Category Archives: Friday Feature

Friday Feature: Fashion

SCARC student worker Susanne was drawn into a new accession this week that was chock full of home design and fashion fun… The collection of alumna Dona Dinsdale Papers (1942-1947).

Coming to Oregon State College in 1943 from Portland, Dona Shirley Dinsdale majored in business with a focus on secretarial science. She graduated with her bachelor’s degree in 1947 and her 0.75 cubic foot collection if full of materials created and collected by Dinsdale during her time as a student at Oregon State College. Mostly made up of course materials, class notes, and term papers, you’ll also find items such as circular letters, event programs, grade reports, newspaper clippings, receipts, student identification cards, publications, and a scrapbook. The latter is a treasure trove! Assembled by Dinsdale for a class in house furnishings, the scrapbook contains images clipped from magazines and samples of furniture fabric. Not to be forgotten, the publications she collected included Oregon Stater alumni magazines, copies of the Beaver Snuffer student monthly publication, and annual college fashion previews published by the Meier and Frank Company.

Why does she love these sorts of collections? Susanne says “I am not a fashionable person but looking at how fashion has changed (hopefully for the better) makes me feel fashionable. It is worth the smile and giggle.” She goes on to say that “somebody put a large amount of thought and care into designing a fashionable/stylish home (as seen in that scrapbook even down to the clothing swatches) that with the turning of the ever turning tide of trends most people would not want to be caught dead in. Fashion royalty soon turns to fashion victim with the steadily unchanging hands of time.”

Want to know more? We have plenty of collections for you to explore your inner designer!

 

Friday Feature: SCARC’s fabulous books!

You may know that we have great History of Science archival collections and great book collections, but do you know about our book collections?

Granta 16: Science.

I was reminded again this week of how awesome the “History of Science Books and Dissertations Collection, 1575-2002” and “History of Atomic Energy Collection, 1896-1991” are is as I watched our resident scholar pore over stacks of books in our reading room.

Cart full o’ books

The History of Science collection documents the development of science and technology within the past 150 years, with a particularly strong focus on quantum physics and chemistry. Highlights of the collection include Niels Bohr’s doctoral thesis; the first edition of Marie Curie’s Traite de Radioactivite; and the first and only edition of Avogadro’s Hypothesis.

  • How big is it? 237 linear feet — 2,512 items — and still growing!

The History of Atomic Energy Collection, containing more than 3,000 items, is a valuable resource for research on the development of nuclear technologies in the twentieth century. Highlights of the collection include the first published account of the discovery of radioactivity in 1896 by Nobel Prize winning physicist Henri Becquerel; writings on the Manhattan Project; materials concerning the congressional hearings of J. Robert Oppenheimer; and formerly classified government reports. Cultural aspects of the atomic age are also explored through fictional works, poetry, drama, and music.

  • How big is it? 231 linear feet — 3,108 items — and still growing!

If you don’t go through our Rare Books portal, you can find most of these books in the OSU Libraries’ online catalog. When you search for a title look for a location that says “Valley SpCol HistSci” or “ValleySpCol Atomic Energy” [see below for a visual aid].

Catalog record with “Valley SpCol HistSci” location

Friday Feature: Happy birthday to KOAC!

There’s a public radio station near and dear to our hearts at OSU — one that keeps many Oregonians well-informed and entertained — turns 90 today. The station that started life as KFDJ, then became KOAC, and then formed a major part of OPB was born on December 7, 1922. And so we say “here’s to their fabulous history” with a new Flickr set!

George Edmonston wrote a wonderful piece in 2009 on the history of KOAC on campus, taking us back to those early days when “[w]ireless communication came to OAC [Oregon Agricultural College] during the 1913-14 school year in a course taught by Dr. Willibald Weniger, head of the physics department and namesake of Weniger Hall.” It was in Dr. Weniger’s class “Wireless Telegraphy 222” that students built and operated a “spark-type transmitter.” After WWI, the class was turned over to Physics Professor Jacob Jordan, who built the radio transmitter for the College’s first 50-watt station as a lab experiment. That station became a central part of the campus (and eventually state) community.

In March of 1922, the OAC Extension Service had begun using the radio station KGW in Portland for educational broadcasts; fortunately for us, they moved back to our campus… Later that year, on December 7, 1922, OAC was granted a license to begin broadcasting the radio station KFDJ. The first formal broadcast (on January 23, 1923) featured music from the Corvallis High School band.

Three years later, in October 1925, the college radio service was officially dedicated. To make it even more official a “Broadcasting Schedule” leaflet was prepared and distributed to a selected list of radio receiver owners. It was at this same time that regular hours of broadcasting were established for Monday, Wednesday, and Friday evenings from 7:30 to 9:00; special broadcasts were also made for college convocations, athletic contests, and other events. The station soon became known as KOAC.

