{"response":{"docs":[{"id":"aar_wsfa_1312","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D179.0002","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1968"],"dcterms_description":["The following segments are included: 0:00:01: Perry Hooper announcing his candidacy for the U.S. Senate during a press conference on March 1, 1968. Hooper, a Republican, was running for the seat that would be vacated by Lister Hill when he completed his term in office; Democrat James Allen ultimately won the seat. 0:02:07: Meeting of the Delegate Assembly of the Alabama State Teachers Association at Alabama State College on March 2, 1968. Bob Inman introduces the segment, which also includes footage of ASTA president Robert E. Lawson and Alabama State College president Levi Watkins addressing the group. Subjects discussed include a possible teachers' strike in Alabama and an ongoing strike in Florida; a resolution calling for a special legislative session to appropriate additional funds to education; and issues affecting schools in the state, such as inadequate funding, stressful working conditions, and faculty shortages. 0:06:21: Interview with ASTA president Robert E. Lawson during a meeting of the Delegate Assembly of the Alabama State Teachers Association at Alabama State College on March 2, 1968. He discusses two resolutions passed by the organization during the meeting: one expressing the organization's support for an ongoing teachers' strike in Florida, and another calling for a special session of the legislature to increase funding for education in the state. 0:08:39: Interview with ASTA executive secretary Joe Reed during a meeting of the Delegate Assembly of the Alabama State Teachers Association at Alabama State College on March 2, 1968. He discusses the organization's intention to ask the federal government to investigate hiring discrimination in local school systems: \"In most cases our school boards have refused to hire Negroes in these positions, yet they're using Federal money. As you know, Title I, I believe operates more directly under the State Department of Education, and, of course, our delegates are rather concerned about the fact that this discrimination continues to exist. And, of course, you know that we have discrimination in the State Department of Education, also. In fact, they still have their staff segregated, so we're going to take a survey, and we're going to find out all local school systems which are discriminating, and we're going to ask the federal government to investigate every one of them and if necessary then we'll take some more action.\" 0:09:22: George Wallace at Dannelly Field in Montgomery during his 1968 presidential campaign. Seymore Trammell is with him. 0:09:41: Mary Grice, Democratic candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives, expressing her support of George Wallace in the 1968 presidential election. In particular, she challenges Congressman Bill Dickinson (the incumbent Republican against whom the winner of the Democratic primary would run), to support Wallace should the House be called upon to decide the president, as per the terms of the 12th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution: \"With George Wallace a strong candidate for president, the American people, by their vote, may throw the presidential race into the House of Representatives. I here and now pledge my vote to George Wallace. Our incumbent Republican congressman has already announced he'll run again. I challenge him to make this same pledge of support to the people of Alabama. Will he support George Wallace? Or will he vote like the Republican Party line in Washington tells him to?\" 0:10:28: Auction for the Hotel Albert in Selma, Alabama, on January 15, 1968. The Albert Hotel Company, which already owned the land on which the structure sat, purchased the building for $10,077. (The hotel was demolished in June 1968.) 0:11:43: U.S. Civil Rights Commission hearing at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery on April 29, 1968. The theme of the hearings, which were held over a five-day period, was the economic status of African Americans citizens in the Black Belt counties of Alabama. Those presiding on the panel are Robert S. Rankin, Frankie M. Freeman, John A. Hannah (chairman), Eugene Patterson (vice chairman), William L. Taylor (staff director), Howard A. Glickstein (general counsel), and Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh. Among the witnesses are Reverend Daniel Harrell Jr. of Camden, Alabama (at 0:13:17), and Harold Culmer, attorney from Commission's office of general counsel (at 0:14:52). A map hanging on the wall is titled, \"Nonwhite Population of Alabama As Percent of Total Population By County: 1960.\" 0:15:48: Interview with Governor Albert Brewer at the airport in Charleston, South Carolina, on June 16, 1968, after his arrival there for the Southern Governors' Conference. 0:16:46: Governor Albert Brewer speaking at press conference at the State Highway Department Auditorium on July 10, 1968. He discusses recent fish kills on the Tombigbee River; the state's upcoming sesquicentennial in 1969; and a hearing about school desegregation in Barbour County , which was conducted by U.S. District Judge Frank M. Johnson on July 9: \"I have expressed my concern many times about the efforts of plaintiffs and cases which are pending in courts in Alabama . . . both the federal courts and uh and the three judge panel, about following the Supreme Court decision and what we know as the Kent County case, in doing away with freedom of choice and requiring something in lieu of it, such as mandatory attendance zones. I think our opinion to as stated to you at a press conference a month ago was in line with the testimony according to the news reports taken in judge Johnson's Court yesterday, to the effect that mandatory attendance zones would destroy the public school system in Alabama because the people are simply not going to participate, have their children attend school under these conditions.\" 0:20:34: Senator Tom Radney speaking in July 1968 about the Alabama Legislative Council's upcoming study of Alabama Public Service Commission. 0:22:05: Dr. Levi Watkins, president of Alabama State College, discussing enrollment at the school during a committee meeting or hearing in July 1968. (The nature of the meeting is unclear, but it could be related to either the college's efforts to block the construction of the Auburn University branch in Montgomery, or Watkins's role on the Alabama Education Study Commission's Task Force I.) 0:23:11: Governor A. Brewer speaking about state budget surpluses during his weekly press conference on October 2, 1968, just after the start of the new fiscal year. 0:26:19: Governor A. Brewer announcing state employee pay raises during a press conference on October 3, 1968. Also present is Frank Cox, president of the Alabama State Employees Association. 0:28:13: Dr. Frank Rose, president of the University of Alabama, speaking at a press conference on May 10, 1968. He discusses a major fundraising initiative (\"STRIDE\") to expand the facilities and programs at the school's campuses in Tuscaloosa, Birmingham, and Huntsville. 0:29:51: Interview with Bob Vance, chairman of the state Democratic party in May 1968. He discusses low voter turnout for the Democratic primaries on May 7, as well as candidates who will head to run-offs in the major races. 0:32:41: Interviews with Bernard Reynolds and an unidentified representative of the Southwest Alabama Farmers Cooperative in Selma in March 1968. They discuss federal loans that SWAFCA had received from the Office of Economic Opportunity and the Farmers Home Administration, as well as an investigation of the organization that Reynolds had requested from the General Accounting Office. 0:34:12: Report by WSFA-TV's Bob Inman about the Democratic primary in Selma on March 5, 1968. Included are interviews with Mayor Joe Smitherman, who defeated Reverend L. L. Anderson and another candidate to secure the nomination (ultimately winning reelection in the August general election); Marius J. \"Ace\" Anderson, a local disc jockey (formerly of WRMA in Montgomery) and city council candidate headed to a run-off election on April 2; and Luther Pepper, Anderson's white opponent for city council (who ultimately won). Inman's questions and report focus on the significance of race in the election: \"There is one thing that yesterday's voting in Selma did show, and that's the fact that whites are still voting for whites, and Negroes, for the most part, are still voting for Negroes. Negro candidates in Selma and elsewhere in the South are going to continue to have a hard time getting elected where negro voters are in the minority, but the signs of change are there. The hard lines of block voting are beginning to dim and possibly in the not too distant future, Negro voters will decide that for the time being at least block voting is not the answer to their problems.