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A tour of a museum reveals the prominent figures and soldiers that have carried Wilkinson swords throughout history. A narrator explains that Wilkinson’s tradition of quality sword making has carried on to their production of razorblades.
St. Louis Browns - 1; St. Louis Cardinals - 3
1944 World Series Game 6. The St. Louis Cardinals (National League) beat the St. Louis Browns (American League) 3-1, to win the series and their second World Series title in three years.
Will Stewart (Birmingham, Alabama)
Originally from Alabama, Will Stewart spent many years living in Nashville as a songwriter, front man, and lead guitarist. When he returned to Birmingham, he released his full-length solo debut, County Seat, in 2017. “Caught somewhere between the worlds of country and electrified rock,” as a songwriter he tried to turn the landscape of his home state into music. Co-produced with Les Nuby (who also engineered and mixed the album) and recorded in a series of live takes, County Seat nods to a number of songwriters who sing about the beauty of their homeland without glossing over its imperfections. There are electrified moments influenced by Neil Young, guitar arpeggios influenced by R.E.M., some Dylan-style aesthetics, as well as the modern-day take on folk by Hiss Golden Messenger. Steward intended his first full-length release as a solo artist to be a rallying cry from a Son of the South who, having returned home after a long trip, looks at his birthplace with renewed eyes.
Interviewed by Holly Hobbs, 09/18/2020.
The Clarence Fitzroy Bryant College is a pivotal institution in the Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis. It is the only indigenous tertiary level institution in the Federation and was a primary post-independence establishment intended to provide the manpower for the developing country (which is the smallest independent nation in the Western Hemisphere) for economic development. The Federation gained independence from Britain in 1983 and the College was established in 1988. Policy makers envisaged an institution that would provide training for middle managers, build human resource expertise in different sectors of the economy, and offer first year university courses in collaboration with the University of the West Indies. There is no systematic documentation of the history of the establishment or impact of the Clarence Fitzroy Bryant College, and the risk that this history could be lost is high, as the policymakers and others involved are of advanced age or deceased.
Libraries are committed to preservation, including preservation of institutional knowledge and community histories, because we recognize the importance of these histories to communities and the cultural and scholarly record. Large institutions like Indiana University have the staff and resources for collecting, organizing, preserving and making accessible, records “documenting the institution’s origins and development and the activities and achievements of its officers, faculty, students, alumni and benefactors.” However, many smaller institutions do not have the resources to collect and preserve these histories for posterity. A collaborative research grant will facilitate a partnership between IU Bloomington Libraries and the Clarence Fitzroy Bryant College (the College or CFBC) in St. Kitts and Nevis to research, document and build a digital history of the College, and use this collaboration as a case study to propose a model for collaboration between institutions of different sizes and resource levels.
On Good Morning's SKNs Connections, Jamie and Kortensia connect with Willa Liburd Tavernier. Willa hails from our twin-island Federation. She is currently a Research Impact & Open Scholarship Librarian at Indiana University. Recently, Willa spearheaded the launch of an open-source digital resource collection called “Land, Wealth, Liberation,” She speaks more about it and her experiences with racism in this powerful and insightful interview.
Willi Carlisle (Izard County, Arkansas)
Willi Carlisle is a folksinger and writer from the Ozark hills. He performs internationally at places like the Kennedy Center and the Ozark Folk Center and has spent many years living in an intentional community near Fox, Arkansas. With years of collecting folklore and playing/calling square dances, Willi is a multi-faceted writer, performer and instrumentalist. He plays banjo, accordion, fiddle and guitar, and has toured extensively and performed with Dom Flemons, Mary Gauthier, Los Texmaniacs, Cory Branan, Carson McHone, and more. Willi prefers to perform songs for the oldest reasons: love, heartache, and joy. His albums, Too Nice to Mean Much and To Tell You the Truth have garnered critical success.
Interviewed by Holly Hobbs, 09/04/2020.
