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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.
Schendler, Auden, Hershkowitz, Allen, Miles, Emily, Shanahan, James
Summary:
As cities viable for hosting the Winter Olympics dwindle, ski resorts face shorter seasons, and climbers work with less predictable terrain, the winter sports industry acts as a key site influencing climate policy.
2:00 - Auden Schendler of Aspen Skiing Company and Protect Our Winters
14:15 - Allen Hershkowitz of Sport and Sustainability International (SandSI)
With more time at home and uncertainty in grocery stores, many of us are planning and planting gardens. In this episode, Hilltop Garden manager Kaylie Scherer talks with host Emily Miles about how to get started at home or in a community plot.
An advertisement for Schick in which a male narrator, accompanied by music, describes the Crown Jewel ladies electric shaver as a woman displays and uses the product. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
Sister Jane Schilling narrates a brief history of labor in the United States from the founding of the country to post-WWII. She describes the struggles of different groups, including African Americans, Chinese immigrants, and Mexican-American migrant workers. She describes the violent outcomes of unionizing and striking, as well as the development of labor laws in the US.
Sister Jane Schilling narrates a brief history of labor in the United States from the founding of the country to post-WWII. She describes the struggles of different groups, including African Americans, Chinese immigrants, and Mexican-American migrant workers. She describes the violent outcomes of unionizing and striking, as well as the development of labor laws in the US.
Schilling, Jane Edward, 1930-2017, Hardin, Boniface, 1933-2012
Summary:
Father Boniface Hardin hosts a discussion with Sister Jane Schilling about the history and treatment of Black soldiers in the United States, including Crispus Attucks and his role in the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Civil War, the Indian wars, Buffalo soldiers in WWI, and the Mexican campaign of 1916. They also address the question of whether or not wars ever advance the cause of freedom.
Schilling, Jane Edward, 1930-2017, Hardin, Boniface, 1933-2012
Summary:
Father Boniface Hardin continues a discussion with Sister Jane Schilling about the colonization movement in Indiana and efforts to resettle free African Americans in Africa in the 19th century. Topics include the 1852 establishment of the colonization board in Indiana and purchase of land in Liberia, arguments for and against colonization, solicitation and instructions to emigres, accounts of those who emigrated, and the eventual demise of the movement.
Schilling, Jane Edward, 1930-2017, Hardin, Boniface, 1933-2012, Smith, Dwight
Summary:
Part 6 in the series: Afro-American in Indiana. Host Dwight Smith and featured guests Rev. Boniface Hardin and Sister Jane Edward Schilling discuss the migration of people from the South to the North, black settlements, the growth of black-owned businesses, recognition of blacks in the Indiana Academy, funeral directors and black ministers, the founding of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), black soldiers who served in WWI, president Woodrow Wilson, the Ledger article, and the first black school built in Howard County. Also discussed are major Indiana figures including Madame C.J. Walker, Lt. Aaron Fisher from Lyles Station, and Dr. Sumner Furniss, the first Black man elected to City Council in Indianapolis.
Schilling, Jane Edward, 1930-2017, Smith, Dwight, Hardin, Boniface, 1933-2012
Summary:
Part 4 in the series: Afro-American in Indiana. Host Dwight Smith and guests Rev. Boniface Hardin and Sister Jane Edward Schilling discuss the "Golden Era" of Reconstruction after the Civil War (1866-1900), public education available to Black people, role of Indiana Supreme Court in the segregation of schools, inaccuracy of census figures around 1877, restoration of Home Rule (Jim Crow), the role of Black teachers and principals, and Black owned newspapers. Smith, Hardin, and Schilling also discuss major figures such as the Bagby brothers, James Hinton, Rev. James Townsend, Rev. Richards Bassett, Gabriel, Dr. Samuel E. Elbert, Dr. Sumner Furnace, Dr. George Washington Buckner, and JBT Hill.
Schilling, Jane Edward, 1930-2017, Stuart, Beverly
Summary:
Sister Jane hosts a discussion with Beverly Stuart, Assistant Director of Community Relations at the Indianapolis Sickle Cell Center, on Sickle Cell Anemia. The hosts explain the disease and its symptoms and discuss its high rates among the Black community. The session addresses misinformation regarding the disease and Beverly educates listeners on the mission and programming of the Indianapolis Sickle Cell Center.
An advertisement for Shlitz Beer in which a man puts up a poster for Shlitz on the side of a building. Another man in a Chaplin-esque costume walks but and then puts a plunger with a tap on the poster. He opens the tap and pours a beer from the poster for both himself and the worker. A female voice sings a jingle and a male narrator talks about the product.
