Bradley, Ed 1941-2006Overview
Publication Timeline
Most widely held works about
Ed Bradley
more
fewer
Most widely held works by
Ed Bradley
The Vietnam War with Walter Cronkite
(
Visual
)
6 editions published between 1994 and 2008 in English and held by 231 libraries worldwide Complete history of the Vietnam War, as chronicled by CBS News correspondents, from its genesis in the days after World War II to its conclusion with the fall of Saigon.
From the Big Apple to the Big Easy NYC's concerts for the Gulf Coast
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 2006 in English and held by 184 libraries worldwide New York City's live concert to support the long-term relief and rebuilding efforts following Hurricane Katrina. Show-stopping performances by New Orleans musical legends and many of music's biggest names.
Ennis' gift a film about learning differences
(
Visual
)
2 editions published in 2000 in English and held by 89 libraries worldwide In this film you meet actors, scientists, business leaders, a polar explorer, a teacher and dozens of others, both children and adults, who have one thing in common: they all have learning differences. These individuals refused to be limited by their difficulties or defined by the labels that were assigned to them. Special appearances by James Earl Jones, Henry Winkler, Charles Schwab, Danny Glover, Lindsay Wagner, Robert Rauschenberg, Bruce Jenner, Jack Horner, and others.
CBS reports. Enter the jury room
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 1997 in English and held by 82 libraries worldwide Ed Bradley and Richard Schlesinger examine the state of trial by jury in the U.S. by focusing on the juries in four criminal trials in the Maricopa County (Ariz.) Superior Court. Filmed deliberations of each jury are commented upon by the judge and lawyers in each case, legal experts, and the jurors themselves.
The Vietnam War with Walter Cronkite. Volume 1
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 2003 in English and held by 38 libraries worldwide The first segment in a 3-part film history of the Vietnam War, as chronicled by Walter Cronkite and other CBS News correspondents. Seeds of conflict looks at America's growing entanglement in Vietnam. America takes charge presents the arrival of the first American ground forces in Vietnam, followed by a massive buildup of U.S. forces as the war becomes Americanized. Courage under fire features remarkable combat footage from the first American offensive through the incursion into Cambodia. The World of Charlie Company joins the men of Charlie Company on a mission in Cambodia in 1970.
The Vietnam War with Walter Cronkite. Volume 2
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 2003 in English and held by 37 libraries worldwide The second segment in a 3-part film history of the Vietnam War, as chronicled by Walter Cronkite and other CBS News correspondents. The Elusive enemy, filmed mostly by the Viet Cong, takes an inside look at the weapons and tactics of the enemy. The Tet Offensive: By 1968, American commanders felt optimistic but then came the enemies' searing Tet holiday offensive, a coordinated attack on more than 100 cities throughout South Vietnam. This program captures the ferocity of the struggle and the stunned reaction in America. Dateline Saigon presents a portrait of Saigon, and its fall to the North Vietnamese forces at the end of the war. Fire from the sky: Presents the story of the men and machines that dominated the air over Southeast Asia for ten years.
The Vietnam War with Walter Cronkite. Volume 3
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 2003 in English and held by 36 libraries worldwide The third segment in a 3-part film history of the Vietnam War, as chronicled by Walter Cronkite and other CBS News correspondents. America pulls back looks at the war during the last days of U.S. involvement. It is a shocking story of poor morale, drug use and innocent victims of a brutal war. The end of the road: As America struggles for a way out, the so-called, "peace with honor," the final chapter of America's involvement in the Vietnam War unfolds. As Saigon falls, witness the last tragic act in a long and divisive war. Legacies: Journeys with veterans and people that lived through the conflict to revisit the places and memories of a distant but unforgotten war.
Vietnam 101
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 1988 in English and held by 31 libraries worldwide Describes a university-level course about the Vietnam War which features veterans of that war as speakers. Visits to the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C. by students enrolled in the course are included.
The Best of 60 minutes, vol. 1
(
Visual
)
2 editions published in 1984 in English and held by 22 libraries worldwide From over 1400 stories, here are some of the most extraordinary segments ever shown.
