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Discussion centers around Indiana University's role in high performance computing; conversation with IU President Myles Brand, IU Vice President for Information Technology/CIO Michael McRobbie; Mike Dunn, Dean, IU School of Informatics; Dennis Gannon, Chair, Department of Computer Science; and Polly Baker, Associate Professor of Informatics
Ruth C. Engs served as a professor of applied health sciences at Indiana University, joining the faculty in 1973 and retiring with emeritus status in 2003. Her main areas of research included the study of the determinants of drinking behavior, especially that of university students, and the study of the role of alcohol in society in cross-cultural and historical contexts.
Pair of roundtable discussions on the issue of binge drinking on the IU campus. The first is a roundtable discussion between several students and one administrator, and the second is with one student and several administrators in different departments, as well as the dean of students.
[videorecording] Filmed before the scenery of his rural Southern Indiana homestead, novelist James Alexander Thom talks about the philosophies and methods that frame his historical fiction. Believing that "character is a product of one's landscape," Thom uses his respect for and knowledge of the skills, resourcefulness, and self-reliance of contemporary "hill people" to re-create a visceral sense of living in the past. Thom's commitment to obtaining factual evidence as a basis for his novels leads him to seek out not only public documentation of historical events, but also those individuals, such as members of the Shawnee nation, who have preserved the past through generations of oral history. Thom is the author of Long Knife, the story of George Rogers Clark; Follow the River, the story of Mary Ingall's abduction and daring escape from the Indians; From Sea to Shining Sea, the saga of the entire Clark family; and Panther in the Sky, a biographical account of the life of the Shawnee leader, Tecumseh. Red Ribbon, 1991 American Film & Video Festival.
We talk with researcher Seth Wynes about how major league sport travel, affected by COVID, affects energy use. Also, does academic travel affect academic success?
Wynkoop, Mary Ann, Stahr, Elvis J. (Elvis Jacob), 1916-1998
Summary:
In this tape, Elvis J. Stahr is interviewed by Mary Ann Wynkoop for research on her doctoral dissertation. Stahr refers to this interview on side 1 of tape 38, but this interview is not directly part of his autobiographical project. Stahr discusses his path to becoming president of Indiana University, as well as his accomplishments as president. He discusses topics such as campus development and expansion under Growth and Change, and student unrest.
An advertisement for Xerox 3103 copy machines in which an orchestra conductor uses the product to make copies of sheet music for his musicians. Narration in Japanese. Submitted for the Clio Awards International category.
An advertisement for the Xerox 9200 copy machine in which a monk is shown painstakingly duplicating a manuscript by hand. When he is ordered to produce 500 more copies of the manuscript, the monk takes the page to a copy store, where an offscreen male narrator describes the features of the Xerox copier. One of the winners of the 1976 Clio Awards.
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.
This is a performance of erhu music and Kun-Wu sword dancing. It includes discussions about the erhu and other Chinese stringed instruments, Chinese musical scores, the five-tone scale, and composer Liu Tien-Hua, as well as questions from audience members.. Descriptive information presented here may come from original collection documentation. Please note that collections of historical content may contain material that could be offensive to some patrons.
An advertisement for Yellow Pages phone book in which a dog jumps on a bed and collapses it, and a narrator says to look in the Yellow Pages for a solution. Submitted for Clio Awards category Short Spots.
Samuel Yette was the first Black Washington correspondent for Newsweek magazine, author of a landmark book and a journalism professor at Howard University.
Yette came to Bloomington for his master’s degree in journalism. While on campus, he was associate editor of the Indiana Daily Student.
After leaving Bloomington in 1956, Yette accompanied Life magazine photojournalist Gordon Parks on a tour of the South to document segregation. Life then published their collaborative effort as a four-part series.
Yette covered the Civil Rights movement in the South for the Afro-American newspaper chain in Baltimore and Washington. That work landed him an editing position at Ebony magazine. Later, he was the first black reporter for the Dayton (Ohio) Journal-Herald. He took his journalism skills to work for the Peace Corps and later for the federal government as a special assistant for civil rights at the Office of Economic Opportunity.
Several times during his career, Yette returned to Bloomington to deliver lectures to journalism students. In 1970, he was the Riley Distinguished Professor of Journalism at Indiana University.
Yette joined Newsweek in 1968 as a correspondent. While working for Newsweek, Yette wrote The Choice: The Issue of Black Survival in America, which documented the effects of federal government policies on African Americans. Yette argued these policies could lead to genocide.
The book, published in 1971, was used as a textbook in colleges across the country. It received several awards, including the Special Book Award from the Capitol Press Club in 1971 and the Nonfiction Work of Distinction from the Black Academy of Arts and Letters in 1972.
Yette was fired from Newsweek shortly after the book’s release, an action that resulted in a seven-year wrongful dismissal lawsuit. Anticipating the firing, Yette had lined up a teaching job at Howard University’s newly created School of Communications. He taught there for 14 years.
After retiring from Howard, Yette remained active writing columns for the black press and appearing as a political commentator on Black Entertainment Television. He also served as an advisor and photographer for Jesse Jackson’s presidential campaigns in the 1980s. He died in 2011.
Video bio of Dick Yoakam, inducted to Indiana Broadcast Pioneers Hall of Fame in 2005.