KOAC’s studios in Covell Hall opened with the completion of that building in 1928. Prior to that they had been in what is now Kearney Hall (Apperson at the time). Not content with just audio, KOAC-TV went on the air in 1957.

In 1981, OPB left the Department of Higher Education, becoming an independent state agency, and in 1988 OPB moved to a new facility on SW Macadam Avenue in Portland. However, most of KOAC’s radio operations were still located on campus until 2009, when all operations moved to Portland.

You can learn more about the history of KOAC in our web chronology at a KOAC Radio Milestones and Music, Markets, and Milestones: 75 Years of KOAC Radio. The 1972 history of KOAC, The Remembered Years is available in ScholarsArchive. You can also learn more about our historical materials pertaining to KOAC in the KOAC Records (RG015) and Jimmie Morris Collection in their online guides .

Want to know more? Check out the Wikipedia article on Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Friday Feature: rolling in the new accessions

It’s that special time of year when archivists get all sorts of wonderful gifts. This year we had an especially good haul from the Facilities Services department, which added many boxes of campus building plans!

Want to know more about campus planning?

In addition to the Facilities Services Records, 1888-2003, there are also several great places to look for information. The Memorabilia Collection includes brochures and general information about Facilities Services, about individual structures, and materials pertaining to campus planning. More detailed information about the construction of some major buildings is available in the records of the corresponding office or department; for example, information about construction and remodeling of the Valley Library (and its predecessors, the Kerr Library and Kidder Hall) are available in the Library Records (RG 009).

Capital Construction Funding Records, as well as other materials pertaining to buildings and facilities, are part of the Business Affairs Records (RG 017). Additional correspondence from Gordon V. Skelton is available in the Civil Engineering Department Records (RG 030).

We also have several great online exhibits for your viewing pleasure including OSU Building Construction and Holsteins, Horses, and Hogs: the Barns of Oregon State. Another resource is the Chronological History of OSU, which is invaluable for those landmark dates, developments, and events.

 

Friday Feature — on a Wednesday

For the sake of dietary balance, it would be delightful to have a Flickr set with tofurkeys and turkeys… Meaty drumsticks and tempeh wings next to platters of roasted Brussels sprouts and garlicky green beans… Boats of gravy and heaping bowls of super sweet sweet potatoes. But no one seems to take pictures of meatless Thanksgiving wonders, so instead we’ve pulled together a gobbling good set of turkey pictures for your viewing pleasure!

Enjoy – and save some room for pie.

Friday Feature: cutting the cake

So who would have known that we’d find a delightful little gem in the Atmospheric Sciences  (that’s P 138 for those keeping track).

The Atmospheric Sciences Department Photographs collection consists of images of department staff and graduate students, the remodeling of department offices, classroom scenes, and the Climatic Research Institute building. The building is in Corvallis at 811 Jefferson Avenue — take a field trip and see if you see the resemblance!

Friday Feature: Dance!

These delightful little 1940s gems showed up in our archive this week. Yes, they are our newest dance card additions!

What’s a Dance Card?

In the bygone days of formal courtship, dance cards played a large role in matching young couples. Dance cards were used to record and “reserve” dances between members of the opposite sex. The dance cards noted which songs were to be played and in what order. A man, or a woman, could then request a partner to dance during different songs with them. At the end of the evening, the dance card would be filled with the names of people who the student had danced with – or at least the people that had promised to dance with a student. A peek inside this dance card, from a 1926 junior prom (pictured next page), gives us an idea of what a dance card would have looked like by the end of the evening. If these dance cards are to be believed, there were some exciting people who showed up at OSU’s dances including Marie Antoinette, Marie Curie, Pochantas…

The dance cards themselves ranged from simple scraps of papers to the elaborate pamphlets. Often, they would come attached with little pencils so that students could easily “pencil” themselves into a certain dance slot. String or ribbon would also be attached to the dance card so that it could be worn around one’s wrist whilst dancing. The oldest cards in the University Archives date from the late 1890s – these are mainly from military balls. Dance cards really became popular at OSU in the early 1900s, when Americans experienced a ballroom craze. Young couples flocked to dance halls to learn the foxtrot, waltz, and two step.

Many of these dances were held at the MU – and students went all out to decorate it. For a Hawaiian themed dance in the 1950s, big glass tanks were brought in and filled with hundreds of gold fish. In 1951, the MU transformed was into the merry land of OZ. Students constructed miniature cities and towns for the enjoyment of their classmates. Instead of the Emerald City, students were invited into the Orange City – and were invited to view the world through these Orange Color glasses, which doubled as a dance card. Gradually, though, dance cards lost their edge and weren’t cool. By the 1960s, they were gradually made to commemorate dances given by fraternities and sororities. The last dance card was made in 1967.

