Among some of Dr. Sabin’s general files is a letter exchange between him and Dr. Raymond Walters, who was President of the University of Cincinnati from 1932 until 1955. These two short letters, dated March 1960, discuss an upcoming engagement where Dr. Sabin was speaking. These letters piqued my interest because the Archives and Rare Books Library on the University of Cincinnati campus has President Emeritus Walters’s manuscript collection (UA-73-20). I thought it would be interesting to take a look at some of Dr. Walters’s diaries to get an outside perspective on Dr. Sabin. Continue reading
HSL Website Switching to HTML
On Wednesday August 17th at 9 am, the Health Sciences Library website is switching from using Cold Fusion to HTML.
What does this switch mean?
It means that the URL extensions for HSL web pages will switch from .cfm to .html. For example:
http://libraries.uc.edu/hsl/reference/elec/Etext.cfm
will switch to
http://libraries.uc.edu/hsl/reference/elec/Etext.html
It also means that if you have bookmarked any HSL internal web pages, you will need to update your bookmarks.
There may be a brief period during the transition when HSL web pages are unavailable. Once the page redirection is in place, access should return to normal. We will be checking behind the scenes for access issues throughout the day and the rest of the week.
If you have any questions or discover an access issue, please contact Edith Starbuck at 513-558-1433 or edith.starbuck@uc.edu.
The Ohio Electronic Records Committee
By Janice Schulz
The Ohio Electronic Records Committee (OhioERC) is a statewide group of records managers, archivists, legal professionals, and information technology professionals devoted to providing guidance for the management of electronic records in Ohio’s state agencies. There are currently twenty members, including representatives from state, county, and local government and Ohio’s public universities. University of Cincinnati Records Manager Janice Schulz has served on the OhioERC since 2006 and was elected as Secretary in 2008. Continue reading
University Architect Records
By Janice Schulz
The Archives & Rare Books Library has numerous collections from the Office of the University Architect with records of capital construction, renovation, and special projects dating from 1944 to 2003. The University Architect oversees all aspects of UC’s physical space, and manages the divisions of Planning+Design+Construction, Renovations, Special Projects, Real Estate, Sustainability, Environmental Graphics, and Space Management. The records in our collections document dealings with architects, construction companies, utilities, regulators, and internal planning committees. Included are copies of contracts, proposals, correspondence, meeting minutes, working designs, plans, specifications and drawings, photographs, test and inspection reports, and status reports. Continue reading
Cold Spring Harbor Protocols Now Available
The Cold Spring Harbor Protocols journal is now available at http://cshprotocols.cshlp.org/
A definitive source of research methods in cell, developmental and molecular biology, genetics, bioinformatics, protein science, computational biology, immunology, neuroscience and imaging, each monthly issue provides new and well-established techniques.
Access Cold Spring Harbor Protocols via the eJournals page, the Library Catalog or bookmark it at http://cshprotocols.cshlp.org/ today.
If you’re accessing Cold Spring Harbor Protocols from off campus, remember to log into the proxy server or the VPN first. If you have Windows 7, log into the VPN via your computer’s Start button.
LearningExpress Library: Job and Career Accelerator
Are you searching for a job? Or, are you just getting started on figuring out which career might be right for you? The UC Libraries have a resource that will help you do all of that and more plus you can use it anywhere that you have Internet access! The Job & Career Accelerator is now available through LearningExpress Library (a UC Libraries database) and it’s FREE for UC students. You can find information on over 1,000 different occupations, access skills tests, search over 5 million job postings, create professional resumes and cover letters, and get tips and advice. Plus, it keeps your job search information organized in one place!
Questions? Ask a friendly RWC Librarian
Visit: 117 Muntz Hall
Call: 745-5710
Web: www.libraries.uc.edu/libraries/rwc
Email: rwclibrary@ucrwcu.rwc.uc.edu
An Alma Mater Moment
By Kevin Grace
Over the years, I’ve gathered a fair amount of UC ephemera from garage sales, flea markets, estate sales, and Ebay, and eventually I’ll end up giving it to the University Archives. In the meantime, it’s always a nice little surprise when I dig around in my basement boxes and find these odds and ends. The postcard shown here is of the original University Building, constructed on Charles McMicken’s property in 1875. That property had been bequeathed to the City of Cincinnati in McMicken’s will when he died in 1858, and after litigation and the Civil War, the city was ready to create a university. UC initially held classes in the old Woodward High School building in Over-the-Rhine. With the erection of a permanent building, the university moved to the hillside below present day Clifton Avenue as it winds its way downtown. Continue reading
Summer 2011 Records Quarterly Now Available
By Janice Schulz
The Summer 2011 edition of Records Quarterly, the newsletter of University of Cincinnati Records Management, is now available on the records management website at http://www.libraries.uc.edu/libraries/arb/records_management/recordsquarterly.html. This issue features articles about managing databases as records, making electronic documents searchable and protected information. Also included is information about the recent Ohio budget bill’s impact on public records laws.
Records Quarterly is distributed electronically via the Records Management website. Subscribers to the Records Management Listserv will receive notification of new issues automatically. You can sign up for the listserv by going to the subscription page, or by sending an email to Janice.Schulz@uc.edu. Please include your name and email address and use “listserv sign-up” in the subject line.
The Albert B. Sabin Digitization Project: Ripped from the Headlines!
Throughout his career, Dr. Sabin was featured in many headlines and articles. Many of his friends and colleagues sent him copies of these newspaper clippings over the years, which Dr. Sabin saved. I wanted to highlight some of them here, in order to give you some perspective as to what he was involved in over the years.
Domestic Manners of the Americans by Mrs. Frances Trollope
By Janice Schulz
“We heard on every side, that of all the known places on ‘the globe called earth,’ Cincinnati was the most favourable for a young man to settle in…”
From Domestic Manners of the Americans
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London gentlewoman Mrs. Frances Trollope had an idea. She would open a shop – a shop in America where she could offer the residents of that fast-growing country the finer things in life – unique items that they otherwise would not have the chance to purchase. Her middle son Henry could run the store, establish himself in a lucrative business, and take advantage of the opportunities that America had to offer a young man. Although possessed of the highest manners and an impressive family background, the Trollopes were not wealthy by the definition of London society, a fact that seriously interfered with Mrs. Trollope’s plans, especially for her children’s future. So she looked to America, and specifically to Cincinnati, to provide the right economic climate and market for her shop idea. In the end the venture was not a smashing success and her expectations of Cincinnati were far from confirmed, but the trip resulted in what would become Mrs. Trollope’s crowning glory, Domestic Manners of the Americans, a travel log of her adventures in the United States. While the book earned Mrs. Trollope popularity and was hailed as a triumph in her homeland, its revelations of uncultured Americans served to portray her as a snobbish villain in the States, particularly with the residents of Cincinnati. Continue reading