C-SPAN 3 TV Schedule
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Charlie Chaplin
1 hour, 14 minutesUniversity of Mary Washington professor Stephen Farnsworth talked about actor Charlie Chaplin and the political dynamics of his films. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's "Great Lives" lecture series in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
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Reel America: "Movies at War" - 1943
21 minutesThis "Film Bulletin" produced by the U.S. Army Signal Corps shows how training, informational, and Hollywood films were distributed by ship, airplane, train, truck, and sometimes camel to theaters during World War II. The film also shows a variety of improvised mobile theaters in Europe and the Pacific and includes scenes from some of the motion pictures shown to U.S. troops.
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Hollywood, Historians & WWII
1 hour, 6 minutesUsing the film "The Best Years of Our Lives," military historian Brian Steed examined Hollywood's role in shaping the nation's response to World War II. The Kansas City Public Library in Kansas City, Mo., hosted this event.
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The Televised Presidency
1 hour, 10 minutesFormer CNN White House correspondent Frank Sesno led a conversation about televised coverage of the White House. He was joined by Clinton White House press secretary Mike McCurry, NBC News senior White House correspondent Kelly O'Donnell, and Martha Kumar, White House Transition Project director.
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Jacqueline Kennedy's 1962 Televised White House Tour
42 minutesFirst lady Jacqueline Kennedy gave Americans a televised tour of the restored White House public rooms on Valentine's Day 1962. A reported 56 million viewers tuned into the CBS broadcast. James Wagner -- John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum exhibits specialist - talked in this virtual program about Mrs. Kennedy's restoration and the tour that captured the nation's imagination.
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Lectures in History: Christian Nightlife in the 1970s
1 hour, 27 minutesCalifornia State University Fullerton professor Eric Gonzaba taught a class about evangelical nightlife and Christian nightclubs in 1970s California.
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Charlie Chaplin
1 hour, 12 minutesUniversity of Mary Washington professor Stephen Farnsworth talked about actor Charlie Chaplin and the political dynamics of his films. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's "Great Lives" lecture series in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
-
Reel America: "Movies at War" - 1943
20 minutesThis "Film Bulletin" produced by the U.S. Army Signal Corps shows how training, informational, and Hollywood films were distributed by ship, airplane, train, truck, and sometimes camel to theaters during World War II. The film also shows a variety of improvised mobile theaters in Europe and the Pacific and includes scenes from some of the motion pictures shown to U.S. troops.
-
Hollywood, Historians & WWII
1 hour, 5 minutesUsing the film "The Best Years of Our Lives," military historian Brian Steed examined Hollywood's role in shaping the nation's response to World War II. The Kansas City Public Library in Kansas City, Mo., hosted this event.
-
The Televised Presidency
1 hour, 11 minutesFormer CNN White House correspondent Frank Sesno led a conversation about televised coverage of the White House. He was joined by Clinton White House press secretary Mike McCurry, NBC News senior White House correspondent Kelly O'Donnell, and Martha Kumar, White House Transition Project director.
-
Jacqueline Kennedy's 1962 Televised White House Tour
42 minutesFirst lady Jacqueline Kennedy gave Americans a televised tour of the restored White House public rooms on Valentine's Day 1962. A reported 56 million viewers tuned into the CBS broadcast. James Wagner -- John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum exhibits specialist - talked in this virtual program about Mrs. Kennedy's restoration and the tour that captured the nation's imagination.
-
Lectures in History: Christian Nightlife in the 1970s
1 hour, 30 minutesCalifornia State University Fullerton professor Eric Gonzaba taught a class about evangelical nightlife and Christian nightclubs in 1970s California.
-
Charlie Chaplin
1 hour, 14 minutesUniversity of Mary Washington professor Stephen Farnsworth talked about actor Charlie Chaplin and the political dynamics of his films. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's "Great Lives" lecture series in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
-
Reel America: "Movies at War" - 1943
22 minutesThis "Film Bulletin" produced by the U.S. Army Signal Corps shows how training, informational, and Hollywood films were distributed by ship, airplane, train, truck, and sometimes camel to theaters during World War II. The film also shows a variety of improvised mobile theaters in Europe and the Pacific and includes scenes from some of the motion pictures shown to U.S. troops.
