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.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the eighteenth of these tapes, in which Stahr details more about Clochette and the Roosevelt family, his experience passing the New York State Bar exam and work at the law firm from 1939-1941, and more memories about his childhood in Hickman, Kentucky. This is one of the last tapes before he begins discussing his career in the army.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the nineteenth of these tapes, in which Stahr discusses more of his early life at Hickman, the University of Kentucky, and England. He discusses religious life in Hickman, as well as recreational activities, music, and movies. He then moves on to discuss his military training at Fort Benning (now Fort Moore).
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the second of these tapes. The first side of the tape is indecipherable, and on the second side Stahr discusses his and his father's political activity, as well as his own musical experience in his early life.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twentieth of these tapes, in which Stahr details more about his time at Fort Benning. After finishing officer training, they kept him on the faculty teaching about the 37mm anti-tank gun. He served as an advisor on a training film, which was shot in New York. Finally, he discusses the circumstances that led him to go to Yale to learn Chinese.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twenty-first of these tapes, in which Stahr details his time at Yale taking Chinese, and subsequent journey towards China. He describes his journey to and time in Oran, Algeria; Bombay (Mumbai), India; and train-ride to Calcutta.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twenty-second of these tapes, in which Stahr details traveling in to China and serving in the 54th Chinese Army. In particular he talks about the beginnings of the Monsoon Offensive of 1944 to open the Burma Road. He also discusses miscellaneous topics from his time at Yale, and Kentucky, including current events at time of recording.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twenty-third of these tapes, in which Stahr details the events leading up to the siege of Tengchong. Stahr also details the first of two lifesaving miracles that occurred in his life: he was delayed slightly en route to catch a plane when he ran into his roommate at Yale, enabling another pilot to arrive in time to warn him not to fly into dangerous airspace.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twenty-fourth of these tapes, in which Stahr details the end of the siege of Tengchong, as well as drinking too much at the victory dinner. He also discusses the campaign after the reopening of the Burma Road, inflation in China, and the death of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the 25th of these tapes, in which Stahr wraps up discussing his time serving in the army during World War II. He discusses the surrender of the Japanese; the gifts given to him by the Chinese officer, "Butch;" his struggles with promotion; and his journey back to the US.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twenty-sixth of these tapes. Side A includes a recording of a speech given by Stahr to University of Kentucky alumni in Washington, on May 10, 1989. Side B returns to the autobiographical project, in which he discusses the living conditions in China and various illnesses; meeting and marrying Dorothy Berkfield; and leaving the New York law firm to become Dean of University of Kentucky's Law School.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twenty-seventh of these tapes, in which Stahr details his time at the University of Kentucky as Dean of the Law School, as well as his time as Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Army. As Dean, he discusses his efforts with the NAACP to circumvent "separate but equal" laws to admit a Black student to the Law School, as well as his teaching and other duties. Stahr also discusses his various duties as Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Army, including briefing President Truman, his speech to the Reserve Officers Association, an incident with Congressmen from Alabama and Mississippi who were upset about the integration of the Army, among other things.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twenty-eighth of these tapes, in which Stahr discusses his time as Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Army, return to University of Kentucky, loss of the UK presidency, time as Staff Director of the President’s Committee on Education Beyond High School, and Vice Chancellorship at the University of Pittsburgh. He also details the birth and some early life of his daughter, Stephanie, as well as his social life in Lexington, Kentucky.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the twenty-ninth of these tapes, in which Stahr backtracks to his time in China, as well as Lexington as Dean of the Law School at the University of Kentucky. He discusses his time at the University of Pittsburgh, as well as receiving and offer and starting his job as president of West Virginia University. He also talks about current events, such as the Tiananmen Square massacre, as well as the various US Congressmen that he came to know.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the third of these tapes. Stahr discusses more of his early life, including gardening, hunting, and fishing; his grandparents; the movies; segregation and Black labor; sports; and the people and businesses of Hickman.