To a remarkable extent, our understanding of the natural world is built from a small set of very deep ideas. I’ll try to give some sense for the nature of these ideas, for their power and scope. I will also try to explain what we mean by “understanding” in several different contexts, and why these successes give us (measured) confidence that more complex problems may yet yield to our search for understanding. Finally, I’ll say a few words about the cultural gaps that separate scientists who have mastery of these theoretical ideas from other scientists, from the generally educated public, and from the polity as a whole. It is not too much to claim that our future quality of life will depend, crucially, on our ability to bridge these gaps by teaching.
Experiments have uncovered many of the mechanisms at work in the machinery of life, but there still is no theoretical framework that ties these discoveries together. A hint about how to construct such a theory comes from the fact that many biological systems operate very near the limits of what the laws of physics allow: from bacteria navigating toward a source of food to the optics of an insect’s eye, from decision-making by cells in a developing embryo to aspects of human perception, important aspects of life’s mechanisms are nearly as good they can be, in a sense that physics makes precise. This proximity to perfection provides us with the ingredients for a theoretical physics of life, and I will explore this idea, hopefully providing an appreciation for some of life’s most striking and surprising phenomena.
Opening sessions of the Art, Race, Space Symposium, January 25, 2013, School of Liberal Arts, IUPUI, Indianapolis, Indiana. Recorded lectures include: "Welcome" by William Blomquist, "Introductory Remarks" by Modupe Labode, and "Inspirations: Musing on What Monuments, Memorials, Public Art, and Public Space, Inspire Me" by Fred Wilson. Symposium program sheet available from: https://hdl.handle.net/1805/31106.
1998 NSRC/SFSU Conference "Kinsey at 50" -- A gathering of contemporary luminaries in the field of sex research, discussing Kinsey's work 50 years on in society.
Digital technology is changing everything in our lives, including the ways in which we study, learn, teach, and create knowledge in the university. While these changes have been slower to come in the humanities, they are now well established and accelerating, with significant implications for teaching and research. What are the new opportunities afforded by the development of digital tools and platforms for humanists? What new fields of inquiry have opened for humanists as a result of the explosion of digital technology? And how should humanists understand and respond to the growing power and influence of the technical disciplines in shaping the priorities of the contemporary university?
Presented by Dr. William D. Adams, former head of the National Endowment for the Humanities, as part of the IU Institute for Digital Arts & Humanities 2017-18 Speaker Series, which had the theme "Making the Arts & Humanities."
William Deneen, Preston E. James, Ph.D, Syracuse University, Encyclopaedia Britannica Films
Summary:
See description for color version GC0944. Surveys life in Mexico in 1961 with its overshadowing influences of the past. Depicts Mexico as an old country with new ideas as the basis for cultural and economic extremes. Illustrates the rise of a middle class society as Mexico attempts development through educational and industrial means. Shows the vast extremes of native Indian villages with primitive open-air markets and methods of farming in contrast with modern manufacturing cities with beautiful parks, fine theaters, office buildings, and luxurious seaside resorts.
These lectures cover methods for obtaining visual displays of quantitative information. They discuss ways to, quite literally, look at data. This is important because graphical representations avoid some of the restrictive assumptions and simplistic models that are often encountered in empirical analyses. These methods are very useful in the social sciences, where the robustness characteristics of traditional statistical techniques often are pushed to their limits. The lectures focus primarily on introductory concepts and graphical displays for univariate data, then move on to graphs for bivariate, multivariate, and categorical data. The main objective is to help you learn to construct a pictorial abstraction that highlights the salient aspects of your data without distorting any features or imposing undue assumptions.
Would you like to draw pictures of your data in ways that reveal structures not obvious from inspection of the data values alone? Multidimensional scaling (MDS) can accomplish that objective. MDS produces a “map” of stimuli based on information about the “proximities” among them. The stimuli are any objects of interest to the researcher (e.g., presidential candidates for a political scientist, consumer products for a market researcher, occupations for a sociologist), and many types of information can be interpreted as proximities (e.g., correlations, similarity judgments, profile dissimilarities, etc.). MDS methods have many potential applications in empirical research. They can be used to simplify the contents of large complex datasets, model similarities among sets of objects, estimate the cognitive structures underlying survey responses, and optimize the measurement characteristics of qualitative observations. MDS can be generalized to show individual differences across distinct data sources (e.g., subsets of survey respondents or data collected at different time points), and can be adapted to represent respondent preferences among a set of stimuli (i.e., “ideal points” models). This workshop provides an introduction to MDS. It is intended for a general audience and does not assume prior experience with MDS or familiarity with advanced statistical methods beyond basic regression analysis. Specific topics to be covered include: The basic idea of MDS; the general estimation procedure; interpretation of results; different varieties of MDS; and software options for performing MDS analyses.
