Friday, December 12, 2014
Special Collections Research Center offers self-serve digitization
The Bookeye 4 scanner is easy for researchers to use. |
The Special
Collections Research Center Breckinridge Research Room now offers self-serve
digitization via a new Bookeye 4
scanner. The easy-to-use touch screen interface allows researchers to
produce high-quality color scans up to 600 dpi. Files can be transferred via
email, cloud storage, or an external USB
drive.
The scanner includes a “V” cradle option that provides additional support for tightly bound materials and reduces the risk of damage to the spine during digitization. Regardless of whether material is scanned by researchers or by the SCRC reference team on request, the Bookeye significantly expands access to UK Libraries’ unique collections.
The scanner includes a “V” cradle option that provides additional support for tightly bound materials and reduces the risk of damage to the spine during digitization. Regardless of whether material is scanned by researchers or by the SCRC reference team on request, the Bookeye significantly expands access to UK Libraries’ unique collections.
Event celebrates publication of letters between Thomas Merton and Victor and Carolyn Hammer
The University Press of Kentucky, in partnership with the
Art Museum at the University of Kentucky and UK Libraries, will celebrate the
publication of The Letters of Thomas
Merton and Victor and Carolyn Hammer: Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam with editors
Paul Evans Holbrook Jr. and F. Douglas Scutchfield. The event, which is free
and open to the public, will include remarks from the editors and features an
installation of Victor Hammers’ paintings, drawings and mezzotints. The
celebration, which includes books on sale, will begin 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12, at
the Art Museum at UK.
For more information on Merton and his relationship with the
Hammers, please see the complete news release.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
UK Libraries marks International Education Week
Students gathered for International Game Day |
In celebration of International Education Week (November 17 -
21), UK Libraries hosted two events designed to promote engagement with
international education.
The first, a vexillology (the study of flags) challenge
asked participants to correctly identify the countries represented by flags
hanging in the atrium of William T. Young Library. Samane Zaarebandakoki, a
graduate student in the UK College of Agriculture, won the prize of a $15 gift
card to Starbucks by correctly identifying the most flags.
More than 60 students participated in International
Game Day on November 19. UK Libraries, the Media Depot, and the Robert Hemenway
Writing Center sponsored the event. Students gathered in the basement of
William T. Young Library to play various games, have snacks, listen to
traditional music, and enjoy international fellowship.
Doug Boyd speaks on oral history in Northern Ireland
Doug Boyd |
Dr. Doug Boyd,
director of the Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, spoke recently at a
conference in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The aim of the Accounts of
the Conflict: Digitally Archiving Stories for Peacebuilding conference
was to examine the role of digital archives of personal narratives,
oral histories, or testimonies in societies emerging from conflict. The conference
showcased the Accounts of the Conflict project at the
University of Ulster; the project seeks to establish a digital archive for the
long-term preservation and dissemination of stories related to conflict in
Northern Ireland.
Doug spoke about what the Nunn Center is doing to
enhance the accessibility of online oral history, the center’s development and
implementation of the OHMS system, and challenges posed by curating online oral
history collections.
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