\" 0:38:51: Interview by WSFA-TV's Bob Inman with city council candidate Marius J. \"Ace\" Anderson after the Selma Democratic primary on March 5, 1968. They discuss the Dallas County Voters League's support of incumbent mayor Joe Smitherman over of Reverend L. L. Anderson, a local civil rights leader whom Martin Luther King Jr. endorsed."],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D179, Item 0002"],"dcterms_subject":["University of Alabama","African Americans--Civil rights","African Americans--Education","African Americans--Employment","Airports","Business","College administrators","Education","Governors--Alabama","Hotels","Journalists","Judges","Lawyers","Legislators--Alabama","Mayors--Alabama--Selma","Political campaigns","Political science","Race relations--Alabama","School integration","Voting","Selma (Ala.)","Dallas County (Ala.)","Montgomery (Ala.)","Montgomery County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D179.0002"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/1312"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["color films (visual works)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Anderson, Marius J.","Brewer, Albert P., 1928-2017","Culmer, Harold","Freeman, Frankie M.","Glickstein, Howard A. (Howard Alan), 1929-","Grice, Mary Younelle, 1930-2015","Hannah, John A., 1902-1991","Harrell, Daniel, Jr.","Hesburgh, Theodore M. (Theodore Martin), 1917-2015","Hooper, Perry Oliver, 1925-2016","Inman, Bob, 1920-","Lawson, Robert E.","Patterson, Eugene","Pepper, Luther P.","Radney, John Thomas, 1932-2011","Rankin, Robert S. (Robert Stanley), 1899-1976","Reed, Joe L.","Reynolds, Bernard","Rose, Frank Anthony, 1920-1991","Smitherman, Joseph T., 1929-2005","Taylor, William L.","Trammell, Warren Seymore","Vance, Bob","Wallace, George C. (George Corley), 1919-1998","Watkins, Levi"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":"\n  \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\nThe following segments are included: 0:00:01: Perry Hooper announcing his candidacy for the U.S. Senate during a press conference on March 1, 1968. Hooper, a Republican, was running for the seat that would be vacated by Lister Hill when he completed his term in office; Democrat James Allen ultimately won the seat. 0:02:07: Meeting of the Delegate Assembly of the Alabama State Teachers Association at Alabama State College on March 2, 1968. Bob Inman introduces the segment, which also includes footage of ASTA president Robert E. Lawson and Alabama State College president Levi Watkins addressing the group. Subjects discussed include a possible teachers' strike in Alabama and an ongoing strike in Florida; a resolution calling for a special legislative session to appropriate additional funds to education; and issues affecting schools in the state, such as inadequate funding, stressful working conditions, and faculty shortages. 0:06:21: Interview with ASTA president Robert E. Lawson during a meeting of the Delegate Assembly of the Alabama State Teachers Association at Alabama State College on March 2, 1968. He discusses two resolutions passed by the organization during the meeting: one expressing the organization's support for an ongoing teachers' strike in Florida, and another calling for a special session of the legislature to increase funding for education in the state. 0:08:39: Interview with ASTA executive secretary Joe Reed during a meeting of the Delegate Assembly of the Alabama State Teachers Association at Alabama State College on March 2, 1968. He discusses the organization's intention to ask the federal government to investigate hiring discrimination in local school systems: \"In most cases our school boards have refused to hire Negroes in these positions, yet they're using Federal money. As you know, Title I, I believe operates more directly under the State Department of Education, and, of course, our delegates are rather concerned about the fact that this discrimination continues to exist. And, of course, you know that we have discrimination in the State Department of Education, also. In fact, they still have their staff segregated, so we're going to take a survey, and we're going to find out all local school systems which are discriminating, and we're going to ask the federal government to investigate every one of them and if necessary then we'll take some more action.\" 0:09:22: George Wallace at Dannelly Field in Montgomery during his 1968 presidential campaign. Seymore Trammell is with him. 0:09:41: Mary Grice, Democratic candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives, expressing her support of George Wallace in the 1968 presidential election. In particular, she challenges Congressman Bill Dickinson (the incumbent Republican against whom the winner of the Democratic primary would run), to support Wallace should the House be called upon to decide the president, as per the terms of the 12th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution: \"With George Wallace a strong candidate for president, the American people, by their vote, may throw the presidential race into the House of Representatives. I here and now pledge my vote to George Wallace. Our incumbent Republican congressman has already announced he'll run again. I challenge him to make this same pledge of support to the people of Alabama. Will he support George Wallace? Or will he vote like the Republican Party line in Washington tells him to?\" 0:10:28: Auction for the Hotel Albert in Selma, Alabama, on January 15, 1968. The Albert Hotel Company, which already owned the land on which the structure sat, purchased the building for $10,077. (The hotel was demolished in 1969.) 0:11:43: U.S. Civil Rights Commission hearing at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery on April 29, 1968. The theme of the hearings, which were held over a five-day period, was the economic status of African Americans citizens in the Black Belt counties of Alabama. Those presiding on the panel are Robert S. Rankin, Frankie M. Freeman, John A. Hannah (chairman), Eugene Patterson (vice chairman), William L. Taylor (staff director), Howard A. Glickstein (general counsel), and Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh. Among the witnesses are Reverend Daniel Harrell Jr. of Camden, Alabama (at 0:13:17), and Harold Culmer, attorney from Commission's office of general counsel (at 0:14:52). A map hanging on the wall is titled, \"Nonwhite Population of Alabama As Percent of Total Population By County: 1960.\" 0:15:48: Interview with Governor Albert Brewer at the airport in Charleston, South Carolina, on June 16, 1968, after his arrival there for the Southern Governors' Conference. 0:16:46: Governor Albert Brewer speaking at press conference at the State Highway Department Auditorium on July 10, 1968. He discusses recent fish kills on the Tombigbee River; the state's upcoming sesquicentennial in 1969; and a hearing about school desegregation in Barbour County , which was conducted by U.S. District Judge Frank M. Johnson on July 9: \"I have expressed my concern many times about the efforts of plaintiffs and cases which are pending in courts in Alabama . . . both the federal courts and uh and the three judge panel, about following the Supreme Court decision and what we know as the Kent County case, in doing away with freedom of choice and requiring something in lieu of it, such as mandatory attendance zones. I think our opinion to as stated to you at a press conference a month ago was in line with the testimony according to the news reports taken in judge Johnson's Court yesterday, to the effect that mandatory attendance zones would destroy the public school system in Alabama because the people are simply not going to participate, have their children attend school under these conditions.\" 0:20:34: Senator Tom Radney speaking in July 1968 about the Alabama Legislative Council's upcoming study of Alabama Public Service Commission. 0:22:05: Dr. Levi Watkins, president of Alabama State College, discussing enrollment at the school during a committee meeting or hearing in July 1968. (The nature of the meeting is unclear, but it could be related to either the college's efforts to block the construction of the Auburn University branch in Montgomery, or Watkins's role on the Alabama Education Study Commission's Task Force I.) 0:23:11: Governor A. Brewer speaking about state budget surpluses during his weekly press conference on October 2, 1968, just after the start of the new fiscal year. 0:26:19: Governor A. Brewer announcing state employee pay raises during a press conference on October 3, 1968. Also present is Frank Cox, president of the Alabama State Employees Association. 0:28:13: Dr. Frank Rose, president of the University of Alabama, speaking at a press conference on May 10, 1968. He discusses a major fundraising initiative to expand the facilities and programs at the school's campuses in Tuscaloosa, Birmingham, and Huntsville. 0:29:51: Interview with Bob Vance, chairman of the state Democratic party in May 1968. He discusses low voter turnout for the Democratic primaries on May 7, as well as candidates who will head to run-offs in the major races. 0:32:41: Interviews with Bernard Reynolds and an unidentified representative of the Southwest Alabama Farmers Cooperative in Selma in March 1968. They discuss federal loans that SWAFCA had received from the Office of Economic Opportunity and the Farmers Home Administration, as well as an investigation of the organization that Reynolds had requested from the General Accounting Office. 0:34:12: Report by WSFA-TV's Bob Inman about the Democratic primary in Selma on March 5, 1968. Included are interviews with Mayor Joe Smitherman, who defeated Reverend L. L. Anderson and another candidate to secure the nomination (ultimately winning reelection in the August general election); Marius J. \"Ace\" Anderson, a local disc jockey (formerly of WRMA in Montgomery) and city council candidate headed to a run-off election on April 2; and Luther Pepper, Anderson's white opponent for city council (who ultimately won). Inman's questions and report focus on the significance of race in the election: \"There is one thing that yesterday's voting in Selma did show, and that's the fact that whites are still voting for whites, and Negroes, for the most part, are still voting for Negroes. Negro candidates in Selma and elsewhere in the South are going to continue to have a hard time getting elected where negro voters are in the minority, but the signs of change are there. The hard lines of block voting are beginning to dim and possibly in the not too distant future, Negro voters will decide that for the time being at least block voting is not the answer to their problems.