Buscar
Resultados de la búsqueda
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Tema:
Southwestern Junior College (Keene, Tex.)
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Tema:
Southwestern Junior College (Keene, Tex.)
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Tema:
Southwestern Junior College (Keene, Tex.)
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Tema:
Keene Industrial Academy (Texas)
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Tema:
Southwestern Junior College (Keene, Tex.)
- Source:
Center for Adventist Research
-
- Item contents:
- ... THE ADVENTIST HERITAGE CENTER, AND A TRIBUTE TO ITS FIRST CURATOR AUSS has periodically published articles dealing with rare source materials in the Adventist Heritage Center in the James White Library of Andrews University. The immediately preceding article in this issue is the latest example, and more will be forthcoming. The purpose of the present brief note is to describe in very general terms the history and nature of the Center and to give tribute to the person who, more than anyone else, has made the Center a true archive and depository for a substantial quantity of rare and irreplaceable materials. This is Louise Dederen, whose service as curator spanned a quarter of a century, from 1966 to 1991. The AUSS editorial staff owes her a debt of gratitude for the assistance she has given us on numerous occasions. LOUISE DEDEREN --------------------------- 108 SEMINARY STUDIES While the Seminary was located in Washington, DC (prior to its two-stage move to Berrien Springs in 1959 and 1960), various materials pertaining to Adventist history and heritage were collected and a number of other valuable items acquired. Included in the latter category are two tracts by Martin Luther dated 1520, which had been purchased for the Seminary by LeRoy Edwin Froom during the 1940s. In the early 1960s the accumulation of rare documents was significantly increased, and although such materials were placed in the James White Library (mainly in a small closet-like "heritage" room in the basement), the Library had no proper "special collections" section. Nor was there any efficient procedure for making the resources available to qualified readers and researchers. A growing concern over this situation led the University administration in 1966 to develop the small basement quarters into a "Heritage-Room" archive which would be open to the public. Mrs. Mary Jane Mitchell, the Library Director, hired Mrs. Dederen to take charge of organizing the materials and enlarging the holdings. : For more than a decade this facility was indeed a "room," for aside from a limited amount of additional space for stacks, storage, and display cabinets, all functions of the new archive were cared for in just one room. Not only did Mrs. Dederen make the operations of this room very efficient in spite of the cramped conditions, but she also exercised an extraordinary capacity for reaching out to acquire further valuable materials—so much so, in fact, that there was a phenomenal growth in the resources. Although during its first decade of existence, the archive obtained a limited amount of additional space, the need for a substantial amount of further space soon became serious, even desperate. Fortunately, when the library building was enlarged in 1978, the facility benefited by having its floor space more than doubled (from 1,639 square feet to 4,089 square feet). Modest further expansion occurred during the next several years, including the addition of a 21-by- 20-foot room made available when the Institute of Archaeology and the Archaeological Museum (now the Horn Archaeological Museum) moved, in 1982, to a three-story building more appropriate for its varied functions. In 1987, the Heritage Room was appropriately renamed the "Adventist Heritage Center." This Center, currently occupies a 5,195-square-foot section on the basement floor of the James White Library’s south wing. Now sufficiently spacious to accommodate a variety of operations, the Center has a reception and office area; several display areas; expanded quarters for document files, and for regular stacks that now include two units of electrically movable compact shelving; a 770-square-foot fireproof vault --------------------------- 110 SEMINARY STUDIES decision was reached to assemble in the Center a complete set of Ph.D, ThD., and Ed.D. dissertations written by students in those schools. Although the James White Library has copies of such dissertations in various other locations, this is its only location where a complete set is available in the same place. Also kept in the Center are numerous lesser theses, research projects, and research papers covering a wide array of topics in religion, education, social studies, the humanities, the history of religions, and missiology. | Reference must be made here to Mrs. Dederen’s valiant effort to secure collections that are as complete as possible of published works by Andrews University faculty, an endeavor in which she fared especially well with regard to teachers in the areas of special interest to AUSS. During her tenure she also brought together the largest extant collection of Adventist hymnals and enhanced the Center’s visual-aid holdings. Among the latter is a set of more than 500 color slides of Reformation sites prepared by Jacques Frei, Mrs. Dederen’s brother-in-law, who resides in Switzerland and is an especially knowledgeable and experienced guide for Reformation tours. Since her retirement on July 1, 1991 (concurrently with that of her husband, Dr. Raoul Dederen, as Seminary Dean and Professor of Systematic Theology), Louise Dederen’s successor, Jim Ford, has continued the work that she began. To him, too, we owe a debt of gratitude for his help to, and support of, AUSS. We thank him especially for the assistance that he has given for the current issue of AUSS by making readily available, on several occasions, the three Saur Bibles featured in the preceding article. In closing, I must reiterate that Mrs. Dederen’s achievements during her twenty-five years of pioneer service as curator of the Heritage Room and of its successor, the