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirtieth of these tapes, in which Stahr backtracks briefly to his time at the University of Kentucky and Pittsburgh before describing his time as President of West Virginia University. In particular, he discusses the controversy surrounding the probation of coach Art Lewis. Finally, Stahr discusses the events leading up to his appointment as Secretary of the Army, including attending JFK’s inauguration.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirty-first of these tapes, in which Stahr details more about his time as Secretary of the Army. He discusses the various trips he took, the people he knew, and his connections to historical events that occurred while in that role, including the aftermath of the Bay of Pigs, the building of the Panama Canal, and discussions about Vietnam and SEATO. Stahr also discusses his contentious relationship with Robert McNamara and his own resignation from the position, including his consideration for the Presidency of Indiana University.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirty-second of these tapes, in which Stahr details more about his time as Secretary of the Army. He discusses the trips he took, the numerous ambassadors he knew, and the parties he attended at various embassies. He also discusses his relationships with various prominent people, including the Eisenhowers and the Fords, Bob and Dolores Hope, and Barbara Walters.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirty-third of these tapes, in which Stahr begins to detail his time as president of Indiana University. He discusses sports, growth of the University under his tenure, as well as outreach and collaboration with other universities through various commissions and associations. In particular, he discusses the events leading up to the formation of the Argonne Universities Association, which facilitated atomic research programs at many higher education institutions.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirty-fourth of these tapes, in which Stahr continues his discussion of his time at IU, as well as miscellaneous memories on his prior experiences as Secretary of the Army and leaving the University of Kentucky. He discusses growing student unrest at IU, including the 1968 Little 500 sit-in, as well as faculty and visiting speakers hosted at IU during his tenure. He also discusses more honorary degrees that he received.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirty-fifth of these tapes, in which Stahr discusses the remainder of his time at IU and his transition to his presidency of the National Audubon Society. He discusses Black student protests and activism on IU's campus, notable speakers at IU, among other things. He takes a significant hiatus from recording his oral history on this tape, from August 1989 to January 1990. He picks back up to begin discussing his work with the Audubon Society.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This tape is the first tape labeled ’36.’ Stahr broke from recording on tape 35 to record this one, in which he discusses his time at Audubon. Specifically, he discusses his efforts to save Red River Gorge in Kentucky. But he also discusses other aspects of his work with Audubon, including various sanctuaries and meeting sites, his work to prevent the development of an oil pipeline in Alaska, and other things.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the second tape labeled 36, in which Stahr details more about his work with the National Audubon society. He discusses the various campaigns to conserve nature, such as the Everglades and Red River Gorge. He also discusses the complicated execution of George Whittell’s estate, through which the National Audubon Society was granted a significant amount of money, through which they expanded the organization’s influence. Finally, Stahr discusses a trip to Africa with his daughter, Stephanie.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirty-seventh of such tapes, in which Stahr details more about his trip to Africa, as well as his time as chairman of the USO while working with the National Audubon Society. He describes his relationship with comedian, Bob Hope, and other leading citizens in New York City. He also discusses his other activities with other groups, such as the National Institute of Social Sciences, the US Delegation to the United Nations, and President Ford’s WIN committee.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirty-eighth of these tapes, in which Stahr talks about Arlington National Cemetery and the memorial services he attended there. He also gives a general overview of his time at Audubon and discusses his lifelong love of baseball. Finally, he talks about current familial matters, health, and happiness, and begins to discuss leaving the Audubon presidency and the work he did afterwards.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the thirty-ninth of these tapes, in which Stahr discusses miscellaneous memories and enumerates the presidents, presidential candidates, and vice presidential candidates whom he knew, in order of election year.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the fourth of these tapes, in which Stahr discusses more about the people in his childhood town of Hickman, his family, as well as his high school achievements and romances.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the fortieth of these tapes, in which Stahr discusses various notable people whom he knew, including presidential candidates, astronauts, and opera stars. There is also significant discussion of current events, both personal and political.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the forty-first of these tapes, in which Stahr talks at length about the ensuing Gulf War, and operation Desert Storm. He also talks about his relationships with notable football coaches, notable men who had recently died, and his office secretaries through the years. He closes by discussing birdwatching and wildlife books and reiterates some of his travels as president of Audubon, as well as his involvement in the ROTC's Pershing Rifles.