\" 0:38:51: Interview by WSFA-TV's Bob Inman with city council candidate Marius J. \"Ace\" Anderson after the Selma Democratic primary on March 5, 1968. They discuss the Dallas County Voters League's support of incumbent mayor Joe Smitherman over of Reverend L. L. Anderson, a local civil rights leader whom Martin Luther King Jr. endorsed.\n   \n\n  \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   "},{"id":"aar_wsfa_1248","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D047.0010","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1967-12-10"],"dcterms_description":["Footage of two antithetical events both held on Sunday, December 10, 1967, in downtown Montgomery, Alabama: Martin Luther King Jr. speaking at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church and a Ku Klux Klan parade and rally in front of the Capitol. King spoke against the Vietnam War, while the Klan was represented by Grand Dragon James Spears, who spoke against various representatives of the political left, from Communists to hippies. The film switches back and forth between the two events throughout its duration."],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D047, Item 0010"],"dcterms_subject":["Ku Klux Klan (1915- )","African Americans--Civil rights","Demonstrations","Civil rights workers","Flags--Confederate States of America","Flags--Soviet Union","Flags--United States","Parades","Race relations--Alabama","Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Protest movements","White supremacy movements","Montgomery (Ala.)","Montgomery County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D047.0010"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/1248"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["16mm (photographic film size)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968","Spears, James"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"aar_wsfa_1330","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D125.0001","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1967-12/1968-09"],"dcterms_description":["The following segments are included: 0:00:01: Silent footage of George Wallace leaving from Dannelly Field in Montgomery, Alabama, in July 1968, during his presidential campaign. Seymore Trammell is with him. 0:00:09: Swag for George Wallace's 1968 presidential campaign. Included are items such as bags, ties, car tags, hats, pins, coins, and bumper stickers, all of which are available for purchase. 0:02:14: George Wallace arriving at Dannelly Field in Montgomery after campaigning in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in early July 1968. During an interview with reporters (including WSFA-TV's Charles Caton), he discusses getting on the ballot in Minnesota; a protest by college students at his rally there on July 3; and support he has received from \"young people\" during his campaign. 0:05:59: George Wallace leaving for Chicago, Illinois, from Dannelly Field in Montgomery on September 30, 1968, during his presidential campaign. In an interview with a reporter, he discusses plans to announce his platform and vice presidential candidate. Seymore Trammell is with him. 0:07:42: WSFA-TV's Charles Caton interviewing George Wallace in December 1967 about his potential candidacy for president in 1968. They discuss the possibility of a third-party candidate throwing the election to the U.S. House of Representatives (as per the terms of the 12th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution); Wallace's recent and upcoming trips to California and the growth of the American Independent Party; and whether he would stop using state employees in his campaign if he were to officially announce his candidacy for president: \"Well, of course, we're not going to use the state employees, other than to say that my wife ran for the governorship on the platform of continuing this fight to return domestic democratic institutions to the people, against this trend of the government to run our lives. That was her platform. I'm not an announced candidate for the presidency, and my going to California to try to awaken the people in that state as they are awakened, and the country, to the dangers of these trends is carrying out my wife platform. I'm not an announced candidate for the presidency, and so we are only doing what she told the people she would, do and she was elected on that in 1966.\" 0:11:25: Governor Albert Brewer announcing a new penalty system for traffic offenses during his weekly press conference on July 3, 1968: \"This point system I've outlined today will be strictly enforced. We simply will not allow habitual violators of our traffic laws to continue operating their vehicles on our highways, endangering the lives of others. As I have said in the past, the first step in reducing traffic accidents is law enforcement. This we fully intend to do with every means available. It is not fair for innocent and law-abiding drivers to be killed and maimed by irresponsible and reckless drivers who disregard the rights of others. I'm wholeheartedly committed to whatever steps may be necessary in reducing the number of senseless tragic accidents on our highways.\" 0:13:10: Governor Albert Brewer discussing an upcoming report from the Special Education Study Commission during his weekly press conference on July 3, 1968. WSFA-TV's Bob Inman and Public Safety Director Floyd Mann are among those in attendance. 0:14:12: Governor Albert Brewer speaking at a patriotic rally at Cramton Bowl in Montgomery on July 4, 1968. The footage begins with a silent scene of Brewer participating in the parade down Madison Avenue, which started at city hall and ended in front of the stadium. 0:15:17: Governor Brewer speaking at his weekly press conference on July 3, 1968. He asks all drivers to travel carefully during the upcoming Fourth of July holiday: \"I want to urge all of our citizens to drive carefully with regard for the rights of others, to recognize that motor vehicles can be lethal weapons on our highways, to drive defensively, to guard against those who are not so careful about the rights of others, in order to protect the lives of our people and those who may be visiting within our state. The full law enforcement resources of the state of Alabama in traffic safety will be on the highways for this period of time. We're going to enforce the laws to the full limit of our ability to try to guard against a tragedy on our highways.\" 0:15:58: 0:00:01: Perry Hooper opening his campaign headquarters on Montgomery Street in Montgomery on September 24, 1968. Hooper, a Republican, was running for the position that would be vacated by Lister Hill when he completed his term in office; Democrat James Allen ultimately won the seat. 0:19:00: Congressmen Bill Dickinson opening his campaign headquarters in Montgomery on September 27, 1968. During his remarks, he criticizes \"national Democrats\" (\"I'm an Alabama Democrat\") and discusses how he would vote if the House were called upon to decide the upcoming presidential election, as per the terms of the 12th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution: \"I believe in answering the issues, and one of the biggest issues in the race today is how will Bill Dickinson vote in the Congress if the presidential election is thrown into Congress, in the House of Representatives? I'm not dodging the question and I'm not ducking it. I'm here to answer it just as plain and as straightforward as I can. I will vote in the Congress as I have always voted, for what is best for the people of the Second District of Alabama and the state of Alabama. I will, in that event, as I have always put the people above the party. I will cast my vote in the Congress of the United States for the same man that carries the Second District of Alabama. I will reflect the voice in the opinions of the Second . . . District of Alabama, and we don't have much doubt that it's going to be George C. Wallace. And if it is George C. Wallace that . . . carries the Second District of Alabama in the presidential race and it's put in the House of Representatives, I will proudly cast my vote for George C. Wallace for president of the United States. And if my vote will make him the next president of the United States, he will be the next president of the United States.\" The event included a parade down Dexter Avenue led by the Lanier High School band, and George Mitchell presented the story for WSFA-TV News. 0:22:48: Closure of the Hotel Albert in Selma, Alabama, in late December 1967. Included is silent footage of the exterior and interior of the building, as well as an interview with the owner (possibly Otis Adams) about the reasons for closing the business. The hotel was later demolished in June 1968. 0:24:50: Participants in the Poor People's Campaign in Selma in May 1968. Included is footage of the demonstrators arriving on buses from Mississippi the afternoon of May 6; a march down Broad Street and on the Edmund Pettus Bridge the morning of May 7, shortly before the group left for Montgomery; and a meeting of city officials and leaders, possibly on May 3 (among those present are Mayor Joe Smitherman and Reverend L. L. Anderson, minister of Tabernacle Baptist Church and local coordinator of the campaign). 