Could not complete log in. Possible causes and solutions are:
Cookies are not set, which might happen if you've never visited this website before.
Please open https://media.dlib.indiana.edu/ in a new window, then come back and refresh this page.
An ad blocker is preventing successful login.
Please disable ad blockers for this site then refresh this page.
Little Calumet River Basin Development Commissioner David Castellanos discusses current use of the Chase Street spring. He aspires to make the area surrounding the artesian well more accessible to users. He says that the question is, "How can we do something that's going to benefit the whole Northwest Indiana community?"
This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Use of the Spring Today for a digital and in-person exhibit of the Spring at Small Farms Oral Histories. The digital exhibit can be seen at https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home.
Little Calumet River Basin Development Commissioner David Castellanos discusses plans for the beautification and enhancement of the Chase Street Spring. He says, "So if we work together in partnership, I think we can really develop something that's going to really enhance this whole community, bring us all together."
This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Use of the Spring Today for a digital and in-person exhibit of the Spring at Small Farms Oral Histories. The digital exhibit can be seen at https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home.
Kay Westhues interviews David Castellanos at Little Calumet River Basin Development Commission office in Munster, IN, on October 25, 2019. Castellanos is a board member on the Little Calumet River Basin Development Commission, the agency that owns the property containing the spring. The Commission is in charge of flood control along the Little Calumet River, from Gary to the Illinois State Line. David shares information about a cleanup at the spring, and the Commission’s plans for improving the spring and the surrounding area. Part of the Spring at Small Farms Oral History Project. See the full exhibit here: https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home
Dean Shanahan sits down with WNBA legend Tamika Catchings to talk about legacy champions, dreaming big, and the importance of making a positive impact. Catchings was the keynote speaker at this year's MLK Jr. Day Leadership Breakfast.
Kay Westhues interviews Chuck Hughes at his office in the Gary Chamber of Commerce in Gary, Indiana, on September 13, 2019. Hughes is the Executive Director of the Gary Chamber of Commerce and a former resident of Small Farms. The Fresh County Market on 25th Ave is in the vicinity of his childhood home. Chuck shares remembrances of growing up in the Small Farms community, his memories of getting water from the spring. He also talks about why people may have moved from the community, and his support of the Fresh Market development when he served as a Gary City Councilperson. Part of the Spring at Small Farms Oral History Project. See the full exhibit here: https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home
Kay Westhues interviews Chuck Hughes at Hughes' office in the Gary Chamber of Commerce in Gary, Indiana, on September 13, 2019. Hughes is the Executive Director of the Gary Chamber of Commerce and a former resident of Small Farms. The Fresh County Market on 25th Ave is in the vicinity of his childhood home. Chuck shares remembrances of growing up in the Small Farms community, his memories of getting water from the spring. He also talks about why people may have moved from the community, and his support of the Fresh Market development when he served as a Gary City Councilperson. Part of the Spring at Small Farms Oral History Project. See the full exhibit here: https://iusbarchives.omeka.net/exhibits/show/spring-at-small-farms/home
It's no surprise that Indiana has a long legacy of top-tier athletic programs. This week, Dean Shanahan sits down with Galen Clavio, IU Associate Professor & Director of the National Sports Journalism Center, and Zach Osterman, the Indy Star's collegiate sports reporter, to talk about IU Athletics past and present.
Video bio of Ann Craig-Cinnamon, inducted to Indiana Broadcast Pioneers Hall of Fame in 2019;
After beginning her radio career at WIFE-AM in Indianapolis, Ann Craig-Cinnamon quickly moved to WNAP-FM, becoming the first woman to be a major part of a radio morning show in Indianapolis when she joined the morning team in the late ‘70s. In the 1980s, she served as the news director for Network Indiana, the statewide news-gathering and reporting radio network. In a broadcasting career that spanned nearly 30 years on radio and TV in Indianapolis, Craig-Cinnamon would go on to make a name for herself as the host of successful radio morning shows on WZPL-FM, WENS-FM, WYJZ-FM and WHHH-FM. She was instrumental in putting WPDS-TV (now WXIN-TV) on the air in 1983 as one of its original reporters and serving as the station’s public affairs director.
--Words from the Indiana Broadcast Pioneers
Making sense of all the data that comes from surveys and assessments is difficult. Student affairs professionals engage with students as educators contributing to student learning and development. This presentation will use NSSE as an example of a survey student affairs educator can use as an assessment tool to create impactful learning experiences. The webinar will follow the case of one institution's data to inform the creation of a new program that can be applied to other campuses.
In response to federally-funded “Always Already Computational: Collections as Data” movement (https://collectionsasdata.github.io), the Indiana University Libraries are both exploring ways to provide access to our own digitized special collections for teaching and research and helping others discover non-IU collections for the same purposes. Those teaching or conducting research or creative pursuits in the arts and humanities have much to gain from interacting with digital collections as data. This brownbag will constructively a) critique ways in which cultural heritage organizations historically have made digital content available for sharing that are not quite conducive for re-use/re-mixing by scholars and students, b) explore how collections, including Indiana University collections, are currently made discoverable and portable, and c) identify the myriad of ways we can improve full access to these collections to advance cultural scholarship. Part of this brown bag will include hearing from you – how you currently use or would like to use existing digital collections in your teaching and research and your ideas about how we can facilitate those use cases.