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the forty-second and last of these tapes. For most of the tape Stahr discusses his relationships with military generals throughout his life. There is significant coverage of familial and geopolitical current events, including the aftermath of the ousting of Mikhail Gorbachev.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the fifth of these tapes, in which Stahr discusses the the latter part of his high school education and arrival at the University Kentucky, as well as the summers spent on his grandparents' farm and his hometown neighbors.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the sixth of these tapes, in which Stahr details more memories of people and family in Hickman. He discusses topics such as dating, leisure activities, flooding, and his medical history.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the seventh of these tapes, in which Stahr recalls the last of his memories of Hickman, and the beginning of his academic studies at the University of Kentucky. He discusses music, baseball, his extended family, and his time as a freshman at U.K.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the eighth of these tapes, in which Stahr details more about his time at the University of Kentucky, recalling his leadership, accomplishments, and mishaps with Sigma Chi, the tennis team, and with the R.O.T.C. and Pershing Rifles. He also details the selection process for the Rhodes Scholarship.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the ninth of these tapes, in which Stahr recalls more memories from Hickman, including Christmases and his father's political relationships. He also recounts more memories during his time at the University of Kentucky, including FDR's presidency and keeping up with the news, sports, and summer adventures with the ROTC and other friends.
This tape is not a part of Elvis J. Stahr's autobiographical project. This tape records a speech by Stahr to a group of Sigma Chi fraternity members. Stahr details his life and career and his relationship with the fraternity.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Elvis J. Stahr, who served as President of Indiana University 1962-1968, recorded forty-four tapes about his life, with plans to write an autobiography. This is the eleventh of these tapes, in which Stahr describes his transition to Oxford University, including his trip to the UK, social culture, living arrangements, and academics at Oxford.
An advertisement for Esso (Standard Oil) Kerosene in which a narrator describes culture and labor in Holland and how Esso kerosene affects these aspects of Dutch life. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for Standard Oil company in which a narrator describes the history of the company's development. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for Standard Oil in which a narrator describes the company's commitment to drilling for oil across the globe over an animation of a person searching for these reserves. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for Standard Oil products in which a narrator describes the company's endless search for oil resources across the globe over an animation. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for Standard Oil petroleum products in which a narrator describes how Standard Oil laborers develop and test the petroleum used in cleaning detergents. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for Standard Oil products in which a narrator describes the way oil affects American life over an animation of wheels turning using oil. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
Reverend Terence Standifer, the former pastor of the Pleasant Valley Missionary Baptist Church in Small Farms, discusses how pollution affected the Little Calumet River and the surrounding area. He says, "As a young child, I could remember people, vaguely, fishing in the Calumet. By the time I was a teenager, that was gone. By the time I was an adult, it was a definite no-no." He then talks about cleanup projects he led in the Ambridge-Mann community in Gary.
This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Environmental Impacts 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.
Reverend Terence Standifer, the former pastor of the Pleasant Valley Missionary Baptist Church in Small Farms, describes a dispute between the Gary-Hobart Water Corporation and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that developed over an EPA-funded remediation project. In 1988, the EPA hired the Gary-Hobart Water Corporation to install public water lines to replace private wells which were contaminated by the Lake Sandy Jo/M&M Landfill Superfund Site, located on 25th Ave. near the communities of Small Farms and Black Oak. Due to the dispute, individuals in those neighborhoods waited until 1993 to gain access to a safe source of water.
This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Environmental Impacts 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.
Reverend Terence Standifer, the former pastor of the Pleasant Valley Missionary Baptist Church in Small Farms, shares his experience doing community outreach for an Environmental Protection Agency remediation project in the Small Farms community. The project, which began in 1988, supplied public water lines to replace the private wells which were contaminated by the Lake Sandy Jo/M&M Landfill Superfund Site, located on 25th Ave. near the communities of Small Farms and Black Oak.
