Month: October 2013

Quicksilver Times

The Quicksilver Times was a Washington, D.C. based underground newspaper that published somewhat sporadically from 1969 until 1972.  Founded by Terry Becker Jr. wrote in support of civil rights, feminism and gay rights.[1] Additionally the paper supported communist movements as seen in the edition highlighted in this post with a quote from Mao Zedong and an ad for the National Liberation Front in Vietnam on the back cover.

Quicksilver was also the subject of a CIA investigation during its run. [2]

There are only a handful of copies of the Quicksilver Times in the Hall Hoag Collection Part II.

Quicksilver Times Cover (December 1970)

Quicksilver Times Cover (December 1970)

Quicksilver Times Back Cover (December 1970)

Quicksilver Times Back Cover (December 1970)


[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quicksilver_Times

[2] http://la.indymedia.org/news/2007/05/198569_comment.php

Chicago Seed

The Chicago Seed was an underground newspaper founded by Don Lewis and Earl Segal in the Old Town neighborhood of Chicago and was printed from 1967 to 1973.  The Seed, edited for years by Abe Peck, was a member of the Underground Press Syndicate.[1] Although the paper was far left leaning, it was known for its independence and impartiality on left wing issues, not subscribing to a particular ideology, which was unusual for the time. Along with political commentary and editorials “it featured freeform poetry, music and movie reviews, reports on area rock concerts, and a fairly detailed Dope on Dope listing of the current street prices of drugs like LSD, marijuana and hashish.”[2]

 

The addition highlight in this post was printed following the 1968 National Democratic Convention and depicts a pig in a Chicago Police uniform and Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley’s face.

Chicago Seed Cover (September 1968)

Chicago Seed Cover (September 1968)

Chicago Seed Back Cover (September 1968)

Chicago Seed Back Cover (September 1968)

 


[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Seed_(newspaper)

[2] http://areachicago.org/the-chicago-seed/

Young Americans for Freedom

The Young Americans for Freedom was founded in 1960 and still exists today. Ideologically the group follows the Sharon Statement developed at the home of William F. Buckley in Sharon Connecticut, which emphasizes the importance of free will, the free market, national defense and the importance of the Constitution and the U.S. Government in upholding those principals.

The group was most prominent in the 1960s and past members are a who’s who in the conservative movement including:

There are ~400 items from The Young Americans for Freedom and its main publication The New Guard in the Hall Hoag Collection Part II.

Young Americans For Freedom Pamphlet Cover (1964)

Young Americans For Freedom Pamphlet Cover (1964)

Young Americans For Freedom Pamphlet Inside (1964)

Young Americans For Freedom Pamphlet Inside (1964)

 

 

One, Inc.

One Magazine was published by One, Inc., a gay rights organization founded in 1952 by Antonio Reyes, Martin Block and Dale Jennings in Los Angeles. The group started publishing One Magazine in 1953 making is the first gay rights magazine in the United States. One, Inc. won a law suit against the U.S. Post Office in 1954 after it refused to deliver the magazine on the grounds that it was obscene. Although the magazine is no longer published the organization still exists to create exhibits.[1]

Below are some of the many issues of One in the Hall-Hoag Collection from the 1950s and 1960s.

One Magazine (1950s -1069s)

One Magazine (1950s -1069s)

For more information:

One, Inc. Records at The University of Southern California: http://www.onearchives.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/NEH-Project-Guide-2012.pdf

An Index of One Issues: http://www.tyleralpern.com/one.html

 


[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ONE,_Inc.

End of Year 1 Update

It has been 1 year since I started as the Project Director for the Hall-Hoag grant and we have been able to accomplish a lot over the first year. It has been a very fun and exciting journey so far and I am looking forward to the next two years. Here are some of the year one accomplishments:

Processing: ~60 new boxes were created from unprocessed material. This concluded the work on unprocessed material.

Collation: ~1100 boxes of material were collated. . When first processed materials were arranged alphabetically within each box, but materials from each organization remained scattered across multiple boxes (for example, materials related to the National States’ Rights Party are currently in boxes 2C, 3C, 4B, 7B, 12B, 18B, 21B, 23B, 26B, 29B, etc.). The goal for the collation process is to correlate all materials from an organization, then alphabetize the entirety of Part II so that, for example, the first box begins with “A Call to Resist” and the last box ends with “Zygon”. This is a critical step in processing the collection as it will eliminate the need for researchers to search for an organization in multiple boxes and will improve the ability of staff to guide researchers in use of the collection.

2013-07-31 09.41.43

Hall Hoag Collection At The Library Collections Annex

Research: 1647 organizations have been researched by student assistants. They found a variety of information on the organizations including: locations, exist dates, biographical histories, related archival collections, organization members and variant forms of the organization names.

Outreach: Announcements about the grant have been published on listservs and in printed newsletters. A blog has been created and updated at least once a week outlining the work done on this project and a presentation was giving at the DH:The Next Generation conference.

DH: The Next Generation March 16, 2013

DH: The Next Generation March 16, 2013

Organization Names: We created a list of 35,000 unique organizations in Hall Hoag Part II. To create the organizations list, we started with the inventories that were created when processing the collection, which, when combined, represented about 180,000 lines in an Excel spread sheet. Many of the organizations were repeated throughout the inventory and were weeded out using many automated and manual processes.

EAC-CPF Standards: Throughout the first year of the grant the project team worked to set a standard set of minimum requirements for EAC-CPF records. Since there are 35,000 organizations in the collection and the goal is create an EAC-CPF record for each organization it was important to set a low requirement for data. Also, many of the organizations in the collection are obscure making it difficult to create robust EAC records. It was also important to set standards for the maximum amount of information to be collected. Some organizations are very well known and students/staff working on creating EAC records could easily spend too much time working on one record if standards were not created.

  • Minimum Requirements:
    • All Control fields
    • Organization name
    • One exist date
    • Location – to the state level at least
  • Maximum Requirements (in addition to the minimum fields):
    • Biographical history
    • List of past members (founders)
    • List of all variant forms of the organization name
    • List of related archival collections
    • List of all geographic locations

EAC-CPF Tool: A tool was built using FileMaker Pro to create EAC-CPF records. The tool has been customized to automatically export valid EAC-CPF records for each organization based on the data that is entered. Fields include name, name authority, locations, dates, members, related archival collections and more.  This tool will greatly increase the efficiency of creating EAC-CPF records. No coding will have to be done by staff at Brown. Students can be trained on how to enter data into FileMaker much more easily than they can be trained on EAC-CPF. This will allow more people to contribute to the creation of EAC-CPF records. The tool can also “export all” records in one batch. This allows us to make a wholesale change to the EAC-CPF coding (if there was a mistake, or an update needed). Rather than going through each record and making changes, they can be made and then exported for each record in a batch.

Hall Hoag Database

Hall Hoag Database

 

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