Adventist Heritage Center, are immeasurable. Ford reports that even in the year of her retirement, she spent a great deal of time in the "collecting and partial organization of personal collections and other miscellaneous series of records" (from Ford's Adventist-Heritage-Center "Annual Report" for 1991). Shortly before her retirement, her outstanding work was given special recognition when, on February 24, 1991, she received the John Nevins Andrews Medallion, the University’s highest faculty award for academic excellence and noteworthy service. We at AUSS are deeply indebted to Louise Dederen for the outstanding service that she has rendered to our journal. In my own behalf and in behalf of the editorial staffs, both past and present, who have so richly benefited from her quarter of a century of curatorship of the special collections of the James White Library, I say "Congratulations, Louise," and "Many, many, many THANKS." Kenneth A. Strand --------------------------- HERITAGE CENTER AND TRIBUTE TO LOUISE DEDEREN 109 containing two further units of electrically movable compact shelving; and a reading room that presently has eight carrels, five desks, and a large reading table. The display facilities include the George B. Suhrie Bible Room, which is used for displays of various Bibles and other religious publications (from among the items in a large Bible collection donated by Suhrie himself, and from among similar materials provided by other donors or acquired by purchase). Another room houses a number of artifacts having special importance in Adventist history (such as the sextant and the two-volume log-book from the ship Pitcairn, a vessel used in the nineteenth century for missionary work in the South Pacific), and a collection of Adventist evangelistic advertisements, props, etc., spanning some 150 years. Among items of considerable general interest (in addition to the materials already mentioned) are several extremely valuable Bibles or Bible sections, such as those donated by Dr. Chester J. Gibson from his Wurker Collection (see the opening paragraph of the preceding article in this issue of AUSS), and an excellent copy of the complete first part of the first edition of Martin Luther’s German translation of the OT (the Pentateuch, 1523). The latter was received as a gift from Mr. and Mrs. James C. Trefz of Silver Spring, Maryland, who subsequently also provided most of the funds for the purchase of a collection of some forty Reformation-era tracts (more than half of them by Luther and the rest by his contemporaries). Further items of interest are a copy of the first Dutch edition of the proceedings of the Council of Dort, which I had been able to secure, and three volumes of a four-volume Latin Bible containing Nicholas de Lyra’s commentary, and published in Strassburg in 1492. Among the Center’s other holdings of considerable importance are a substantial collection of books, pamphlets, magazine and newspaper clippings, etc., on "Women in Church and Society," which was provided, and is continually updated, by Leona Glidden Running, Seminary Professor Emerita of Biblical Languages; and collections of source documents, such as those accumulated by LeRoy Edwin Froom in preparing his massive four-volume Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers (Washington, DC: Review and Herald, 1946-1954). In addition, the Center has issues of almost all Adventist periodicals printed in numerous printing houses throughout Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, and South America. In many cases, the periodical runs are complete. In the early 1970s, when the Theological Seminary and School of Education of Andrews University began offering doctoral programs, a ...
- Creador:
Strand, Kenneth A. (Kenneth Albert), 1927-1997
- Part of:
Adventist University Seminary Studies
- Date:
01/07/1994
-
- Item contents:
- ... Sheila is the Librarian at Burman University, a post she has held for ten years. Previously she was the Access Librarian at Walla Walla University and then the assistant librarian at Burman. Working in a small institution, she has the opportunity fill a variety of roles in addition to administration. She has been a teacher of information literacy throughout her career and this is her research interest. My life can basically be summed up in three small phrases: books, sheet music, and a cup of coffee. A future music reference librarian from Puerto Rico, | love libraries, museums, and coffee shop hopping (local of course). My curls are my crowning glory. | currently live in Boston where | go to Simmons University in pursuit of my MS degree in Library and Information Science. | also work at the reference desk at Beatley Library, Simmons University. | aspire to work as a reference librarian in a Music Library and (someday) work myself into becoming Library Director. --------------------------- Norah Mauti is a Librarian at Adventist University of Africa in Nairobi, Kenya. She has worked in both public and academic libraries since 1987. She joined Judith Thomas Library at Adventist University of Africa in 2011. She holds a Master of Science in Library and Information Science and a Degree in Library and Information Science from Moi University in Kenya. Her research interests are: library management, information literacy skills, library information resources marketing, outcome assessment of library services and digital libraries. Her hobbies are reading, traveling, and cooking. Sabrina Riley has a BA in history from Andrews University and a Master of Information and Library Studies from the University of Michigan. During a nearly twenty-year career as a librarian, she honed her research skills and practiced historical and genealogical research. She is particularly interested in family narratives and the important role these stories play in transmitting family values, building self-esteem, and strengthening family bonds. Her areas of expertise include families and topics related to Nebraska, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and the Seventh-day Adventist Church. --------------------------- WEDNESDAY 8:00am 9:00-Noon Noon-1:00pm 1:00-4:00pm 4:00-4:30pm 