This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Environmental Impacts 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.
Connie Standifer recalls the community use of the Chase Street Spring when she was growing up. She remembers that people traveled to Small Farms to collect water from the artesian well, sometimes drawn by its "miraculous healing" properties. She says, "And there were people from all over... All different types of license plates. From, Utah…Illinois, Nevada."
This was one of a group of excerpts gathered under the subject heading of Community Use of the Spring 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 Terence and Connie Standifer at Macomb Community College in Macomb County, Michigan, on November 8, 2019. Reverend Standifer was the pastor at Pleasant Valley, Missionary Baptist Church in the Small Farms Community from 1981 to 1993. He participated in several environmental cleanup projects in the Ambridge-Mann community and conducted community outreach to help bring water lines into the Small Farms neighborhood. Reverend Standifer now lives in Michigan with his wife Connie. 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
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.
Video bio of Steve Starnes, inducted to Indiana Broadcast Pioneers Hall of Fame in 2017;
For more than 30 years, Steve Starnes worked as a photographer for WTHR-TV in Indianapolis. One of his crowning achievements came in 1982 when he worked on a documentary about the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana. The program earned a myriad of national and international awards, including a national Emmy award. Starnes’s career behind the cameras took him all over the world, traveling from Afghanistan and Albania to Africa, before he retired in 2009.
--Words from the Indiana Broadcast Pioneers
An advertisement for State Farm automobile insurance featuring clown Emmett Kelly's Weary Willie character going through a car wash in a car without a protective hood. An offscreen male narrator describes the benefits of State Farm policies. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for State Farm automobile insurance in which a company agent drives to work as a jingle plays. State Farm marketing appears in increasingly absurd places along his drive, including traffic lights, trains, people's shirts, and on a dog. A skywriter pilot speaks to the agent and apologizes for oversleeping. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for State Farm automobile insurance in which two parking attendants discuss the benefits of the company's policies. An aerial shot reveals that the attendants have arranged the cars in the lot to resemble the State Farm logo. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for State Farm automobile insurance where shots of cars on the road are edited to up tempo music. An offscreen male narrator describes the savings available for State Farm customers and a jingle plays. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for State Farm homeowners insurance in which two construction workers discuss the benefits of State Farm's plans while on the job. The final shot revels that the workers has been building a giant wooden State Farm display logo. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for State Farm Insurance in which an offscreen male narrator describes how every State Farm sign on roadways across the country represents a local company agent. The narrator explains the benefits of State Farm's nationwide network over an image of a map of the U.S. populated by company branches. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
During this presentation, Dr. Lisa Staten discusses the "Diabetes Impact Project – Indianapolis Neighborhoods (DIP-IN)". This a multi-year, multisector, community engaged project with a holistic approach to reducing the diabetes burden in three Indianapolis communities. She provides an overview of the project and then focuses on the diverse partnerships that are central to the project.
Steddy P (Kansas City, Missouri)
Ray Pierce, better known by his stage name, Steddy P, is a Kansas City-based rapper who, for many years, has come to represent underground Missouri hip-hop. Through his college years, he built a dedicated following in Columbia, Missouri, and then began to spread outward across the state and beyond. He is also the founder of the label Indyground Entertainment, which has artists Farout and Dom Chronicles on its roster. His music is often biographical, often political, and is inspired and assisted in creation by St. Louis-based DJ and producer, DJ Mahf.
Interviewed by Holly Hobbs, 09/08/2020.
Sage Steele is one of ESPN’s most popular and respected commentators, currently serving as the anchor for the 6 p.m. SportsCenter with co-anchor Kevin Negandhi and as lead host for SportsCenter on the Road.
Her lead role for SportsCenter on the Road, which she’s held since September 2016, includes on-site, day-long and pre-event coverage for the biggest sports events of the year, including the NBA Finals, the Super Bowl, the World Series, the Masters, the College Football National Championship and many more.
She’s anchored the 6 p.m. SportsCenter since May 2018. Previously, she anchored SportsCenter:AM, and she hosted NBA Countdown on ESPN and ABC from 2013-17.
