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#I. Stanford Jolley
oldshowbiz · 2 years
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Character actor I. Stanford Jolley
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badmovieihave · 1 year
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Bad movie I have The Complete First Season Wagon Train 1957
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gatutor · 2 years
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I. Stanford Jolley-Carol Forman "La viuda negra" (The black widow) 1947, de Spencer Gordon Bennett, Fred C. Brannon.
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doraemonmon · 2 years
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The Ape - Boris Karloff with I. Stanford Jolley
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chernobog13 · 1 year
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The Crimson Ghost terrorizing Diana Farnsworth (Linda Stirling) in his 1946 movie serial.
The Crimson Ghost had one of the best masks of all the film serial villains. So memorable, in fact, that the band The Misfits has used The Ghost's visage as their mascot.
Unfortunately, his main foil, criminologist Professor Duncan Richards (Charles Quigley) didn't have a costume of his own, and was fairly dull.
The production used some real fake-outs to keep the audience from figuring out who The Crimson Ghost was until the end of the final chapter. The man inside the costume was Bud Geary, but The Crimson Ghost's voice belonged to actor I. Stanford Jolley. Meanwhile, Jolley appeared on screen as a psychologist victimized by The Crimson Ghost. And when finally unmasked, Scooby Doo-style, it's revealed that The Crimson Ghost was a college professor played by actor Joseph Forte. Got that all straight?
One final thing memorable thing about the serial to mention: Clayton Moore starred as The Crimson Ghost's # 1 henchman/right hand goon. Three years later Moore would star as The Lone Ranger on the eponymous television program, a role for which was known for the rest of his life.
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kwebtv · 1 year
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Burke’s Law -  List of Guest Stars
The Special Guest Stars of “Burke’s Law” read like a Who’s Who list of Hollywood of the era.  Many of the appearances, however, were no more than one scene cameos.  This is as complete a list ever compiled of all those who even made the briefest of appearances on the series.  
Beverly Adams, Nick Adams, Stanley Adams, Eddie Albert, Mabel Albertson, Lola Albright, Elizabeth Allen, June Allyson, Don Ameche, Michael Ansara, Army Archerd, Phil Arnold, Mary Astor, Frankie Avalon, Hy Averback, Jim Backus, Betty Barry, Susan Bay, Ed Begley, William Bendix, Joan Bennett, Edgar Bergen, Shelley Berman, Herschel Bernardi, Ken Berry, Lyle Bettger, Robert Bice, Theodore Bikel, Janet Blair, Madge Blake, Joan Blondell, Ann Blyth, Carl Boehm, Peter Bourne, Rosemarie Bowe, Eddie Bracken, Steve Brodie, Jan Brooks, Dorian Brown, Bobby Buntrock, Edd Byrnes, Corinne Calvet, Rory Calhoun, Pepe Callahan, Rod Cameron, Macdonald Carey, Hoagy Carmichael, Richard Carlson, Jack Carter, Steve Carruthers, Marianna Case, Seymour Cassel, John Cassavetes, Tom Cassidy, Joan Caulfield, Barrie Chase, Eduardo Ciannelli, Dane Clark, Dick Clark, Steve Cochran, Hans Conried, Jackie Coogan, Gladys Cooper, Henry Corden, Wendell Corey, Hazel Court, Wally Cox, Jeanne Crain, Susanne Cramer, Les Crane, Broderick Crawford, Suzanne Cupito, Arlene Dahl, Vic Dana, Jane Darwell, Sammy Davis Jr., Linda Darnell, Dennis Day, Laraine Day, Yvonne DeCarlo, Gloria De Haven, William Demarest, Andy Devine, Richard Devon, Billy De Wolfe, Don Diamond, Diana Dors, Joanne Dru, Paul Dubov, Howard Duff, Dan Duryea, Robert Easton, Barbara Eden, John Ericson, Leif Erickson, Tom Ewell, Nanette