4:30-6:00pm 6:00-7:30pm June 26, 2019 Bus departs the hotel Courtyard Marrictt parking lot Tour of the Library of Congress Capitol Hill This tour goes behind-the-scenes in the Library of Congress Jefferson Building and includes a visit to the LOC digitization center. LUNCH LOC Cafeteria or NMA museum cafeteria Explore the National Mall and Smithsonians National Mall Enjoy three hours of free time to visit the historic sites and museums along the National Mall at your leisure. Return to the bus Location to he announced The bus departs for Union Station at 4:30. Dinner at Union Station 50 Massachusetts Ave NE, Waoshingron, DC 26002 Grab dinner at historic Union Station. The bus departs for Maryland at 6:00; please board before 6:00. Bus returns to the hotel Pe. ; . : s Courtyard Marrictr parking fot The bus arrives back at the hotel around 7:30. --------------------------- President: Lori Curtis President-elect: Katharine Van Arsdale Past President: Per Lisle Secretary: Heather Rodriguez-James (2017-2019) Interim Treasurer: Lori Curtis ASDAL Action Editor: Neal Smith (2018-2020) David Trim - Chair Ashlee Chism Roy Kline Rowena Moore Reiko Davis Katharine Van Arsdale - President-elect, Chair Ashlee Chism - On-site Coordinator Lori Curtis - ASDAL Interim Treasurer --------------------------- Welcome to the 39th Annual Conference of the Association of Seventh-day Adventist Librarians. | know that we all enjoy the opportunity the ASDAL conferences afford us to come together and interact with colleagues from both near and far. | hope that in addition to catching up with colleagues and friends, we all engage with the program, the presenters, the topic. | hope we all take something away from this conference that will help make us better librarians and archivists, something that will expand our professional horizons while bringing us closer to our ASDAL colleagues. Katharine Van Arsdale, Ashlee Chism, and others have planned a stellar conference for us. It has been exciting watching these younger colleagues take on new roles, reaching for the stars. Our future is in good hands! At the end of this conference, after a week of professional, personal, and spiritual enrichment, while it is always bittersweet to say goodbye, | know that | can with confidence pass on the torch of leadership to Katy and the rest of the incoming ASDAL officers. --------------------------- 1:00-2:30pm 2:30-2:45pm 2:45-3:30pm 3:30pm ARMS Workshop, Round Il: "What do | do with this box of stuff?" Takoma Fark Room This is a practical, hands-on workshop that demonstrates methods and reasoning behind archival processing. The workshop is hosted by the Archives & Records Management Section chair, Ashlee Chism. It is free to attend. BREAK Laserfiche demonstration Takoma Park Room Kenrie Hylton, Digital Records Manager for ASTR, gives an overview of the Laserfiche platform and a demonstration of the core features as it relates to electronic records management. End of concurrent programming Return to General Conference meeting room 21-13-14 --------------------------- 1:15-2:00pm 2:00-2:45pm The Judith Thomas Library recently established the African Adventist Heritage Museum to help future generations understand and appreciate their church history and culture, and take pride in the achievements of their forbearers. The museum aims to document, educate, inspire, and motivate its audience. Adventist University of Africa librarian Norah Mauti tells the story of starting the museum. She shares the aims behind its mission and expresses hopes for the museum's future. Through a survey of existing literature, interviews with museum founders, and reference to church writings, Mauti's presentation shows the value of collecting and preserving the past history of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Africa. At Andrews University, Marianne Kordas wears many hats--music librarian, archivist, scholar. This presentation explores a multi-year project that allowed Kordas to engage all of her skills. Towards the end of her life, twentieth-century American composer, pianist, and pedagogue Dr. Blythe Owen gifted two sets of materials fo Andrews University. Now housed in the Center for Adventist Research, over the years Collection 186 has grown to include many letters, books, musical scores, and musical manuscripts of various provenances related to Owen and her work. --------------------------- Dr. Hilary Dickerson studied U.S. History at Washington State University, earning her PhD in 2011. She currently teaches at Walla Walla University, but has also worked at Pacific Union College, where she chaired the History Department. Her areas of research interest include: cultural exchanges between Japan and the U.S. from the 1920s-1950s, particularly focused on the lives on Nobuo Tatsuguchi and B.P. Hoffman; Twentieth Century American History; Japan, particularly from the Meiji-Era to the American Occupation; America during World War Il and the Cold War; and US foreign policy. Her hobbies are plentiful, but she particularly enjoys family, travel, literature, camping, and cooking. | was born in Angwin, CA and stayed there most of my life, attending all the Pacific Union College schools, until | finally left to attend graduate school at San Diego State University and Simmons College. After finishing two Master's degrees, | worked at the University of Redlands as a Reference Librarian. | came back to NorCal and held a variety of jobs including project archivist, high school librarian, museum assistant, and adjunct professor of English. In 2017 | began my current position as Access Services Librarian at PUC, where | supervise somewhere between 8 and 10 student workers at the circulation desk and teach library instruction, amongst “other duties as assigned.” My hobbies include writing, saying | read but actually watching too much television, and ballroom dancing. --------------------------- Talea Anderson's poster presents outcomes from the Affordable Learning Project—an effort funded by a Student Success Seed Grant at Washington State University (WSU) that aimed to increase use of low- to zero-cost course materials in university courses. As part