Steele joined ESPN in 2007, serving as a regular SportsCenter anchor until 2013. In addition to SportsCenter, she also has contributed to First Take and Mike & Mike, and has been a guest co-host of ESPN2’s SportsNation. She hosted ABC and ESPN’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve during the inaugural College Football Playoff.
Beyond her work for ESPN, Steele has co-hosted ABC’s telecast of the Miss America pageant since 2016 and has been a featured guest host on ABC’s The View. She also hosted the Scripps National Spelling Bee from 2010-13.
In 2015, Steele added “mommy blogger” to her job portfolio, contributing several stories to Disney-owned Babble. She has also been a guest on Jimmy Kimmel Live! and has been profiled by Rolling Stone, the Wall Street Journal, Vibe and Huffington Post, to name a few.
In 2013, Steele had the honor of driving the pace car for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Brickyard 400 at the famed Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Steele began her television career at WSBT-TV in South Bend, working as a producer and reporter from 1995-97. She then moved to WISH-TV in Indianapolis, where she was the beat reporter for the Indianapolis Colts, in addition to covering the 1997 NCAA men’s Final Four, NASCAR and the IndyCar Series.
In August 1998, Steele moved to Tampa and worked as a reporter, anchor and host for WFTS-TV. She was the beat reporter for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1998-2001 and covered the 1999 NCAA men’s Final Four. In 2000, she joined Fox Sports Net in Tampa as a reporter and covered Super Bowl XXXV for the 2000-01 NFL season.
In April 2001, Steele became the anchor for the debut of Comcast SportsNet, serving the Washington, D.C./Baltimore region. She anchored the flagship show SportsNite for six years and was also a beat reporter for the Baltimore Ravens from 2001-05, hosting a magazine show for all five seasons.
Steele graduated from IU in 1995 with a B.S. in sport communication. In her spare time, she is a board member for the Pat Tillman Foundation and is passionate about working alongside military veterans. She enjoys horseback riding and spending time with her husband and three children.
Martha Moutoux Steffens shifted her focus after 30 years in newspapers to education, sharing her expertise with college students at the University of Missouri School of Journalism and with hundreds of professionals around the world looking to expand both their skills and their news organizations’ reach.
Her years in news equipped her for her second act in academia. Steffens was an editor and reporter at the Evansville Courier, the Dayton Daily News, the Orange County Register, the St. Paul Pioneer Press, the Minneapolis Star and the Los Angeles Times, where she was an editor on the business desk.
Later, she was executive editor of the Press & Sun Bulletin in Binghamton, N.Y. Steffens ended her newspaper career as executive editor of the San Francisco Examiner.
In 2002, she joined the University of Missouri as the Society of American Business Editors and Writers Endowed Chair, teaching business and financial journalism. Steffens’ interest in supporting journalism around the world led her to the Middle East to train journalists to cover elections, to Macedonia to train business journalists and to Saudi Arabia to conduct the first-ever training sessions for women journalists. To date, she has organized more than 100 workshops for journalists in 28 countries on topics from local business reporting to covering global financial markets.
Steffens has served on the boards of the Pew Center for Civic Journalism and CBS MarketWatch. Earlier this year, she was named to the executive board of the International Press Institute, an organization that seeks to monitor and support press freedom around the world. She is a member of journalism’s alumni board.
Steffens received the Society of American Business Editors and Writers President’s Award in 2013. She is co-author of Reporting Disaster on Deadline and author of the upcoming Dimension Reporting.
John Stehr was lead news anchor for 23 years at WTHR-TV, Indianapolis, before retiring in 2018. His work earned him numerous Regional Emmy Awards. Previously he was anchor in New York for the CBS Morning News and the Money Wheel on CNBC. Stehr began his career working for stations in Erie, Pennsylvania, and Grand Rapids, Michigan.
--Words from the Indiana Broadcast Pioneers
Presentation at Open Repositories 2015 (OR2015), the 10th International Conference on Open Repositories, Indianapolis, Indiana, in session P5A: Building the Perfect Repository.
