Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Madness at Mason

Special Collections & Archives announces the launch of Madness @ Mason: Documenting a Dream Season. Madness @Mason is an electronic archive of artifacts, printed materials and other items that documents the Mason men's basketball team's 2005-06 season and NCAA Tournament run. The project was conceived by the University Libraries' Special Collections and Archives department to preserve items related to the season and facilitate greater access to them through the World Wide Web.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Special Collections & Archives was recently featured in The Mason Gazette. David Driver's article, "Libraries' Archivists Join the 'Mason Nation' with Enthusiasm, is a nice summary of SC&A's efforts to collect materials from the 2005-2006 men's basketball season. The article can be found at http://gazette.gmu.edu/articles/8970/

Monday, July 24, 2006

Fiscal Year In Review

Special Collections & Archives
2005/2006 Fiscal Year Highlights

SC&A focused its efforts on creating digital collections including the C. Harrison Mann, Jr. Digital Collection, the Planned Community Archives: Catherine A. Baum Digital Collection, and the 1972 Richard Nixon Campaign Photographs Collection. All of these collections are accessible via the Mason Archival Repository Service (MARS).

SC&A staff worked on preparations for a new Special Collections & Archives facility to be built in the new wing of Fenwick Library. During exploratory stages, Paul Koda, Robert Vay, Anne Hakes, and Veronica Fletcher toured the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections & Archives Library at the University of Virginia, and developed detailed documents specifying the required elements for SC&A’s presence in the new wing.

Veronica Fletcher toured Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University’s newly renovated Special Collections Library in preparation for a new Special Collections & Archives facility to be built in the new wing of Fenwick Library.

Anne Hakes toured the new Special Collections wing in the newly renovated Earl Gregg Swem Library at the College of William and Mary.

SC&A obtained five map cases to house its oversized flat items. Most notably, SC&A transferred numerous maps from the C. Harrison Mann, Jr. Collection into the cases.

SC&A accessed 17 cubic feet of materials from the estate of Edith Ker. The materials included photographs, slides, and travel journals. An image from the Ker Collection was selected to be the cover of the University Libraries’ 2005 seasonal greeting card.

Myra Anson Nicholas, daughter of the late Abraham Anson, donated her father’s scholarly materials to SC&A. The geographic surveying collection consists of 14 cubic feet of aerial photographs, working papers and lab notes, Anson publications, glass plate negatives, and slides.

Barbara Thaler’s donated nine Arthur Scott photography scrapbooks. This donation is a rich addition to SC&A’s Arthur Scott Collection. The collection came to SC&A thanks to the efforts of Theodore McCord, who worked with Thaler and the Scott family to bring the scrapbooks to SC&A.

SC&A invited Detective B.C. Bannon from the GMU Police Department to visit the department and to conduct a security audit, which the staff used as a springboard to compile a more thorough analysis. Additionally, staff continued to work to limit the number of after-hours alarms that are accidentally triggered in SC&A.

The Planned Community Archives Board unanimously voted to officially transfer ownership of the Planned Community Archives Collection (PCA) to George Mason University Libraries.

Paul Koda, Librarian for Special Collections & Archives, retired from George Mason University on March 17, 2006. Preliminary steps were taken to find a new Head of SC&A.

Anne Hakes toured the Conservation Lab at the University of Maryland’s McKeldin Library with fellow members of the Libraries’ Preservation Planning Committee.

As Mason’s official repository, SC&A actively collected men’s basketball materials related to the team’s season and participation in the NCAA tournament.

In April, University Libraries and the Center for Study of Public Choice co-sponsored the first inaugural James M. Buchanan Lecture. In correlation with the lecture, SC&A created the James M. Buchanan Electronic Collection, accessible via the Mason Archival Repository Service (MARS), and a physical exhibition and keepsake flyer.

In the spring, the Records Management website underwent a complete upgrade.

SC&A accessioned approximately 35 cubic feet of material from retiring GMU faculty member, Jerry Clapsaddle.

SC&A accessioned 298 Mason dissertations and theses.

Records Management accessioned 1314 cubic feet of new materials, disposed of 472 c.f., and handled 120 retrieval requests.

Katja Hering, Robert Vay, and former Librarian of Special Collections & Archives, Paul Koda, conducted an oral history interview with Edwin Meese, former United States Attorney General and former GMU Board of Visitor member.

SC&A curated a number of exhibitions during the 2005-2006 fiscal year, including The Yellow Book and the Age of Decadence,” “What Can a Woman Do,” and “The History of Virginia in Books.”

