Subject: Appointments at Library of Congress
Update from the Library of Congress Preservation Directorate: In ongoing efforts to develop staff and tools needed for increasingly complex preservation issues in traditional, audiovisual, and digital collections, the Preservation Directorate of the Library of Congress will be announcing a series of milestones throughout the rest of this year, to include: * the hiring of new scientists for the Preservation Research and Testing Division (PRTD) * the hosting a summit of national and international scientists * the reopening of PRTD's optical properties lab, having new capabilities to track changes in optical properties of materials (with a new environmental scanning electron microscope and other imaging systems) * the reopening PRTD's chemical and mechanical properties laboratory, having new capabilities to track changes in chemical and mechanical properties (including a new TAPPI Standards room) * the establishment of a new materials science reference collection We will be updating colleagues as these initiatives come online. At this time we are pleased to announce the first of these initiatives: the hiring of the following four new scientists, effective immediately. Dr. Christopher S. Coughlin received a PhD in Polymer Science from the University of Southern Mississippi, following a BSE in Polymer Science from Case Western Reserve University. He worked in a variety of governmental positions, including six years at the Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR). He has a wide experience in synthetic organic polymers and polymer engineering, which will support the Library's programs in the preservation of audio-visual and digital media, working with PRTD's thermal analysis and gel-permeation chromatography instruments. Dr. Lynn Brostoff received a PhD in Chemistry from the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, following a Masters in Polymer Materials Science from the University of Cincinnati and a Masters in Art History with a Certificate of Conservation from New York University. She worked at the Smithsonian Institution's Museum Conservation Institute for four years, and previously at the National Gallery of Art. She has a wide experience in materials analysis and coatings science, which will support the Library's program in the preservation of traditional library materials, working with PRTD's infra red spectroscopy and x-ray fluorescence instruments. Dr. Fenella France received a PhD in Textile Science from the University of Otago, in New Zealand. She worked as the Smithsonian Institution Preservation Scientist on the Star-Spangled Banner for the past decade, as Scientific Analyst and Project Manager for the World Trade Center 9/11 Project since 2002, and as Conservation Scientist and Environmental Consultant with the American Museum of Natural History in New York for the past three years. She has wide experience in preventive conservation and the testing of natural organic materials, and will support the Library's programs of environmental research and the transfer of technology to preservation research, working with PRTD's environmental sensing (heat, humidity, light, oxygen) and hyper-spectral and other imaging instruments. Dr. Jennifer Wade received a PhD in Earth Sciences from Boston University. She previously worked as a Physical Scientist at the Preservation Research and Testing Division of the Library of Congress for one year. She has a wide experience in the micro-analysis of inorganic materials, which will support the Library's programs of quality assurance of library materials and the preservation of digital media, working with PRTD's environmental scanning electron microscopy and inductively-coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy instruments. *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:65 Distributed: Sunday, June 15, 2008 Message Id: cdl-21-65-001 ***Received on Monday, 9 June, 2008