Interested in refreshing your quantitative skills or learning a new method that will aid in your research? Whether you are a faculty member or a graduate student, a great place to accomplish both tasks is the Summer Program in Quantitative Methods of Social Research at the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR). ICPSR offers both month-long and 3-5 day short courses. All month-long courses and many of the short courses are offered at the University of Michigan, though several short courses are offered at different institutions throughout the country, including right here at Indiana University (and hosted by WIM!). Who better to provide you information about ICPSR than the Director of the Summer Program himself? Dr. Jacoby will provide a brief description of the ICPSR Summer Program and answer your questions in this hour-long informational session following his WIM presentation on multidimensional scaling. You are welcome to attend both, or only this informational session. Come have all your questions answered by the person who knows more about the Summer Program than anyone else!
William Harris, Vivianne Crowley, Michigan City Public Library
Summary:
"Getting There: Oral Histories about transportation in Michigan City" is a series of oral histories, focusing on the railroads and aviation in Michigan City. This project was initiated and administered by the Michigan City Public Library, co-sponsored by the LaPorte County Historical Society, and funded through an Indiana Heritage Research Grant from 1993-1994.
Interview of William Harris, conducted by Vivianne Crowley. Harris touches on his experience as a Pullman rail car engineer.
William J. Thiele, William Bruckner, Jack Chertok, Lee Van Cleef, Kenneth Tobey, Henry Morgan, Keith Richards, Lyle Talbot, Peter Hanson, Teaching Film Custodians
Summary:
Teaching Film Custodians abridged classroom version of an episode of the Cavalcade of America television series, "Duel at the OK Corral" (season 2, episode 20), which originally aired March 9th, 1954 on ABC-TV. This film highlights the efforts of Marshall Wyatt Earp to free the West of dangerous armed gunmen. Earp's activities in Dodge City, Kansas, in Deadwood, South Dakota, and in Tombstone, Arizona are featured.
These lectures cover methods for obtaining visual displays of quantitative information. They discuss ways to, quite literally, look at data. This is important because graphical representations avoid some of the restrictive assumptions and simplistic models that are often encountered in empirical analyses. These methods are very useful in the social sciences, where the robustness characteristics of traditional statistical techniques often are pushed to their limits. The lectures focus primarily on introductory concepts and graphical displays for univariate data, then move on to graphs for bivariate, multivariate, and categorical data. The main objective is to help you learn to construct a pictorial abstraction that highlights the salient aspects of your data without distorting any features or imposing undue assumptions.
William Morrison, John Clayton, American Academy of Asian Studies
Summary:
Portrays the highlights of Mahatma Gandhi's life. Indicates some of the factors that shaped his philosophy of non-violence and shows some of the instances in which his philosophy was put into action. Shows also how Gandhi's pronouncements and activities became an influence in the life of India as a nation.