An Italian advertisement for Schlitz Beer in which a truck driver at a beer factory accidentally breaks an outside pipe, causing beer to begin spraying onto the street. Workers initially try to contain the leak before beginning to drink and party around it while holding mugs. Large crowds of people from the surrounding community begin to join. One of the winners of the 1971 Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Schlitz beer in which friends at a backyard barbecue casually chat while drinking cans of Schlitz. An offscreen narrator speaks about how Schlitz is the beer "with a difference." Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Schlitz beer in which men sitting at a bar casually chat while drinking bottles of Schlitz. An offscreen narrator speaks about how Schlitz is the beer "with a difference." Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Schlitz beer in which friends in a basement playroom casually chat and play table tennis while drinking cans of Schlitz. An offscreen narrator speaks about how Schlitz is the beer "with a difference." Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Schmidt Beer in which a group of men are working on an oil rig while a jingle, called "Schmidt Country," is sung in a male voice. Then the men sit at a bar counter as a bartender slides them beers down the countertop.
An advertisement for Schmidt’s beer in which a male narrator discusses the product as a group of happy people celebrate the grand opening of a new bar. The advertisement ends with a Schmidt's jingle.
An advertisement for Shmidt's Beer in which a male narrator talks about putting people together with Shmidt's. An image of people decorating a party is assembled in the shape of a jigsaw puzzle. Then the image comes to life and women hand men beers as they decorate. A female voice sings a jingle.
An advertisement for Schmidt’s beer in which a simple animation of a four beers being poured into four glasses. Then a male narrator says, "Schmidts's and people, put em together." Then people are pictured enjoying a party as the male narrator speaks about the product, accompanied by music. The advertisement ends with a jingle.
An advertisement for Schmidt's beer in which a blindfolded man praises the qualities of Coors beer, not realizing that he is actually drinking Schmidt's. An offscreen narrator states that when editors at the Philadelphia Inquirer set out to write about how good Coors tastes, they actually found out how good Schmidt's tastes instead. One of the winners of the 1976 Clio Awards.
Lecture delivered by William H. Schneider, PhD (Professor Emeritus, Department of History and Program in Medical Humanities, IUPUI) on October 17, 2018.
Lecture presented by William H. Schneider, PhD (Professor Emeritus, Department of History and Program in Medical Humanities, IUPUI) on February 23, 2022. This talk examines the historical developments that shaped the conduct and regulation of medical research in the United States. Dr. Schneider discusses the ways in which the communication of scientific results have changed, and how those changes ensured the validity of results and prompted efforts to ensure the safety of research participants. He also points to how increased public awareness of and government funding for research contributed to more extensive regulation of research practices. Dr. Schneider also explores how Henry K. Beecher’s 1966 article “Ethics and Clinical Research” exposed research misconduct after the Nuremberg Code and Declaration of Helsinki and led to the creation of Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) to ensure medical research is conducted ethically.
This lecture is part of the Indiana University Center for Bioethics Translational Research Ethics: Applied Topics (TREATs) seminar series and was co-sponsored by the John Shaw Billings History of Medicine Society and the Ruth Lilly Medical Library.
Lecture delivered by William H. Schneider, PhD on September 24, 2010 as part of the 2010-2011 Indiana University School of Liberal Arts Sabbatical Speaker Series.
An advertisement for Scholl anti-perspirant foot spray in which a man aboard a stagecoach removes his boots to show them to a flirtatious woman, only to have his foot odor repel all the other passengers from the coach. An offscreen male narrator describes the features of the spray over close-up shots of the product. One of the winners of the 1973 Clio Awards.
Lecture delivered by Richard L. Schreiner, MD (Edwin L. Gresham Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine; retired Chair of Pediatrics and Physician-in-Chief, Riley Hospital for Children) on September 11, 2024. In celebration of Riley Hospital for Children’s centennial anniversary, this talk examines the hospital’s one-hundred year history, from the death of its namesake, Indiana poet James Whitcomb Riley, to the establishment of the hospital and the people who made it possible. Important figures, accomplishments, and details about the hospital’s dramatic growth from the 1920s through the present are discussed.
This event was co-sponsored by the John Shaw Billings History of Medicine Society, Riley Children’s Health, IU School of Medicine History of Medicine Student Interest Group, IU Indianapolis Medical Humanities & Health Studies Program, and the Ruth Lilly Medical Library.
On Thursday, October 29, 2020 from 5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., Professor Peter Schubert, the 2020 Bantz-Petronio Translating Research Into Practice Awardee, hosted an inaugural brain-storming session to develop innovative ways to use clothing to power electronic devices and much more. This was a multi-disciplinary, campus-wide project. Faculty, students, and staff were encouraged to share their creativity in this fun, engaging, and interactive event.
In this video, Dr. Peter Schubert describes his translational research. Three complementary solutions are needed so that everyone can enjoy a comfortable standard of living without despoiling our shared home. First, is baseload power for cities and factories, provided by Space Solar Power, in which orbiting powersats convert sunlight to radiowaves and deliver it wirelessly to terrestrial utilities that delivery electricity and produce hydrogen. Second is rural energy from non-food crop waste that can be converted, on-site, to electricity, heat, biochar, and also hydrogen transportation fuel. Third is safe, convenient hydrogen storage for mobile and portable applications that emit only water vapor as their effluent. These can be built from earth-abundant materials that are eminently recyclable, so that a clean and growing economy can benefit all humankind.
