Infantry: Not Available At This Time (Currently in Progress). This Civil War Materials listing is a work in progress, as sections are completed they will be added to this site. Questions about any regiments that have not yet been added to this completed guide can be directed to our Reference Department by emailing Reference, by calling our Reference Desk at (317)234-0321, or by referring to the Civil War Researcher’s Guide to see if we have materials related to that regiment. It is expected that this listing will be in progress for the foreseeable future owing to the extensive collection materials housed at IHS. Materials in our printed collections can be found by searching the regiment in our online catalog. This listing highlights only materials from our manuscript and visual collections. Indiana’s participation in the Civil War was extensive and as such the IHS Library has collected a significant amount of material related to regiments and to the individual soldiers within them. This expanded Civil War Materials listing uses the previous Researcher’s Guide as a starting point. The Researcher’s Guide was created and maintained by the IHS Collections and Library as a contribution to the 150th commemoration (2011-2015). The IHS also served as a member of the Indiana Civil War Sesquicentennial Committee for Indiana’s Civil War Sesquicentennial Commemoration. A Civil War Researcher’s Guide at the Indiana Historical Society was created in 2011 with the start of the 150th anniversary of the war. Smith Memorial Library collects, preserves and makes accessible a substantial amount of material related to the American Civil War and especially to the role of Indiana’s people in the conflict. The Indiana Historical Society’s William H.
0 Comments
And her best girlfriend, LaDonna Fredericks, was often relegated to saying either “girl,” “Chile” or, most often, “Girl, I hate that.” Catchphrases were extremely important back then, which is why, in addition to LaDonna’s signature dialogue, Johnny Slash also was required to say, “Totally different head - totally,” at least once per episode.īut the fact that “Square Pegs” was of its time, in its time, was what made it so great to watch and, for those who wax nostalgic about that era ( who, me?), great to watch again. People regularly used phrases like “Gag me with a spoon!” and “barf.” Jennifer DiNuccio (Tracy Nelson) - the popular Valley Girl who said “like” at a ridiculous level of frequency intended to be comedic but that now seems less comedic because everyone talks that way - actually wore a zigzag-print leotard and leg warmers in one episode. It still featured that God-awful retro laugh track. Another word I learned from those titles: cleavage.)Ī re-watch of any “Square Pegs” episode - available on DVD and streaming on Amazon - confirms that this show soaked heavily in its ’80s juices. (Clique - I actually learned that word from listening to the “Square Pegs” opening titles. It was like a weekly John Hughes movie, before the Hughes movies had come out. It was a show about not fitting in that hit the zeitgeist long before “My So-Called Life,” “Freaks and Geeks” or, yes, “Glee” would attempt to insightfully explore similar terrain. It was a show starring young, not always model-pretty characters - from nerdy pals Patty (Parker) and Lauren (Amy Linker) to tweaked-out musician Johnny Slash (the late Merritt Butrick) to hyper-overachiever Muffy Tepperman (Jami Gertz) - who talked in a language peppered with references to Pac-Man and the Clash. As envisioned by creator Anne Beats, a former “Saturday Night Live” writer, it was a single-camera series when almost every other sitcom was a multi-camera, shot-live-before-a-studio-audience deal. “Square Pegs”looked very different from everything else on television. But if you were a kid walking the Earth then and are still reeling from the arrival of MTV 13 months prior, this seemed like another youth culture game-changer. Given that the show was canceled after its inaugural season, it may not have been a super-monumentous occasion. 27, 1982, the high school comedy “ Square Pegs” aired for the first time on CBS. |