Fabray, Felicia Farr, Sharon Farrell, Herbie Faye, Fritz Feld, Susan Flannery, James Flavin, Rhonda Fleming, Nina Foch, Steve Forrest, Linda Foster, Byron Foulger, Eddie Foy Jr., Anne Francis, David Fresco, Annette Funicello, Eva Gabor, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Reginald Gardiner, Nancy Gates, Lisa Gaye, Sandra Giles, Mark Goddard, Thomas Gomez, Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez, Sandra Gould, Wilton Graff, Gloria Grahame, Shelby Grant, Jane Greer, Virginia Grey, Tammy Grimes, Richard Hale, Jack Haley, George Hamilton, Ann Harding, Joy Harmon, Phil Harris, Stacy Harris, Dee Hartford, June Havoc, Jill Haworth, Richard Haydn, Louis Hayward, Hugh Hefner, Anne Helm, Percy Helton, Irene Hervey, Joe Higgins, Marianna Hill, Bern Hoffman, Jonathan Hole, Celeste Holm, Charlene Holt, Oscar Homolka, Barbara Horne, Edward Everett Horton, Breena Howard, Rodolfo Hoyos Jr., Arthur Hunnicutt, Tab Hunter, Joan Huntington, Josephine Hutchinson, Betty Hutton, Gunilla Hutton, Martha Hyer, Diana Hyland, Marty Ingels, John Ireland, Mako Iwamatsu, Joyce Jameson, Glynis Johns, I. Stanford Jolley, Carolyn Jones, Dean Jones, Spike Jones, Victor Jory, Jackie Joseph, Stubby Kaye, Monica Keating, Buster Keaton, Cecil Kellaway, Claire Kelly, Patsy Kelly, Kathy Kersh, Eartha Kitt, Nancy Kovack, Fred Krone, Lou Krugman, Frankie Laine, Fernando Lamas, Dorothy Lamour, Elsa Lanchester, Abbe Lane, Charles Lane, Lauren Lane, Harry Lauter, Norman Leavitt, Gypsy Rose Lee, Ruta Lee, Teri Lee, Peter Leeds, Margaret Leighton, Sheldon Leonard, Art Lewis, Buddy Lewis, Dave Loring, Joanne Ludden,  Ida Lupino, Tina Louise, Paul Lynde, Diana Lynn, James MacArthur, Gisele MacKenzie, Diane McBain, Kevin McCarthy, Bill McClean, Stephen McNally, Elizabeth MacRae, Jayne Mansfield, Hal March, Shary Marshall, Dewey Martin, Marlyn Mason, Hedley Mattingly, Marilyn Maxwell, Virginia Mayo, Patricia Medina, Troy Melton, Burgess Meredith, Una Merkel, Dina Merrill, Torben Meyer, Barbara Michaels, Robert Middleton, Vera Miles, Sal Mineo, Mary Ann Mobley, Alan Mowbray, Ricardo Montalbán, Elizabeth Montgomery, Ralph Moody, Alvy Moore, Terry Moore, Agnes Moorehead, Anne Morell, Rita Moreno, Byron Morrow, Jan Murray, Ken Murray, George Nader, J. Carrol Naish, Bek Nelson, Gene Nelson, David Niven, Chris Noel, Kathleen Nolan, Sheree North, Louis Nye, Arthur O'Connell, Quinn O'Hara, Susan Oliver, Debra Paget, Janis Paige, Nestor Paiva, Luciana Paluzzi, Julie Parrish, Fess Parker, Suzy Parker, Bert Parks, Harvey Parry, Hank Patterson, Joan Patrick, Nehemiah Persoff, Walter Pidgeon, Zasu Pitts, Edward Platt, Juliet Prowse, Eddie Quillan, Louis Quinn, Basil Rathbone, Aldo Ray, Martha Raye, Gene Raymond, Peggy Rea, Philip Reed, Carl Reiner, Stafford Repp, Paul Rhone, Paul Richards, Don Rickles, Will Rogers Jr., Ruth Roman, Cesar Romero, Mickey Rooney, Gena Rowlands, Charlie Ruggles, Janice Rule, Soupy Sales, Hugh Sanders, Tura Satana, Telly Savalas, John Saxon, Lizabeth Scott, Lisa Seagram, Pilar Seurat, William Shatner, Karen Sharpe, James Shigeta, Nina Shipman, Susan Silo, Johnny Silver, Nancy Sinatra, The Smothers Brothers, Joanie Sommers, Joan Staley, Jan Sterling, Elaine Stewart, Jill St. John, Dean Stockwell, Gale Storm, Susan Strasberg, Inger Stratton, Amzie Strickland, Gil Stuart, Grady Sutton, Kay Sutton, Gloria Swanson, Russ Tamblyn. Don Taylor, Dub Taylor, Vaughn Taylor, Irene Tedrow, Terry-Thomas, Ginny Tiu, Dan Tobin, Forrest Tucker, Tom Tully, Jim Turley, Lurene Tuttle, Ann Tyrrell, Miyoshi Umeki, Mamie van Doren, Deborah Walley, Sandra Warner, David Wayne, Ray Weaver, Lennie Weinrib, Dawn Wells, Delores Wells, Rebecca Welles, Jack Weston, David White, James Whitmore, Michael Wilding, Annazette Williams, Dave Willock, Chill Wills, Marie Wilson, Nancy Wilson, Sandra Wirth, Ed Wynn, Keenan Wynn, Dana Wynter, Celeste Yarnall, Francine York.
