Hands on Human Rights

Curator Valerie Love in Rwanda

Curator Valerie Love in Rwanda

 

Valerie Love, Curator for Human Rights and the Alternative Press Collection at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, is witnessing human rights work first hand in Kigali, Rwanda, as a participant in a human rights delegation through the organization Global Youth Connect.  Fifteen years ago, between 800,000 and 1 million people were killed in a horrific genocide that attempted to destroy the Tutsi minority and also targeted moderate Hutus in Rwanda.  “The new government has made extraordinary progress in restoring stability and security to a ravaged society; however the many scars of genocide are still visible and the work of justice and reconciliation is ongoing,” she writes in an email.

Watch for details in an upcoming issue of the Libraries’ newsletter and the University’s new news website.

State of Immigrants

Italian immigrants studying English

Italian immigrants studying English

 

Similar to other states, a significant portion of Connecticut’s population came from somewhere else.  The variety of available employment attracted immigrants from all over the world who came, worked, stayed and contributed their peice to the state’s rich ethnic mosaic.  The resulting mix of traditions, cultures and languages has been documented in several oral history projects beginning with the WPA Federal Writers’ Project in the 1930s, continued  in the mid 1970s by the Peoples of Connecticut project at UConn and, more recently, the Waterbury Area Immigrant Oral History Collection.  The transcripts for the Waterbury collection are available online and can be accessed via the finding aid for the collection at  http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/findaids/watbimmig/MSS20090014.html.

Related Connecticut WPA era oral histories can be found electronically on the Library of Congress’ American Memory website at http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/wpaintro/ctcat.html.  Transcripts of the Peoples of Connecticut and WPA oral histories are available in the Reading Room of the Dodd Research Center.

Blues at Newport

You have so many memories, if you were old enough and lived close enough and knew enough to get to the Newport Folk Festival in its great days in the 1960s….And, just as certainly, you remember the blues, which was one of the richest strands in the rich weave of music and culture that was the Festival….Part of the emotional response to the blues singers was that most of them had been forgotten in the years since they’d made their handfuls of recordings for the old ‘race’ labels of the 1920s….It’s true that memories can sometimes be insubstantial, or that time can change what you heard or saw, and maybe you’ve romanticized the playing you remember or the singers you shouted for — but here on this collection of live recordings from the Newport Festival blues concerts you can hear that the music was as great as you remember it was. And if you’re hearing it for the first time — this is what it was like to be there. — Sam Charters

BluesatNewport

Blues at Newport is a compilation of blues performances recorded live at the Newport Folk Festivals, 1959-1964, produced by Samuel Charters for the Vanguard Records label. This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Newport Folk Festival, founded in 1959 by Theodore Bikel, Oscar Brand, Pete Seeger and George Wein. Check out Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival, performing Big Bill Broonzy’s standard Key to the Highway, available on the live recording.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMZzAGAao58]

Blues at Newport is part of the Samuel and Ann Charters Archives of Blues and Vernacular African American Musical Culture, donated in 2000 to Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center. For a detailed listing of the contents of the Charters Archives, visit http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/findaids/charters/MSS20000105.html .

Kodachrome No More

Kodachrome Transparency

It was reported in the Wall Street Journal today that the Eastman Kodak Co. will discontinue Kodachrome color film manufacture this year due to falling sales. The Wall Street Journal also noted that the last roles of Kodachrome film would be donated to the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film in Rochester, New York. There are a number of archives that have posted Kodachrome galleries online. To see more brilliant Kodachrome film check out Bound for Glory at the Library of Congress.

Honoring alumni who made the “ultimate sacrifice”

"The Ultimate Sacrifice" Memorial

"The Ultimate Sacrifice" Memorial

The Dodd Research Center is proud to be a part of the efforts to honor UConn alumni who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. “The Ultimate Sacrifice” Memorial was dedicated on November 10, 2008 at a moving ceremony on the Great Lawn, where faculty, staff, alumni and families of our veterans gathered to reflect on the lives lost.

