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News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxxiii, 1998-2001, Syracuse University Library Associates Jan 2001

News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxxiii, 1998-2001, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Post-Standard Award Citation, 1998, for David H. Starn

Post-Standard Award Citation, 1999, for Dorothea P. Nelson

Post-Standard Award Citation, 2000, for Katleen W. Rossman

Recent Acquisitions:

-Thomas Moore Papers

-Kat Ran Press (Michael Russem)

-Margaret Bourke-White Photographs

-The Werner Seligmann Papers

Library Associates Programs for 1998-99, 1999-00, and 2000-01

In Memoriam


News Ofthe Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxxii, 1997, Syracuse University Library Associates Jan 1997

News Ofthe Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxxii, 1997, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Post-Standard Award Citation, 1997, for George R. Iocolano

Recent Acquisitions:

-The Lewis Carroll Collection

-Addition to the Joyce Carol Oates Papers

-African Americans in the Performing Arts: Ephemera Collected by Carl Van Vechten

-Thomas Bewick Illustrations

Library Associates Program for 1997-98


Courier, Volume Xxxii, 1997, Syracuse University Library Associates Jan 1997

Courier, Volume Xxxii, 1997, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Ivan Mestrovic in Syracuse, 1947-1955 / David Tatham, p. 5 -- Declaration of Independence: Mary Colum as Autobiographer / Sanford Sternlicht, p. 25 -- A Charles Jackson Diptych / John W. Crowley, p. 35 -- Of Medusae and Men: On the Life and Observations of Alfred G. Mayor / Lester D. Stephens, p. 65 -- The Wonderful Wizards Behind the Oz Wizard / Susan Wolstenholme, p. 89 -- Dreams and Expectations: The Paris Diary of Albert Brisbane, American Fourierist / Abigail Brisbane, p. 105 -- The Punctator's World: A Discursion, Part X / Gwen G. Robinson, p. 123 -- News …


News Of The Library And Of Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxxi, 1996, Syracuse University Library Associates Jan 1996

News Of The Library And Of Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxxi, 1996, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Post-Standard Award Citation, 1996, for Mark E Weimer

Recent Acquisitions:

-Margaret Bourke-White Negatives of Olympic Athletes

-The Geography of Strabo

-Narrative ofthe Life of Frederick Douglass

-Materials from the Albert Schweitzer Center

-Albert Schweitzer: A Message for a New Millennium

Library Associates Program for 1996-97


Courier, Volume Xxviii, Number 2, Fall 1993, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1993

Courier, Volume Xxviii, Number 2, Fall 1993, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Foreward / Robert Fogarty, p. 3 -- Preface / Mark F. Weimer, p. 7 -- John Humphrey Noyes and Millennialism / Michael Barkun, p. 11 -- Building Perfection: The Relationship between Physical and Social Structures of the Oneida Community / Janet White, p. 23 -- Women, Family, and Utopia: The Oneida Community Experience and Its Implications for the Present / Lawrence Foster, p. 45 -- "Mingling the Sexes": The Gendered Organization of Work in the Oneida Community / Marlyn Klee-Hartzell, p. 61 -- Breaching the "Wall of Partition Between the Male and the Female": John Humphrey Noyes and Free Love …


From The Collections, From Courier, Vol. Xxviii, No. 2, Fall 1993, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1993

From The Collections, From Courier, Vol. Xxviii, No. 2, Fall 1993, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

This exchange of letters between Hope Emily Allen and George Bernard Shaw of November 1924 is published here for the first time. The letters reveal Shaw's interest in the Oneida Community and the descendants' apprehensions about public exposure of their historical documents, forty-four years after the breakup of the Community.

The archives were guarded by George Wallingford Noyes, nephew ofJohn Humphrey Noyes and Community historian, until his death in 1941. Thereafter some descendants who were part of Oneida Community Ltd. destroyed most of the original manuscripts, a tragedy mitigated only by the fact that G. W. Noyes had placed, in …


News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxviii, No. 1, Spring 1993, Syracuse University Library Associates Apr 1993

News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxviii, No. 1, Spring 1993, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

POST-STANDARD AWARD CITATION, 1993 For Gwen G. Robinson : Gwen Groves Robinson, distinguished scholar-editor of the Syracuse University Library Associates Courier, you have made significant contributions to Syracuse University and to the academic world at large.

...


