Digitization made possible by the National Historical Publications & Records Commission.
March 6, 1979 - Highlights from Macalester College symposium, "The Vietnam Experience and America Today" exploring the impact of Vietnam on the arts. Reporter Nancy Fushan has prepared the summary of discussions.; Hmong
March 7, 1979 - Vietnam symposium held at Macalester college. This segment deals with veterans.American veterans of the war and officials of the Veterans Administration discuss their conditions., the actions and attitudes of the VA in regard to Vietnam veterans, and medical and psychiatric problems of veterans.
March 8, 1979 - Dr. Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. speech. Part of Vietnam Symposium.
March 8, 1979 - Today's report covers Vietnam, the presidency, public trust and student activists.
March 9, 1979 - Vietnam symposium studies the effect the war had and has on America.Author and national defense specialist Herbert Y. Schandler, Marquette University journalist and professor and former Presidential Press Secretary to Lyndon Johnson, George Reedy, and moderator Hy Berman of the University of Minnesota History Department discuss relations between the Presidency and the Congress as a result of the war. Also, former Minnesota Congressman Donald M. Fraser and Notre Dame professor David C. Leege discuss the Vietnam War's effect on public confidence.
March 10, 1979 - The plight of the Vietnamese refugee, like that of the Vietnam veteran, are the two most visible reminders of a war most Americans would prefer to forget. The ten day conference held at Macalester was one of the first national post-war forums to examine the effects of Vietnam. The conference considered how the war changed America's values, communication, lifestyles, political institutions, economy and foreign policy.
March 14, 1979 -
March 14, 1979 - Radio Sweden's Al Simon prepared a summary of Isaac Singer's interview appearances in Stockholm while he was there to receive the Nobel Prize in literature.
March 19, 1979 - Psychologist, author, and theologian Dr. Rollo May offers his insights into the nature of freedom, the relationship between love and freedom, and related questions in a speech at Mankato State University.
March 20, 1979 - Women Who Dared to Write series profiles four important women writers: Virginia Woolf, Elizabeth Barrette Browning, Louisa May Alcott and Charlotte Bonte. The series presents excerpts of their works and is hosted by Fred Calland.