Cool@Hoole

Overwhelmed by “digital preservation”?

Don’t be! There are simple, straightforward steps that you can take to help ensure long-term access to your digital material. And if you want your content to last more than, say, about 5 years, you cannot afford to wait!

I’ve just returned from a Digital Preservation Train-the-Trainer Workshop at the Library of Congress. I have been given the materials and guidelines for providing introductions to digital preservation to folks ranging from librarians and archivists to content creators trying to manage their own personal digital files. Do you need this training? If so, please contact me to set up a training seminar at your institution.

The materials cover 6 broad categories, each intended to be an hour’s presentation (with exercises); and an intro and closing summary will be added. However, I can focus on only one or two, or combine them to provide a broad overview, if you don’t want an entire day’s training. Here’s the 6 segments:

  1. Identify: what steps should you take to identify your digital content?
  2. Select: what portion of that content do you need to preserve?
  3. Store: how should you store it? What exactly do you need?
  4. Protect: what steps need to be taken to protect your investment?
  5. Provide: how can you keep this content accessible as the world changes?
  6. Manage: what provisions should you make for long-term management?

This broad framework offers basic steps for laying the groundwork to enable you to move forward without feeling overwhelmed. The information will be tailored to your needs. Workshops can be set up either in centralized locations at a hosting institution, or at your own institution. There are currently 4 trainers in each of six regions of the United States; my region is the Southeast. If you need a trainer in another region, I’ll be happy to refer you!!

Jody DeRidder

Acumen Items Now Accessible Via Scout

Did you know that our digital collections are now accessible through University Libraries’ Discovery Service, Scout? Now when someone searches Scout for a title, author, or keyword, they will not only recieve results for books, articles, etc., but also any of our digital items that meet their search criteria.

 

Using Scout’s advanced search interface, it can even be set up to search only our digital collections, giving users one more way to find our material.

When a search returns digital items, there are even links to Acumen included on the search results page, making it really quick and easy to view the item.

The Web Services Department is currently working on thumbnails for the digital items, and it will look great when that’s done. Thanks to them for all their hard work on this project!

Eugene Allen Smith and an Upcoming Author Visit to Hoole!

On Tuesday, September 20, at 5:00 P.M., author Aileen Kilgore Henderson will visit Hoole Special Collections Library to discuss her new book Eugene Allen Smith’s Alabama: How a Geologist Shaped a State. For more information about this event, please visit the Cool @ Hoole blog or call 205-348-0500.

Eugene Allen Smith was a professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy at the University of Alabama from 1871-1913 and served as Alabama State Geologist from 1873-1913. His entire photo collection is online as part of our digital collections. It spans more than four decades and contains photos of his many field trips, work as State Geologist and images of campus in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Below are just a few images from this collection of over 700 photographs.

Dr. Smith and a geology party

Cahaba River

Lookout Mountain

Waterfalls on Talladega Creek

Eugene Allen Smith and his children

Geology class field trip

 

Happy birthday Paul “Bear” Bryant!

This Sunday would be University of Alabama legend, Paul “Bear” Bryant’s 98th birthday. Bryant served as head coach of the University of Alabama for 25 years, amassing the university’s football team 6 national championships and 13 conference championships.

Here’s a few facts you may or may not know about the famous coach. (Click on the photos for more information about them.)

  • Bryant was born in Southern Arkansas and was the 11th of 12 children.
  • He received his nickname “Bear” as a young teenager. A theater owner in Fordyce, Arkansas, offered a dollar to anyone who would wrestle a bear for a minute. Bryant successfully wrestled the bear, but the bear and owner escaped without paying.

Bryant speaking at a Pep Rally

  • Bryant accepted a scholarship to the University of Alabama in 1931, and was a member of the school’s 1934 national championship team.
  • He once played with a partially broken leg in a game against Tennessee in 1935.

Bryant accepting an award

  • During his senior year, Bryant married Mary Harmon Bryant, whom the building that houses Hoole Special Collections is named after. He kept the marriage a secret from his football coach, as he was afraid he would lose his scholarship.
  • In the 1936 NFL draft, Bryant was drafted in the 4th round by the Brooklyn Dodgers, but never played professionally.
  • In 1941, Bryant was offered the head coaching position at Arkansas, but after the attack on Pearl Harbor, he joined the U. S. Navy instead.
  • During World War II, Bryant served in Northern Africa aboard the SS Uruguay as a Lieutenant Commander.
  • While coaching at Kentucky for 8 years, Bryant led the school to its first bowl appearance in 1947 and won its first SEC championship in 1950.
  • Bryant coached at Alabama from 1958 to 1982.

  • Bryant received 1.5 votes for the Democratic Party presidential nomination at that 1968 Democratic Convention.
  • In 1971, Bryant recruited the first African-American scholarship player at the University of Alabama, Wilbur Jackson, and junior-college transfer John Mitchell became the first black man to play for Alabama.
  • When Bryant retired in 1982, he held the record for the most wins as head coach in collegiate football history.

Paul "Bear" Bryant with President Gerald Ford

  • Bryant passed away only a month after retiring from coaching on January 26, 1983.
  • A moment of silence in his honor was held prior to Super Bowl XVII, played 4 days after Bryant’s passing.
  • When asked by a student publication what he would have done for a living he he hadn’t become a coach, Bryant replied, “Oh, I don’t have any idea. I’ve never wanted to do anything else.”