The Dance Theatre of Harlem
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 1988 in English and held by 22 libraries worldwide A profile of Arthur Mitchell and the Dance Theatre of Harlem. Mitchell, in interviews with 60 Minute's Ed Bradley, explains how he started in classical ballet and why he abandoned his own successful career to create the Dance Theatre of Harlem. Includes scenes of the children's classes and the company in rehearsal and performance.
The bad Samaritan
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 1998 in English and held by 15 libraries worldwide An interview with David Cash, the Berkeley student who took no action when his best friend raped and murdered a 7 year old girl in a Las Vegas casino.
Subcomandante Marcos
(
Visual
)
2 editions published in 1994 in English and held by 11 libraries worldwide Ed Bradley and the crew of 60 minutes travel to Mexico and interview Subcomandante Marcos in March 1994 about the peasant uprising in Chiapas.
The Vietnam War
(
Visual
)
2 editions published between 1985 and 2006 in English and held by 10 libraries worldwide
The Harlem Children's Zone
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 2006 in English and held by 10 libraries worldwide The Harlem Children's Zone -- a 60-square-block in Central Harlem -- educator and activist Geoffrey Canada is determined to prove that poor children from poor neighborhoods can succeed if they and their parents are given social, medical, and educational support. The "Zone", serves nearly 10,000 children, providing them with after-school programs such as tutoring, karate and music. Ed Bradley spends some time in the "Zone" with Geoffrey Canada.
Blacks in America life in the South, 1979
(
Visual
)
2 editions published between 2002 and 2003 in English and held by 10 libraries worldwide Filmed in 1979 in Tupelo, Lexington and other Mississippi locals, this program examines the gains made by African-Americans in the areas of education, employment, housing, health care and politics 25 years after the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to outlaw public school segregation. Segregationist academies and Ku Klux Klan activities are also investigated, to demonstrate how integration was being sidestepped by some and openly resisted by others.
Blacks in America life in the North, 1979
(
Visual
)
2 editions published between 2002 and 2003 in English and held by 10 libraries worldwide Filmed in 1979, correspondent Ed Bradley travels to his hometown of Philadelphia, to assess how African-Americans have been faring 25 years after the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to outlaw public school segregation. Quality education, employment opportunities, fair and adequate housing and political representation are addressed, as are issues of illiteracy, de facto segregation and racial violence.
Alice Coles of Bayview
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 2003 in English and held by 10 libraries worldwide A segment from the CBS "60 minutes" program devoted to the story of Alice Coles, a single mother from a poor rural town in Virginia who led an effort to transform her community.
Negative about affirmative action
(
Visual
)
2 editions published between 2000 and 2002 in English and held by 9 libraries worldwide Three white students charge in a lawsuit that the University of Michigan denied them entry, but enrolled black students who they say were less qualified academically.
Tell it like it is [live at Storyville Jazz Hall in New Orleans
(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 1989 in English and held by 9 libraries worldwide
CBS reports: Blacks in America with all deliberate speed? [Pt. 2
(
Visual
)
2 editions published in 2002 in English and held by 9 libraries worldwide Filmed in 1979, correspondent Ed Bradley travels to his hometown of Philadelphia, to assess how African-Americans have been faring 25 years after the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to outlaw public school segregation. Quality education, employment opportunities, fair and adequate housing and political representation are addressed, as are issues of illiteracy, de facto segregation and racial violence. more
fewer
Audience Level
Related Identities
Associated Subjects
60 minutes (Television program) Aeronautics, American military African Americans--Economic conditions African Americans--Education African Americans--Politics and government African Americans--Social conditions Arizona--Maricopa County Ballet dancing Benefit performances Biography Cambodia Choreographers Concert films Dance companies Dance for children Dance Theatre of Harlem Documentary films Documentary television programs Dyslexia Films for the hearing impaired History Interviews Jazz Jury Jury--Decision making Kroft, Steve Learning disabilities Louisiana--New Orleans Medicaid fraud Military campaigns Musical films Music--Instruction and study New York (State)--New York Popular music Press coverage Race relations Racism Rooney, Andrew A Safer, Morley School integration Stahl, Lesley Study skills Television broadcasting of news Tet Offensive (1968) United States Veterans Vietnam--Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam War (1961-1975) Wallace, Mike,--1918- War correspondents
|
Alternative Names
Bradley, Edward, 1941-
Bradley, Edward R., 1941-2006
Languages
Covers
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Related Identities