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wahwealth · 3 months
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🐉Bella Lugosi, Joan Barclay, George Pembroke. Clayton Moore | Black Dragons
Black Dragons is a 1942 US film directed by William Nigh.  The stars are   Bela Lugosi, Joan Barclay, George Pembroke. and Clayton Moore.  The film was being made during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 and was rushed into production.  The movie is about Japan's diabolical Black Dragon Society.  The Black Dragons are involved in an evil plot with the Nazis. A master scientist, Dr. Melcher, traveled to Japan on a secret mission. He operates on six Japanese, transforming them to look like six US leaders. The real leaders are murdered and replaced with their look likes. Cast Bela Lugosi as Dr. Melcher aka Monsieur Colomb / Cell Prisoner Joan Barclay as Alice Saunders George Pembroke as Dr. Bill Saunders Clayton Moore as Dick Martin Robert Frazer as Amos Hanlin Edward Peil, Sr. as Philip Wallace (credited as Edward Piel Sr.) Robert Fiske as Ryder Irving Mitchell as John Van Dyke Kenneth Harlan as FBI Chief Colton Max Hoffman Jr. as Kearney Frank Melton as FBI Agent Joseph Eggenton as Stevens I. Stanford Jolley as The Dragon (credited as Stanford Jolley) Never miss a video. Join the channel so that Mr. P can notify you when new videos are uploaded: https://www.youtube.com/@nrpsmovieclassics
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jedivoodoochile · 11 months
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'The Crimson Ghost' released on Oct 26, 1946.
The serial is divided into twelve chapters, and stars Charles Quigley as Professor Duncan Richards, a criminologist who attempts to thwart the efforts of the eponymous villain, the Crimson Ghost, to steal an invention that can render electrical devices powerless. The serial also stars Linda Stirling, Clayton Moore, and I. Stanford Jolley. In 1966 it was re-edited and re-released as a television film titled “Cyclotrode X". The serial's titular villain, the Crimson Ghost, has become somewhat of a pop culture icon due to the punk rock band Misfits having adapted his skull-like visage as part of their iconography. The Misfits first made use of the character's likeness in a flyer promoting one of their gigs on March 28, 1979 at Max's Kansas City, after vocalist Glenn Danzig and bassist Jerry Only came across a picture of the Crimson Ghost while searching for images to silkscreen on T-shirts. Heavy metal band Iron Maiden have also used the Crimson Ghost in their "The Number of the Beast" music video.
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thebutcher-5 · 3 years
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La città dei mostri
La città dei mostri
Benvenuti o bentornati sul nostro blog. Nello scorso articolo abbiamo deciso di parlare di una commedia horror davvero simpatica: Freaky. Una commedia horror che possiamo definire una parodia di Quel pazzo venerdì dove, invece che esserci lo scambio di corpo tra figlia e madre, avremo lo scambio di corpo tra un’adolescente e un serial killer. I due attori principali riescono a fare un ottimo…
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michigandrifter · 5 years
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Tumbleweed 1953
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manualstogo · 4 years
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For just $3.99 A Bride for Henry Released September 29, 1937: While her bride groom is sleeping off a wild bachelor party, the angry bride marries the best man to get revenge. Directed by: William Nigh Written by: Marion Orth from a story by Josephine Bentham. The Actors: Anne Nagel Sheila Curtis, Warren Hull Henry Tuttle, Henry Mollison Eric Reynolds, Claudia Dell Helen Van Orden, Betty Ross Clarke Mrs. Curtis, Lyle Moraine unknown, Harry Harvey reporter, Harrison Greene Constable, Richard Cramer bicycle owner, I. Stanford Jolley party guest, Donald Kerr reporter, Sam Koki Hawaiian musician, Hal Price Clifford Van Fleet, Carleton Young hotel guest Runtime: 58min *** This item will be supplied on a quality disc and will be sent in a sleeve that is designed for posting CD's DVDs *** This item will be sent by 1st class post for quick delivery. Should you not receive your item within 12 working days of making payment, please contact us as it is unusual for any item to take this long to be delivered. Note: All my products are either my own work, licensed to me directly or supplied to me under a GPL/GNU License. No Trademarks, copyrights or rules have been violated by this item. This product complies withs rules on compilations, international media and downloadable media. All items are supplied on CD or DVD.