Produced by the American Academy of Asian Studies of the College of the Pacific. A documentary of the life of Gandhi based on newsreel footage and still photographs.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Lecture by Óscar Arias Sánchez, former president of Costa Rica and Nobel Peace Prize laureate. The discussion centers around the ideal qualities of leaders in the 21st century, examining the values which underpin successful and transformative leadership for a society.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Lecture by former president of Costa Rica and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Óscar Arias Sánchez. Sánchez illustrates his vision and values for a future world, and discusses some criticisms he has with the current state of world affairs.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Continuation of a Q&A session with Donna J. Haraway, from one of her two lectures in 1991. The Q&A focuses around questions of mortality and the AIDS crisis, and the way in which the biological self is understood.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Video Recording of a lecture by Alexander W. Astin on novel ways of evaluating student success in higher education.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Q&A Session with Amartya Sen after his lecture. Questions are on aspects of his arguments around identity and conflict, and how they relate to current American policy both at home and abroad.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Lecture by Amartya Sen, winner of the Nobel Prize of Economics. Sen discusses the negative effects of fatalism as a mindset and how it leads to government passivity, as well as distancing of identity which is caused by class and economic means, and the negative effects which rigid class structures have upon a society and the preventable suffering they cause. Sen analyzes the constructive forces of social divisions alongside their alienating forces as well.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Amartya Sen discusses the sources and consequences of ethnic strife in India, and the ways in which social divisions can be overcome.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Conclusion of the lecture "India: Bits and Pieces and Beyond" by Amartya Sen. The rest of the lecture can be found at the following link: https://media.dlib.indiana.edu/media_objects/qn59qm03z
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Performance of Beowulf in original Old English, with Lyre accompaniment.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Prominent musical scholar and concert pianist Charles Rosen speaks in this lecture, giving an analysis of the history of western music, focusing on the 19th century, its influences, movements, and styles. He prefaces this discussion with a recap of 18th century music to give some more context.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Q&A session with Charles Rosen after he finishes his lecture. Includes analysis of the use of trills and repetition in the establishment of tone in 19th century pieces.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Charles Rosen discusses the relationship of emotion to music throughout history. Rosen challenges the understanding of music as having personal sentiment, and the evolution of attitudes towards sentiment in music over history.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Charles Rosen discusses analytical and thematic questions around the pieces that Rosen examines in his lecture.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Lecture by economist Charles Schultze, who led the office of management and budget for the United States. His lecture discusses the major economic problems facing the U.S. in the 1980s, including difficulties around anti-inflation policy.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Presentation and lecture by Darlene Clark Hine discusses some of her research into the history of how Black communities in the south organized health and support systems for themselves in the era of Jim Crow segregation.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
In this lecture, Darlene Clark Hine uses the experience of three Black professionals in Clarendon County, South Carolina in their 1950s campaign for rights to illustrate broader issues of race and discrimination.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Literary analysis and discussion of the book "Pride and Prejudice". Dr. Phillips' central argument is that people can uncover their pride & prejudice through their first impressions of an object of desire. Dr. Phillips uses Austen's book as a focus for his arguments around the topic throughout the lecture.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
In this lecture, Dr. Adam Phillips discusses first impressions as a concept and psychological mechanic through the analysis of Charles Dickens' work 'Great Expectations'.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Kerber examines the role of women in shaping individualism in American society, and how Women have worked to develop and embrace individualism over the course of American history.
The William T. Patten Foundation was founded at Indiana University in May 1931 by Indiana University alumnus William T. Patten. The Foundation hosts scholars from various institutions and disciplines to give lectures in his/her area of expertise. Audiovisual materials from the Patten Foundation records includes audio or video recording of lectures.
Q&A session with Donna J. Haraway after her lecture "Science, the very idea! Feminist diffractions". The session touches on aspects of the lecture including language around the addressing of the AIDS crisis and clarifications on some of the positions she explains in the lecture.
Poster presented at the Indiana University Medical Student Program for Research and Scholarship (IMPRS) Research Symposium held on July 27-28, 2023 in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Williams, David, von Ende, Samantha, Shanahan, James
Summary:
This week on Through the Gates, host Jim Shanahan is joined by David C. Williams, the executive director of the Center for Constitutional Democracy and the John S. Hastings Professor of Law in the Maurer School of Law.
Williams has written widely on constitutional law and consults with constitutional reform movements around the world. Presently, he advises elements of the Burma democracy movement on the constitutional future of the country. In today's interview, he will share some of how that process works.
Later in the episode, student Samantha von Ende will share some of her own work with the Center for Constitutional Democracy. As a Ph.D. student, von Ende has worked extensively on gender-related issues of democracy in the United States and around the world.