Courier, Volume Xxviii, Number 1, Spring 1993, Syracuse University Library Associates Apr 1993

Courier, Volume Xxviii, Number 1, Spring 1993, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

An Interview with Barney Rosset, Former Chairman and President of Grove Press / Mary Beth Hinton, p. 3 -- "Say! Dis is Grate Stuff": The Yellow Kid and the Birth of the American Comics / Richard D. Olson, p. 19 -- National Service: A Forty-Three-Year Crusade / Donald J. Eberly, p. 35 -- Hey, Why Don't We Start an External High School Diploma Program? / Patricia King and Mary Beth Hinton, p. 55 -- Portrait of a City: Syracuse, the Old Home Town / John A. Williams, p. 65 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, …


The Kipling Collection At Syracuse, Thomas Pinney Oct 1992

The Kipling Collection At Syracuse, Thomas Pinney

The Courier

The following is an edited transcript of the talk given by Professor Pinney to the Syracuse University Library Associates on 25 September 1992. Professor Pinney is the editor of The Letters of Rudyard Kipling.

Though Kipling is known to have visited New York State, it is unlikely that he ever saw the streets of Syracuse. However, he is notably present in the city now through the large, important, and growing collection of his letters and printed works assembled here in the George Arents Research Library for Special Collections. There are other important Kipling collections in the United States. Kipling's great …


News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxvi, No. 2, Fall 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1992

News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxvi, No. 2, Fall 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

71125: Fifty Years of Silence and B 11226: Fifty Years of Silence, Artists' Books on the Holocaust. Purchased with funds from the Jerome and Arlene Gerber Endowment Fund.

The Library recently acquired two limited-edition artists' books in which Holocaust survivors Eva and Eugene Kellner recall their experiences in Nazi concentration camps. The books were designed and printed by their daughter Tatana, who is artistic director ofthe Women's Studio Workshop in Rosendale, New York.


Courier, Volume Xxvii, Number 2, Fall 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1992

Courier, Volume Xxvii, Number 2, Fall 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

A Dominican Gradual ofSaints, circa 1500 / George Catalano, p. 3 -- Stephen Crane at Claverack College: A New Reading / Thomas A. Gullason, p. 33 -- Fenimore Cooper's Libel Suits / Constantine Evans, p. 47 -- The Kipling Collection at Syracuse / Thomas Pinney, p. 75 -- Fore-edge Paintings at Syracuse University / Jeff Weber, p. 89 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 115.


Courier, Volume Xxvii, Number 1, Spring 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates Apr 1992

Courier, Volume Xxvii, Number 1, Spring 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Modernism from Right to Left: Wallace Stevens, the Thirties, and Radicalism / Alan Filreis, p. 3 -- Adam Badeau's "The Story ofthe Merrimac and the Monitor" / Robert J. Schneller, Jr., p. 25 -- A Marcel Breuer House Proj ect of 1938-1939 / Isabelle Hyman, p. 55 -- Traveler to Arcadia: Margaret Bourke-White in Italy, 1943-1944 / Randall I. Bond, p. 85 -- The Punctator's World: A Discursion (Part Seven) / Gwen G. Robinson, p. 111 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 159.


The E. S. Bird Library Reconfiguration Project, Carol Parke Oct 1991

The E. S. Bird Library Reconfiguration Project, Carol Parke

The Courier

This article details the rennovation that occurred on the E. S. Bird Library at Syracuse University in 1991. The then two-decade-old library was changed to better facilitate access and reflect emerging trends in libraries that looked to better integrate academic disciplines. The article includes a brief history of the library, the planning and implementation of the reconfiguration project, and a floor plan of the 1991 library.


News Of The Library And The Library Associates, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1991

News Of The Library And The Library Associates, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Briefly noted below is an eclectic selection of acquisitions that represents some of the George Arents Research Library's existing strengths. Some of these additions to the Library's rare book and manuscript collections were acquired in 1991 as gifts to the Syracuse University Library, and others were purchased by the Syracuse University Library Associates.


Courier, Volume Xxvi, Number 2, Fall 1991, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1991

Courier, Volume Xxvi, Number 2, Fall 1991, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Foreward / Alexander Charters, p. 3 -- Preface / Mary Beth Hinton, p. 5 -- Laubach in India: 1935 to 1970 / S. Y. Shah, p. 9 -- The Portfolio Club: A Refuge of Friendship and Learning / Constance Carroll, p. 25 -- Omnibus: Precursor of Modern Television / Mary Beth Hinton, p. 41 -- The Adult and Continuing Education Collections at Syracuse University / Terrance Keenan, p. 53 -- The E. S. Bird Library Reconfiguration Project / Carol Parke, p. 79 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 95.