Produced by: Jed Duvall;
Post-Production by: DreamVision Media Partners;
Archive Footage: Indiana University;
After graduating from the University of Iowa, Richard Yoakam became a reporter and newscaster for WHO-AM in Des Moines, Iowa, and later was news director at KCRG-TV in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. In 1957 he left to become an assistant professor at Indiana University, where he put broadcast news into the curriculum of the journalism and radio-TV departments. He designed the facilities for teaching television news reporting and editing in the renovated Ernie Pyle Hall in 1975. During the 1960s and ‘70s, he occasionally took leave for professional refreshment working at NBC News in New York and Washington, D.C. He was Indiana state manager of election coverage for NBC from 1964 to 1976. Yoakam helped launch many broadcast careers, and former students continued to seek his advice. His honors include the IU Alumni Association Distinguished Teaching Award. Yoakam retired in 1989 and died in 2004.
--Words from the Indiana Broadcast Pioneers
Richard Yoakam Tribute Dinner
Radio-TV Collection
Department of Telecommunications held a tribute dinner for Richard Yoakam to commemorate the start of the Richard Yoakam Technology Fund. The dinner was held in the Radio-TV studio and recorded.
June 13, 1998
00:30 Music starts, wide shot of RTV studio w guests
00:45 Ken Beckley at the lectern, Yoakam sitting at a table to his left
John Gutowsky & Ken covering an IU football game for Yoakam to critique
Beckley says he was describing queen and court at halftime
Yoakam said “Jesus Christ Beckley, I asked you to cover a football game, not a
fashion show.”
02:16 -that ended my sports career
-Ernie Nims, Bill Orwig, and Bill Cameron
03:02 Ernie Nims, at lectern speaking
(Chip Drake in audience)
06:23 (Mary Bob Yoakam in audience)
06:50 (Legene White in audience, she set up the event)
07:30 Legene White at lectern, Dept. of Telecommunications Alumni Affairs
She thanks the alumni committee
09:40 Legene introduces Telecommunications Faculty & staff
10:57 (Margaret Joseph & Barrie Zimmerman in audience)
11:05 (Betsi Grabe & Eric Bucy in audience)
11:40 Legene introduces School of Journalism faculty
(Dan Drew, Will Counts in audience)
14:00 Ernie Nims back at lectern
14:50 Nims talks about sports remote w/ Dwight Smith
-don’t say what you don’t want on air
16:02 Next up are tributes on tape for Yoakam
16:55 Dick Enberg audio tribute to Richard Yoakam
-they both arrived in 1957. Yoakam changed his life
-hanging out at Nick’s
-hero is someone I would like to be
19:30 John “Gordon” Gutowsky, NBC Sportscaster audio tribute
21:10 Jane Pauley video tribute to Yoakam from NBC Time & Again Studio
-she says she started the phrase “bad hair day”
-crazy makeup when she worked at WISH-TV, w/ chroma key
-Thanks to Yoakam for helping her get to NBC New York
23:26 parody video of Bill Clinton honoring Yoakam
24:42 Phil Jones, CBS Correspondent video tribute
-I wouldn’t be at CBS without you
-teacher and even agent, and good friend
26:00 Steve Smith, KHOU TV news anchor in Houston video tribute
-thank you for my career
30:10 Joe Angotti, NBC News, Class of ’61 talking from lectern
-couldn’t make it to Yoakam’s retirement because of Tiannamen Square
32:16 watching “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” movie while a grad student, so Joe had his own
party & invited Dick & Mary Bob Yoakam
-I wish your news judgment was as good as your party judgment
-worked at WMAQ in Chicago. He met Keith Klein there
34:40 Keith Klein, Cook Group PR, talking from lectern, Class of ‘66
-talked about Arnie Hahn (sp ?) who they worked with
-Byron Smith
-Flash documentaries,
(shot of Byron Smith in audience)
39:40 -talking about Adlai Stevenson death and getting a recording
40:45 -Yoakam throws a milkbone at Klein and told him to chew on it.
41:41 talking about Dwight Smith covering Gary mayor race w/ Hatcher
(Dwight Smith in audience)
43:00 Bill Orwig & Ernie Nims doing IU basketball games
44:40 covering Little 500 race w/ telex
45:50 Marilyn Schultz was in the pace car w/ wireless transmitter
But signal got crossed w/ construction crew building library
47:10 Huntley-Brinkley Report -Marilyn Schultz working on newscast
49:00 Marilyn Schultz & Playboy Playmate
49:30 Marilyn Schultz, UT-Austin Professor at lectern for tribute
-got first job at NBC thru Russ Tornabene
-Vietnam war protests. Student shaved his head and had an American flag around
his naked body, Yoakam asked him if he got glasses
51:40 -facts & truth of story aren’t always the same
52:00 Yoakam has always been a technological visionary
-Tell them a story.. no matter what you’re doing
53:30 John Butte, Ohio News Network at lectern for tribute, Class of ‘70
57:03 -looking for files from his Yoakam’s classes for memories
-can’t find his notes
1:00:00 -Yoakam’s stories taught him everything
-news religion -preacher in the church of news
-the stuff of news & journalism
1:02:45 TAPE ENDS -during Butte talk