Author Archive

Bishop Spangler (and his brain’s) Legacy

By Sasha Doppelt

For our latest installment of “Health Matters,” premiering tonight at 8 and online now, host David Granet talked to Dr. Jacopo Annese, director of The Brain Observatory at UC San Diego. Dr. Annese is working on a “Digital Brain Library” that uses advanced neuroimaging technologies to create digital models of the human brain at cellular resolution. Sounds like pretty standard scientific research, right? Not quite.

What makes Dr. Annese’s work unique is that he also studies — and ideally gets to know — the person behind the brain. With this information, he offers an unprecedented holistic perspective on this complex organ.

Bishop Spangler, 1932-2011

Dr. Annese’s Digital Brain Library relies on generous brain donations from community members who want to have a role in discovering how disease and aging affect the brain. San Diego resident Bishop Spangler was one of these people.

Bishop passed away on June 12, 2011 after living with GIST (gastrointestinal stromal tumor) for nine years. In the following paragraphs, his wife Bettie Spangler tells us about her husband, why he felt compelled to donate his brain to Dr. Annese, and how the donation experience profoundly affected Bishop and the entire Spangler family during his final days.

Can you tell us a little bit about your husband?
Bishop Spangler was born in 1932 in a rural area of Southwest Virginia into a farming family of seven children. His family had a proud, rich history of helping settle a community named Meadows of Dan. Growing up, he learned about integrity, helping your neighbors, working as a team, doing deals with a “hand shake,” making your own music, barn dancing, and church. He learned about determination if you wanted to accomplish anything, and the importance of the environment for raising crops and live stock. After high school he found a college in Kentucky where he could go and work his way through and, four years later, he graduated from Berea College with his B.A. degree majoring in physics. He went on to the University of Pittsburgh on a teaching assistant program and earned a Masters in Mathematics, and later his PhD also in Mathematics. He married and later moved to San Diego where he worked in the aerospace industry and raised a family. Eventually, Bishop left the aerospace industry and became an entrepreneur. He loved to “wheel and deal” so he became a real estate broker where he could use many of his gifts/talents/passions. His goal was to always try to help people “stretch in order to obtain their dreams.”

How did your family become involved in the brain library project?
Bishop read an article in the newspaper toward the end of May about the Brain Observatory and the work that Dr. Annese was doing. He showed me the article after he had made the phone call to the paper asking for someone to call him, as he would like to be a donor. He told me that he wanted to give his brain to this project after he died and would I make sure it happened? I said that I did not want to do that for myself, but if that is what he wanted to do, then I would do all I could do to make it happen. He told his children about his decision and they supported him, as we all recognized this as a Bishop thing.

Can you tell us about the experience?
On May 25, 2011 I received a call from Dr. Annese giving me some information about the project. I told him he would need to talk to my husband and he offered to come to our home the next day. Bishop insisted on getting dressed and coming downstairs to meet Dr. Annese, along with our daughter and son. He was ready to sign whatever papers necessary as he knew his time was short and he wanted to take care of business. He was now a brain donor! Dr. Annese was always kind and considerate about not adding pressure or pushing Bishop for more. He would always tell him what was happening during the MRI studies and asking if he felt like doing more. When Bishop got tired he would tell him…no more. At one time the whole family came into the bedroom where Bishop was talking about his early history and the grandchildren asked to sit in. It was fine with Dr. Annese as long as we were quiet. He looked around the room with some on the bed and others on the floor spread out and said, “It looks like camping,” and everyone felt at ease. One of our granddaughters said, “Witnessing Gampa relive key moments of his life through Jacopo’s interviews and knowing that it would be used in support of something he deeply cared about was one of the most powerful experiences of my life.”

Why did your husband want to donate his brain?
Bishop wanted to leave something he could be remembered by—a kind of legacy. He also wanted to leave something that might help humanity in the future. One of our granddaughters said it best, “It made perfect sense since he marked his life with a desire to make a difference and an ongoing quest for deeper understanding about the mysteries of earth and spirituality.”

How did his decision to participate impact his end-of-life experience?
A few days before he died, we were all sitting around in the bedroom listening to him and Dr. Annese talk, when our friend and minister and his wife came in. Introductions were made and then Bishop pointed to Dr. Annese and told our minister, “This man saved my life.” Meaning, he had given him hope that he would live on into the future through this project, and he would be able to contribute something that might help humanity and the scientific community. He lived to accomplish whatever he could give to Dr. Annese for his program.

Is there anything else you would like to add?
Dr. Annese kept all of the promises he had made. He told me he would be with Bishop at the end and he would arrange everything needed to accomplish what Bishop indicated he wanted to do with his brain after he died. He was very clear in describing the project to us and to share the goals and objectives that he hoped to accomplish. He never pushed us in making any decisions or to keep appointments if it was not convenient. He also came to the Celebration Of Life service and gave support to all the family. By this time, we all considered him part of our family. We still are in contact. He has a kindness and a bedside manner that many do not have today. Bishop loved Jacopo and trusted him with the end of his life.

