Ex Libris

February 2, 2009

LECTURE SERIES MILESTONE

Filed under: Fall 2008 — Tags: , — mgerry @ 3:43 pm

By Jennie Thomas, Archivist

Dr. Marcy Sacks

On Tuesday, October 7, Special Collections held its annual Marilyn Crandell Schleg Memorial Lecture, an
endowed lectureship that provides visiting archivists, conservators, curators, and historians the
opportunity to lecture on archival and library topics.  This year was the tenth anniversary of the lecture, featuring Dr. Marcy Sacks, associate professor of history.

The evening began with a dinner at Bellemont Manor in honor of the family of deceased alumna Marilyn
Crandell Schleg and Dr. Sacks.  In attendance were President Donna Randall; Provost Susan Conner;
Marilyn Schleg’s widower, Edward, their son David, and her twin sister and her husband, Marlene and Arthur Francis; members of the History Department and the Library, past Schleg lecturers, and others who
continue to assist with the lecture.

Following the dinner, college faculty, staff, students, the Schleg family, and members of the community all gathered in the Wendell Will Room for “Unmasking the ‘Deadpan’: The Search for the ‘Real’ Joe Louis.”  Dr. Sacks’s lecture was based on her research for a forthcoming biography of Louis, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.  Sacks conducted several interviews with family members and friends of Louis, the iconic heavyweight boxing champion.  “He had a tremendous impact on race relations,” she explained.  Her lecture discussed the challenges of finding new information about Joe Louis and the research methodology that she employed to help answer the question of his historical significance.  A number of insightful questions were asked in relation to current racial imagery and
ideology.

After the lecture, a reception was held to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the lecture.  Marlene Francis, Marilyn Schleg’s twin sister, cut the first piece of cake.

IMPOSING ALBION MURAL ON VIEW

Filed under: Fall 2008 — Tags: — mgerry @ 3:34 pm

The history of Albion looms large on the main floor of the Mudd building in the form of a mural designed by nationally known Michigan artist Michael Peck.

The panels of this triptych depict the farm families who settled the Albion area; the beginnings of industry, culminating in the monumental figure of the Molder; and the cultural milieu in which Albion College, represented by Dickie Hall (now part of the Kellogg Center), plays an important part.  To appreciate the rich detail of the mural, read the framed description that accompanies it.

After graduating from Marshall High School, Michael Peck attended Albion College, majoring in Anthropology and Theatre.  His work as a decorative painter has won him prestigious private commissions, and his creative team, comprised of Michigan artists, has executed commissions for world-class hotels such as The Plaza in New York City and The Breakers in Palm Beach, Florida.

His artistic credentials made Peck a natural choice to restore murals and paint an original tompe l’oeil panel for the Honolulu House in Marshall.  Other local examples of his work can be seen at Marshall’s Oaklawn Hospital and Architecture Plus Design in Battle Creek.

Albion’s mural was commissioned by Albion’s Downtown Development Authority, Economic Development
Corporation, and Chamber of Commerce, with support from the Arts and Industry Council, the W.K.
Kellogg Foundation, the Albion Community Foundation, Semco Energy, and private donors.

The mural will be on display in the college library at least through the fall semester.  Take some time to “read” this graphic history of our community!

BLOOD, SWEAT, AND TIERS

Filed under: Fall 2008 — Tags: — mgerry @ 3:31 pm

This past summer, a small, valiant crew of student employees completed the mammoth task of shifting every single bound periodical in the Stockwell tiers.  
 
The goal of the project was to free up space for book collections that are currently over-crowded in the Mudd building. 
 
Thanks to alumna Sarah Bunde and current students April Clawson, Rikus Goodell, Dan Gremore, Sara Grable, and Alex Jasinowski, the shift was completed with a few days to spare before the fall semester began.  They battled through even the occasional crankiness of Stockwell’s vintage elevator !  

A WELCOME ADDITION

Filed under: Fall 2008 — Tags: , — mgerry @ 3:23 pm

Tammy Sayles

We are very pleased to have future librarian Tammy Sayles with us this semester. Tammy is completing her Master’s in Library and Information Science (MLIS) from Wayne State University and plans to graduate in December. Inspired by her experience in a class on academic libraries taught by our library Director, Dr. John Kondelik, Tammy arranged for him to supervise her in a practicum here at Stockwell-Mudd Library.

Her practicum requirements are to complete 135 hours and to work on a specific project for the library. She staffs the reference desk on Sunday and Wednesday nights and devotes Saturdays to her project, a marketing analysis of the library.

“Basically, I am focusing on how the library can promote its wonderful electronic and print resources to the students, faculty, and community,” explains Tammy.

Her research and recommendations will be presented to Dr. Kondelik and his staff in early December.

STAY UP TO DATE ON NEW LIBRARY MATERIALS

Filed under: Fall 2008 — Tags: — mgerry @ 2:01 pm

Michelle Gerry, Systems Librarian

Wondering what’s new in the library? Check out our recent acquisitions page by clicking on the link of the same name in the sidebar of the library main page. The page (http://www.albion.edu/library/
NewBooks/), which is updated approximately every month, is broken down by subject matter.

You can even subscribe to RSS feeds. Simply click the RSS image next to the area of interest (e.g., ‚Political Science‛) and add the feed to your Firefox toolbar or favorite RSS reader. This is an excellent way to stay informed about new material—books, theses, movies, CDs, and more—in your area of research.

Mac laptops for check-out

Filed under: Fall 2008 — Tags: — mgerry @ 1:35 pm

The Library now has ten available behind the Circulation Desk.

NEW RESOURCE: CHICAGO DEFENDER

Filed under: Fall 2008 — Tags: , — mgerry @ 1:26 pm

By Michael VanHouten, Associate Director

The Library now has full-text online access to the Chicago Defender, a leading and influential national African-American newspaper. Coverage is from 1905 to 1975. The Chicago Defender was ‚a leading African-American newspaper, with more than two-thirds of its readership outside Chicago. It was a proponent of the ‘Great Migration,’ the move of over 1.5 million African-Americans from the segregated South to the industrial North, 1915-1925.‛
The Defender allows researchers to study many significant events in American history that received only cursory attention from other newspapers. It covered the Red Summer Riots of 1919, editorialized for anti-lynching legislation, and published Walter White, Langston Hughes, and Gwendolyn Brooks. A link can be found on the Library’s Online Database page.

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