Traveling Hopefully, 1982

Robert Louis Stephen­son once wrote that to travel hope­fully is bet­ter than to arrive. And the true reward is to labor. I have trav­elled hope­fully for all these years. So has the ACLU. Some day, some time, but the goal is clear, the road is hard, and progress painful. We are approach­ing — we are begin­ning to approach —  a tol­er­a­ble world of peace, order, and justice.

–Roger Bald­win, 95th Birth­day Cel­e­bra­tion, 1979

Reel Mudd’s show­case of the audio­vi­sual mate­ri­als from the Records of the Amer­i­can Civil Lib­er­ties Union con­tin­ues with Trav­el­ling Hope­fully. This 28 minute doc­u­men­tary tells the life story of Roger Bald­win, the ACLU direc­tor from 1920 to 1950. The film inter­sperses inter­views of Bald­win by Gail Sheehy and Nor­man Lear with praise for Baldwin’s actions by Ira Glasser, Andrew Young, Nor­man Dorsen, Ted Kennedy and oth­ers. Much of the praise for Bald­win comes from a 1979 din­ner hon­or­ing Baldwin’s 95th birthday.

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