|
View of Davis Library’s Grounds around 2:45 PM Tuesday
10.15.13
|
Today, Rio Grande alum Larry Rosen visited
Davis Library to share tales of his student college years during the late 1960s –early 1970s.
While attending classes, Rosen worked part-time
at local radio station that covered the
1967 Silver Bridge Tragedy,
one of initial focuses of the
Ohio River
Tales project.
|
Mike Thompson, Instructional Media & Design Services (IDMS) Director and Rio Grande student Carole Armstong prepare Rio Grande alum Larry Rosen for his "Ohio River Tales" video-recording session at Davis Library |
Rosen also discussed his experiences protesting the
Vietnam War
on campus with
Abbott
(Abbie) Hoffman, a leading social activist and politician at the time who
had staged a demonstration here just outside the Davis Library in 1969.
|
Sam Wilson, Profesor of History, Mike Thompson, IDMS Director, Rio Grande students Karen Proffit and Carole Armstrong (enrolled in Thompson's Intro to Radio/TV course) participate in the "Ohio River Tales" interview process of Rio Grande alum Larry Rosen | |
|
Ohio River Tales is
currently expanding its oral history collections to include stories of local
African-American heritage as well as recollections of Vietnam War era and its
impact on our tri-state (Ohio/Kentucky/West Virginia) region.
The gathering of such accounts will be a
continuous process and a number of recordings sessions are being scheduled both
on campus and within the community in the coming weeks.
On Friday, October 18, 2013 members of the
Ohio River Tales project team will be
visiting the
John Gee Black
Historical Center in
Gallipolis,
Ohio from 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. to conduct interviews and collect remembrances
of
Lincoln
School, an all-black school once headed by noted scientist
Edward
Bouchet, the first African-American to earn a doctorate degree in the
United States, and tales of the
Lambert
Lands, a free-slave settlement near
Bidwell, Ohio that
existed 20 years prior to the
Emancipation
Proclamation issued by
Abraham
Lincoln in 1863.
Do you have a story
to share? If so, please contact Gregory
A. Miller, Director of Cultural Advancement for the university at
1.800.281.7201, extension 7030 or gmiller@rio.edu.
If you have questions about Davis Library’s role in this
digital initiative, please feel free to “Ask Us!”