
Photo courtesy of IU Northwest
Three IU medical students (left to right) Nicholas Shea of Highland and Heather Higgins and Nancy Pudlo of Munster received scholarships in the name of the late Eugene Bainbridge, who served in the Indiana General Assembly. Dr. William Baldwin, assistant dean and director of the IU Northwest Center for Medical Education (center background) and Stella Bainbridge(center foreground), widow of the late legislator, presented the awards to the area scholars at a student orientation luncheon for the IU School of Medicine. The IU Northwest Center in Gary
employs 18 full-time and several part-time faculty, more than 120 physician volunteers, a full-time medical librarian and nine research assistants.

Photo courtesy of IU Southeast
Sandra Patterson-Randles (left, foreground) acknowledges the applause of IU President Myles Brand (far right) and the platform party during the new IU Southeast chancellor’s formal installation ceremony Oct. 15 at the Paul W. Ogle Cultural and Community Center in New Albany. Frederick Eichhorn Jr., president of the IU Board of Trustees, and Stephen Ferguson, vice president of the trustees, assisted the ceremony’s grand marshal, Gilbert Atnip, vice chancellor for academic affairs at the New Albany campus, in placing the chancellor’s mantle around Patterson-Randles’ shoulders. In her remarks, Patterson-Randles reflected on the impact her experiences as a professor have had on her students, who have made an effort to keep in touch with her. “They manage to find me wherever I go, and the very fact that they like to, as they very often put it, ‘touch base with me,’ tells me so very clearly of the impact that education has had on their lives,” she said. Of her vision for IU Southeast, Patterson-Randles emphasized the continued engagement of community support as the campus faces the challenges of continued enrollment growth and efficient management of resources.
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