For even more facts about Coach Bryant, as well as more photos and some videos, visit the Paul W. Bryant Museum website or drop by the museum next time you’re in Tuscaloosa. Happy birthday Coach!

Life in the mines: why we are grateful for unions

Why do we celebrate Labor Day?
Because of the major changes and protections (such as 8-hour work days) developed by labor unions in the United States.

The early days of union organization were tough. Listen to Cleatus and Louise Burns discuss working conditions in the Alabama coal mines in the 30’s, and what it was like to live in a company camp.

Can you imagine always wondering if your husband was going to make it home from work? Here’s a quote from Louise:

“I would be worried about him when he’s down in the mines… every morning when I’d go down to feed the hogs, and listen, I’d hear a shot go off out at that mines. And he — that would be where he was. And I’d tell him [later] what time it went off, and he’s say that was a shooting down in there. Shooting that coal down, you know. That was a shot went off when they’re shooting down coal.”

They tell the story of when Cleatus lost his best friend, who was only 19, in the mines:

Louise: ‘… he had come by to where Cleatus was working and Cleatus told him, said he’s going up to get … some timbers, from a place. This boss had sent him up, was sending him up there. And Cleatus…say he told him, said “Gweldon, don’t you go up there… that place has got gas in it.” He said, “And your lamp’ll set it off.”

He said, “I’m not going to take my lamp in there, I’m going to leave it on the outside.” And uh, and in a few minutes they heard, heard that gas explode.”‘

Mining was a dirty, dangerous job, loaded with explosions, often working in 18 inches of space or knee-deep water. Read more about Cleatus and Louise’s life in the early 30’s; it will help you appreciate all that labor unions do to protect us.

Happy Labor Day!

Back to school!

Welcome back students! Classes started yesterday and campus is all a-buzz with the excitement of the new school year. While many things have changed about college over the years, one thing remains the same: move in day! Included here are some pictures from the 1960s that would be very similar to scenes of students moving in this year to start a new year of school. These photos and many more documenting the history of the University can be found in the University of Alabama Encyclopedia.

 

Dorm room in Mary Burke Hall

 

Move in day in front of a dorm

All the necessities from home

A little help from dad

Welcome home!

Cotton production in the 60’s

One of the major forms of agriculture in the south, cotton production shaped the lives of many. The Marjory L. Smith Slide Collection contains 71 color slides taken by Marjorie in and around Hayneville (Lowndes County) Alabama in the early 1960’s.

Although some of the images show men working the harvesters, it’s clear that some of the work had changed little from the days of slavery… and neither had some of the living conditions.

Step back in time, to the days not so very long ago, when people still drove horse and buggy because it was all they had.

Imagine what it was like to have lived only 50 years ago, struggling to survive by working the cotton fields in the Deep South. Visit the Marjory L. Smith Slide Collection.

Dating in the 20’s and 30’s: much like today?

Wonder what dating was like in the late 20’s and early 30’s?

Read about it in the Haydn Neal Thompson Letters, now online.  Hayden was away at military school, and later, college, during 1924-1935.  This is a compilation of letters from his extended family members and girl friends during this period, socializing through correspondence and discussing entertainments and dating.

Some things never change.  Here’s a short excerpt from a letter written in 1934 by one of Haydn’s girl friends:  “I’d be very happy if I could believe you’re really working hard.  I’d know then you’d have very little time to play around.”

Letter from Ann Griffith, 1934

She apparently was having a bit of fun herself, as later in the same letter she says “The beach party fell thru — one of the fellows had a terrible cold but we had a good party Sat. nite. Gin was plentiful — and did I feel dizzy yesterday!”

And here’s the first paragraph from another girlfriend’s letter in 1924: “If the old saying —  ‘True love never runs smooth’ — has any truth in it at all — I can easily say – ours is the truest love of all.  Isn’t it terrible the way our affairs are always becoming a mess of tangles?”

Somehow it’s reassuring to know so many things stay the same over time.  🙂

Newly Online: Rolland Plattner Letters

The Rolland Plattner Letters Collection contains 41 letters written by Mr. Plattner when he served in the Pacific theater during World War II. All of these letters were written to his friend and neighbor, Charles Harold Regnier of Clifton, Illinois. Plattner’s letters detailed his daily life in Army camps in Hawaii, New Guinea, and the Philippines. Links to individual items in this collection are presented along with metadata within the context of the finding aid, a new way we are providing access to digital collections in Acumen.

Come join our team! Senior Programmer Analyst Position

The University of Alabama Libraries is seeking candidates for 
a Senior Programmer Analyst professional staff position in the 
Web Services Department. The primary responsibility of the 
position is the maintenance and continued development of the 
open source Acumen digital repository discovery application 
(http://acumen.lib.ua.edu). The Programmer Analyst will also 
design, develop and support complex software systems for the
Libraries; architect, program, debug, maintain and enhance 
locally developed software modules to integrate with commercial 
and open source software; serve as the primary developer and 
support person for the Digital Services, Integrated Library 
System and Electronic Resources Management, Cataloging & 
Metadata Services, and Web Services units within the University 
Libraries. May be asked to serve as technical lead and
coordinate multiple development efforts with other Web Services 
technical staff.
For more details visit https://staffjobs.ua.edu.

Posted on behalf of Jason Battles, Head of Web Services 
at the University of Alabama Libraries.