0:26:12: Participants in the Poor People's Campaign in Montgomery on May 8, 1968. Included is footage of a memorial gathering for Martin Luther King Jr. in front of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church; mourners in line on the steps of the Capitol, waiting to view Lurleen Wallace lying in state; and demonstrators boarding Trailways buses for Birmingham to continue the campaign. Among the participants are civil rights leaders Hosea Williams, Richard Boone, and Roosevelt Barnett. 0:28:39: Dr. Frank Rose, president of the University of Alabama, speaking at a press conference on May 10, 1968. He discusses a major fundraising initiative (\"STRIDE\") to expand the facilities and programs at the school's campuses in Tuscaloosa, Birmingham, and Huntsville."],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D125, Item 0001"],"dcterms_subject":["Wallace, Lurleen, 1926-1968--Death and burial","African Americans--Civil rights","African Americans--Economic conditions","African Americans--Social conditions","Airplanes","Airports","Alabama State Capitol (Montgomery, Ala.)","Business","Civil rights demonstrations","Civil rights workers","College administrators","Democratic Party (U.S.)","Education","Governors--Alabama","Hotels","Law enforcement officers","Legislators--United States","Marching bands","Mayors--Alabama--Selma","Parades","Political campaigns","Political science","Parades","Demonstrations","Political participation ","Reporters and reporting","Republican Party (U.S.)","Universities and colleges","Selma (Ala.)","Dallas County (Ala.)","Montgomery (Ala.)","Montgomery County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D125.0001"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/1330"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["film (material by form)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Anderson, Louis Lloyd","Barnett, Roosevelt","Boone, Richard C., 1937-2013","Brewer, Albert P., 1928-2017","Caton, Charles, 1938-2020","Dickinson, William L.","Hooper, Perry Oliver, 1925-2016","Inman, Bob","Mitchell, George, 1927-2023","Rose, Frank Anthony, 1920-1991","Smitherman, Joseph T., 1929-2005","Trammell, Warren Seymore","Wallace, George C. (George Corley), 1919-1998","Wallace, George C. (George Corley), 1951-","Williams, Hosea, 1926-2000"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"aar_wsfa_2","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D116.0008","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1967-08-18/1967-08-22"],"dcterms_description":["The following segments are included: 0:00:01: U.S. Air Force graduation ceremony, possibly at Gunter Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama. (Notes accompanying the original film identify the event as \"Gunter graduation.\") 0:01:48: Senator Ollie Nabors speaking about a filibuster to prevent passage of a conditional educational appropriations bill: \"Some of us are concerned that there is $26,000,000 being appropriated in a conditional appropriation and in those conditional appropriates there are monies for special interest projects that we oppose to. We feel like that the money that is available or possibly will be available should go to the existing institutions in the state and 65% at least should go to public education.\" 0:03:04: Congressman Tom Bevill discussion recent legislation he sponsored in the U.S. House of Representatives \"which will make it a felony for a citizen of this country to go into a foreign country and advocate the overthrow of the government of the United States.\" He specifically mentions \"black power advocate Stokely Carmichael.\" 0:03:57: Colonel Willis Davis speaking at a Civitan Club luncheon in Montgomery, Alabama, on August 18, 1967. Davis was a native of Gordo, Alabama. 0:05:02: U.S. Air Force graduation ceremony, possibly at Gunter Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama. (Notes accompanying the original film identify the event as \"Gunter graduation.\") Some of the footage is silent. 0:06:45: Interview about the choice of Selma, Alabama, as the filming location for the movie adaptation of \"The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.\" The novel, written by Carson McCullers and 1940, was set in Columbus, Georgia, but that city did not have enough suitable sites: \"They have selected Selma not because of any other reason other than it affords them a place that they can shoot the scenes in the proper locality.\" Also included is footage of a residential street and a cemetery. 0:07:56: Demonstration of the Westinghouse Cachalot Saturation Diving System. The footage is silent. 0:09:02: Judge Perry Hooper Sr. discussing the new microfilm record system at the county probate court in Montgomery, Alabama. 0:12:00: Colonel C. W. Russell, director of the Alabama Department of Public Safety, speaking about the high number of traffic accidents and fatalities that had recently occurred: \"When have you read a driver's manual? Or have you ever read one? I suggest if you haven't read one lately, you get one and study it very carefully. I believe you will be a better driver if you will. Let's make every effort to be a better driver and a sober driver.\" 0:12:39: Introduction of color news film at WFSA in Montgomery, Alabama. The segment, dated August 21, 1967, includes the delivery and operation of the film processing equipment. 0:14:20: Peanut production and processing in Coffee County, Alabama. The segment, presented by WSFA reporter Bob Inman, includes interviews about the year's local peanut harvest, as well as shots of the Boll Weevil Monument in downtown Enterprise; peanuts in the field; and the Sessions processing plant in Enterprise. 0:20:30: Midnight session of the Senate at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama, which began at 12:01 a.m. on August 22, 1967. Issues discussed include the \"teacher choice\" bill, which would allow parents to choose the race of their children's teachers, and a resolution requiring state-supported schools to fly the Confederate flag. Among those visible are Ollie Nabors, George Bailes, McDowell Lee, Roland Cooper, Eddie Gilmore, and Stewart O'Bannon, who speaks at the end of the clip: \"And one of my grandfathers could take the great distinction of being on the [1901] constitutional convention committee, which messed up the state of Alabama. And I'm down here trying to straighten it out, but I am sick and tired of resolutions to fly flags. I thought that I served in the Army so people could do, within the realm of reason, those things that they wanted to do.\" 0:22:55: Senators Bob Harris and Roland Cooper debating the \"teacher choice\" bill, which would allow parents to choose the race of their children's teachers. 0:24:45: City commission meeting in Montgomery, Alabama. Mayor Earl D. James is seated in the center. The footage is silent. 0:25:15: Senator Fred C. Folsom speaking on the floor of the Senate chamber at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama. Though he does not specifically name the proposed legislation he refers to in the clip, it is likely the \"teacher choice\" bill, which would allow parents to choose the race of their children's teachers. (Notes accompanying the original film identify this segment as \"Folsom schools.\") 0:25:59: Midnight session of the Senate at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama, which began at 12:01 a.m. on August 22, 1967. Though the footage is mostly silent, the senators appear to be discussing the \"teacher choice\" bill, which would allow parents to choose the race of their children's teachers. Among those visible are George Bailes, Tom Radney, Albert Brewer, Albert Turner, Roland Cooper, and Fred Folsom. 0:26:44: Tine W. Davis donating $25,000 to Alabama Christian College in Montgomery, Alabama. Davis, president of Winn Dixie of Montgomery Inc., gives the check to Dr. Rex A. Turner, president of the college; also present are Jimmy Faulkner, chairman of the school's board, and H. O. Davis and Elizabeth Wright, both member of the school's Big Gifts Committee. The footage is silent. 0:27:18: Kiwanis Club meeting at the Whitley Hotel in Montgomery, Alabama. The footage is silent. 0:28:09: Interview with Charles Glasscock, Marty Johnson, and Stan Trott on the campus of Sidney Lanier High School in Montgomery, Alabama. All three were part of the state track team that would compete in Des Moines, Iowa, on August 25 and 26, 1967. The footage is silent. (The notes accompanying the original film also mention a clip of the 50th anniversary reunion of the Dixie Division, but that footage was not found on the reel.)"],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D116, Item 0008"],"dcterms_subject":["Alabama Christian College","Faulkner University (Montgomery, Ala.)","African Americans--Civil rights","African Americans--Employment","Agriculture","Business","Businesspeople","Cemeteries","College administrators","Farms","Diving","Education","Equipment","Farm produce","Farmers","Flags--Confederate States of America","Public buildings","Commencement ceremonies","Journalists","Judges","Police","Legislators--Alabama","Legislators--United States","Mayors--Alabama--Montgomery","Microfilms","Armed Forces--Officers","Memorials","Municipal officials and employees--Alabama--Montgomery","Press","Organization","Political science","Race relations--United States","Recording and registration","Soldiers","Students","Taxation--Alabama","Track and field","Universities and colleges","Enterprise (Ala.)","Coffee County (Ala.)","Selma (Ala.)","Dallas County (Ala.)","Gunter Air Force Base (Ala.)","Montgomery (Ala.)","Montgomery County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D116.0008"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/2"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["color films (visual works)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Bailes, George Lewis, 1919-","Bevill, Tom, 1921-2005","Brewer, Albert P., 1928-2017","Cooper, Roland","Davis, H. O. (Harry Orville), 1877-1964","Davis, Tine Wayne, 1914-1980","Smith, Elizabeth Hobbie Wright, 1924-2012","Faulkner, James H.","Folsom, Fred C.","Gilmore, Eddie Hubert, 1925-2009","Glasscock, Charles","Harris, Bob","Hooper, Perry Oliver, 1925-2016","Inman, Bob, 1920-","James, Earl D.","Johnson, Marty","Lee, Charles McDowell, 1925-2014","Nabors, Ollie Wilson, 1926-","O'Bannon, Stewart, Jr.","Radney, John Thomas, 1932-2011","Russell, C. W.","Trott, Stan","Turner, Rex A. (Rex Allwin), 1913-2001"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":"\n  \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\nThe following segments are included: 0:00:01: U.S. Air Force graduation ceremony, possibly at Gunter Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama. (Notes accompanying the original film identify the event as \"Gunter graduation.