As part of the project, University Archivist Betsy Pittman is working with the Alumni Association to document the “Roll of Honor”, a comprehensive listing members of the UConn community who lost their lives while serving in the armed forces. For more information on the honor roll, contact Betsy Pittman at betsy.pittman@uconn.edu

Lecture today – 2:30pm

“How Picturebooks work: the dynamics between visual and verbal narratives in modern picturebooks.”

Join the 2009 Billie M. Levy Travel Grant Recipient, Claudia Rueda to learn more about her research in the development of the dynamics between words and images in traditional picturebooks and how the interaction in modern works can generate new meanings and interpretations to involve the reader’s imagination.

Today – June 18 – 2:30pm
Dodd Research Center, Conference Room 162

Lost your Nutmeg yearbook in the last move?

The UConn <em>Nutmeg</em>, 1982

The UConn Nutmeg, 1982

UConn alums who have misplaced their copy of the yearbook now have the capability of reliving their college years online. In collaboration with the Nutmeg staff and the Division of Student Affairs, the UConn Libraries announces the availability of the 1915-1989 electronic Nutmeg. Anyone can access individual issues of the Nutmeg from the Archives & Special Collections website at: http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/collections/nutmeg/index.htm

2009 Billie M. Levy Travel Grant recipient to speak

Claudia Rueda, Lesley University

Claudia Rueda, Lesley University

On June 18, 2009, Claudia Rueda will present the results of her research in the Northeast Children’s Literature Collection at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center’s Conference room 162 at 2:30pm. Ms. Rueda is the second recipient of a Billie M. Levy Travel/Research Grant for 2009 and will give a presentation entitled “How Picturebooks work: the dynamics between visual and verbal narratives in modern picturebooks.”  A native of Colombia, Ms. Rueda is the author and illustrator of nine picture books and has illustrated five others. After attending law school and art school in Colombia, she moved to the U.S. in 1997 to study illustration at the University of California at Berkeley.  Ms. Rueda has won multiple awards for her work and is currently in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Lesley University.  Ms. Rueda will talk about the development of the dynamics between words and images in traditional picturebooks and how the interaction in modern works can generate new meanings and interpretations to involve the reader’s imagination.  

Ms. Rueda’s talk is free and open to the public.  For more information, contact Terri J. Goldich, curator for the Northeast Children’s Literature Collection at 860.486.3646 or terri.goldich@uconn.edu.

D Day

Tomorrow marks the 65th anniversary of D Day, the Allied Invasion of Normandy and we will use the opportunity to talk about the Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP) at UConn.  Based out of the School of Engineering, the U.S. Army’s ASTP program was implemented in early 1944 due to the impending invasion.  The goal of the program was to increase the number of army trained engineers across the country.  More than 1,500 soilders were stationed at UConn.  The Kodachrome exhibit on display has several images of the training these soilders received while on campus.  For more information about the ASTP, please see their website at http://www.astpww2.org/

Marching soilders, 1944

Marching soilders, 1944

We hope you will join us for UConn’s Alumni Weekend this Friday and Saturday.  We are offering free tours of the Dodd Center and the Homer Babbidge Library on Saturday at 10am.

A little about football

According to Carl Brandt, the post World War II era was a great time for UConn’s football program.  Many of these “mature males” played teams that seemed to be made up of “kids” just out of High School.  The score below is an indication of one such game.  Mr. Brandt recalls another score of something like 105 to 0, but doesn’t have an official photo of it.  

UCONN Football Score

 

And it was a time when women played football also, as you can see in this rare color photograph from the collection.

Ladies football, circa 1948

Ladies football, circa 1948

Milk, it does the body good

Creamery Farm Ladies

"Farm Femmes" (Women's Land Army Participants) in the creamery, 1942

The University of Connecticut’s history is rooted in the traditions of agriculture.  This was still a prevalent field in the 1940’s and 1950’s.  In our latest tribute to alumni weekend this June 5th & 6th, we are sharing two of the many wonderful photos taken by Jerauld Manter that show how enjoyable a glass of fresh milk can truly be.  

Milford Labor Camp, 1942

Milford Labor Camp, 1942