of the project, five WSU faculty members received funds to revise their courses in summer 2017 to include low-cost resources for instruction in fall 2017. All five opted to adopt or create open educational resources (OER), or educational materials that are openly licensed and freely available to students. Following instruction in the fall, project leads documented cost savings for students and learning outcomes in the affected courses, including grades and rates of withdrawal. The poster will present these outcomes as a means of assessing the effectiveness of directing university funding toward creation and adaption of OER. Talea Anderson currently works as a Scholarly Communication Librarian at Washington State University (WSU). In this capacity, she pursues a variety of projects that endeavor to increase access to university research. These include managing the university's institutional repository, coordinating a small-grants project to increase use of open educational resources (OER), and encouraging faculty and students to use tools such as ORCID identifiers. --------------------------- Christy Scott is the Education Services librarian at Peterson Memorial Library where she coordinates information literacy in general studies and senior research classes. She holds a Master's degree in Information Science and Learning Technologies from the University of Missouri and a B.S. in Elementary Education from Union College. Her professional interests include technology in libraries, children’s literature and services, and media and information literacy. During her time at Walla Walla University she has been involved in collection management, reference services, interlibrary loan, and information literacy and currently serves as a liaison to several departments, including Education. Neal Smith is the Scholarly Communications and Digital Services Librarian at AdventHealth University. He specializes in copyright education and electronic systems. He builds and maintains digital research platforms for the R.A. Williams Library, supports faculty scholarship, and answers research and reference questions. Prior to joining the faculty at AHU, Neal worked as an intern at the U.S. Copyright Office and a legal reference librarian at the Western New England University School of Law. Neal has an MS in Library and Information Science from Simmons College and a JD from the University of New Hampshire School of Law, where he served as notes editor for IDEA: The Intellectual Property Law Review. Neal's current research interests include copyright in academic and medical settings, plagiarism, and information ethics. --------------------------- 2:00-2:45pm 2:45-3:00pm 3:00-3:30pm Numerous studies in large universities have repeatedly found that librarians are rarely students’ first choice of information assistance (Thomas, Tewell, & Wilson 2017; Van Kampen-Breit and Cooke, 2015; Miller & Murillo 2012). In such institutions, structures are not necessarily in place to facilitate librarian-student contact (Miller and Murillo, 2012). Consequently, students are largely unaware of librarians’ expertise to support their academic success and less likely to approach them. (Bickley and Corrall, 2011). Small universities provide greater opportunity for librarian- student contact. This changes the dynamic of interaction. Based on three years of survey data, Burman University librarian Sheila Clark and her co-authors propose the following sequence as a chain of events that shift perception of the librarian and eventually results in greater IL competence and academic success for students: librarian-student interaction influences the perception of librarians as competent, which in turn increases the students’ use of library resources and services. ASDAL President Lori Curtis leads the first business session of the 39th annual ASDAL conference. --------------------------- 8:15-8:45am 8:45-9:00am 9:00-9:45am 9:45-10:00am Guest speaker: Rowena Moore Shane MacDonald is Special Collections Archivist at the American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives (ACUA), in northwest Washington, D.C. In his keynote address to ASDAL, MacDonald will speak to the conference theme of "Librarians Outside Libraries." The Catholic University of America Archives faces many challenges in balancing its limited resources with its vast array of patrons - from campus administrators and students to visiting researchers and religious orders. With backgrounds in history, education, and marketing, the staff began to experiment both in and outside the reading room with how to proactively use their collections and skills as teaching tools. Bringing a pedagogical approach to reference, outreach, and administrative operations, MacDonald found new ways to engage and learn from stakeholders and patrons, while also incorporating his professional experiences from outside the archives. During the break, enjoy a slideshow looking back on a decade of D. Glenn Hilts scholarship recipients. --------------------------- 11:30-Noon Noon-1:00pm 1:00-1:30pm The Weimar Institute Library exists to support the mission of the Institute: to develop leaders in comprehensive health evangelism. Toward this end the Library provides resources for research, assistance with research, and a space for quiet study and reflection. Joel Lutes will report on his work in the Weimar Institute Library, touching on the role the library played in Weimar's recent accreditation through the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) Senior College and University Commission. Within the North American Division more than half of PreK-12 schools will have no more than three teachers on their staff. Teacher training includes how to teach Physical Education, Music, and Art, but despite evidence supporting the importance of libraries to student outcomes, no courses covering library or school media center skills are offered. Christy Scott's presentation presents supporting evidence for library training for Education students. She shares ways that building liaison relationships with Education Faculty at Walla Walla University has opened opportunities within existing coursework, and