Dr. Schubert discusses three solutions needed so that everyone can enjoy a comfortable standard of living without damaging our planet. First, is baseload power for cities and factories, provided by Space Solar Power. Second is rural energy from non-food crop waste that can be converted, on-site, to electricity, heat, biochar, and also hydrogen transportation fuel. Third is safe, convenient hydrogen storage for mobile and portable applications that emit only water vapor as their liquid waste. Dr. Schubert shares how these solutions can be built from earth-abundant materials that are recyclable, so that a clean and growing economy can benefit all humankind.
Lecture delivered by Jane E. Schultz, PhD (Professor of English and Medical Humanities at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis) on December 5, 2018 in conjunction with the National Library of Medicine's "Life and Limb" traveling exhibit hosted by the Ruth Lilly Medical Library. Presentation includes representation of surgeon-soldier interactions from surgical letters, diaries, and memoirs; what happens when language fails to summarize and describe, despite surgeons' fluency in the clinical register; and literary observations about historical narrative.
Marilyn R. Schultz was a pioneer in broadcast journalism, dedicating herself to the fight for women's rights in the industry and, later, to educating future journalists as a college professor.
Schultz, who died in 2010, earned three IU degrees: a bachelor's in radio and television in 1967, a master's in telecommunications in 1990 and a doctorate in mass communication in 1993.
She began her career at NBC News in New York City, where she worked for nine years. Affectionately referring to her by her nickname, "Schultzie," former "NBC Nightly News" anchor Tom Brokaw recalled Schultz's impact on women in journalism in a traditionally male-dominated environment.
"First there was the name — "Schultzie," Brokaw said at the time of Schultz's death. "If that didn't get your attention, her attitude did. Schultzie worked in the newsroom when it was an all-white-male den of machismo, cigar, pipe and cigarette smoke, bawdy manners and profane speech. What everyone quickly learned is that Schultzie didn't need any of those props to hold her own.
"Now our newsrooms are fully integrated, but the first steps so long ago were Schultzie's — and she wasn't tiptoeing then or any time since."
Schultz took on the role of lead plaintiff and spokesperson for a class-action lawsuit representing 700 women against NBC. The suit, which lasted seven years, aimed to bring equal pay and opportunity to women at the company. As a result, more than 1,000 women received back pay, and women gained access to jobs previously unavailable to them.
The Washington Press Club Foundation would later name Schultz one of its 16 "American Women Who Changed the Face of Journalism (1965-1995)."
"It didn't take long to discover that she didn't just talk about changing the culture of NBC News, she acted to bring change about," said Wallace Westfeldt, Schultz's former boss and then-executive producer of NBC News, in 2010.
Schultz moved to Washington, D.C., to work as an on-air reporter for affiliate WRC-TV. There, she covered events such as the 1972 election, the Apollo 12 launch and Watergate.
In 1984, she moved to Indianapolis to work as a producer for NBC affiliate WTHR-TV. There, she covered the Mike Tyson trial and the Ryan White case, among other stories.
In the late '80s, Schultz returned to IU to pursue her master's, and later her doctorate. She accepted her first teaching position at the University of Texas at Austin, where she taught for nine years as an assistant professor and then broadcast journalism head.
From there, she took a position at St. Edward's University in Austin, where she continued to educate students for eight years until the time of her death.
The university established the Marilyn Schultz Memorial Scholarship for students studying media arts.
"Marilyn once said that 'teaching is the most important work I've ever done,' which was obvious from her interactions with her students," said Father Lou Brusatti, then-dean of the School of Humanities at St. Edward's University, in Schultz's obituary. "She was a motivation and inspiration for her students and colleagues."
Nationally, student loan debt reached $1.6 trillion last year. That works out to somewhere between $200 and $300 for alumni paying off their personal student loans, but the economic downturn has a lot of people in a pinch. The U.S. Department of Education says about 20 percent of borrowers are in default, and a recent Pew study found most were concerned about how they'd make their next payment.
To counter the national problem, the Biden administration extended the student loan grace period until September 2021. We talked with Phil Schuman, who is the executive director of Financial Wellness and Education at Indiana University -- Bloomington, to see what this means for alumni, students and potential borrowers.
For more, visit moneysmarts.iu.edu
Video bio of Franklin D. Schurz, Sr., inducted to Indiana Broadcast Pioneers Hall of Fame in 2014.
Produced by Scott Leiter & WSBT South Bend;
Franklin D. Schurz, Sr., was the longtime editor and publisher of the South Bend Tribune and owner of WSBT-AM/FM/TV in South Bend, Indiana. He served as general manager of WSBT-AM/FM from 1936-1946 and was editor and publisher of the newspaper from 1954-72. He was chairman of the privately owned Schurz Communications, which at the time of his death in 1987 included the Tribune and WSBT-TV in South Bend as well as television stations in Virginia, Missouri and Georgia, and four cable television systems.
--Words from the Indiana Broadcast Pioneers