Career in Libraries and Archives, April 17, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Collins Library!

career

Librarians and library workers help people find information and use it effectively for personal and professional purposes. They must have knowledge of a wide variety of scholarly and public information sources and must be on the cutting edge of technology trends in order to provide service.  People with varying levels of education and a wide variety of interests work in libraries.

LibraryCareers.org is a service of the American Library Association designed to promote interest, awareness, and information about careers in libraries. Its purpose is to serve as a starting point to anyone who may be considering working in a library http://librarycareers.drupalgardens.com/

Employment Outlook:  According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, employment of librarians is expected to grow by 8 percent between 2008 and 2018, which is as fast as the average for all occupations. A large number of librarians are likely to retire in the coming decade, but job growth will be limited by government budget constraints and the increasing use of electronic resources which may result in the hiring of fewer librarians and the replacement of librarians with less costly library technicians and assistants.booksandcomputers

Education:  A master’s degree in library science (MLS), preferably from an American Library Association (ALA) accredited school, is necessary for librarian positions in most public, academic, and special libraries, although  smaller libraries will sometimes hire people with other degrees or equivalent experience because they have a more difficult time filling positions. School librarians may not need an MLS but must meet state teaching license requirements.

Lots of opportunities to specialize:

  • Public libraries
  • School libraries
  • Academic and research libraries
  • Special Libraries:  Archives, Art, Law, Medicine, Music, Government
  • Job Specializations:  Cataloging, Children, Information Technology, Support Staff, Reference, Teaching, Administration

Where to go for additional information:   

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A Book By Its Covers!

GreatGatsbyFrancis Coradal-Cugat’s original cover art for “The Great Gatsby,” which Baz Luhrmann brings to the big screen next month, depicts a disembodied face floating in a night sky. It is one of the lasting images in literature, but that hasn’t kept book designers from trying to outdo it. The scholar and F. Scott Fitzgerald biographer Matthew J. Bruccoli spent his adult life stockpiling those efforts ­— pulpy paperbacks, fancy slip-covers, French-flapped foreign editions — and today his trove is not only one of the world’s most complete collections but also an illuminating cross section of 83 years of book design. Now housed at the University of South Carolina, the collection is worth several million dollars but Bruccoli, who died in 2008, claimed he was never motivated by money. “You don’t buy books as an investment,” he said. “You buy them because it gives you pleasure to read them, to touch them . . . to see them on shelves.”

From: http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/09/a-book-by-its-covers/?ref=design-issue

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Did You Know? Historical Puget Sound Photographs Are Available in a Sound Past!

soundpastOver 2000 University of Puget Sound historical photographs are available in A Sound Past!

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Living and Breathing Poetry Online

April is National Poetry month, but why limit ourselves to just one month out of the year? Try out some of these services and apps to keep poetry in your life year-round.

Poem-a-Day:  The American Academy of Poets will email you a new poem every day of the year!  The selections include previously unpublished work by contemporary poets as well as classic and historical poems.

The Poetry App:  Produced by the Josephine Hart Poetry Society, this free app for the iPhone and iPad lets you listen to and see world-class readings and performances of poetry.

Poetry Readings:  The Library of Congress makes available webcasts of poetry readings and talks about poetry.

Poem Flow:  This free app for the iPhone and iPad lets you hear and read poems as they flow across the screen.

Submitted by Peggy Burge, Humanities Librarian

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A surprise staff member in the library!

GrizzatCirculation

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Spotlight: People Making a Difference at Collins – Anacristina Somarriba

My name is Anacristina Somarriba and I am a sophomore majoring in Business Leadership and French Language International Affairs from San Francisco. I will be studying abroad next spring in Dijon with 12 other UPS students. I am very excited because it has always been a dream of mine to study and live in France. I’m not sure what I want to do after graduation, as it is two years away, but I hope to find a job that I enjoy and am genuinely interested in. On my free time I like to read, listen to music, watch documentaries, hike, and travel (I am going to Greece this summer)!

I have been a cataloging assistant since my freshmen year and have processed countless books, movies, CDs, DVDs, and music scores. The best part of my job is working with amazing people such as my supervisor Willow, and my two other coworkers Vanessa and Holly. They keep the job fun and interesting. Working at the library also allows me to relax and forget, for a moment, all of my schoolwork.

I will miss seniors Vanessa and Holly because they’ve been great to work with. I am so glad that I’ve met them. I look forward to working in the RMS department again in the fall with new coworkers!

