds, cats, and humans. Illustrates through still and animated drawings the basic elements of the neuron and the pathway of the nerve impulse during a reflex arc.
Discusses and demonstrates the laboratory procedures involved in the production of a 16mm, color, sound film. Follows the camera original film and a quarter inch audio tape through the following procedures: processing the original, dubbing the sound to 16mm magnetic film, making a work print, and edge numbering the original and the work print. Observes the edited work print and magnetic sound track going through the processes of conforming, transferring to optical sound, and color balancing in order to make the composite answer print.
Uses drawings and real photography to depict the origin and nature of the Hawaiian Islands. Shows a recent eruption of Mauna Loa Volcano and indicates how rain, wind, and the ocean have transformed the islands into fertile regions over the centuries.
Reviews, through documentary scenes taken from the National Archives, the historic events which led to the entry of the United States into World War II. Records the failure of the League of Nations to take strong action against the aggressive acts of Japan, Italy, and Germany. Highlights the war of nerves, the successive Axis aggression, U.S. Neutrality Acts, the various agreements and pacts, and the declaration of war by England, France, and the United States.
Documentary of events leading to United States entry to World War II. Different stages through which American public opinion passed as events in Europe took place are described.
Outlines the work of Dr. Howard Kendler, Dr. Tracy Kendler, Dr. Spence, Dr. Harlow, and Dr. Skinner, in exploring the different strategies employed in developing new theoretical concepts about man's ability to learn. Shows how the work of these men has influenced methods of instruction in schools and colleges.
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.