-
Hollywood, Historians & WWII
1 hour, 5 minutesUsing the film "The Best Years of Our Lives," military historian Brian Steed examined Hollywood's role in shaping the nation's response to World War II. The Kansas City Public Library in Kansas City, Mo., hosted this event.
-
The Televised Presidency
1 hour, 11 minutesFormer CNN White House correspondent Frank Sesno led a conversation about televised coverage of the White House. He was joined by Clinton White House press secretary Mike McCurry, NBC News senior White House correspondent Kelly O'Donnell, and Martha Kumar, White House Transition Project director.
-
Jacqueline Kennedy's 1962 Televised White House Tour
41 minutesFirst lady Jacqueline Kennedy gave Americans a televised tour of the restored White House public rooms on Valentine's Day 1962. A reported 56 million viewers tuned into the CBS broadcast. James Wagner -- John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum exhibits specialist - talked in this virtual program about Mrs. Kennedy's restoration and the tour that captured the nation's imagination.
-
Lectures in History: Christian Nightlife in the 1970s
1 hour, 27 minutesCalifornia State University Fullerton professor Eric Gonzaba taught a class about evangelical nightlife and Christian nightclubs in 1970s California.
-
Charlie Chaplin
1 hour, 13 minutesUniversity of Mary Washington professor Stephen Farnsworth talked about actor Charlie Chaplin and the political dynamics of his films. This talk was part of the University of Mary Washington's "Great Lives" lecture series in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
-
Reel America: "Movies at War" - 1943
23 minutesThis "Film Bulletin" produced by the U.S. Army Signal Corps shows how training, informational, and Hollywood films were distributed by ship, airplane, train, truck, and sometimes camel to theaters during World War II. The film also shows a variety of improvised mobile theaters in Europe and the Pacific and includes scenes from some of the motion pictures shown to U.S. troops.
-
Hollywood, Historians & WWII
1 hour, 5 minutesUsing the film "The Best Years of Our Lives," military historian Brian Steed examined Hollywood's role in shaping the nation's response to World War II. The Kansas City Public Library in Kansas City, Mo., hosted this event.
-
The Televised Presidency
1 hour, 10 minutesFormer CNN White House correspondent Frank Sesno led a conversation about televised coverage of the White House. He was joined by Clinton White House press secretary Mike McCurry, NBC News senior White House correspondent Kelly O'Donnell, and Martha Kumar, White House Transition Project director.
-
Jacqueline Kennedy's 1962 Televised White House Tour
42 minutesFirst lady Jacqueline Kennedy gave Americans a televised tour of the restored White House public rooms on Valentine's Day 1962. A reported 56 million viewers tuned into the CBS broadcast. James Wagner -- John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum exhibits specialist - talked in this virtual program about Mrs. Kennedy's restoration and the tour that captured the nation's imagination.
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Civil Rights Activism
58 minutesFred Gray is a longtime civil rights attorney from Montgomery, Alabama. Some of his notable clients included Martin Luther King, Jr., Rosa Parks, and other participants of the mid-1950's Montgomery bus boycott. He recalled his early career in Alabama and the fight for racial equality. The National Archives Foundation hosted this program and provided the video.
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Lectures in History: Mamie Till-Mobley & Remembering Emmett Till
58 minutesUniversity of Kentucky writing and rhetoric professor Brandon Erby discussed the legacy of Mamie Till-Mobley and her efforts to bring awareness to the 1955 murder of her son Emmett Till. The University of Kentucky is located in Lexington.
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African American Historical Sites
52 minutesBrent Leggs talked about his work to raise funds and awareness for African American historical sites. He is a senior vice president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The Association of African American Museums hosted this event.