John E. Stempel, BA’23, led the IU journalism department from 1938-1968. His lifelong affiliation with IU and journalism began as a student in the early 1920s. He was editor of the Indiana Daily Student, and worked on the student paper at the same time as future IU president Herman Wells and fellow inductees Pyle and Poynter. After graduation, he earned a master¹s degree from Columbia University and worked on the New York Sun and The Express in Easton, Pa.
Under his leadership, IU became one of the first accredited journalism education programs in the nation. He increased the number of faculty and broadened the scope of studies available to students. He hired the program¹s first broadcast professor and established the doctoral program in 1963. He also created the High School Journalism Institute.
Stephanie BadSoldier Snow (Garwin, Iowa)
Stephanie BadSoldier Snow was raised on the Meskwaki Settlement in central Iowa with traditional Meskwaki ways and is of the Swan Clan. She is an enrolled tribal member of the HoChunk Nation of Wisconsin. Along with Meskwaki and HoChunk heritage, Stephanie is also Lakota and Umohon. As a member of various song, storytelling, and dance troupes, she has had the honor of working with acclaimed Native American performing artists throughout her career. A tremendous lifelong goal was realized when she was blessed to be one of the first Native performers on the Nashville stage. Stephanie is an award-winning artist who holds the Meskwaki way of life dear, appearing on recordings meant to revitalize the tribal language and revive songs once thought lost to the community. Today Stephanie, also a published poet and anthropologist, works from home as a cultural consultant, continues as a virtual musical performer, acts as learning coach to her two children, and spends time sharing ideas with her intellectual husband.
Interviewed by Holly Hobbs, 10/09/2020.
This workshop will give an overview of how to identify what types of data analysis tools to use for a project, along with basic “DIY” instructions. We will discuss the most common analysis tools for describing your data and performing significance tests (ANOVA, Regression, Correlation, Chi-square, etc), and how they should be selected based on the type of data and the type of research question you have. We will spend the first hour outlining ‘what analysis to use when’ and the second hour going through an example dataset in SPSS software “Comparing motivations for shopping at Farmer’s markets, CSA’s, or neither.” Bring your own data set to work along also.
In the past few decades, laboratory experiments have gained popularity in a number of social science disciplines outside of psychology, including economics, political science, and sociology. In part, this is due to the usefulness of laboratory experiments for addressing questions about causality. This workshop offers an introduction to the theory and practice of designing and conducting laboratory experiments, oriented towards those with little or no prior experience. The presentation will also address motivations for conducting experimental research, the relationship between theory, experiments, and the “real world,” and the ethics of experiments.
Stephen Kieran and James Timberlake proceed from the belief that architecture is most resonant, beautiful, and artful when it connects deeply across levels and dimensions in ways that resolve into a new whole—a whole that is expansive, unified, and far greater than the sum of its parts. Their lecture FULLNESS: The Art of the Whole explores how beautiful design arises from the art and science of a deep, query-based research process, and includes many individuals and many (often competing) influences. Central among these influences is an ethical commitment to researching and envisioning anew the ways in which architecture and planning can address some of the most pressing issues of our time: the international crisis of affordable shelter and the role that carbon consumption plays in global warming and the decimation of our physical environment. Using project examples from the past decade, they will discuss the evolution of their creative process over time, the expanding role of communication in their work, and how innovative new modeling and analysis technologies can become tools for dialogue and collaboration.
Jodi Cohen interviews Stephen Porges for her podcast "Essential Alchemy: the ancient art of healing naturally." The summary reads: "With Stephen Porges, PhD, you’ll learn the impact of the autonomic state on reactions, how safety cues calm the physiological state, and the ways in which trauma distorts neuroception and creates defensive reactions. In this episode, you will learn: Impact of the autonomic state on reactions; How safety cues calm the physiological state; Trauma distorts neuroception and creates defensive reactions"
Poetry reading of Stephen S. Mills. Video recording of Mills reading "How We Became Sluts" from his published work "Not Everything Thrown Starts a Revolution."