To learn more about Dr. Annese’s brain library project and research, watch “Health Matters: Your Own Personal Brain Map.” Thank you to Bettie Spangler for sharing her husband’s inspiring story with us.

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Monthly Highlights: November 2011

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Featured This Month
Program Highlights
New to Video On-Demand


FEATURED THIS MONTH

The Atlantic Meets the Pacific

Last month, UC San Diego and The Atlantic gathered together some of the country’s most fascinating thinkers for The Atlantic Meets The Pacific, a 3-day forum to designed to explore the future of energy, health, and technology. Now UCSD-TV’s audience has access to this exclusive event with this six-part series premiering in November and December.

Exploring the Mind of an Entrepreneur with Elon Musk and James Fallows

War of the Worldviews: Exploring Science vs. Spirituality with Deepak Chopra and Leonard Mlodinow

Exploring Energy

Exploring Technology with Evan Williams

Exploring the Future of Gaming and Alternate Realities with Will Wright and Alexis Madrigal

Exploring Health with Ira Magaziner

Living Better, Living Longer

It’s true that aging isn’t easy, but research and lifestyle tips from UC San Diego researchers and other experts can help. Tune in to discover how the latest research is helping unlock the secrets of the body and mind.

Research on Aging: The Search for the Fountain of Youth

Health Matters: Unlocking Brain Function

About Health: Aging But Never Old


PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

All programs repeat throughout the month. Visit the Program Schedule on our web site for additional air dates and times.

Health & Medicine

Road to Recovery: Treatment and Recovery in Behavioral Health for Americans with Disabilities

Taking Control of Your Diabetes: Growing Up with Type 1 Diabetes

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Science

Keeling Lecture: Climate Change: The Evidence and Our Options

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Public Affairs

Economics Roundtable: “After the Fall;” with Carmen Reinhart

UCSD 2011 Convocation

Building Bridges, Rebuilding Societies with Zainab Salbi

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Humanities Humanities

UCSD By Design: John Walsh

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Arts & Music Arts & Music

Mexican Folkloric Dance: Rafael Zamarripa’s Artistic Trademark

UC Davis Symphony Family Concert: Rossini, Beethoven, Mendelssohn

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Check out the latest additions to our online video archive

9/11 Ten Years Later

Debating Darwin: How Jerry Fodor Slid Down the Slippery Slope to Anti-Darwinism

The 12th Annual UC Santa Barbara’s New Venture Competition

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Behind the Scenes at the Athenaeum



Matt Alioto adjusts Cecil Lytle’s microphone.


John Menier and Marci Bretts assess the set-up in the monitor.


Cecil Lytle reads his narration, with Matt Alioto manning the camera.


The Athenaeum Music & Arts Library is transformed into a TV studio for “Liszt in the World.”


Host Cecil Lytle as he appears on-camera.

Monthly Highlights: October 2011

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Featured This Month
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FEATURED THIS MONTH

Presenting SummerFest 2011

La Jolla Music Society’s 2011 SummerFest series may be behind us, but three outstanding performances from their 25th anniversary season — plus plenty of behind the scenes interviews — live on Friday nights on UCSD-TV. Tune in for Mozart, Mendelsson and more from this celebrated music festival.

Mozart, the Sublime Spirit

Commissions and Premieres

Finale

Plus bonus video and performances from past seasons at www.ucsd.tv/summerfest.

Searching for Democracy

What does our democracy require of us? What are our shared values? How do we define and create a common good? Join the California Council for the Humanities and esteemed scholars, policy specialists. journalists, and more for thoughtful dialogue on the evolution of civic conversation and the changing nature of democracy. Broadcast schedule and online video at www.ucsd.tv/searchingfordemocracy


PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

All programs repeat throughout the month. Visit the Program Schedule on our web site for additional air dates and times.

Health & Medicine

Research on Aging: Staying Physically Active/Challenges and Solutions

About Health: Alzheimer’s

Taking Control of Your Diabetes: Sleep Apnea from A to Zzz

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Science

Subsidies, Aliens, and Ecologists: Connectivity at the Edge

IDEAS: A Future for the Past: Using Science to Safeguard Our Cultural Heritage with Maurizio Seracini

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Public Affairs

Working for Water

Point Loma Writers: An Evening with Bill McKibben

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Humanities Humanities

Point Loma Writers: An Evening with Mary Karr

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Arts & Music Arts & Music

La Jolla Symphony & Chorus: Prometheus, the Poem of Fire

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Check out the latest additions to our online video archive

Frontiers in One Health – Disease Resurgence From Climactic and Ecological Change

UC San Diego Jazz Camp: Finale Concert 2011

Osher UCSD: Lords of the Landscape: Israeli Settlements as Obstacles to Middle East Peace with Gary Fields

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