she suggests possibilities for future research. --------------------------- 1:00-4:00pm 4:00-8:00pm 7:30-92:00am 8:00-8:20am 8:20-8:45am 8:45-9:00am This is a practical, hands-on workshop that demonstrates methods and reasoning behind archival processing. The workshop is hosted by the Archives & Records Management Section. It is free to attend. ASDAL and GC folks will warmly greet you with light refreshments at the registration table in the hotel. This is where you pick up your conference name tag and bag or pay for any extra banquet or tour tickets. Guest speaker: GC Secretary G.T. Ng General Conference hosts and ASDAL executives welcome you to the 39th annual ASDAL Conference. ARS Chair Jim Ford introduces the morning program. --------------------------- Noon-1:00pm 1:00-3:30pm 1:00-1:15pm 1:15-2:00pm See orange tabbed pages for Records Management programming offered at this time. Scientific research builds on past work. Scientists should and do reference previous studies in their reports of present research. But do they quote the literature accurately? In general, do cited articles support the propositions for which they are cited? Multiple studies have considered this question of quotation accuracy in medical literature, but quotation accuracy has not been rarely discussed in other disciplines. AdventHealth University librarian Neal Smith will report his initial findings in a study of quotation accuracy for top journals in multidisciplinary sciences (Nature, Science, Nature Communications, Science Advances, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and National Science Review), focusing on amount and nature of any errors. He will also discuss the implications for librarians and begin a conversation about how we can improve our patrons’ use of scientific literature. --------------------------- 2:00-2:45pm 2:45-3:00pm 3:00-4:00pm 4:00-5:00pm 5:00-7:00pm 7:00-10:00pm (continued) This presentation examines the history of the collection and its processing, the significance of Owen's life and documentary legacy, and some of the unorthodox processing choices made to better facilitate research in the collection (as well as some of the archivist's initial mistakes). Far from being a static collection of musty papers, Collection 186 has proven a rich locus for learning about the dynamic interaction between being both the librarian/archivist processing a collection, and the scholar conducting musicological research in it. The Adventist Digital Library team has spent the last eighteen months working on critical platform enhancements. Eric Koester's presentation features a demonstration of new functionality and a discussion of potential future enhancements. Please bring your questions, comments, and ideas to share. The meeting will be chaired by Paulette Johnson. --------------------------- SDA Classification Advisory Committee Lori Curtis (2016-2019), Chair Adorée Hatton (2018-2021) Genevieve Singh (2018-2021) Felipe Tan [Editor, ex officio] Seventh-day Adventist Periodical Index Advisory Committee Lawrence Onsager [Library Director of Host Institution, ex officio], Chair Paulette McLean Johnson (2014-2019) Shelia Clark (2016-2021) Carolyn Gaskell (2017-2022) Jim Ford (2016-2021) [ADL Liasion], Secretary Shan Tamares [Loma Linda University Library Director, ex officio] Lori Curtis [ASDAL President, ex officio] Site Planning Committee Paulette McLean Johnson (2016-2019) Norah Mauti (2018-2021) Chapters African Chapter General Coordinator: Clara Okoro (2017-2018) Inter-American Chapter General Coordinator: Keisha Brown-Dixon Other chapters currently inactive. See www.ASDAL.org for more information and listings of inactive or unfilled positions. --------------------------- David Trim was born in Bombay, India, to missionary parents and spent his childhood in Sydney, Australia. Educated in Australia and England, he earned a BA in history from Newbold College and PhD in history from King's College in London. Trim was on the faculty of Newbold College for a decade, and held the Walter C. Utt Chair in History at Pacific Union College. He has also held visiting fellowships at the Huntington Library, the Folger Shakespeare Library, the UC Berkeley, and the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. In 2003 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. A prolific author, Trim has edited or co-edited ten books, and his other publications include over 150 articles and chapters in scholarly journals, popular magazines, and books. He has served as Director of the Office of Archives, Statistics, and Research since 2010. Katharine Van Arsdale is the Archivist and Special Collections Librarian for the Pacific Union College Library and the Walter C. Utt Center for Adventist History. In addition to her library and archives work, Katharine occasionally teaches in the PUC History Department. Before coming to PUC in 2015, she worked for 3 years as a research librarian in Washington, DC. With an MA in History and an MSLS in Library Science from the Catholic University of America, Katharine especially enjoys researching local history and bringing it to life. She is a member of the Society of American Archivists, Society of California Archivists, and, of course ASDAL. This year she has the honor of being ASDAL's President-elect. --------------------------- 9:00-9:45am 9:45-10:00am 10:00-10:30am 10:30-11:00am 11:00-Noon Benjamin Philip Hoffman was an Adventist missionary to Japan, a professor, a librarian, and an Office of Naval Intelligence agent during World War Il. in this presentation, Walla Walla history professor Dr. Hilary Dickerson discusses how she used archives, special collections, and libraries to trace his life in Japan and the United States. Kenrie Hylton gives a walkthrough of a model workflow for digitizing records, based on ASTR's current digitization work. He will overview the process and steps involved from accepting records to having them ultimately securely stored in digital form. Accreditation is a quality assurance process through which a record-keeping facility of the Seventh-day Adventist Church can demonstrate that it meets the minimum record-keeping standards