Smoke gets in Your Eyes. Includes V.P. Leonov's and Peter Waters' description of drying the Leningrad books with sawdust and blankets and warm air.
Preserve to Serve. Chair: Cathy Henderson Preservation Program Evaluation: Report on the Findings. Concerns SAA education & outreach.
Photographic Conservation Update Preservation Guru or Gadfly. Chair: Carolyn Harris Preservation Surveys: A Spectrum of Programs and Progress. Chair: Pat Morris
Holdings Maintenance. Presenters: K. Garlick & M.L. Ritzenthaler
The Conservation Section is now named the Preservation Section, and Karen Garlick is the new section chair, as well as the liaison to ALA
The SAA Council took four preservation-related actions:
The first certification examination was given, and the Academy of Certified Archivists came into being. In order to pass the exam, applicants have to know a certain amount of preservation. This knowledge, outlined in the January 1989 SAA Newsletter, includes five "tasks" that the applicant should be able to perform, such as "Analyze the current physical condition of documents and determine appropriate preservation actions and priorities." It also includes five "knowledge statements" or areas of applied expertise, such as "Supplies, storage equipment, and environment standards." Preservation is, of course, only one of a number of areas of expertise in which an applicant is supposed to qualify.
All documents deteriorate all the time.
No one can have access to a document that no longer exists.
Use causes wear.
The physical medium of a document contains information.
Authenticity cannot be restored.
No treatment is reversible.