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oldshowbiz · 4 years
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Hangdog character actor I. Stanford Jolley
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rpsabetto · 7 years
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White Christmas
(USA 1954)
“May your days be merry and bright; and may all your Christmases be white!”
— Cast
I’ve never heard anyone — not even my grandparents — call White Christmas their favorite movie. Nonetheless, as corny holiday adventure romantic comedies go, it’s a holiday treat that can’t be beat. This year, we caught a double feature (White Christmas and It’s a Wonderful Life) complete with live…
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VALLEY OF THE DRAGONS (1961)
Moments before they are about to engage in a duel to the death over a woman, Hector (Cesare Danova) and Michael (Sean McClory) find themselves struck by a comet and swept away to a prehistoric world, filled with gigantic predatory animals and savage man-like creatures. Putting aside their differences in order to survive, the two of them traverse the land and discover a pair of tribes of more human-like, comparatively civilized people. Becoming separated by an attacking mammoth, Hector and Michael each end up at a different tribe, gaining their trust as well as the affections of one of their women. Unfortunately, all is not well as a nearby volcano erupts, threatening both tribes and forcing them all to work together. Once the immediate danger has passed, a group of giant reptiles disturbed by the eruption begin to menace Michael's tribe, bringing the two even closer together as they unite against the beasts. With both tribes now on friendly terms, Hector and Michael begin to plan for their eventual return home.
Loosely based on Jules Vernes' story "Off on a Comet," Valley of the Dragons is a highly entertaining film, though likely not for the reasons the filmmakers intended. While the movie starts off well enough (though it does feature some clunky Twilight Zone-style narration as if worried that the audience might not be able to piece the story together themselves), as soon as Hector and Michael begin to explore their new prehistoric surroundings, things quickly go awry. The first ancient creature we see is not a brand new creation for this film (not even an inept one), but rather stock footage. And not stock footage of a nondescript, generic dinosaur either, but of Rodan, from the Toho film of the same name! Unfortunately, this is the movie's biggest problem: Its special effects are all taken from other films. It's not just Rodan, but King Dinosaur, One Million B.C., and Cat-Women of the Moon are all pillaged to create effects sequences for this movie. And when you're not having fun recognizing the unmistakable stock footage used from other films, you're cringing at the blatant animal abuse as you watch a monitor lizard get literally tossed at an alligator-turned-slurpasaur and see the two tear into each other. And then there's the shot of the not-too-bad-looking woolly mammoths hanging out next to... giant armadillos. Finally, the catastrophic eruption of the volcano feels like it should be the grand finale of the movie (or at least very close to it), but the film instead continues for quite a while after that, not quite wearing out its welcome, but coming very close. It's during the eruption that Rodan makes his return to the film, emerging from the ground and flying away. Amusing, once you realize that he finally succeeded in escaping a volcanic eruption after failing to have done so in his debut movie (surprisingly, none of the Rodan footage used in this sequence is from the eruption scene).
