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Third lecture in the Leo J. McCarthy, MD History of Medicine Lectureship. Presented by C. William Hanke, MD, MPH, FACP at the Ruth Lilly Medical Library on November 16th, 2017.
In episode 45, we speak to Dr. Justin Garcia, associate director for research & education at the Kinsey Institute and Ruth N. Halls Assistant Professor of Gender Studies at Indiana University. Dr. Garcia talks about a new era of modern love and dating and technology's role in it, as well as Match.com's Singles in America survey.
Gary Donatelli is an Emmy award-winning television and film producer/director, best known for the 18 years he spent directing network dramas.
Donatelli attended Indiana University on a combined football and wrestling scholarship. He graduated in 1974 with a degree in radio and television and turned his experiences in the classroom and on the field into a career as a camera operator for ABC’s Wide World of Sports. Donatelli filmed events ranging from the Olympics, to the Kentucky Derby and the Indianapolis 500, to the World Series and Monday Night Football, winning four Emmys for his camerawork. He also authored The ABC Monday Night Football Cookbook & Restaurant Guide.
While working for ABC, he started his own company, Hav Cam Inc. The company produced corporate and music videos, working with artists such as James Brown, Miles Davis and Neil Young along with bands including Boston, Spyro Gyra, and KC and the Sunshine Band.
Donatelli’s tenure at ABC also led him to major news events. He recorded presidential inaugurations and NASA space shuttle launches, and he filmed for ABC Eyewitness News. Over the years, Donatelli climbed the ranks at ABC, moving from cameraman to technical director and then, in 1993, director.
That year, he entered the world of daytime dramas, directing the series Loving. He moved to NBC to direct Another World for four years before returning to ABC to direct One Life to Live from 1998-2011. During those 13 years, the directing team won four Emmys and garnered seven nominations for “Best Directing Team in Daytime Drama.” Combined with guest slots at The Bold and The Beautiful and General Hospital, his career totals more than 1,000 episodes of daytime drama.
For more than a decade, Donatelli also directed the annual Variety Children’s Telethon, a five-hour live entertainment broadcast with “Cousin Brucie” Morrow that raised more than $20 million a year for children’s charities.
He began documentary work in 2001, producing and directing the series Lean on Me, a post-9/11 documentary series for the Fire Department of New York’s Counseling Services Unit. Now, he’s producing and directing Clearing Larry Floyd, a documentary about a Mississippi man who was brutally beaten by corrections officers during an escape attempt after having served time for what he maintains was a racially charged wrongful murder conviction.
Most recently, Donatelli returned to his football roots and produced the film 23 Blast, the true story of a blind high school football player. The film is available on Netflix and won the Audience Choice Award at Indiana’s Heartland Film Festival.
As a member of the Fort Lee Film Commission in New Jersey, he lobbied for years to encourage the Directors Guild of America to honor Alice Guy-Blaché, the world’s first female director. In 2011, the guild posthumously awarded Blaché its Special Directorial Achievement Award. The Fort Lee Film Commission presented Donatelli with its Barrymore Award for his efforts and success in this cause.
Donatelli has taught as an adjunct professor at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts and has served as second vice president of the Directors Guild of America.
When he arrived in South Bend in 1980, the field of rehabilitation in Indiana "was in desperate need of some rapid growth," recalls George Soper. George had moved from Iowa, where he completed a doctoral work in the area of rehabilitation. Having started as a physical therapist, the focus of George's career became hospital administration. He retired in 2011 as Senior Vice President and Chief Learning Officer for South Bend's Memorial Hospital & Health System. He worked for the hospital for 31 years. George had been hired to build up the rehabilitation unit at Memorial Hospital in 1980. He describes how the number of physical and occupational therapists has grown from two of each to 37 and 25 therapists, respectively. He developed one of the first rehabilitation engineering programs, creating seating for mobility purposes and other adaptive equipment. "We had people come in from literally all over the country to see what we were doing." He also started an innovative driver rehabilitation and training program for people with disabilities in the early 1980s.
George discusses trends in rehabilitation such as the reduced length of hospital stays that led to expansion of outpatient services, how "lifestyle abuse" has led to needs for rehab services, and future training needs related to the growing aging population. George, who has twice won a Franklin Covey Community Service Award, also discusses the influence of Steven Covey's "Seven Habits" philosophy in his life and work. He was interviewed in South Bend in 2013.
In episode 71, Dean Shanahan speaks to Distinguished Professor of Biology Ellen Ketterson about her research and her leadership of the Prepared for Environmental Change Team—one of Indiana University's Grand Challenges.
Dina Kellams, Director of University Archives, and Meg Meiman, head of teaching and learning at IU Libraries, join us to discuss the Indiana University Archives and the Primary Source Immersion Program. The new program will help IU faculty members integrate primary sources into an existing or new course and show ways to foster students’ information literacy skills in relation to primary sources.
