Videos

Banner 1

 Some stories cannot be told strictly in print.

View the videos—old and new—about ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ and its culture and history.

Listen to former senator Frank "Hap" Farley shed light on the creation of ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ University--then called ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ State College.

We asked students two questions: "Why did you pick ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ?" and "How does your original opinion of ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ compare to your current opinion?" Here are the results.

Video courtesy of Fall 2018 Video Production Intern Melissa Tucker.

Three Mayflower students, now alumni, sharing their ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ experience.

Video courtesy of Fall 2018 Video Production Intern Melissa Tucker.

Watch this mashup of ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ dance performances through the years.

Video courtesy of Fall 2018 Video Production Intern Melissa Tucker.

 

Take a look at the beloved Cedar Bog on campus with its infamous bridge.

Video courtesy of Spring 2019 Video Production Intern Nicholas Georgel.

 

Professor Emeritus of Environmental Studies Claude Epstein remembers the early years of ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ and its struggle to find an environmentally responsible answer for waste water treatment.

Video Courtesy of Spring 2019 Video Production Intern Nicholas Georgel.

 

Dick Thomas, an early ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ registrar, describes the college's early days at the Mayflower Hotel in Atlantic City and parties in the 1970s.

Video courtesy of Fall 2019 Video Production Intern CJ Coyle.

 

David Lockwood, a ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ Community Garden member, gives an overview of the growing space and the benefits it provides to both students and the local community.

Video courtesy of Fall 2019 Video Production Intern CJ Coyle.

 

ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ senior Ashley Collins discusses the community in the Art Room of the Arts and Sciences Building. 

Video courtesy of Fall 2020 Video Production Intern CJ Coyle.

 

Professor Ken Tompkins, ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ's first Dean of General Studies, describes an early urban legend on campus.

Video courtesy of Spring 2020 Video Production Intern CJ Coyle.

 

The Spring 2020 strike team presents their work for the semester to the campus community.

 

Tom Kinsella and Ray Reichardt interview James Pullaro and William Hamilton about historical aspects of the ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ property including the identification of ÒùÐÔÊÓƵ’s Revolutionary War era sawmill, located on Lake Fred, and, in this excerpt, Lake Fred’s cranberry period.