Cesare Danova and Sean McClory are serviceable as our leads Hector and Michael, but unfortunately their character development ends roughly twenty minutes into the movie. Instead of stretching out their uneasy alliance and learning to trust each other for a majority of the film, they quickly save each other from savages and a giant spider respectively, then become best friends from there on. And while admittedly that is a refreshing change of pace (as most other movies would make them distrust each other for the entire movie while there are killer dinosaurs running around, which would be rather aggravating), they unfortunately don't have anything else for the two to deal with once that first development is taken care of. They become friends near the start of the movie and then there's no real challenge to overcome or goal to accomplish. Even the "bully" caveman in Michael's tribe, Anoka (Mike Lane), is taken care of fairly quickly with a single punch and never becomes a problem again. Playboy Centerfold Joan Staley plays Deena, Hector's cavegirlfriend, and essentially has to mime her entire performance, grunting out the occasional nonsense caveman word (though the scene where she and Hector teach each other their respective languages is admittedly a cute one). There's an underwater sequence where she swims around in skimpy clothes (providing a surprising amount of underboob in the process) which is nice to watch, but like the volcanic eruption and resulting lizard attack, it goes on for far longer than is necessary - And honestly, it's surprising they didn't use stock footage of the Gill Man looking up at her from Creature from the Black Lagoon. Danielle De Metz plays Nateeta, Michael's girl, and she has even less to do than Deena does. Whereas Deena's relationship with Hector (such as it is) is shown evolving and her capture is eventually what brings the two tribes together, Nateeta basically just stands around looking pretty, her only real contribution to the plot is that she’s briefly jealous of Deena, and even that is resolved quickly. As one might imagine for characters of this type and era, almost everything concerning Deena and Nateeta is hilariously outdated and sexist, with a few moments even bordering on offensive, like a brief scene where Michael leads a captured Deena around via a rope tied around her wrists (which sounds far worse than it is in the movie - it's a heroic moment where he rescues her from the men of 'his' tribe - but still gives one pause for a moment) then proceeds to reassure Nateeta with "you belong to me."
While doing absolutely no justice to the classic works of Jules Verne, Valley of the Dragons is nevertheless fun to watch. It's definitely filled with problems, but none of them make the film unwatchable and in fact come together in an enjoyable "so bad it's good" sort of way. If you like your dinosaur movies with a healthy dose of animal abuse and objectifying women, give it a watch! It won't disappoint.
Rating: ★★ ½
Cast: Cesare Danova ... Hector Servadac Sean McClory ... Michael Denning Joan Staley ... Deena Danielle De Metz ... Nateeta I. Stanford Jolley ... Patoo Mike Lane ... Anoka
A.K.A.: Prehistoric Valley. Director: Edward Bernds. Producer: Byron Roberts and Al Zimbalist (executive producer). Writer: Edward Bernds, Donald Zimbalist (story), and Jules Verne (original story "Off on a Comet"). Music: Ruby Raksin. Special Effects: Richard Albain.
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jedivoodoochile · 2 years
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King of the Rocket Men es una serie de películas en blanco y negro de 12 capítulos de 1949de Republic Pictures , producida por Franklin Adreon , dirigida por Fred C. Brannon , protagonizada por Tristram Coffin , Mae Clarke , Don Haggerty , House Peters, Jr. , James Craven e I. Stanford Jolley .
Esta serie de películas se destaca por presentar al único personaje llamado "Rocket Man", un nombre inapropiado que los fanáticos aplicaron a los otros héroes propulsados ​​​​por cohetes de la República que siguieron en sus series posteriores: Radar Men from the Moon (1952), Zombies of the Stratosphere (1952) y Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe (1953).
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hottytoddynews · 7 years
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High school students (from left) Blake Howard, Caroline Sturgis, Peyton Jolley and Annija Westfall conduct a gunshot residue test during the third annual CSI Camp. Photo by Thomas Graning/Ole Miss Communications
A dead body, blood spatter, guns, bullets and DNA samples – all fake – offered plenty of opportunities for gifted middle and high school students to test their forensic skills recently at the University of Mississippi.
Thirty-five seventh- through 12th-graders visited Ole Miss as part of a weeklong camp on forensic science. Sponsored by the American Academy of Forensic Science, the UM Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Division of Outreach and Continuing Education, the event drew students from Mississippi, Alabama, California, Illinois, Louisiana, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, Ohio, Texas and the District of Columbia.
Led by Murrell Godfrey, the university’s forensic chemistry program director, and his students, the group spent time honing detective skills while examining “evidence” throughout classrooms and labs in Coulter Hall.
“The students participated in daily labs where they participated in analyzing the crime scene evidence using high-tech instrumentation and techniques used in a real crime laboratory, including gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, infrared spectroscopy, liquid chromatography, comparison microscope, DNA analysis and gunshot residue analysis,” Godfrey said.
“The students then must defend their data and results as expert witnesses in a mock trial held on the last day of the camp.”