Harold de Bock’s developments in audience and customer loyalty research influenced multiple industries, media platforms and world regions — from media to customer contact, from broadcast to print, from the United States to Europe.
De Bock came to the United States from The Netherlands in 1971 to earn his Ph.D. in mass communications from Indiana University. During the 1972 presidential campaign, for his dissertation, he conducted one of the first field experiments that showed the impact of election poll results on electoral turnout and voter preference.
Upon returning to The Netherlands in 1974 after graduation, de Bock started work as an audience researcher at The Netherlands Broadcasting System. He later became its research director, responsible for all qualitative and quantitative radio and television research for the country’s many public broadcasters. He initiated the transition from paper diaries to people meters for television audience measurement.
In 1985, de Bock joined the Dutch commercial market research firm Inter/View as its director of media research and consultancy. He directed readership, circulation and advertising research for individual newspapers and magazines, as well as the country’s annual joint-industry print media research survey.
For Time magazine, de Bock developed the pan-European Media and Marketing Survey targeting Europe’s top 15 percent affluent audiences for international print and broadcast media. Thirty years, later, the survey is still the global standard.
Later in his career, de Bock specialized in customer loyalty research. He made Inter/View a major partner in the Indianapolis-based Walker Information Worldwide research network, on behalf of which he conducted large-scale, international customer loyalty research projects for multinational corporations around the world.
De Bock took his expertise to Hepworth Consultancy in 1997, working as research and consultancy director and establishing a research unit on customer loyalty and employee motivation. He pioneered techniques we now refer to as “data mining” and “big data” analysis.
The new unit was so successful that in 2000 it was acquired by MarketResponse, one of the largest market research companies in The Netherlands. MarketResponse made de Bock its research and consultancy director. His unit became the company’s largest and most profitable research entity.
De Bock was a leader in an industry-wide effort to improve communication quality of customer contact centers as key to customer loyalty in The Netherlands. He was a founder of the annual National Contact Center Benchmark Survey, which developed into the country’s Top 30 Contact Center program that exists today. He was the first and longest-serving chairman of the jury for the country’s National Contact Center Awards competition, known as the “Oscars” of customer contact. Upon retirement, he received the highest personal performance award at this ceremony. He also developed the Dutch quality standards for customer contact center certification.
For the last 10 years, de Bock has made trips to the U.S. to take long-distance “anthropological” solo rides across the country on his semi-antique Yamaha motorcycle. He also edits and writes for the Dutch Motorcycle Riders Action Group’s full-color magazine. He has covered more than 20,000 miles through more than 25 states, following the original itineraries of America’s first historical continental highways, including Route 66, the Dixie Highway, the Lincoln Highway, the Yellowstone Trail and the Great River Road. He blogs about his environmental observations and personal encounters while on the road.
In episode 65, we chat with IU alum, writer, and paranormal enthusiast Kat Klockow about Indiana University's spooky stories and urban legends. Klockow is author of "Haunted Hoosier Halls: Indiana University" and "Ohio's Haunted Crime." Be sure to listen to this in conjunction with episode 67, where our producers examine more ghost stories related to the IU Bloomington campus (Through-the-gates-at-iu – Ep-67-breaking-down-indiana-university-campus-ghost-stories).
Student comments can provide rich insight and add texture to statistical trends highlighted in Institutional Reports, but can be overlooked as it is difficult to efficiently analyze textual data. This webinar will discuss NSSE student comments, changes made to the end-of-survey comment prompts, a variety of methods for analyzing textual data, and how NSSE researchers have made use of comments data.
Author and The New Yorker staff writer Peter Hessler joins Through the Gates to discuss the cultural differences between Egyptians and the Chinese entrepreneurs who have set up shop in towns along the Nile.
Imago is a prototypic 'next-generation' digital repository that is dynamically linked to the collection management databases supported by a unique partnership between the IU Libraries and the Center for Biological Research Collections. Imago is the next stage in the metamorphosis of research data that are currently housed, in the form of physical collection objects, in the collections of the Indiana University Herbarium, the Indiana University Paleontology Collection, and the William R. Adams Zooarchaeology Lab. By taking advantage of dynamic cyberinfrastructure, high-throughput digitization workflows are enabled to build preservation-quality digital research products (3D scans, scanned 35 mm film, specimen photographs etc.), robust metadata integration, and robust linkages to propagate changes in taxonomy, georeferencing, or other augmentations to the existing metadata. Imago also greatly facilitates the discoverability of these collection objects and their metadata to the broader scientific and public community by providing a versatile framework that readily interacts with the API of large-scale biodiversity data aggregators, online curated galleries of images and 3D objects, and citizen-science platforms.
