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Item 2014 – 2015 DOCTORAL DISSERTATION FELLOWSHIP(2014) Lake Institute on Faith & GivingItem Beginnings of the Enduring Partnership between Indiana University and Riley Children’s Health, 1916-1924(Riley Children's Health, 2020) Schreiner, Richard L.; Stroup, Karen BrunerThe James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association (now the Riley Children’s Foundation), Indiana University, and the Indiana Child Welfare Association, worked together to advocate for passage of legislation that was passed by the 1921 Indiana General Assembly to appropriate state funds to support the building and operations of the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children. This legislation created the Joint Executive Committee charged with the mission to supervise the building and operations of the hospital. This is the first of four photo displays to be presented through this project.Item Board of Visitors: Center on Philanthropy Activities - June 2012(2012-06) IU Lilly Family School of PhilanthropyItem Celebrating the Contributions of Edwin L. Gresham, M.D. to Neonatal Care at Riley Hospital for Children and Neonatology in Indiana(Riley Children's Health, 2020) Schreiner, Richard L.; Stroup, Karen BrunerThis is the fourth of four photo displays to be presented through this project.Item The Creation of the Statewide Campuses of the IU School of Medicine(2014) Grau, KevinThe Creation of the Statewide Campuses of the IU School of MedicineItem Enduring Contributions of Indiana University Presidents and Leaders to the building and growth of Riley Children’s Health through the Riley Children’s Foundation(Riley Children's Health, 2020) Schreiner, Richard L.; Stroup, Karen BrunerIndiana University Presidents have played significant and consistent leadership roles in the history of the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children. Through involvement in the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association (now the Riley Children’s Foundation) since its beginnings in 1921 to the present day, Indiana University Presidents have been steady, strong, and dedicated voices for building, expanding, and enhancing the hospital’s capabilities to care for children from the Hoosier state and beyond. Through the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association (now the Riley Children’s Foundation), Indiana University Presidents and other university leaders like James W. Fesler (Trustee, 1902-1936 and Board President, 1919-1936) and Indiana University First Lady Laurie Burns McRobbie (2018 appointment, Riley Children’s Foundation Board of Governors) have contributed their knowledge, expertise, resources, and vision to the betterment of the hospital. Indiana University President William Lowe Bryan and President Herman B. Wells set the standard for this enduring leadership. This is the second of four photo displays to be presented through this project.Item Fahrenheit 451: A Descriptive Bibliography(2011-10-10) Barrett, Amanda Kay; Eller, Jonathan R., 1952-; Touponce, William F.; Coleman, Martin A.This document offers scholarly researchers, students and general readers a reliable, genealogically-based descriptive bibliography of all U.S. and British publications of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 (1953). The driving force behind this thesis is the desire to preserve, catalog, describe and archive a work of literature that has stood the test of time and continues to be an influential milestone of American culture well into the twenty-first century.Item FSA Resources at Indiana University Libraries(2012-11-27) Durrant, SummerA guide to Farm Security Administration resources at Indiana University Libraries.Item The Greatest Outrage: Military Park, Long Hospital, and Progressive Era Notions of Urban Space(2009) Jones, Amanda Christine; Bingmann, Melissa; Barrows, Robert G.; Wilson, Jeffrey S.In 1911 Dr. Robert W. Long gave a gift of real estate to the state of Indiana and stipulated that the sale of the property would fund a teaching hospital for the Indiana School of Medicine. The state senator who sponsored the hospital bill suggested placing the proposed hospital within the boundaries of Military Park, the city’s oldest park. Indiana University trustees agreed, which led to Indianapolis Mayor Samuel Lewis Shank’s angry denunciation of the proposition as “one of the greatest outrages” proposed in recent years in Indianapolis. Three interested camps formed over the location of what became known as Long Hospital: the Indiana University trustees, who approved of placing the hospital in the park because of its proximity to downtown Indianapolis; lineage societies and veterans, who touted the park’s historical significance as a nationalistic message to all residents; and the state and city governments and local civic organizations, who promoted the health benefits of public parks and playgrounds. Through open debate, particularly in Indianapolis’ newspapers, each position supported Progressive era reform attitudes towards the use of civic space in terms of its relationships to public health, social morality, and nationalistic values.Item "History of The Indiana University School Of Medicine"(1990-01-02) Irwin Jr., Glen