 

 

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From the Archives: Homer T. Bone

BoneWhen most people discover that I work in an archive, the first question that always comes up is, “what exactly do you do in the archives?” That question is one that I’ve always had a difficult time answering precisely because there are so many different things that we do in the University of Puget Sound Archives. The Archives & Special Collections, located on the second floor of the library (room 211, come visit us sometime!), are truly a hidden treasure on this campus. We store archival material, mostly from different Puget Sound departments and programs, but we are also fortunate to have a wide array of personal and family papers as well.

These private collections range from the Oregon Mission papers (a collection of letters and papers from some of the first missionaries to come west) to the Leroy Ostransky papers (this is a collection of papers and documents from a former Puget Sound music professor and composer). I have been lucky enough to recently have been working with the Homer T. Bone papers.

The Homer T. Bone papers are, by far, one of the biggest collections in the archives, at just over 130 boxes. The size of this collection has always been intimidating, especially when I was asked to work on its inventory. The inventory, which detailed the contents of each box, was immense, and when I first began, I was sure I would never finish! Luckily, I was surprised at how quickly it went, and how interesting this collection turned out to be.

Homer T. Bone, (1883-1970) was a lawyer, politician and judge who was based in Tacoma and the surrounding areas. After switching political parties several times (from Socialist, to Republican, to, finally Democrat) he found immense success as a member of the U.S. Senate for over a decade (1933-1944) during which he was actively involved in a number of committees, while seeming to remain in touch with his constituents back here in Washington.

Of course, with the amount of material in this collection, I could go on and on about Senator Bone, but instead I think I’ll point out a few of the things that I found most interesting, as well as some fun facts I learned. As a senator, Bone was a staunch isolationist, actively working to investigate war profiteering in WWI as part of the Nye Committee. Many of his senate activities were centered on this belief. However, when the time came to declare war on Japan after the Pearl Harbor attacks, neither Bone nor his fellow Washington senator voted, making Washington the only state which did not vote on the declaration of war. This was, however, just a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, as Senator Bone was in Florida, recovering from a hip injury, while the other Washington senator was away doing business for a senate sub-committee. Neither could make it back to Washington DC in time for the vote.

As senator, Bone was one of the principle writers of the legislation which established the National Cancer Institute, and worked actively with the Public Works Administration on projects such as the Narrows Bridge and the Bonneville dam. He ended his senate career with a nomination by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Homer T. Bone was an incredible man with varied interests who was, I believe, an important, if slightly forgotten, part of local and national history. I hope that someday, someone will be inspired, and not intimidated, by this vast and fascinating collection.

By Hannah Ellison

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April is National Poetry Month: “Point Defiance”

Here’s one with a local touch, written by our own Bill Kupinse, Puget Sound Associate Professor of English and 2008-09 Tacoma Poet Laureate. Submitted by Elizabeth Knight

POINT DEFIANCE

When I visit her, I find
a sea widow scanning the bay,
hair of braided epiphytes
askew, the blast of wind
across the bay
her keening.

Footpaths cross her heart:
ligatures suture
rags of tissue, strain
against arrhythmia.

In her secret embrasure
anomalous snow convenes,
fistfuls of confetti, forgotten
or illswept.  Here
breathing calms.

A tree stump older
than the steam engine
strikes, for a second, sunlight
in its mossy hollow.  Where rot
succeeds to loam, a splintered branch
of windfall jabs.
Flagless pole, it quivers,
marking a coordinate
which now mostly bores.

ASARCO’s airborne plume
casts a century’s tumorous shadow
—copper cadmium arsenic—
from Ruston’s clavicle to Vashon’s chin.
More than we, the Greeks understood
a poison that might linger,
but here no Machaon will salve
Philoktetes’ festering wound.

Orcas passing through the bay,
half your heroes gone,
circle widely, when the seas
diminish, emulate
the octopus, whose
arms grasp the Narrows bridge:
seek out the secret places.

Leaning back, I descend
a driftwood colossus,
wavetorn taproots flailing —
how long they served, how hard
to relinquish one’s defense.

The tang of ocean drops
frozen from the air.

On sand, I turn and see the giant,
angled toward the sea, now
unremarkable; dozens
so fashioned test water. And I

cannot decide if they are winter sunbathers
or skiffs readying themselves for the sea.

Copyright © 2006 by William Kupinse
From: http://www2.ups.edu/faculty/wkupinse/Poems.htm

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Recommended Reading: “Watership Down”

WatershipWatership Down by Richard Adams has been my favorite book since elementary school; I read it every couple years and get more out of it every time.

-Library Student Staff

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Consider a Career in Libraries/Archives/Special Collections! April 17, 5:30 p.m., Collins Library

career

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