\") 0:01:48: Senator Ollie Nabors speaking about a filibuster to prevent passage of a conditional educational appropriations bill: \"Some of us are concerned that there is $26,000,000 being appropriated in a conditional appropriation and in those conditional appropriates there are monies for special interest projects that we oppose to. We feel like that the money that is available or possibly will be available should go to the existing institutions in the state and 65% at least should go to public education.\" 0:03:04: Congressman Tom Bevill discussion recent legislation he sponsored in the U.S. House of Representatives \"which will make it a felony for a citizen of this country to go into a foreign country and advocate the overthrow of the government of the United States.\" He specifically mentions \"black power advocate Stokely Carmichael.\" 0:03:57: Colonel Willis Davis speaking at a Civitan Club luncheon in Montgomery, Alabama, on August 18, 1967. Davis was a native of Gordo, Alabama. 0:05:02: U.S. Air Force graduation ceremony, possibly at Gunter Air Force Base in Montgomery, Alabama. (Notes accompanying the original film identify the event as \"Gunter graduation.\") Some of the footage is silent. 0:06:45: Interview about the choice of Selma, Alabama, as the filming location for the movie adaptation of \"The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.\" The novel, written by Carson McCullers and 1940, was set in Columbus, Georgia, but that city did not have enough suitable sites: \"They have selected Selma not because of any other reason other than it affords them a place that they can shoot the scenes in the proper locality.\" Also included is footage of a residential street and a cemetery. 0:07:56: Demonstration of the Westinghouse Cachalot Saturation Diving System. The footage is silent. 0:09:02: Judge Perry Hooper Sr. discussing the new microfilm record system at the county probate court in Montgomery, Alabama. 0:12:00: Colonel C. W. Russell, director of the Alabama Department of Public Safety, speaking about the high number of traffic accidents and fatalities that had recently occurred: \"When have you read a driver's manual? Or have you ever read one? I suggest if you haven't read one lately, you get one and study it very carefully. I believe you will be a better driver if you will. Let's make every effort to be a better driver and a sober driver.\" 0:12:39: Introduction of color news film at WFSA in Montgomery, Alabama. The segment, dated August 21, 1967, includes the delivery and operation of the film processing equipment. 0:14:20: Peanut production and processing in Coffee County, Alabama. The segment, presented by WSFA reporter Bob Inman, includes interviews about the year's local peanut harvest, as well as shots of the Boll Weevil Monument in downtown Enterprise; peanuts in the field; and the Sessions processing plant in Enterprise. 0:20:30: Midnight session of the Senate at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama, which began at 12:01 a.m. on August 22, 1967. Issues discussed include the \"teacher choice\" bill, which would allow parents to choose the race of their children's teachers, and a resolution requiring state-supported schools to fly the Confederate flag. Among those visible are Ollie Nabors, George Bailes, McDowell Lee, Roland Cooper, Eddie Gilmore, and Stewart O'Bannon, who speaks at the end of the clip: \"And one of my grandfathers could take the great distinction of being on the [1901] constitutional convention committee, which messed up the state of Alabama. And I'm down here trying to straighten it out, but I am sick and tired of resolutions to fly flags. I thought that I served in the Army so people could do, within the realm of reason, those things that they wanted to do.\" 0:22:55: Senators Bob Harris and Roland Cooper debating the \"teacher choice\" bill, which would allow parents to choose the race of their children's teachers. 0:24:45: City commission meeting in Montgomery, Alabama. Mayor Earl D. James is seated in the center. The footage is silent. 0:25:15: Senator Fred C. Folsom speaking on the floor of the Senate chamber at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama. Though he does not specifically name the proposed legislation he refers to in the clip, it is likely the \"teacher choice\" bill, which would allow parents to choose the race of their children's teachers. (Notes accompanying the original film identify this segment as \"Folsom schools.\") 0:25:59: Midnight session of the Senate at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama, which began at 12:01 a.m. on August 22, 1967. Though the footage is mostly silent, the senators appear to be discussing the \"teacher choice\" bill, which would allow parents to choose the race of their children's teachers. Among those visible are George Bailes, Tom Radney, Albert Brewer, Albert Turner, Roland Cooper, and Fred Folsom. 0:26:44: Tine W. Davis donating $25,000 to Alabama Christian College in Montgomery, Alabama. Davis, president of Winn Dixie of Montgomery Inc., gives the check to Dr. Rex A. Turner, president of the college; also present are Jimmy Faulkner, chairman of the school's board, and H. O. Davis and Elizabeth Wright, both member of the school's Big Gifts Committee. The footage is silent. 0:27:18: Kiwanis Club meeting at the Whitley Hotel in Montgomery, Alabama. The footage is silent. 0:28:09: Interview with Charles Glasscock, Marty Johnson, and Stan Trott on the campus of Sidney Lanier High School in Montgomery, Alabama. All three were part of the state track team that would compete in Des Moines, Iowa, on August 25 and 26, 1967. The footage is silent. (The notes accompanying the original film also mention a clip of the 50th anniversary reunion of the Dixie Division, but that footage was not found on the reel.)\n   \n\n  \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   "},{"id":"aar_wsfa_18","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D0141.009","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1967-07"],"dcterms_description":["The following segments are included: 0:00:01: Public hearing held by the Senate Education Committee on July 11, 1967, to debate a proposed \"speaker ban bill,\" which would have prohibited state-funded schools from inviting Communists to speak on campus. The bill, which ultimately failed, was introduced by Senator Leland Childs. 0:04:31: Senators Roland Cooper and Tom Radney debating about legislative meeting days and vacation pay. (In July 1967, the Senate passed a resolution to stop legislative pay during a 12-day vacation period, but it did so after the House had already adjourned for that break. The Senate had also started working three days a week, while the House was only working two; because of a cap on the number of days per legislative session, a working day for either house counted for both, and thus the representatives lost both hours and pay during the session.) 0:06:22: Dr. Ira L. Myers, state health officer, addressing the Montgomery Kiwanis Club during a luncheon at the Whitley Hotel on July 11, 1967. Myers discussed the need to address air and water pollution problems in Alabama, as well as the state's plan for enacting water quality standards, which was waiting approval from the U.S. Secretary of the Interior. The footage is silent. 0:07:26: Alabama Air National Guard at summer training camp at Gulfport, Mississippi. The footage is silent. 0:09:31: Public hearing held by the Senate Education Committee on July 11, 1967, to debate a proposed \"speaker ban bill,\" which would have prohibited state-funded schools from inviting Communists to speak on campus. The bill, which ultimately failed, was introduced by Senator Leland Childs. 0:12:09: Senators Roland Cooper and Tom Radney debating about legislative meeting days and vacation pay. (In July 1967, the Senate passed a resolution to stop legislative pay during a 12-day vacation period, but it did so after the House had already adjourned for that break. The Senate had also started working three days a week, while the House was only working two; because of a cap on the number of days per legislative session, a working day for either house counted for both, and thus the representatives lost both hours and pay during the session.) 