Welcome to our ALA Student Chapter blog. Visit this site to find out what's happening in UCLA's Department of Information Studies and for the latest news and events about libraries, archives, and information management.

Monday, September 27, 2010

British Library to Publish Handwritten Greek Manuscripts Online


For those of us who are unable to make it to the British Library reading rooms to review the library's collection of handwritten Greek texts in person, never fear. The British Library will post a quarter of their exceptional works online so interested individuals the world over can see classics in their original form. To view the manuscripts, click here.

The Associated Press reports that more documents will be published in 2012.

Celebrating Baseball in Children's Books


With the airing of Ken Burns' baseball series "Baseball: The Tenth Inning" on PBS this week, it's time for a review of great children's books about the history of the sport.

First up: the magnificent "We Are the Ship", written and illustrated by Kadir Nelson. This sumptuous, warm book outlines the enormous challenges and achievements of the Negro Baseball League. The perspective of the illustrations create a feeling of actually being on the field, on the mound, playing the game under a sharp sun. Nelson, whose thoughtful illustrations previously graced Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom and Henry's Freedom Box has portrayed the elegance of baseball in a stirring and personal way.

("We Are the Ship" was awarded the 2009 Robert F. Sibert award and the 2009 Coretta Scott King Author Award and Illustrator Award.)

Mighty Jackie: The Strike-Out Queen, an ALA Notable Book of 2005, is another exceptional information book about the history of baseball. It tells the story of Jackie Mitchell, a 17-year-old woman who pitched against Babe Ruth and Lou Gerhig, and struck them both out.

For an excellent general grounding on the history of baseball, we suggest The Story of Baseball. This compendium earned an ALA Notable book award for 1984, combining information about baseball fundamentals, the development of the game and information about the various characters who defined the sport for decades to come. This work was updated in 1999.

Jonah Winter and Andre Carrilho's collaboration in You Never Heard of Sandy Koufax?! makes for an exceptional work. With unique, stylized images, Carrilho crafts a vivid and exciting perspective on the life of Sandy Koufax, while Winter's prose illuminates the strength and character that made Sandy Koufax a baseball hero. The work earned an ALA Notable Award for 2010.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Volunteering in the West Bank



Summer term is often a time for students to do something a little bit different than the rest of the year. Before I began at UCLA in the Information Studies department last year, I studied archaeology. So, this summer I spent most of my time working as registrar on an archaeological excavation in southern Turkey (an excellent way to combine a love of archaeology and information studies by the way)!


A second way that I combine my love of archaeology and libraries is as chair of the World Archaeological Congress’ Global Libraries Program. The program works to enhance the literary collections of archaeological and cultural heritage research institutions around the globe.


During the summer of 2009, I attended an archaeological conference in the Palestinian town of Ramallah in the West Bank. There, we began collaborating between the Global Libraries Program and the Institute of Archaeology at Birzeit University. While housed in a major university, the Institute has been plagued by a lack of funding, a lack of a full-time librarian, and a lack of new research materials for the last ten years.


Following my excavation this summer, I again visited the West Bank (and this time I brought my friend and archaeological colleague, Sarah Hawley). We spent a week this August volunteering in the Birzeit Institute of Archaeology library. We brought some archaeological journal donations in our suitcase, and we donated our time that week to help organize the materials in the library so that they can be accessible for students and professors to research.


As an MLIS student at UCLA, I have the skills to catalog and sort the books in the library (that were out of their boxes but not cataloged or in any useful order). Unfortunately, the computers were not working and therefore we were not able to access LCC for cataloging. Instead, Sarah and I (alongside Birzeit students who came and helped) took more of an archival approach.


We sorted through all of the libraries loose papers and organized all of the individual journal articles and off prints dispersed through many shelves and boxes. We organized the articles by author and year and they are now a resource for students and faculty.


I want to say thank you to the UCLA ALA Student Chapter for helping me defray part of the cost of traveling to Birzeit University this summer. Sarah and I were able to accomplish a lot in organizing the library. However, even more importantly, our presence was an encouragement to the faculty at the school who are working so hard to make the Institute succeed. In addition, some of the students in the program were not even aware that there was a specialized library available to them. We were an impetus for these students to take ownership of their Institute and a few now plan on volunteering this term to continue the work on the library. I’m just glad that we could help work together to transform the library into a valuable resource.




--Ashley Sands

UCLA ALA Student Group, Co-Treasurer