Volume 12, Number 8
Dec 1988
News
Education
- In January, representatives from eight countries will take part
in a three-month training program at the Los Angeles Public Library,
organized by Columbia University and Airdex Corporation. The program
aims to give conservators first-hand knowledge in the recovery of
water-damaged library materials using dehumidification and vacuum
technology.
- At the Canberra Centre for Advanced Education, the conservation
school in Australia, a new unit entitled Library and Archives
Preservation was introduced this year, with the cooperation of
Australian Archives and the National Library of Australia.
- The Association of Research Libraries (ARL) has received a grant
of $145,167 from the NEH Office of Preservation in support of
preservation planning in research libraries. The three-year grant
will help provide training for six experienced preservation
librarians to serve as consultants to libraries participating in the
Office of Management Services' Preservation Planning Program. It
will also support ten more self-studies and an evaluation of the
whole program by Margaret Child, Assistant Director for Research
Services at the Smithsonian Institution Libraries.
Role Seen for Mid-Sized Libraries in Microfilming Program
The role of mid-sized libraries in the nationwide brittle book
preservation program will be explored by a committee of the
Commission on Preservation and Access, chaired by Paula Kaufman,
Dean of Libraries of the University of Tennessee. The reformatting
of three million volumes over a three-year period, with funds
recently made available through the National Endowment for the
Humanities, is based on the concept of a sustained funding
commitment to a core group of large research libraries that will
form the basic framework of the program. However, because of the
diverse and dispersed nature of American research collections, many
other libraries with special collections and strengths in a variety
of disciplines will be called upon to participate in the program as
it develops.