Joan Roberts Speech, 1974

Scope and Content Note

The tape of this presentation has two tracks: a voice track containing the presentation itself and a time track containing time announcements at intervals of approximately five seconds. The abstract below lists, in order of presentation, the topics covered on the tape and indicates the time-marking at which point each segment begins.

Thus, the researcher by using a tape recorder's fast-forward button may find expeditiously and listen to discrete segments without listening to all of the taped presentation. For instance, the user who wishes to listen to the remarks about “TWO SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF WOMEN IN SOCIETY” should locate the place on the second track of side one where the voice announces the 03:45 time-marking (the voice says at this point, “three minutes, forty-five seconds”), and at this point switch to the first track to hear the commentary. The discussion of “TWO SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF WOMEN IN SOCIETY” continues until approximately 05:15 at which point the next topic (“HAVE FACED BOTH PROBLEMS IN LAST 2-3 MONTHS”) begins.

Notice that in many cases sentences beneath each headline explain more about the content of the topic. For example the sentences underneath “TWO SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF WOMEN IN SOCIETY” give further details on what appears on the tape between 03:45 and 05:15.

Statements, questions, and answers that have been transcribed verbatim from the tape to the abstract are given in quotation marks. Other entries in the abstract are either paraphrases or condensed topical statements. At certain points the abstract may give the researcher information about the quality of the sound on the tape, the identity of a speaker, the continuity of a discussion or answer, or other aspects of the recorded presentation as they occur. Information of this kind appears in brackets.

The abstract is designed to provide a brief outline of the content of the tape and cannot serve as a substitute for listening to it. However, the abstract will help the researcher easily locate distinct topics among the many minutes of presentation.