0:13:54: Former senator Neil Metcalf speaking about the recommendations issued by the Joint Interim Committee on Ad Valorem Taxation in July 1967. Metcalf, who served as general counsel to the committee, sponsored the legislation that led to its establishment during a special legislative session in 1966. 0:14:54: Aftermath of a fire on Dexter Avenue in Montgomery, Alabama. The fire started before dawn on July 6, 1967, and burned for six hours, destroying six businesses (Carl's Men's Shoe Store, Marilyn Shoes, Hardy Shoe Store, The Fashion Shop, Eleanor Shop) and damaging three others (Warner's Women's Shop, The Hub, and Belk-Hudson). Fireman Hershel O. Roy was killed when an he was thrown from a ladder by an explosion in one of the buildings. The footage is silent. 0:15:42: W. T. Mallory, dire chief in Montgomery, Alabama, discussing the fire that damaged or destroyed six businesses on Dexter Avenue on July 6, 1967. 0:18:46: Teenage boys stretching and running on a track, possibly at a school in Montgomery, Alabama. 0:19:21: Prayer service for Governor Lurleen Wallace, who was having cancer surgery in Houston, Texas. The Legislature had adopted a resolution declaring July 7, 1967, a statewide day of prayer for the governor. 0:20:27: Congressman Bill Dickinson addressing an audience at the Whitley Hotel in Montgomery, Alabama. He criticizes U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark for not taking action against \"professional agitators and instigators of riots,\" specifically mentioning Stokely Carmichael, who had been arrested in Prattville in June 1967. 0:21:28: Meeting of the executive committee of the Alabama Republican Party in Montgomery on July 8, 1967. 0:21:56: Tandy Little discussing the budget of the Alabama Republican Party at a meeting of the party's executive committee on July 8, 1967. He mentions both recent campaign losses and the prospects for success in the next election. 0:23:02: Jim Martin discussing the objectives of the Alabama Republican Party at a meeting of the party's executive committee on July 8, 1967: \"So we have two prime objectives, to defeat Johnson and to nominate a conservative on the Republican ticket to do that job.\" 0:24:29: Tandy Little discussing the budget of the Alabama Republican Party at a meeting of the party's executive committee on July 8, 1967. 0:25:36: Jim Martin discussing the upcoming Republican National Convention during a meeting of the Alabama Republican Party's executive committee on July 8, 1967: \"I believe southerners will work in a unified, powerful group. . . . They'll be for the most conservative candidate we can get. With Reagan coming up in the west, if the star continues to rise, I can see the South as perhaps swinging to him if Nixon loses out and doesn't have a chance of winning. I think the South will name the next nominee on the Republican ticket, thereby securing for the South a position of great political power. And that man might just be Ronald Reagan of California.\" 0:26:38: Fourth of July parade on Madison Avenue in Montgomery, Alabama. Paul Harvey is riding in a convertible with Mayor Earl James. 0:28:06: Senate committee meeting at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama. William McDermott, Junie Pierce, Bob Harris, Woodrow Albea, Leland Childs, Aubrey Carr, John Hawkins, Walter C. Givhan, Fred Folsom, Ray Lolley, Tom Radney, James Clark, and Pierre Pelham. The footage is silent. 0:29:01: Senator Emmett Oden speaking during a public hearing held by the Senate Temperance Committee on July 12, 1967, to debate several bills related to liquor sales in Alabama. Oden wrote one of the bills, which called for a statewide \"wet-dry\" referendum on whether or not to continue liquor sales in the state. 0:31:23: Public hearing held by the Senate Temperance Committee on July 12, 1967, to debate several bills related to liquor sales in Alabama. One of the bills called for a statewide \"wet-dry\" referendum, and another would allow cities in dry counties to decide for themselves whether or not to allow liquor sales. Among the speakers is Senator Joe Goodwyn, who wrote the local option bill. 0:33:51: Senate committee meeting at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama. Among those present are Tom Radney, Bo Torbert, Joe Goodwyn, William McDermott, and Wallace Lindsey. The footage is silent. 0:34:34: Montgomery County grand jury meeting to examine charges against John Graves, the state comptroller, who had been accused of misusing funds by padding his expense account. Ultimately, the jury chose not to indict him. The footage is silent. 0:35:01: Admiral Thomas Moorer at the airport in Montgomery, Alabama. Moorer, a native of Eufaula, had just been appointed chief of naval operations of the U.S. Navy. The footage is silent. (The notes accompanying the original film also mention footage of Governor Lurleen Wallace leaving Montgomery for Houston, Texas. According to the notes, the footage had been removed, and it was not found on the reel during digitization.)","YouTube link: https://youtu.be/KMFCp1xoLrw"],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA collection","Box D0141, Item 009"],"dcterms_subject":["Alabama. Air National Guard","Air pollution","Buildings","Communism","Education, higher","Fires","Governors--Alabama","Holidays","Juries","Legislation--Alabama","Legislators--Alabama","Legislators--United States","Liquor laws--Alabama","Marching bands","Mayors--Alabama--Montgomery","Military officers","Parades and processions","Politics and government","Prayer","Republican Party (Ala.)","Soldiers","Sports","Stores and shops","Taxation--Alabama","Temperance","Track athletics","Water pollution","Montgomery (Ala.)","Montgomery County (Ala.)","Gulfport (Miss.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D0141.009"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/18"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["color film (film, material)","16mm (photographic film size)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Albea, Woodrow","Carr, Aubrey J., -1920","Childs, Leland","Clark, James Sterling, 1921-2000","Cooper, Roland","Dickinson, William L.","Folsom, Fred C.","Givhan, Walter Coats, 1902-","Goodwyn, Otis James, 1920-1973","Harris, Bob","Harvey, Paul, 1918-2009","Hawkins, John, Jr.","James, Earl D.","Lindsey, Wallace Henry, III","Little, Tandy","Lolley, W. Ray","Mallory, W. T.","Martin, James Douglas, 1918-2017","McDermott, William Henry, b.1933","Metcalf, Neil, b.1921","Moorer, Thomas H., 1912-2004","Myers, Ira L.","Oden, William Emmett, b.1909","Pelham, Pierre, 1929-2009","Pierce, Junius Julius","Radney, John Thomas, 1932-2011","Torbert, Clement Clay, 1929-2018"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"aar_wsfa_22","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D126.0007","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1967/1975"],"dcterms_description":["The following segments are included: 0:00:00: Melba Till Allen speaking about the importance of electing Alabama's constitutional officers, rather than abolishing the positions or changing them into executive appointments. Allen served as the state auditor from 1967 to 1975, and she was the state treasurer from 1975 to 1978. 0:01:16: Governor Lurleen Wallace delivering the commencement address at Judson College in Marion, Alabama, on April 16, 1967. During the graduation ceremony, Wallace was also awarded an honorary doctorate by the school. 0:02:31: Sybil Pool at an Alabama Public Service Commission meeting in Montgomery. Pool was the first woman in Alabama elected to statewide office. Before serving four terms on the PSC (from 1954 to 1970), she had been secretary of state (1944 to 1951) and state treasurer (1951 to 1955). 0:03:04: John Cashin submitting paperwork to Secretary of State Mabel Amos, in order to qualify for candidates for the National Democratic Party of Alabama (NDPA). 0:04:07: Secretary of State Mabel Amos speaking from her office in July 1971, about a memorandum she sent to local registration officials after the ratification of the 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Because the amendment extended the right to vote to all citizens (18 or older) in all elections, any 18- to 20-year-olds who had previously registered for federal elections would have to re-register in order to vote for state or local candidates. 0:05:25: Secretary of State Mabel Amos speaking from her office in March 1972, about her decision not to qualify the Alabama Communist Party to place candidates on the ballot in November. On her desk is a large stack of petitions signed by voters, which had been submitted by state party chair Jim Bains. Amos insists that many of the signatures cannot be verified and therefore rejects the request. 0:07:15: Secretary of State Mabel Amos speaking at the Probate Judges Conference at the Governor's House Motel in Montgomery, Alabama, possibly in January 1974. WSFA-TV news reporter Ivy Berman is seated in the audience. 0:09:06: Alabama's electors officially casting their votes for presidential candidate George Wallace at the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama, on December 16, 1968. The following officials and private citizens served as electors for the state: Governor Albert Brewer; Attorney General MacDonald Gallion; Superintendent of Education Ernest Stone; Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries Richard Beard; Treasurer Agnes Baggett; Secretary of State Mabel Amos; Earl Morgan, Jefferson County district attorney; Mary Jane Selden (wife of Congressman Armistead Selden); Maryon Allen (wife of Senator James B. Allen); and Frank Mizell of Montgomery. 