Artists' Papers In The George Arents Research Library: Sources For The Study Of Twentieth-Century American Art, Mark F. Weimer, Donna Capelle Cook Apr 1991

Artists' Papers In The George Arents Research Library: Sources For The Study Of Twentieth-Century American Art, Mark F. Weimer, Donna Capelle Cook

The Courier

For nearly thirty years the George Arents Research Library for Special Collections at Syracuse University has actively acquired primary materials to support research and study in the field of art history including, as outlined in an internal collection development statement of 1961, "the papers of architects, artists, sculptors, industrial designers, cartoonists, photographers, art critics, educators, and the records of professional associations and galleries". Beginning with the gift of the papers of sculptors James Earle Fraser, Laura Gardin Fraser, and Anna Hyatt Huntington in the 1960s, and continuing to the recent acquisition of collections relating to Diego Rivera and Philip Evergood, …


Gabriel Naude And The Ideal Library, Antje Bultmann Lemke Apr 1991

Gabriel Naude And The Ideal Library, Antje Bultmann Lemke

The Courier

This paper is an edited version of a talk given by the author for the Syracuse University Library Associates on February 18, 1988. It was originally titled: "Gabriel Naude, Seventeenth-Century Scholar Librarian of Mazarin". Among Naude's works discussed here, the George Arents Research Library has copies of the 1903 reprint of the 1661 English translation of "Advis pour dresser une bibliotheque," the 1744 Cologne edition of "Considerations politiques sur les coups d'estat," and "Naudaeana et Patiniana," 2nd ed. (Amsterdam: Vander Platts, 1703).

The life of Gabriel Naude falls within one of the liveliest centuries in the history of Europe. Against …


News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxvi, No. 1, Spring 1991, Syracuse University Library Associates Apr 1991

News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxvi, No. 1, Spring 1991, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

The following represent selected additions to the Library's special collections made during the academic year 1990-91.

Belluschi, Pietro

...

Waugh, Evelyn.


Courier, Volume Xxvi, Number 1, Spring 1991, Syracuse University Library Associates Apr 1991

Courier, Volume Xxvi, Number 1, Spring 1991, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Describing the Flora of the United States: Botanies at Libraries in Syracuse / Dudley J. Raynal, p. 3 -- Gabriel Naude and the Ideal Library / Antje Bultmann Lemke, p. 27 -- Philip Evergood and Ideologism in the 1930s / Kendall Taylor, p. 45 -- Artists' Papers in the George Arents Research Library: Sources for the Study of Twentieth-Century American Art / Mark F. Weimer and Donna Capelle Cook, p. 65 -- The Punctator's World: A Discursion (Part Six) / Gwen G. Robinson, p. 83 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 141.


News Of The Library And The Library Associates, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1990

News Of The Library And The Library Associates, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

RECENT ACQUISITIONS As 1990 comes to a close, the George Arents Research Library can report a particularly exciting year in the development of its collections. As the following list of recent acquisitions shows, both the generosity of our donors and the Library's commitment to the development of its research collections continue to be strong.


Courier, Volume Xxv, Number 2, Fall 1990, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1990

Courier, Volume Xxv, Number 2, Fall 1990, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Huntington Mansion in New York: Economics of Architecture and Decoration in the 1890s / Isabelle Hyman, p. 3 -- Memories of Maruerite Yourcenar / Mary H. Marshall, p. 31 -- Margurite Yourcenar, Alchemist / Rhoda Lerman, p. 51 -- Legacy for Stephen Crane: the Princeton Writings of the Reverend Jonathan Townley Crane / Thomas A. Gullason, p. 55 -- Punctator's World: a Discursion (Part Five) / Gwen G. Robinson p. 81 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 123.