A previously unknown collection of over 25,000 black and white architectural photographs were discovered in a dilapidated house owned by the Indiana Limestone Company in Bedford, Indiana. These images of residences, churches, universities, museums, businesses, and public and municipal buildings, many of which were designed by prominent architects, document the use of Indiana limestone throughout the United States from the late 1800s to mid-1900s. Remarkably holistic in scope, these photographs and their accompanying metadata can be studied across major disciplines such as American history, architectural history, history of technology, urban studies, history of photography, historic preservation, labor history, and the history of geology. The Indiana Geological Survey in partnership with the Indiana University Libraries has been cataloging, digitizing, archiving, and publishing online a growing subset of the photographs through the Libraries' Image Collection Online portal. Thanks to a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services, administered by the Indiana State Library, we will be able to process an additional 4,500 photographs, and add approximately 3,000 images to the existing online collection, Building a Nation: Indiana Limestone Photograph Collection. Join us as we unravel the story behind the collection's discovery and our plans for ongoing curation and digitization.
In episode 73, Janae Cummings speaks with Eliza Hittman, IU alumna and award-winning indie filmmaker. Hittman recently visited the IU Cinema as part of its Jorgensen Guest Filmmaker program. Her most recent feature BEACH RATS won the 2017 Sundance Film Festival Directing Award for U.S. Dramatic Feature.
More than 130 institutions administered the new Inclusiveness and Engagement with Cultural Diversity Topical Module in 2017. This webinar will focus on the purpose of the Topical Module, how it was developed, and how it will change for 2018. The presenters will review inaugural results and facilitate a discussion on how the results can be used to improve institutional practices.
In episode 72, Janae Cummings speaks to Sarah Wroth, associate chair of the ballet department at the Jacobs School of Music, and Georgia Dalton, graduating junior and the Sugar Plum Fairy in IU’s upcoming production of The Nutcracker. Tickets are still available for the performance, which runs from November 30 to December 3 at the Musical Arts Center on the IU Bloomington campus.
Video bio of Jack Rinehart, inducted to Indiana Broadcast Pioneers Hall of Fame in 2017;
Jack Rinehart was born and grew up in South Bend, Indiana. He graduated from Bradley University in 1973 with a bachelor’s degree in speech. While still in college, Rinehart started working as a reporter at WRAU-TV (now WHOI-TV) in Peoria, Illinois. He later became an investigative reporter and weekend anchor at WRAU-TV before coming to WRTV-TV on Nov. 10, 1975. For more than 40 years Rinehart worked as a senior reporter at WRTV-TV. During his four decades on-air he broke thousands of stories, covered hundreds of exclusives and established himself as one of the most trusted reporters in the market. His career highlights include an Emmy Award, Associated Press awards, a CASPER Award, and he was named a “Sagamore of the Wabash” by Indiana Governor Robert Orr.
--Words from the Indiana Broadcast Pioneers
"I'm going to need to go to a college with a very highly rated psychology department." James Martin Cousins, who has autism, was a sophomore at a charter high school in Indianapolis when he was interviewed in 2011. He described his central role in creating his own Individualized Education Program (IEP) at Metropolitan High School. Jaime shares his educational goals after high school graduation and how he hopes to get his dream job doing research for the Lego company.
"He asked me if I wanted out. I said yeah, do what it takes to get me out." Jamie Beck shared her story about how she ended up living in a nursing home shortly after graduating from high school. She says her father's stage four cancer led to her placement there. After trying to make the best of a bad situation, Jamie spoke up and told her guardian she wanted out. Today Jamie lives in a home and works part-time in the community. She was interviewed in Indianapolis in 2016.
Marriage Equality Collection includes audio and video files, photographs, historical documents and ephemera representing experiences of same-sex couples married in the decade of legal marriage in the U.S. Particular focus is on the experience of couples in Indiana. This archive is growing in both content and scope.
"Now disability politics, you know, is not Republican or Democrats, it's really nonpartisan but you still have to be recognized as someone who's reliable and trustworthy," observes Jim Hammond in this 2013 interview. Working with legislators was part of his job as CEO of the Indiana Association of Rehabilitation Facilities (INARF). "INARF is the trade association for providers of services," he explains. It was a $1 billion industry in 2012, the year he retired.
Jim discusses his 34 years with the membership organization, including its strong relationship with The Arc of Indiana, the envy of INARF's counterparts in other states. He describes the pool loan program, a tax exempt financing members created in 1992, and INARF's role in establishing unified standards for provider agencies and the adoption of an independent third party national accreditation program. He recalls founder Costa Miller, who was CEO until his death in 2004, and the "fierceness of his commitment." He discusses how funding for disability services has fared under various governors and their respective political parties. Other topics include Medicaid waivers and the growing importance of technology such as video monitoring and "smart home" features in residences for people with disabilities.