0:10:23: Agnes Baggett speaking about her campaign for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1972. Baggett ran against incumbent Bill Dickinson, who won reelection. 0:13:08: Agnes Baggett speaking at her campaign headquarters in the Bell Building in downtown Montgomery, Alabama, during her run for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1972. Baggett ran against incumbent Bill Dickinson, who won reelection. 0:15:26: Agnes Baggett and Seymore Trammell campaigning against each other for the position of state treasurer in 1970. 0:17:34: Juanita McDaniel, member of the Alabama Public Service Commission, during a meeting about providing telephone service to residents in Hope Hull. (The notes accompanying the original film also mention a clip of Governor Lurleen Wallace meeting with other southern governors in Montgomery, but that footage was not found on the reel.)"],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D126, Item 0007"],"dcterms_subject":["Judson College (Marion, Ala.)","National Democratic Party of Alabama","African Americans--Political activity","Communism--Alabama","Government officials--Alabama","Governors--Alabama","Commencement ceremonies","Political campaigns","Political science","Students","United States. Constitution. 26th Amendment","Voter registration","Voting","Women--Political activity","Marion (Ala.)","Perry County (Ala.)","Montgomery (Ala.)","Montgomery County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D126.0007"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/22"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969","1970/1979"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["16mm (photographic film size)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Allen, Maryon Pittman, 1925-2018","Allen, Melba Till, 1933-1989","Amos, Mabel, 1900-1999","Baggett, Agnes, 1905-1992","Beard, Richard, 1903-1972","Brewer, Albert P., 1928-2017","Buhl, Ivy Berman, 1938-2019","Cashin, John L. (John Logan), 1928-2011","Gallion, McDonald, 1913-2007","McDaniel, Juanita","Mizell, Frank","Morgan, Earl C.","Selden, Mary Jane Wright","Stone, Ernest, 1910-1989","Trammell, Warren Seymore","Wallace, Lurleen, 1926-1968"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"aar_wsfa_1320","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D150.0002","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1967/1975"],"dcterms_description":["The following segments are included: 0:00:01: Melba Till Allen discussing the results of the recent Democratic primary during a press conference on May 5, 1972. Allen had been a candidate for U.S. Senate, but she lost to incumbent John Sparkman, who garnered over 50 percent of the vote during the election that was held on May 2. Though she suggested she would call for a recount (in the hopes of necessitating a runoff), she ultimately accepted the outcome of the primary. 0:02:10: Governor Lurleen Wallace meeting with other southern governors in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 17, 1967. Governors Lester Maddox of Georgia, Paul Johnson of Mississippi, of John McKeithen Louisiana visited Wallace at the Governor's Mansion and in her office at the Capitol, where they discussed recent federal court orders on school desegregation. Former governor George Wallace and Seymore Trammel were also in attendance. 0:07:02: Press conference held on November 10, 1975, to announce an upcoming 20th anniversary celebration of the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Among those present are Ralph Abernathy, Rosa Parks, Coretta Scott King, Johnnie Carr, Andrew Young, and Fred Gray. (Randall Williams is seated with other reporters on the front row.) A shot of a poster advertising the commemorative event (which took place December 5 through 7, 1975) is also included. 0:08:46: Birthday party honoring Fred Gray at the Holiday Inn in Tuskegee, Alabama, on December 14, 1973. Rosa Parks attended the event, though the footage of her speaking is silent. 0:10:42: Rosa Parks, Mayor Johnny Ford, Fred Gray, and others speaking on a panel at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery on December 14, 1973. The same day, Parks and Gray also visited with Governor George Wallace at the Capitol. (Parks had returned to Alabama to attend Gray's 43rd birthday party in Tuskegee.)"],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D150, Item 0002"],"dcterms_subject":["Montgomery Bus Boycott, Montgomery, Ala., 1955-1956--Commemorations","African Americans--Civil rights","Birthday parties","Civil rights workers","Education","Government officials--Alabama","Governors--Alabama","Governors--Georgia","Governors--Louisiana","Governors--Mississippi","Journalists","Lawyers","Legislators--Alabama","Mayors--Alabama--Tuskegee","Motion picture cameras","Photographers","Political campaigns","Political science","Race relations--Alabama","School integration","Montgomery (Ala.)","Montgomery County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D150.0002"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/1320"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969","1970/1979"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["film (material by form)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Abernathy, Ralph, 1926-1990","Allen, Melba Till, 1933-1989","Carr, Johnnie Rebecca, 1911-2008","Ford, Johnny, 1942-","Gray, Fred D., 1930-","Johnson, Paul B. (Paul Burney), 1880-1943","King, Coretta Scott, 1927-2006","Maddox, Hattie Virginia Cox, 1918-1997","Maddox, Lester, 1915-2003","McKeithen, John J. (John Julian), 1918-1999","Parks, Bernice Hill","Parks, Rosa, 1913-2005","Wallace, George C. (George Corley), 1919-1998","Wallace, Lurleen, 1926-1968","Williams, Randall, 1951-","Young, Andrew, 1932-"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"aar_wsfa_1301","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D165.0014","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1966-11"],"dcterms_description":null,"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D165, Item 0014"],"dcterms_subject":["Auburn University","Huntingdon College (Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","African Americans--Civil rights","African Americans--Political activity","Basketball","Basketball players","Beauty contestants","Business","Cheerleaders","Children","Circus","Municipal officials and employees--Montgomery--Alabama","Coaches (Athletics)","County officials and employees--Montgomery--Alabama","Courthouses","Courts","Education","Football","Football players","Public buildings","Governors--Alabama","Grocery trade","Police","Lawyers","Journalists","Judges","Judicial process","Marching bands","Organization","Political campaigns","Politics and government","Schools","Sports","Stores, Retail","Students","Universities and colleges","Voting","Selma (Ala.)","Dallas County (Ala.)","Lowndesboro (Ala.)","Lowndes County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D165.0014"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/1301"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["16mm (photographic film size)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Baker, Wilson","Brantley, Linda","Clark, James G.","Collins, Victor","Gholson, Laura","Howard, Jana","Hutsell, Wilbur Hall, 1892-1980","Inman, Bob","Lawrence, Susan","McCord, Sally","Price, Annie Lola, 1903-1972","Reese, Martha Jo","Robison, Vaughan Hill, 1918-1977","Speaks, Frankie","Spitler, Gordon","Stephens, Carl","Wallace, George C. (George Corley), 1919-1998","Wallace, Lurleen, 1926-1968","Warr, Eleanor","Wilson, Judy"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":"\n  \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n   \n\n \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\nThe following segments are included: 0:00:01: Staff at WSFA-TV in Montgomery, Alabama, preparing sets at the station for coverage of the election that would be held on November 8, 1966. 0:01:04: White and African American citizens voting in Selma and Lowndesboro, Alabama, on November 8, 1966. Among the voters are Wilson Baker, Selma's director of public safety, and Jim Clark, sheriff of Dallas County. (Most of the polling locations are unidentified, but some of the Selma footage was shot at the Dallas County courthouse and the Star Department Store in the Dallas Fair Shopping Center.) 0:03:13: Staff at Lurleen Wallace's campaign headquarters setting up for the election returns on November 8, 1966. 0:03:46: Interview with George and Lurleen Wallace on November 9, 1966, the day after she was elected governor of Alabama. George discusses potential cabinet appointments in the new administration, and he raises the possibility of a presidential run in 1968. Most of the footage of Lurleen speaking is silent, except for a brief clip in which she thanks their supporters. 0:08:01: Pep rally at Lanier High School in Montgomery before the annual football game against Lee High School on November 11, 1966. 0:08:53: Pep rally at Lee High School in Montgomery before the annual football game against Lanier High School on November 11, 1966. 0:09:30: Football game between Lanier High School and Lee High School at Cramton Bowl in Montgomery on November 11, 1966. Lanier won the game, 10 to 0. 0:10:34: Meeting of the Montgomery County Board of Revenue in November 1966. 0:11:10: Scenes of shoppers inside a Big Bear grocery store in Montgomery in November 1966. Also included is an interview with Gordon Spitler, director of merchandising for the grocery firm of Hudson-Thompson, Inc., which operated Big Bear stores. During the conversation, WSFA-TV's Bob Inman asks about rising food prices, which Spitler contributes, in part, to the \"war economy\" caused by the Vietnam War. 0:14:40: Long lines of people buying license plates at the Montgomery County Courthouse, probably on November 14 or 15, 1966. (Automobile owners had until November 15 to purchase their car tags, after which they would have to pay a penalty; as of the day before the deadline, several thousand people in the county still had not bought their plates.) 