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These discussions were held in front of an audience at Columbia University Law School back in an era where you had to be cordial even if it's clear you hated each other, so it's a pretty interesting series of discussions.

They do a decent job of trying to balance voices from the left and right.

Warning, there are some super assholes who represent the right.

  1. Executive Privilege and Delegation of Powers
    Can the President's conversations with advisors remain secret when Congress demands to know what was said? Congresswoman Barbara Mikulski, former President Gerald Ford, and Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox bring first-hand experience to this topic.

  2. War Powers and Covert Action
    If the president, as commander in chief, decides to declare war, can Congress restrain him? Debating the issue are Gerald Ford, former CIA deputy director Bobby Inman, former secretary of state Edmund Muskie, and others.

  3. Nomination, Election, and Succession of the President
    A tangled web of issues is involved in electing a president. Edmund Muskie, former presidential press secretary Jody Powell, party officials, and others discuss the role of political parties, the electoral college, and what to do if a president becomes disabled.

  4. Criminal Justice and a Defendant's Right to a Fair Trial
    Should a lawyer defend a guilty person? This and other questions are debated by Bronx district attorney Mario Merola, former New York mayor Edward Koch, CBS News anchor Dan Rather, and others.

  5. Crime and Insanity
    Is a psychiatric evaluation precise enough to be allowed as testimony in a court of law? U.S. Court of Appeals judge Irving Kaufman, Hastings Center president Willard Gaylin, and others discuss the use of psychiatry in law.

  6. Crime and Punishments
    Cruel and unusual punishment, from overcrowding in prisons to the death penalty, is debated by U.S. Court of Appeals judge Arthur Alarcon, Federal Bureau of Prisons director Norman Carlson, government leaders, civil libertarians, and journalists.

  7. Campaign Spending
    Do limits on campaign spending infringe on First Amendment rights? Political consultant David Garth, Washington Post columnist David Broder, Bill Moyers, and others explore the issues.

  8. National Security and Freedom of the Press
    What right does the public have to know about national security issues? Former CIA director and secretary of defense James Schlesinger, former attorney general Griffin Bell, and others debate the issue.

  9. School Prayer, Gun Control, and the Right To Assemble
    A series of events embroils a small town in First and Second Amendment controversies. Featured are Griffin Bell, former secretary of education Shirley Hufstedler, and civil liberties counsel Jeanne Baker.

  10. Right To Live, Right To Die
    Gloria Steinem, Joseph Califano, Rep. Henry Hyde, Phil Donahue, and others discuss the right to make intensely individual decisions about dying, abortion, personal freedom, and privacy.

  11. Immigration Reform
    The rights of legal and illegal aliens to employment and to medical and educational services are debated by U.S. Court of Appeals judge Arlin Adams, Notre Dame president Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, and immigration officials and journalists.

  12. Affirmative Action Versus Reverse Discrimination
    Are quotas based on sex or race unconstitutional? Participants include Ellen Goodman, former EEOC chair Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington Post columnist William Raspberry, and United Federation of Teachers president Albert Shanker.

  13. Federalism
    How much power the federal government can wield over state and local affairs is debated in this final episode. Among those featured are Senators Orrin Hatch and Daniel Moynihan and Columbia University professor Diane Ravitch.

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I used to have this episode on tape.

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I had it, but I never unrolled it to look at it.

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Jack Horkheimer was the director of the Miami Space Transit Planetarium and a wonderfully nerdy guy with a PBS astronomy program that was originally called Jack Horkheimer: Star Hustler and then later Jack Horkheimer: Star Gazer. His catch phrase was a cheery, "keep looking up!"

Jack left us in 2010, but I will never forget his infectious, charismatic nerdiness.

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This show is much better than I remember it.

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Definitely done because of the success of Star Wars and also, oddly, Upstairs Downstairs. Don't expect to laugh. You won't.

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This Canadian sitcom was hastily assembled in 1970 to comply with upcoming Canadian content requirements and had an extremely limited budget for both time and money. 130 episodes of the series were produced, requiring scripts to be recycled from 1940s radio dramas, line mistakes to be kept in the finished product due to time and money constraints, and virtually the entire series shot from one small living-room set. As a result of the poor-quality end product, the series is often considered one of the worst of all time.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sitcoms_known_for_negative_reception

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I watched this show religiously when it was on.

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I love the Internet Archive so much.

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Gorey, apparently, was a prolific sewer along with being an artist and frequently sewed toys, some based on his own creations.

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

In my opinion, one of the best concert videos, even if it isn't a live concert in front of an audience.

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I know this has made the rounds online before but given it was just a demo tape for a format most have never heard of I figured it may still find new audiences here.

Source of the rip and more info on the format is available in this video.

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Yes, really.

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This is one of my all-time favorite plays and this is a terrific production of it too.

It's a very weird, but very entertaining play that is a satire on American culture and religion, but about a family that lives through various ages of human history as if they were contemporary or near-contemporary.

While the Antrobus family remains constant throughout the play, the three acts do not form a continuous narrative. The first act takes place during an impending ice age; in the second act the family circumstances have changed as George becomes president of the Fraternal Order of Mammals (apparent references to Sodom and Gomorrah but also to the Roaring Twenties), while the end of the world approaches a second time; the third act opens with Maggie and Gladys emerging from a bunker at the end of a seven-year-long war.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Skin_of_Our_Teeth

I'm almost certain that The Flintstones was inspired by Act I of this play, but I don't want to suggest that it's in any way like The Flintstones other than both being "modern stone-age families."

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