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[PADG:214] Re: week-ending high notes
Thanks for the Friday afternoon chuckle! It was classic.
Quoting Jacob Nadal <jnadal@xxxxxxxxxxx>:
> I was having a discussion with a friend who teaches undergraduate
> English and composition classes at Emory, and she mentioned
> off-handedly that the part of one of her "get to know the library"
> assignments that the students really enjoyed was using the microfilm.
> My jaw dropped and I demanded to know more. Apparently all of the
> "future generations, yet unborn" for whom we've been doing all this
> preservation work have gone and gotten themselves born. And they seem
> to be grateful! Here then, a sample of the responses she received from
> students having their first encounters with the tiny wonder medium:
>
> She writes:
> Well, they were looking at old newspapers. They were really into
> seeing
> what kinds of things were happening, what kinds of things were
> reported,
> and were fascinated by the ads. None of which is microfilm specific,
> or
> course. But they seem glad to know how to use it now. Here's a quote
> from
> one student's brief essay on the matter. It represents about a
> quarter of
> what he wrote:
>
> "Preceding this assignment I had never heard of microfilm or much less
> had any idea how to use it. I actually found it quite fascinating
> that it
> is possible to find virtually any article written in many major
> periodicals over the past couple centuries, and view it through a
> projector. Microfilm will largely come in handy while working on a
> project involving past events and various views on them. The fact that
> there are many different periodicals to choose from allows one to find
> different views on a topic that was covered by many different
> writers. "
>
> and another:
>
> "Of all the assignments, I found the microfilm aspect to be the most
> difficult as well as the most rewarding. Simply put, I had absolutely
> no
> idea how to use that machine. After many unsuccessful efforts and a
> consultation with a passerby, I was finally able to properly load the
> film into the machine. My troubles were not over, however. The film
> viewer conveyed the articles, but they were all upside down. It must
> have
> taken at least ten minutes of fumbling around with buttons and dials
> until I located the proper knob to adjust the viewing angle. I believe
> that using the microfilm reader will prove to be the most useful
> skill in
> my future classes. I was astonished to look at actual newspaper
> articles
> from the 1950s. Microfilm, while not exactly a technological marvel,
> will
> certainly add many depths and layers to my research in the years to
> come."
>
> and
>
> "The third assignment was definitely the most useful task during the
> project. The assistant helped me locate the microfilm of The New York
> Times and I continued picking out the appropriate date. After I
> procured
> the correct microfilm, the assistant loaded the microfilm and briefed
> me
> on how to use the device. After finding October 20, 1954, I focused
> the
> image and began printing. I read some of the articles inside the
> newspaper and was intrigued by numerous things in the newspaper. The
> final assignment went by very quickly and I had no problems finding
> the
> information."
>
> TGIF, everyone,
> Jake
>
>
> ---------------------------------------------
> Jacob Nadal
> Head, E. Lingle Craig Preservation Laboratory
> Indiana University Libraries
> (812) 855-6281 | mailto:jnadal@xxxxxxxxxxx
> ---------------------------------------------
>
>