Main Speaker(s): Alan Green, Dr William Leggett, Bob Rae, Paul Wiens. Location: Stauffer Library. Video is footage of the grand opening of Stauffer library. Green gives a speech after which he calls up Dr Leggett takes the podium who thanks everyone for their work and funding for the library. Rae then talks about the importance of the library to the public. Brief speeches are given by representatives from the Stauffer foundation and the National Library. Paul Wiens talks about the library from a librarian's perspective, while . Edith Wiens sings opera songs between a few of the speeches. John Meisel gives another speech, then Dick Stackhouse and David Barr assist Green with cutting the ribbon to open the library. Video ends with Edith Wiens singing several songs.
Main Speaker(s): John Spragge. Pre-recorded video for an economics class where Spragge discusses the uses of computers in economics, including explanations of the various kinds of economics software a student would use.
Main Speaker(s): David Baird.Edited video narrated by Baird to advertise Queen's University. A re-edit of the original Tradition of Excellence, this time specifically for the Department of English. The video contains footage and audio from the original, but cut down from 16 minutes to 7. The video also features different music than the original.
Silent video containing still shots of things relating to William Coverdale's architecture in Kingston and Leon Krier's villa. First 15 min. of video is a slideshow buildings and architectural plans created by Coverdale, which is repeated again once it is over. Afterwards the next 3 min. of video consists of shots of a model of a villa which was designed by Krier, which is repeatednine times.
Main Speaker(s): Mark Baker. Video contains a lecture by Baker on the duties of a collection agent, as well as tactics used by them to have people pay their debts.
Part 1. Main Speaker(s): Harry Brown. Clips from CBC TV show Take 30. Begins with segment on The Jupiter Effect which would end the world on March 10, 1982 (the day after the show). Afterward comes a segment on a group of Canadian tapestries on loan to the Barbican Centre. The next segment is on how more and more Canadian families are getting multiple sources of income due to the increased number of wives joining the workforce, as well as the downsides of that. Part 2.Video on the history of women attending Queen's University, including their fight for equality in the university. Footage is a slideshow of photographs of women from Queen's history. Part 3. CKWS News segment on how electrical engineering students at Queen's will start designing silicon microchips, one of the first centres like it in the world.