and guidelines recommended by the Office of Archives, Statistics and Research (ASTR). Director Dr. David Trim explains the accreditation process and why it matters. --------------------------- NOTES --------------------------- Shane MacDonald serves as the Special Collections Archivist at the American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives (ACUA). He attended Oberlin College and Catholic University, where he earned a BA in History and Politics and a MA in History, respectively. He is currently a doctoral candidate in History at Catholic University. He began his archival career volunteering at the Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer archives in Grand Island, Nebraska, and later, the American Red Cross National headquarters archives in Washington, D.C. He has been with the ACUA since 2012, serving first as a student employee and then staff member. Eric Anderson holds a Ph.D. in history from the University of Chicago. In addition to 30 years of teaching at PUC and nine years of administration at Southwestern Adventist University, he has been a Fulbright lecturer in Greece and a program officer at the National Endowment for the Humanities. He has written on a variety of historical topics, including Reconstruction in North Carolina, philanthropic support of black education, and Progressive Era vice reform. His most recent publication is a chapter in the Oxford University Press study of Ellen Harmon White: American Prophet. He and his wife, Loretta, currently reside in Angwin, California. --------------------------- 10:00-10:30am 10:30-11:00am 11:00-11:30am As part of the incoming generation of new information professionals, Adaliz Cruz addresses the issue of succession in the field of Adventist librarianship. Cruz describes the personal journey that led her to choose librarianship as a career, and she offers suggestions on how to find, engage, and support future prospective Library and Information professionals. Allison Fox reflects on what she has learned while managing students. She ponders why library school does little to prepare librarians to train workers or wrangle schedules. Talking points also include the art of diplomacy (i.e., when to comfort and when to kick it up a notch) and dealing with payroll. Neal Smith presents a case study of his experience becoming an embedded librarian in the Center for Population Health Research at AdventHealth University. Neal tells how he developed the relationship with the center, what roles he has played, and the lessons he has learned. He also shares his plans for the Center's future and with other groups on the AdventHealth University campus. --------------------------- THURSDAY Or), continued 1:45-2:45pm 2:45-3:15pm 3:15-3:30pm 3:30-4:15pm 4:15-5:15pm 6:00-9:00pm Break Out Sessions Meeting locations will be announced. Choose from the following: Archives & Special Collections; Directors; Reference and Public Services; Technical Services. Break Out Sessions Report General Conference Meeting Koom 2) 13.14 Panel Discussion: “What Makes a Librarian Adventist?” Facilitator: Sabrina Riley - The Family Archivist, VA Panel Members: Johanna Bjork - Lewis-Clark State College, ID Dustin Kelley - North Park University, IL Joel Lutes - Information Services Consultant, CA Kendra Perry - Hagerstown Community College, MD ASDAL Business Session ll Banquet Pant oT Lf . Ta 4 ; Ceneral Centerence Cofeteria --------------------------- 9:00-92:30am 9:30-10:00am 10:00-10:15am 10:15-10:30am 10:30-11:30am 11:30-Noon Noon-1:00pm 1:00-1:15pm Accession records play an invaluable role in tracking ownership and giving context to archival records. But what about library donations? And why do we need any records at all? Katharine Van Arsdale proposes some answers based on experiences in the Pacific Union College archives. Dr. Eric Anderson is both a historian and the director of Pacific Union College's Walter C. Utt Center for Adventist Research. How does he reconcile those two roles and get his hands dirty in the archives on a daily basis? Find out here. Kenrie Hylton facilitates a round table discussion of Records Managers problem-solving and brainstorming, with input from librarians, archivists, historians, and others. --------------------------- NOTES --------------------------- NOTES --------------------------- NOTES --------------------------- Eric Koester is the Digital Systems Manager of the Adventist Digital Library and holds a BA degree from Southern Adventist University. He has over fifteen years’ experience in software design and development with specialized experience in the print and digital publishing industry. He recently served for seven years as a bi-vocational pastor in Canada before returning to Berrien Springs, Michigan, to take up his role with the Adventist Digital Library. He has a lifelong passion for church history, especially the spread of the Advent movement in Europe and America prior to 1844. Marianne Kordas currently serves as the Director of the Music Materials Center for the James White Library at Andrews University in Berrien Springs, MI. She holds an undergraduate degree in music with an emphasis in violin performance and minors in French, German, and English studies. Her graduate studies in musicology and music librarianship were undertaken at the University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee. During this time, she also took course work in archival studies, performing a summer internship for the Ward Irish Music Archives and going on a multi-week study tour to Edinburgh, Scotland. Marianne is passionate about student mentorship as well as embedded librarianship. A strong believer in the French concept of la bonne vie, Marianne likes to garden, cook, hike, read, draw whimsical sketches, and have a good laugh with friends. --------------------------- Executive Committee President: Lori Curtis President-elect: Katy Van Arsdale Past President: Per Lisle Secretary: Heather Rodriguez-James (2017-2019) Interim Treasurer: Lori Curtis ASDAL Action Editor: Neal Smith (2018-2020) asdaleasdal.org Coordinators Membership Coordinator: Adorée Hatton (2018-2020) Publicity Coordinator: Allison Fox (2018-2020) School Library Section Coordinator: Petra Duersch Web Site Coordinator: Gerald Rezes (2018-2020) Adventist Library Information Cooperative (ALICE) Council Volunteer Staff: ALICE Chair: Paulette McLean Johnson, Oakwood University College (Alabama, USA) (2018-2019) ALICE Project Manager: Carolyn Gaskell, Walla Walla University (Washington, USA) (2018-2020) ALICE Treasurer: Lawrence Onsager, Andrews University (Michigan, USA) (2018-2020) ALICE Secretary: Per Lisle, Newbold College of Higher Education (United Kingdom) (2018-2021) --------------------------- Deborah Armentrout, a Certified Records Manager (CRM), has been working in records and information management for over 25 years. Deborah is a founding member of the CRM /Federal Specialist sub- Committee which developed the qualifications, test standards, and outreach for this additional CRM designation. As a member of ARMA International for over 20 years, she has served on the ARMA Metro Maryland Board as President, Vice President, Education Director, Institute of Certified Records Managers (ICRM) Liaison, Newsletter Editor and is currently Communications Director. Employed with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), she is Director of Corporate Records Management and serves as the Agency Records Officer. When not consumed with records and information management, she relaxes with arts and crafts, gardens (weeds), and occasionally rides her Harley-Davidson motorcycle. Ashlee Chism earned a BA in English from Southern Adventist University and a Master of Science in Information, specializing in Archives and Records Management, from the University of Michigan. Previously, she was a student librarian at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. She has written several articles and is a member of the Society of American Archivists and ARMA International. --------------------------- Members: Adventist International Institute of Advanced Studies (Philippines) - Megumi Flores Adventist University of Health Sciences (Florida, USA) - Deanna Flores Andrews University (Michigan, USA) - Lawrence Onsager Asia-Pacific International University (Thailand) - Damian Gingijil Burman University (Canada) - Sheila Clark Friedensau Adventist University (Germany) - Raul Cervantes Helderberg College (South Africa) - Gail Geduld La Sierra University (California, USA) - Jeffery de Vries Loma Linda University (California, USA) - Shan Tamares Newbold College of Higher Education (United Kingdom) - Per Lisle Oakwood University (Alabama, USA) - Paulette McLean Johnson Pacific Union College (California, USA) - Patrick Benner Southern Adventist University (Tennessee, USA) - Deyse Bravo-Rivera Southwestern Adventist University (Texas, USA) - Cristina Thomsen Union College (Nebraska, USA) - Melissa Hortemiller Walla Walla University (Washington, USA) - Carolyn Gaskell Washington Adventist University (Maryland, USA) - Don Essex Weimar Institute (California, USA) - Maryann Krueger Adventist Resources Working Committee Jim Ford (2017-2020), Chair Adorée Hatton (2016-2019) Alan Hecht (2017-2020) Michelle Rojas (2018-2021) Katharine Van Arsdale (2016-2019) --------------------------- Kenrie Hylton began his career at his Alma Mater, Northern Caribbean University (NCU) in Jamaica, where he earned a BSc in Information Science. Here he served in a number of information technology based roles including being the Chair for the Computer & Information Sciences Department. He earned an M.Sc. degree in Applied Computer Science from Columbus State University, and a PhD in Information Systems from Nova Southeastern University. He joined the Office of Archives, Statistics, and Research in 2015 as the Digital Records Manager. Roy Kline has an undergraduate degree in business administration and a graduate degree in hospital management. Having worked within private sector healthcare administration for 25 years, he accepted a call to the mission field of the Southern Asia SDA and served six years as CEO of Scheer Memorial Hospital, Kathmandu and Aizawl Adventist Hospital, Mizoram, India. He is a member of the American College of Healthcare Executives, ASDAL, Society of American Archivists, and ARMA International. --------------------------- Archives and Records Management Section Steering Committee Ashlee Chism (2016-2019), Chair Adorée Hatton (2018-2021) Alan Hecht (2017-2020) Roy Kline (2017-2020) Katharine Van Arsdale (2016-2019) Conference Planning Committee - Ex officio or appointed at site library Katharine Van Arsdale - (President-elect), Chair Ashlee Chism - On-site Coordinator Lori Curtis (ASDAL Interim Treasurer) Constitution and Bylaws Committee Darel Bennedbaek (2016-2019), Chair Don Essex (2016-2019) Donald Martin (2017-2020) Lori Curtis [ASDAL President (ex officio)] Lori Curtis [ASDAL Interim Treasurer (ex officio)] Nominating Committee Per Lisle [ASDAL Past President, ex officio) Shelia Clark (2018-2019) Jeffery de Vries (2018-2019) Deanna Flores (2018-2019) Cristina Thomsen (2018-2019) Scholarship and Awards Committee Heather Rodriguez-James (2016-2019), Chair Deyse Bravo (2018-2021) Lori Curtis [ASDAL President, ex officio] Lori Curtis [ASDAL Interim Treasurer (ex officio)] --------------------------- MONDAY - PIII), TUESDAY 3:30-4:15pm 4:15-5:00pm 5:00-7:00pm 7:00-10:00pm TUESDAY Retention Schedules Goneral Conference meeting room 211314 Local ARMA (Association of Records Managers and Administrators) International member Deborah Armentrout shares perspectives on creating and following retention schedules. The Path to Becoming a Records Manager ASTR's Assistant Director, Roy Kline, talks about his journey from a business background to records management. He shares how he learned on the job and what surprising skills have proved useful. DINNER On yous own -restaurants are available near the Courtyard Marriott SDAPI Meeting Courtyard Marriott Meeting Room The meeting will be chaired by Jim Ford. June 25, 2019 8:00-8:30am 8:30-8:45am 8:45-9:00am Worship General Conference meeting room 21-13-14 Guest speaker: Dr. David Trim Announcements Archives & Records Management Section Section Chair Ashlee Chism introduces this year's ARMS programming. ...