Thanks to former student workers Kelsey and Ingrid Ockert for providing all these fabulous dance cards details! If you want to learn more about dance cards see more photos, check out the “Shall We Dance” set.

Friday Feature: saying goodbye to Christy Turner

Christy Turner rode off into the archival sunset this week, ending a great 3+ year tenure at Special Collections (and then in the merged SCARC).

Christy Turner

She served the department in a variety of roles and on several notable projects before and after her graduation last spring, most recently as a temporary full-time staff member helping us navigate the new waters of our merger. Her last few months have been dedicated to mounting the new “Molecules to Monographs” exhibit currently on the 5th floor. Stop by and see it — you’ll be delighted and impressed!

Before she graduated we were lucky to have Christy serve as the Lead Student Worker for two years. She prepared student staffing schedules for both the 3rd floor and 5th floor public service desks, an uneviable and complicated task; prepared monthly statistics reports for both desks, again, not an easy thing; and served as a member of the SCARC Public Service Point Merger Group, the only student employee serving on any of our numerous working groups.

As Lead Student, Christy also served as a positive example to the rest of the student staff, and this she does unfailingly well, but she has also been a great asset to our combined department. Her knowledge of the 5th floor collections combined with her excellent customer service skills have been a tremendous boon to the effectiveness of the 5th floor public service desk and have served to lessen the reference burden that the full-time staff faces on a daily basis. She was also instrumental in guiding our students through the new reference processes and statistics tracking activities that have been implemented within the student workflow since our departmental merger was initiated.

While her organizational skill is formidable, Christy, who was a Fine Arts major, has also been integral to the aesthetics of our public side. She created, largely on her own, the major display “Linus Pauling: World Traveler.” She also did a smaller refresh of the Linus Pauling Office permanent exhibit in the 5th floor reading room and mounted framed photographs and text panels for display in our collections storage area.

Christy’s skill as a photographer has been enlisted on many occasions — which means we have very few pictures of her for this tribute! She photographed nearly all of the hundreds of images on the “Treasures of the McDonald Collection” and “Roger Hayward: Renaissance Man” sites. In addition, she photographed a number of events hosted by the department, including all five of the 2011 Resident Scholar presentations, as well as the Special Collections/University Archives anniversary celebration in November 2011.

Finally, while a fine artist by training, Christy assumed the role of “ad hoc graphic designer” for SCARC and did an astonishing job of teaching herself the skills necessary. Her portfolio includes unique graphics developed for both the web (“Treasures of the McDonald Collection,” Resident Scholar videos, numerous images for the forthcoming SCARC department website) and in print (the graphic identity for the 2012 Pauling Legacy Award event, SCARC rack cards).

She was been an integral component of whatever successes we have garnered in recent years — including the smooth merger of two units with long and unique histories of their own — and she is, without doubt, hugely deserving of our gratitude and highest praise. She is a credit to this library and will be missed.

Friday Feature: 10 Little Baking Club Lessons

Remember the Friday Feature “Ten Little Lessons on Vitamins“? Well these 10 Little Baking Club Lessons offer another view of cooking and health!

Brought to you from the Oregon Agricultural College Extension Service and Boys & Girls Industrial Clubs in 1916, these delicious little bulletins provide wonderful lessons for kids learning to cook.

Get inspired and get cooking! To find the full text of each, visit ScholarsArchive and search for “Baking Club Lessons.”

And don’t forget to Taste those ‘Chives Monday at noon.

Friday Feature: the old stuff that makes me happy

It should come as no surprise that archivists just really love old stuff… SCARC staff are really quite lucky to have such fabulous opportunities to see, read, add, and work with great collections and great people.

For the Friday Feature this week I want to share a few of my favorite things!

  • Taste of the ‘Chives delicious dishes… Remember you can taste for yourself on Oct 29!
  • From 2009 Cheese & Pimiento Salad: “Stuff canned pimientos with cream cheese, cut into slices, and serve one or two slices to each person on lettuce leaves with French dressing.”

    This is the sixth version of Benny Beaver, and the fifth version of Benny’s costume (used 1984-1998).

    From the Eta Sigma Gamma, OSU Alpha Tau chapter (Health Science Honorary) Collection…

    Bike trip? Flickr folks pose

    “Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hardin meet Woodsy Owl. Woodsy is the newest environmental symbol of the United States,” from the Gerald Williams Collection circa 1970.

    What are some of your favorite things? Let me know at tiah.edmunson-morton@oregonstate.edu!