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Archive for July, 2009

Upcoming Brand Names and Trademarks Presentation

Brand Names and Trademarks Presentation Flyer

Wednesday, August 5th, 6:30PM
Bluebonnet Regional Branch Library
9200 Bluebonnet Boulevard

Does your business have a unique name, brand or logo that you would like to protect? Attendees will learn about the application process and how to navigate the USPTO website and develop an effective trademark search strategy. Justin Ourso, trademark attorney at Jones Walker Law Firm will present to answer audience questions.

Please email Alexis Carrasquel at acarrasq@lsu.edu
or call 578-4680 to register for the workshop.

You can also register online at:
http://www.lib.lsu.edu/sci/ptdl/workshopregistration.htm

Special Collections: Manuscripts Now Cataloged Online

As of June 30, 2009, Special Collections completed cataloging of all the manuscript collections in the Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections, which was previously only cataloged in the paper card catalog located at Hill Memorial Library. As a result, Special Collections’ manuscript holdings are now more accessible not only in our local catalog, iLink, but also through the union database WorldCat, which scholars around the world may access. Links to online finding aids are included in the records.

The Library stopped adding cards to the card catalog in the early 1990s, when collections began to be entered into the online catalog instead  . Manuscripts processing staff chipped away at the task of adding the information from the paper file to the OPAC, but no programmatic effort to recon the old card catalog was made until June of 2006, when Special Collections Cataloger Hans Rasmussen was hired. Rasmussen focused his efforts on the project; Cataloger Joseph Nicholson and Luana Henderson, Library Associate in Manuscripts Processing, also contributed. Together they added approximately 1,839 records, bringing the total number of historical manuscript collections described in the online catalog to 4,414, which represents all of Special Collections’ processed manuscript holdings.

Click here to access the catalog.

LSU Libraries Receives Grant to Digitize Louisiana Newspapers

Newspaper

Louisiana Newspaper WebIndex

The LSU Libraries’ Special Collections division has been awarded a grant of $351,380 from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to digitize 100,000 pages of Louisiana newspapers published from 1860 through 1922. The newspapers digitized during this two-year grant will be freely available via the Library of Congress’s “Chronicling America” website.

The project builds on more than 60 years of work done by LSU Libraries staff to preserve Louisiana history by microfilming the state’s newspapers of record. Today, Special Collections continues to produce archival-quality microfilm for 90 Louisiana newspapers that are not commercially filmed. As a result of the grant, microfilm will be digitized, and the images will be processed using optical character recognition software to create full-text searchable files that will be made available by the Library of Congress.

“People from every walk of life use our historical newspapers on microfilm,” said Elaine Smyth, head of Special Collections and co-director of the project with Gina Costello, Digital Services Librarian. “Having free, keyword-searchable access via the Internet will be a big step forward for our users. We’re excited to be able to begin adding Louisiana’s newspapers to the Chronicling America project.” An Advisory Board made up of twelve scholars, educators, archivists, and librarians known for their expertise in Louisiana history will help select which newspaper titles will be digitized in this initial project, which will end in June 2011.

As of June 2009, the Chronicling America website (http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/) hosts more than 1 million pages of historic American newspapers. “Newspapers are the most important printed record of the history of our country at the local, state and national level. Now in a single search, users can dive into a million pages on the Chronicling America webpage and surface at the pages that contain the history of our past in real time,” said Henry Snyder, former dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at LSU and now Project Director for the California Digital Newspaper Project, University of California at Riverside, during an event held in Washington on June 16 to celebrate passing the million-page mark.

LSU’s project co-director Gina Costello noted that collaboration is a key element of the project. “Fifteen states have already participated in the National Digital Newspaper Program, and they are all ready to help the seven new states that will be joining the program this year. We can pool our knowledge to make the project work better and more efficiently.” Carole Watson, Acting Chairman, National Endowment for the Humanities, agrees, adding that the Chronicling America project also “builds on more than twenty years of collaboration between the NEH and LC to preserve and make accessible the content of millions of pages of historically important American newspapers, first by microfilming and now by digitization.”

NEH has designated LSU’s project as a “We the People” project. “The goal of the ‘We the People’ initiative is to encourage and strengthen the teaching, study, and understanding of American history and culture,” said Watson. “I anticipate that [LSU's] project will contribute significantly to this effort.”