News Of The Library And The Library Associates, Syracuse University Library Associates Apr 1990

News Of The Library And The Library Associates, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

From March 1944 through July 1945 Helen and Sydney Stringer found themselves on separate continents: he, a medical officer in Africa, Italy, France and Germany and she, the mother of four, living in Skaneateles, New York. They wrote almost daily-articulate, courageous, touching, often humorous letters-exchanging accounts of life in the war zone and on the home front. The letters were recently made into the book Prisms: As We Were, March 23, 1944-July 12, 1945 and privately printed by Helen Stringer (Manlius, New York: 1989). Both the book and the original letters have been donated by Helen Stringer to the George …


Courier, Volume Xxv, Number 1, Spring 1990, Syracuse University Library Associates Apr 1990

Courier, Volume Xxv, Number 1, Spring 1990, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Intentional Omissions from the Published Civil War Diaries of Admiral John A. Dalgren / Robert J. Schneller, Jr., p. 3 -- Stephen Crane's Father and the Holiness Movement / Christopher Benfey, p. 27 -- "I Want to Do This Job": More Margaret Bourke-White Letters to Erskine Caldwell / William L. Howard, p. 37 -- The New School of Wood Engraving / Edward A. Gokey, p. 53 -- The Punctator's World: A Discursion (Part Four) / Gwen G. Robinson, p. 85 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 127.


The Imperishable Perishable Press, Terrance Keenan Apr 1987

The Imperishable Perishable Press, Terrance Keenan

The Courier

When art and meaning come together so effectively, when craft and purpose meld so well, something precious emerges. Of the many one-of-a-kind things in the world, few have a memorable identity. In the work of Walter Hamady the art of bookmaking explores new terrain. The finished product is not a candidate for the museum or the gallery. It holds something for the eye and the mind both, something that was created by human hands to be held by human hands. Often beautiful, always different and provocative, the books of the Perishable Press are durable reminders of the creative spirit at …


Alvaro-Agustin De Liano And His Books In Leopold Von Ranke's Library, Gail P. Hueting Apr 1985

Alvaro-Agustin De Liano And His Books In Leopold Von Ranke's Library, Gail P. Hueting

The Courier

This article tells the story of Liagno (or Liano), an author active in Europe during the early nineteenth century. The author discovered the little-known author while research annotations in the von Ranke collection within the Syracuse University Special Collections. He traveled to many cities and wrote in many languages, became a monk, priest, and then converted to Calvanism. Appropriately, he became responsible for cataloging materials in the area of theology, history, and literature in multiple languages.


Of Collectors, Collections, And Libraries, Frank P. Piskor Jul 1979

Of Collectors, Collections, And Libraries, Frank P. Piskor

The Courier

Adapted from a talk given by Dr. Frank P. Pistor at the Syracuse University Library Associates' Annual Members' Luncheon, April 28, 1978. (See The Courier, 15.2 and 15.3, Summer 1978).


The Sound Of Fame: Syracuse University's Audio Archive And Edison Re-Recording Laboratory, Frank S. Macomber Apr 1977

The Sound Of Fame: Syracuse University's Audio Archive And Edison Re-Recording Laboratory, Frank S. Macomber

The Courier

At first glance the Syracuse University Audio Archive and Edison Rerecording Laboratory looks like an antique shop. Old phonographs, cylinders, posters of a by-gone era are everywhere; there is even a relief of the Victor dog. But there are great differences in action and atmosphere from an antique shop, for at the Archive the "relics" are living machines, and the ancient cylinders are taking on a modern, full-toned life. Here, modern techniques of cleaning, reprocessing and re-recording are giving new sounds for old. Here, the staff is finding ways for the sounds of the past to function as realities in …


The Greatest Invention Since The Wheel, Richard G. Underwood Apr 1974

The Greatest Invention Since The Wheel, Richard G. Underwood

The Courier

As part of a talk given by Mr. Underwood on behalf of the Syracuse Library Associates, this article gives a fascinating insight into the history of texts, focusing mostly on Medieval Ireland, instead of the more obvious Germany. Underwood argues that the lessons learned from the history of books isn't merely for antiquarians, but vital to proper intellectual stimulation, which modern technology can only supplement, not supplant.


Research Libraries Enter The Machine Age, Betsy Knapp Jan 1972

Research Libraries Enter The Machine Age, Betsy Knapp

The Courier

This article details the struggles of Syracuse University in the early 1970s with the opening of a new library amidst a plethora of problems. Parallels are drawn to the problems of growing catalogs and fledgling mechanization that faced the New York Public Library at the same time. Also mentions the then-nascent MARC format and OCLC.


The Building Of A Library, Warren N. Boes Jan 1972

The Building Of A Library, Warren N. Boes

The Courier

This article details the planning of the Ernest S. Bird Library that took place from the late 1950s until its completion in 1972. Great effort was taken to make the building modular and able to handle future concerns.