0:15:14: Reception for retired Southern Bell employees in November 1966. 0:15:51: WSFA-TV's Carl Stephens interviewing Neal Posey, basketball coach at Huntingdon College in November 1966. They discuss the upcoming season and introduce (by name) each of the players on the 1966-1967 team. 0:18:49: Circus performing at Garrett Coliseum in Montgomery on November 15, 1966. The first segment is in color, and the second (beginning at 0:19:56) is in black-and-white. 0:20:55: Meeting of the Montgomery County Board of Education in November 1966, as well as a statement by attorney Vaughan Hill Robison about the board's legal efforts to halt the construction of Jefferson Davis High School. The board pursued the action to contest the wage and labor standards set by the Alabama Building Commission and the Public School and College Authority. 0:22:48: Annual Omicron Delta Kappa - Wilbur Hutsell Cake Race at Auburn University on November 17, 1966. The segment ends with the winner, freshman Eddie Collins, kissing Miss Auburn, Jana Howard, after receiving his trophy. Former coach Wilbur Hutsell, who is also present at the event, started the race in 1928 as a way of recruiting track athletes. 0:09:30: Football game between Catholic High School (of Montgomery) and Union Springs School at Cramton Bowl in Montgomery on November 18, 1966. Union Springs won the game, 13 to 8. 0:24:47: Members of the Alabama Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs participating in a mock trial led by Judge Annie Lola Price at the Supreme Court building in Montgomery on November 19, 1966. Charles Bennett, secretary of Jones Law School, directed the event, which was based on the real-life murder trial of State v. Caponey. 0:25:42: Beauty pageant at Huntingdon College in Montgomery on November 18, 1966. From the twenty contestants, the following eight were selected to be Campus Beauties for the 1966-1967 school year: Laura Gholson, Frankie Speaks, Martha Jo Reese, Judy Wilson, Sally McCord, Susan Lawrence, Eleanor Warr, and Linda Brantley.\n   \n\n  \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   \n\n   "},{"id":"aar_wsfa_2823","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D130.0003","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1966-06"],"dcterms_description":["Report on the March Against Fear through Mississippi, which had been started by James Meredith in Memphis, Tennessee, on June 5. (Meredith was injured by gunshots shortly after setting out was unable to rejoin the march until June 25.) Included is footage of the participants at campsites and on rural roads; a joint interview with leaders Martin Luther King Jr. and Stokely Carmichael, during which they discuss their opposing viewpoints of non-violence and the Black Power movement; and the arrival of the demonstrators in downtown Canton, Mississippi."],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D130, Item 0003"],"dcterms_subject":["African Americans--Civil rights","Civil rights demonstrations","Civil rights workers","Police","Reporters and reporting","Canton (Miss.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D130.0003"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/2823"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["film (material by form)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Abernathy, Ralph, 1926-1990","Carmichael, Stokely, 1941-1998","King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"aar_wsfa_1223","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D005.0006","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, Macon County, Tuskegee, 32.42415, -85.69096"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1966-01"],"dcterms_description":["Demonstrations in Tuskegee to protest the murder of civil rights worker Samuel L. Younge, who was killed on January 3, 1966. The footage beings with Gwen Patton, Wendell Paris, and other Tuskegee Institute students confronting Mayor Charles Keever about Younge's death, as well as segregation in local schools, public facilities, and businesses","the segment ends with everyone (including the city officials) holding hands and singing \"We Shall Overcome.\" Following that are scenes around town, including the spot where Younge's body was discovered (near the Greyhound bus station), the Macon County courthouse, and the Macon County jail. The film ends with shots of protesters marching in the rain. (The latter half of the footage is silent.)"],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["African Americans--Civil rights","Civil rights demonstrations","Municipal officials and employees--Alabama--Tuskegee","Tuskegee (Ala.)","Macon County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D005.0006"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/1223"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["newsreels"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Keever, Charles M.","Paris, Wendell","Patton, Gwendolyn Marie"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"aar_wsfa_1261","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D047.0005","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1965-05-11"],"dcterms_description":["Martin Luther King Jr. speaking at Brown Chapel AME Church in Selma, Alabama. He discusses a boycott of downtown businesses in the city (\"We aren't trying to put anybody out of business downtown. We're just trying to put justice in business, that's what we're trying to do.\"); the importance of the First Amendment and his opposition to communism (\"See, the reason I couldn't ever be a Communist is because I believe that the great moments in history have been the moments when individuals were left free to think. Some sacred in a nation that talks about freedom of speech, freedom of press, freedom of assembly. You can't do that over in Russia, you can't do that in Communist China.\"); the need for integration at schools and other public facilities (illustrated by an anecdote about an encounter at the Dobbs House restaurant in Atlanta); and the legislative bill that would result in the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Among those visible with near him are Coretta Scott King, P. H. Lewis, F. D. Reese, L. L. Anderson, Sheyann Webb, and Rachel West."],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)","WSFA collection","Box D047, Item 0005"],"dcterms_subject":["African Americans--Civil rights","Children","Civil rights workers","Race relations--Alabama","Segregation--Alabama","Selma (Ala.)","Dallas County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D047.0005"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/1261"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["16mm (photographic film size)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Anderson, Louis Lloyd","King, Coretta Scott, 1927-2006","King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968","Lewis, P. H. (Paul Hamilton)","Nelson, Rachel West","Reese, Frederick Douglas, 1929-2018","Webb, Sheyann"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"aar_wsfa_3340","title":"WSFA audiovisual item D142.0004","collection_id":"aar_wsfa","collection_title":"WSFA Collection","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, 32.75041, -86.75026"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1965-03-18"],"dcterms_description":["Governor George Wallace addressing a joint session of the Legislature in the House chamber of the Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama, the day after Judge Frank Johnson issued his court order allowing the Selma to Montgomery March to proceed. In his remarks, he discusses the costs of providing protection and support for the marchers, and he urges white citizens to avoid the upcoming demonstration: \"I ask you to restrain yourself, and I hope that at the time this march takes place, that you will stay at your workbench, that you will stay at your home, and that you will let this matter be handled by those who are in authority.\" (Seated in the background are Senator Pete Mathews and Lieutenant Governor Jim Allen.)"],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Montgomery, Ala. : Alabama Department of Archives and History"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["WSFA-TV (Television station : Montgomery, Ala.)||WSFA collection||Box D142, Item 0004"],"dcterms_subject":["Alabama State Capitol (Montgomery, Ala.)","African Americans--Civil rights","Civil rights demonstrations","Government officials--Alabama","Governors--Alabama","Legislators--Alabama","Political science","Civil rights demonstrations--Alabama","Montgomery (Ala.)","Montgomery County (Ala.)"],"dcterms_title":["WSFA audiovisual item D142.0004"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["Alabama. Department of Archives and History"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/wsfa/id/3340"],"dcterms_temporal":["1960/1969"],"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Copyright, Alabama Department of Archives and History. Donated by WSFA, https://www.wsfa.com."],"dcterms_medium":["16mm (photographic film size)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Allen, James B. (James Browning), 1912-1978","Mathews, Charles Thomas, 1917-2005","Wallace, George C. 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