Tuesday's memorial service for Rosalynn Carter--carried on television--was very moving.
Mrs. Carter was an extraordinary American--and an exceptional citizen of the world. She led a life of great service, and great purpose.
A Book About Network Television in the late 1940s and early 1950s, by Andrew Lee Fielding. Originally published in 2007 by BearManor Media. Revised Edition published in 2019. See also: www.andrewleefielding.com
Tuesday's memorial service for Rosalynn Carter--carried on television--was very moving.
Mrs. Carter was an extraordinary American--and an exceptional citizen of the world. She led a life of great service, and great purpose.
Tomorrow is--it feels startling to say this--the 60th anniversary of JFK's death.
Below is a photograph that my brother took the weekend of the assassination (though as the date at the top of the picture indicates, it was not developed until March of 1964).
The picture shows the screen of a black and white TV set our family had; the set was in a room off of our dining room. The image is of the President's casket, on Sunday, November 24th--I believe just after it had been placed on the bier, by the military service members who had carried the casket into the Rotunda of the Capitol building.
My brother was ten when he took the picture (I was seven). It looks to me as though two window shades in the room had been pulled down (though not entirely), one on each side of the TV set; my brother (who a handful of years later began what would become a photography career), evidently knew what to do to insure that the image would come out properly. Yet there is, nonetheless, a small imperfection at the near-center of the flag which covered the casket--a slight intrusion of white light, which perhaps came from another window in the room (there were several), or possibly from some unanticipated reflection.There is, to me, an eeriness to the photograph--maybe, in part, due to the darkness surrounding the television screen (a darkness, one could say, befitting the tragedy which had occurred two days before). Yet the photograph--showing the TV image, and the accompanying darkness--conveys, I think, a grim sort of beauty.
The following link is to an excellent piece from the website of The Atlantic, by staff writer Tom Nichols, titled "The Juvenile Viciousness of Campus Anti-Semitism." Its subtitle is: "Some of America's students are embracing an ancient evil."
https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/archive/2023/11/campus-anti-semitism-hamas-war/675991/
Mr. Nichols writes, for example, that at George Washington University,
activists projected pro-Hamas slogans on the sides of buildings, including “Free Palestine from the river to the sea,” a call for the eradication of Israel. Spare me the sophistry—most recently plumped by Representative Rashida Tlaib of Michigan—that “From the river to the sea” is merely an anodyne call for freedom and equal rights, or that it somehow can be detached from Hamas’s genocidal meaning...
Mr. Nichols writes:
Good for Harvard’s president, Claudine Gay, for denouncing this slogan (despite immediate campus backlash for doing so); better late than never. Some protesters insist—and many with undeniable honesty—that they are objecting only to Israeli policy. But even the sincerest among them often resort to the backbreaking mental gymnastics required to dismiss the obvious anti-Semitism that is woven into so many of these protests.
Are you in need of Copy Editing, Proofreading, or other writing services?
Would you like assistance in preparing a Press Release for your non-profit group, your small business, or for the book you've written?
If so, contact this address: editing2015@yahoo.com
Reasonable rates.