Stephen S. Mills is an award-winning LGBTQ poet who is a native of Richmond, Indiana. Travis Rountree, assistant professor of English and director of the Writing Program invited Stephen to IU East to read some of his poetry that often refers back to the region. Stephen also visited Dr. Rountree’s Eng-W270 class to talk to the students about growing up in Richmond, how he came out to his family and found his identity, and what inspires him as a writer.
Poetry reading by Stephen S. Mills. Audio recording of Mills reciting his poem "You Don't Look Violent" from his published work "Not Everything Thrown Starts a Revolution."
To open our fourth season, we chat with Northeastern University professor of sustainability science and policy Jennie Stephens about climate movement leadership and how it needs to shift if we want to see transformative change.
Army Black Knights - 20; Michigan Wolverines - 13
Battle of Unbeatens
Game played at Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Disc 1
1. Pre-Game
2. First Quarter
3. Second Quarter
4. Half-time
Disc 2
1. Third Quarter
2. Fourth Quarter
3. Bob Ufer Remembered
Army Cadets - 48; Notre Dame Fighting Irish - 0.
"Army 48 Notre Dame 0 - Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis lead the Cadets to a big win in a battle of unbeaten powerhouses at Yankee Stadium - Bill Stern on SAW (:55) - have original recordings"
Army Cadets - 0; Notre Dame Fighting Irish - 0.
Battle of Unbeatens; Considered "Game of the Century"
Game played at Yankee Stadium in Bronx, New York.
Disc 1
1. First Quarter
2. Second Quarter
3. Half-time
Disc 2
1. Third Quarter
2. Fourth Quarter
3. Post-Game
4. 11/23/45 (Stern with Senatra)
Boston College Eagles - 13; Tennessee Volunteers - 33;
Game played at Braves Field in Boston;
Called by Bill Stern on NBC Radio
Disc 1
1. Pre Game
2. First Quarter
3. Second Quarter
Disc 2
1. Halftime
2. Third Quarter
3. Fourth Quarter
4. Post Game
Cotton Bowl. Kentucky Wildcats - 20; Texas Christian Horned Frogs - 7
"1m - Bill Stern mistake (lateral) in Cotton Bowl of TCU v Kentucky - NBCç
radio over film - SP copy - SP - in XSD"
No. 9 Notre Dame Fighting Irish - 28; No. 12 Great Lakes Navy - 7.
Notre Dame Stadium in Notre Dame, Indiana. Commentator Bill Stern.
"NOTRE DAME 28 Great Lakes 7 - Irish come from behind to win their final game of the season - Bill Stern"
1948 Rose Bowl: No. 2 Michigan Wolverines - 49; No. 8 University of Southern California (USC) Trojans - 0.
"Michigan 49 USC 0 - at half - Louie Vincente, Omar Bradley, Leo Carillo and Virginia Goodhue - Jack Lydcap, Frank Barton, Joy Storm and Bill Stern (KNBC San Francisco) (also on R-13) HCL118 (various HL off of ICBX) ICBX (BKR)"
Texas Christian University Horned Frogs - 7; No. 8 Southern Methodist University Mustangs - 7.
Fourth quarter recording in this Southwest Conference matchup at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas.
NBC Radio, Bill Stern
Steve and Stan Blessing (Masters), Jon Kay (Director), Nineteenth State LLC. (Production Services), William Winchester Claytor (Videographer and Editor), Nathan Vollmar (Sound Recording and Editor) Kelly Totten (Cover Design), Betsy Shepherd (Production Coordinator) Traditional Arts Indiana
Summary:
In 2012 we partnered with Traditional Arts Indiana to produce this short profile of Blessing Farms, a family dairy farm and cattle breeding operation outside of Ft. Wayne, Indiana. The 800 acre farm, run by brothers Steve and Stan Blessing, is home to approximately 140 Brown Swiss dairy cows, and has been in operation since 1936. The Blessing family also grows corn, soybeans, alfalfa, and wheat.