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- Several prohibition agents display cans and bottles of seized liquor for the camera. They are then shown dumping the goods at a junk yard, smashing up the tins and barrels seen earlier. The contents flow into what appears to be a lake of illegal hooch, and a few Negro residents are seen stealing some of the alcohol out of the battered leaking tins.
- Short film which documents William McKinley's presidential inauguration.
- The first sequence (ca. 49 ft.), views of President William McKinley speaks to the crowd during his inauguration in Washington, DC. We see crowds on Pennsylvania Ave., NW, passing by the Willard Hotel during the inauguration festivities. A military unit on horseback rides down the court of honor, the area on Pennsylvania Ave., NW, going down 15th to 17th streets. President and McKinley and his party reviews the inaugural parade from a stand here. McKinley tips his hat to the crowd as his carriage passes the Willard Hotel. Stting beside McKinley in the carriage is Sen. Marcus A. Hanna of Ohio with members of the President's special escort, Troop A of the Ohio National Guard, and aides aides with guards. The man riding alone in the second carriage is Vice President Theodore Roosevelt.
- A dying man in an intensive care unit decides to take his fate into his own hands.
- Soldiers carrying guns, soldiers carrying swords, and a military band parade in front of decorated stands.
- Mounted soldiers parade by decorated stands, towing cannon behind them. (Possibly part of William McKinley's 1897 inauguration parade.)
- The Washington Star of April 1st, 1900, gave the following account of the ceremony: "Over 40,000 women and children passed through the White House Gates to-day during the hours set apart for the great National show of Egg Rolling, and when the President stepped on the south front gallery at 4:15 P.M., at least 20,000 were within the grounds. The Marine Band rendered a programme of popular music. The President's children entertained at least fifty young friends during the day with a view of the egg rolling from the balcony, but none of them mingled with the great throng, preferring to view the panorama from the distance. They were much amused with the antics of the great crowd of children, who were of all colors and from every walk of life."
- PAST IS PROLOGUE is the prequel web series to Cristin Terrill's YA time travel novel ALL OUR YESTERDAYS, coming from Disney-Hyperion on 9/03/13. Meet Em and Finn, two imprisoned teens who are keeping a secret from the man they call only "the doctor" in this story that takes place in the days leading up to the beginning of the novel.
- Follows the first ever installation of bike racks at the legendary Howard University.
- From April 29th, 2017, Nolan Gould states over communal drums that climate change will change access to clean water and air. The camera marches with the people including a NASA retiree, Oklahoma protesters, Al Gore, and veterans.
- National Press Club hears a speech from Alfred Hitchcock.
- American astronomers from METI, which deals with Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence, invent a universal language for communicating with aliens. Their first message has already been sent. How long will we have to wait for an answer?
- The meeting of two fish.
- Emmy-nominated promo sizzle created for Chicago real estate developer McCaffery. An attention-grabber that showcases the breadth of McCaffery's offerings in the context of the people who live, work, and create within their developments.
- A young man contemplates life on a train journey home.
- Short film which documents President McKinley's escort to the Capitol building.
- Bryan Dunn is a man whose duty knows no bounds. And he has asthma.
- Threatened by his father, an artsy college student attempts to steal the test answers from his teacher but ultimately struggles to gain his father's acceptance for his art.
- A common street mugging is thwarted by a uniquely incompetent superhero.
- After a fight with Aeron culminating in Aeron shattering a plate, Rue finds more and more dark spots appearing on her body. Rue cannot seem to conceal or get rid of the spots no matter what she does. Will Aeron's love and concern be enough, or is the underlying cause something far more sinister?
- Documentary short from the producers of the Emmy-winning "Anacostia," highlighting the debut of "A Right to the City" at the Smithsonian's Anacostia Community Museum, a cultural landmark and institution in the historic D.C. neighborhood.
- Big Tuna is the hottest hit-woman around. She's assigned to kill one man and bring back proof, but she's a bit fed up with taking orders.
- Scenes of President McKinley's funeral.
- Using money from a recent law suit settlement, Billy embarks on his first how-to video, "How to Roundhouse Kick Someone in the Face"
- A single-shot experiment involving the reflective properties of the human eye, Blink If You Can Hear Me plays with the notion of perspective to explore popular perception of prescription opioid use.
- A middle-aged couple's fight about what to order in a restaurant turns into a questioning of their relationship's survival.
- Witness Against Torture protesters gather in front of the White House to recite the words of Fahd Ghazy, a man held at Guantánamo for thirteen years without charge or trial.
- They say that the dog is man's best friend, but - what does that imply? Animadversion is a somewhat different story of love (or lack of).