Archive for October, 2011

Reducing the backlog, three boxes at a time

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

In the summer of 2011, graduate students in the Center for Primary Research and Training embarked on a project to reduce the department’s backlog of partially processed collections and make them available to the public for research.

Chris Marino (Information Studies), Yasmin Damshenas (Moving Image Archive Studies), Jesse Erickson (Information Studies) and Heather Lowe (Information Studies) worked from a list to choose collections that appealed to their interests. The only “rule” of the assignment was that the collection should be three boxes or smaller. (We did break that rule on occasion and do collections of four boxes!)

In a three month period, these four students arranged, described and rehoused 55 collections, on subjects such as the Spanish Civil War, rare book collecting, mountaineering, education in Malawi, Persian calligraphy and the kidnapping of the Lindbergh baby. Heather said, “My favorite part of processing small collections was how much I learned from each one. Whether it was the Building and Loan League Records, the Charles Wilkin Waddell Papers, or the Andy Zermeno Papers, I got to investigate things such as the rise of savings and loans, the birth of the education department at UCLA, and the agricultural workers’ movement in California. These are all things I might not have sought out to learn on my own but were a way I really benefited from the project.” Yasmin added, “The small size of the collections allowed for exposure to an unbelievable variety of topics and disciplines within a short period.  Within one week alone I was able to work with WWI photographs, 17th century theatrical set design, journalism on California social issues, expressionist lithographs, and Broadway plays. It made for a rewarding experience.”

Please check back in the coming weeks for stories from the students about their favorite collections and intriguing finds.

By Megan Hahn Fraser, Processing Projects Librarian

UCLA Library Curators’ Conversations

Friday, October 21st, 2011

After the Earthquake
Popular Memory as History in
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Report on a Student Oral History Project

Wednesday, November 2
Noon-1 p.m.
Charles E. Young Research Library
Presentation Room

In January 2010 a devastating 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck Haiti. More than five hundred thousand people were killed or injured, and the island nation’s infrastructure was devastated. In September 2011 a UC contingent led by UCLA history professor Robin Derby traveled to Port-au-Prince, funded by a seed grant from the Ford Foundation-Latin American Studies Association. There they joined faculty members of the State University of Haiti to conduct an intensive training course in oral history methodology for a group of Haitian students.

Teresa Barnett, head of the UCLA Library’s Center for Oral History Research and a member of the UC contingent, will report on the experience. In particular, she will focus on the interviews that resulted and some of the oral history and archival issues raised by such collaborations.

Please join us for this occasional series exploring Library collections and projects with the staff who acquire and make them available. The presentation will be followed by a question-and-answer period.

You are welcome to bring your lunch; coffee and cookies will be served.

Seating is limited. RSVP to UCLA Library Development at <rsvp@library.ucla.edu>.

In the News: Hot Enough for You?

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

The Story of Air Conditioning, a fact-filled 16-page pamphlet distributed by the Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Machinery Association sometime between 1940 and 1953, is available for reading at History & Special Collections for the Sciences on the 4th floor of the Biomedical Library. It also is online at: The Story of Air Conditioning

This recent acquisition—the only copy now held by a library, and found for us by West Sand Lake, New York-based ephemera dealer aGatherin’—uses the characters Tempy (temperature), Drippy (humidity), Stirry (air circulation), and Dusty (cleanliness) to answer the question, “Did you ever wonder why you are so much more comfortable in air conditioned surroundings?” [Italics are theirs.]  The pamphlet is wittily illustrated by John Groth, who was the art editor of Esquire in the 1930s and combat correspondent and artist for the Chicago Sun during World War II.

submitted by Russell A. Johnson
History and Special Collections for the Sciences

Call for applications: 2012 Thayer Short-Term Research Fellowships

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

The UCLA Library’s James and Sylvia Thayer Short-Term Research Fellowships support the use of special collections materials by visiting scholars and UCLA graduate students. Collections that are administered by the UCLA Library Special Collections and available for Thayer fellowship-supported research include materials in the humanities and social sciences; medicine; life and physical sciences; visual and performing arts; and UCLA history.

Research residencies may last up to three months between February 1 and December 14, 2012. Recipients receive stipends ranging from $500 to $2500. Those receiving fellowships are expected to provide a brief report on the results of their research that can be mounted on the UCLA Library Web site. Fellows may have the opportunity to speak about their research at an informal brown-bag session with local scholars during their visit.

Full details are available at:
http://www.library.ucla.edu/special/thayer.cfm

Completed applications are due November 18, 2011.