Ole Miss graduate student Caroline Spencer assisted with instruction, and undergraduate students Zachara Catchings and Ebone McCowan served as camp counselors. Cass Dodgen, project manager for summer programs, coordinated transportation, housing and meals.
Participants observed as Godfrey and others demonstrated the proper procedures for analysis of the staged evidence recovered from the mock crime scene.
Some of the hands-on activities include DNA, fingerprint, gunshot residue, bullet and drug analyses using the same high-tech analytical and physical techniques used in crime laboratories.
Forensic scientists who delivered lectures on different aspects of investigation included Darrell Davis, a retired DEA director from Dallas; DeMia P. Pressley, of the DEA Diversion Control Division in Washington, D.C.; Deedra Hughes, Mississippi Forensics Laboratory assistant director and DNA technical leader from Jackson; and Jennifer Tuten, a DEA forensic chemist from Dallas.
“It was such a great experience to be able to share what I do and participate in such a wonderful event,” Tuten said. “The students were even more interested and excited to learn than I could have imagined.
“I would have jumped on an opportunity like this one when I was in high school.”
A mock trial on the last day of the camp tests students’ knowledge on the various topics and labs.
“The students must serve as expert witnesses, prosecutors, defense attorneys, suspect and so forth,” Godfrey said. “The expert witnesses must defend their analysis of the different pieces of evidence found at the crime scene. A jury will then render a final decision in the case.”
Divided into smaller groups, the students rotated daily between labs in the chemistry department and stations for DNA collection, presumptive tests, ballistics and gunshot residue, fingerprints, and analytical chemistry and forensics. At each station, students analyzed their samples and collected data.
A double-decker bus tour of campus and the university’s Maynard W. Quimby Medicinal Plant Garden was arranged by Don Stanford, assistant director of UM’s Research Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences.
This was the third forensics summer camp hosted at the university.
“This was our best CSI Camp yet,” Godfrey said. “We had 35 campers representing 11 states. Our goal is always to encourage these gifted young minds to become STEM majors once they enter college.”
Several students said they’ve learned a great deal through their experience.
“I expected to learn a lot about solving crimes,” said De’Monica Dumas, a ninth-grader from Shreveport, Louisiana. “During the week, I met some cool experts and learned what goes on behind closed doors when solving a crime.”
Senior Kayla Masari agreed.
“During the week, the experiences I have made have been life-changing,” said Masari, from Dumont, New Jersey. “It has proved to me that it is what I want to be. In addition to that, it has also made the University of Mississippi a top school on my list, and I definitely intend to apply to the forensic chemistry program.”
Other students were Meredith Archer of Tupelo; Alyssa Bencel of Nacogdoches, Texas; Grace Bennett of Waggaman, Louisiana; Nia Binning of Richmond, Georgia; Autumn Bishop of Pell City, Alabama; Amelia Block of Purvis; Katelyn Brooks of Saltillo; Terrell Caldwell of Stockbridge, Georgia; Lauren Colbert of Murphy, Texas; Lindsey Coulon of Bunkie, Louisiana; Kayla Fowler of Conroe, Texas; Axel Gonzalez of Mercedes, Texas; Rachel Harris of Belden; Darby Hesson of Westerville, Ohio; Blake Howard of Cedar Park, Texas; Leah Hughes of Brandon; Peyton Jolley of Bartonville, Texas; Nia Jones of Chicago; Lana Lauer of Beverly Hills, California; Alyshia Moore of Vicksburg; Francisco Munoz of Pharr, Texas; Heaven Ratcliff of Houston, Texas; Gesselle Sanchez of Welasco, Texas; Sydney Sanchez of Spring, Texas; Earline Saunders of Washington, D.C.; Shaelyn Simoneau of Kathleen, Georgia; Caroline Sturgis of Huntsville, Alabama; Isaac Trevino of Donna, Texas; Marija Westfall and Annija Westfall, both of Orange, California; John Wilkins of Bowie, Maryland; Sophia Williams of San Diego; and Tyler Williams of Oxford.
For more information about the forensic chemistry program within the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, visit http://ift.tt/2uLv4bXndergraduates/forensic-chemistry/.
By Edwin Smith
For more questions or comments email us at [email protected]
The post CSI Camp Creates Forensic Summer Fun appeared first on HottyToddy.com.
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