A large number of the books in the C. Harrison Mann Collection were professionally conserved by Etherington Conservation.

Anne Hakes attended the conferences of MARAC, VAGARA, and SLA. She is the webmaster of the University of Maryland’s student SLA chapter, which received the SARC award for Creative Use of Electronic Resources.

Anne Hakes presented a poster on digital conservation at the LOEX Annual Conference at the University of Maryland on May 5th.

Robert Vay attended “Copyright at a Crossroads: The Impact of Mass Digitization on Copyright and Higher Education”. The symposium was held June 14-16 at UMUC in College Park, MD.

Katja Hering, Robert Vay, and Anne Hakes interviewed Mason Basketball player Lamar Butler at the Patriot Center on June 30th.

Thursday, June 15, 2006

SC&A Collecting Areas

Recently, there has been several questions regarding what types of materials SC&A collects. SC&A's collecting areas are quite diverse, including such topics as the history of George Mason University, theater, photography, transportation, and planned communities.

Futhermore, Special Collections & Archives specializes in collecting Northern Virginia related items, pertaining to a variety of topics such as:

Transportation
Planned Communities
Civil War
George Mason, the historical figure


SC&A already has numerous Northern Virginia collections, including:

Planned Community Archives Collection
Eleanor L. Templeman Local History Collection
Ruth Preston Rose Collection
Henry Lampe Papers
The League of Women Voters of the Fairfax Area Collection
C. Harrison Mann, Jr. Collection
Jack Underhill Collection



Special Collections & Archives seeks to collect:

Maps
Photographs
Books
Working papers
Manuscripts
Oral histories

Monday, May 15, 2006

Staff accomplishments
Several SC&A student workers are coming to the end of their careers at Mason. Liz Lordan graduates this spring, with a degree in managment. Liz has worked in SC&A for four years. Other students, Elizabeth Winder and Hyun Kim, are graduating this summer. Elizabeth is earning a master's degree in creative writing and Hyun is graduating with a degree in interntional studies. SC&A warmly congratulates these and all other Mason graduates.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Exhibition
There is a Special Collections & Archives exhibition located in the display cases on the second floor of Fenwick Library, Wing A. The exhibition is entitled "The History of Virginia in Books," and highlights some of Special Collections & Archives' recent acquisitions.
Special Collections & Archives actively collects Virginia history, including the history of Northern Virginia and Jamestowne (the Herschel H. Helm Collection). Featured in the exhibit are: John Burk's The History of Virginia, from It's First Settlement to the Present Day. Petersburg, Virginia, published in 1804, 1805 and 1816; William Stith's The History of the First Discovery and Settlement of Virginia, published in 1865; and T. B Warder and James Catlett's Battle of Young's Branch, or Manassas Plain, Fought July 21, 1861, published in 1862. The exhibit will be up through the end of May. Please stop by and check it out!

James M. Buchanan Inaugural Lecture
On April 7th the Center for the Study of Public Choice and University Libraries hosted the first James M. Buchanan Lecture. Distinguished guest lecturer Deirdre McCloskey was the keynote speaker, discussing "The Hobbes Problem: From Machiavelli to Buchanan." Robert Vay, electronics text coordinator, also spoke, discussing the process of making materials available via the Mason Archival Repository Service (MARS) . Following the lecture a reception was held in Mason Hall featuring the exhibit, "Biography of a Book." The exhibit, currated by Special Collections & Archives graduate students Adam Fielding and Carrie Hoover, featured letters, photographs and other documents related to the making of The Calculus of Consent. The Calculus of Consent, 1962, presented public choice theory as an innovative approach to to analyzing the political process as it relates to the economy. Photographs from the event can be found at: http://condor.gmu.edu/~photography/images/webbuchanan2/

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Staff News

Paul Koda, Librarian for Special Collections & Archives, recently announced his retirement from George Mason University. Paul has been the head of Special Collections & Archives for fourteen years and has been instrumental in its growth and development. His last day at GMU will be March 16, 2006.


Numerous graduate students, from the History Department, have been hired to fulfill various SC&A duties. Adam Fielding was hired to assist with the first inaugural Buchanan lecture, to be held on April 7, 2006. Rachel Korpan Lee was hired to work on the Catherine Baum Reston Images Digitization Project. Pearl Harris was hired to assist Anne Hakes with Records Management duties. Peter Cashman was hired to work on Electronic Finding Aid/Research Guides (EADs).