- Creador:
Association of Seventh-day Adventist Librarians
- Part of:
39th Annual ASDAL Conference
-
- Item contents:
- ... The Prophecies in a Nutshell arranged in such a manner that the most simple can understand them fOLDING PROPHETIC (HART HEUSTRATING THE PROPH [CIES DANIEL REVELATION TwWRITE THE VISIGN AND MAKE IT PLAIN UPON TABLES SO THAT HE MAY RUN THAT READE TH IF. Every Minister Bible Worker and Christian Home should have One The above is a view of the chart when folded, showing the title-page. Hach worker and every family should have one. And when vou get one, and go through it strictly in order, arrangement does not make you laugh, to let us know your name, if the ingenuity of its please write a postal card A. T. JONES, Battle Creek, Mich. --------------------------- THOU, 0 NING. ART THIS HEAD OF GOLD After Thee Shall Arise ANOTHER KINGDOM INFERIOR TO THEE And Another THIRD KINGDOM OF BRASS Which Shah Bear Rule Over Alt the Earth THE FOURTH KINGDOM STRONG AS IRON THE KINGDOM SHALL BE DIVIDED THESE KINGS | | | i ioe Th Fr The chart as opened to explain Nebuchadnezzar's dream found in Daniel 2. Your chart is a wonderfully ingenious device, and must indeed prove a great help to all Bible workers, M. C. WILCOX, Oakland, Cal. --------------------------- FE AW OF pap | LAW OF wt u WAVES WO | i web py op JEHOVAH PAPACY i : | Wo i ! ' y 1 | | boy ANOTHER UTTLE HORN fos omen wet 3 RN The chart as arranged to show side by side the Taw of God as given by Jehovah and as changed by the Papacy as predicted in Daniel 7: 25. It will carry conviction to the hearts of the learned and the un- learned, for it surely makes the matter plain LEWIS SHEAF, Louisville, Ky. --------------------------- ' " < ETE | JEHOVAH REVE LATION “THE a OBSERVANCE THE BEAST or And Bie Imago and Roceiys His Mask in : hv Forehead or te la Bana THE SAME SHALL DRINK LN D Y or THe wish, OF THE WRATH OF GOD. arias ro BY THE Bs aR SI PROTESTANTS TE - IS AN HOMAGE THEY PAY - INSPITE OF THEMSELVES TG THE AUTHORITY OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. wie ia rovers act mo The chart as arranged to show a quotation from a Catholic work showing how the world is worshiping the beast. Not only will it make the truth impressive upon adults, but it will be valuable in making the prophetic truth plain to the children in our families. DANIEL NETTLETON, Minnesota. --------------------------- at LAW OF (0 : So : WEL nn 0 QWNTICSME), THE SEAL JEHOYAM REVELATION ] 4 so a . ! : BEHOLD | COME , IEEE QUICKLY “prROPH rc \ ' : . OF THIS BOOK ‘ A SEAL In Usb IN CONNECTION WITH , “LAW THAT DEMANDS ) OBEDIENCE Ann Mist Snow THREE POINTS § I . . * The Name of the Giver II. His Right fo Rule i III. ~The Extent of His ¥ | Dominion Chart as arranged to show the symbols of Rev. 12 and 13. Also showing the principles of a seal. I am free to say that it is the most complete and comprehensive of any chart I have ever seen. A. J. BREED, Battle Creek, Mich. 0 --------------------------- Eo THE | NEW FOLDING PROPHETIC CHART Is something so valuable and unique that it must really be seen to be appreciated. Every Seventh- day Adventist minister and Bible worker should secure this latest chart. It consists of fourteen in- side folding plates, gx235 inches. and a neat cloth and morocco cover. These inside folding plates are hinged, and so subdivided that the speaker is able to present one, two, three, or more symbols at a time, making it very convenient. The plates representing the symbols are beauti- fully lithographed in five colors, and represent the highest skill of the best artists. On the outside of the cover will be found a unique arrangement con- sisting of a folding diagram in three parts, outlin- ing the subject of the twenty-three hundred davs. This chart was exhibited to the delegates at the late General Conference at South Lancaster, Mass., by its inventor, Wm. W. Simpson, and many valu- able testimonials were secured for it. Read them $ carefully. Price, $3.00, postpaid. Address your State ‘Tract Society, or MINN NN NS NNN NINN SNL NS NSN SNS NSN NSN NS NS NPN NNN NNN Review & Herald Pub. Co., Battle Creek, Mich. MINI NI NS NS NS NSN SNS NS NS NSIS A --------------------------- THESE GREAT BEASTS Which are Four ARE FOUR KINGS (OR KINGDOMS) WHICH SHALL ARISE OUT OF THE EARTH THE FOURTH BEAST FALL uF in FOURTH KINGDOM UFON EARTH And the Ten Horns out of This Kingdem arc TEN KINGS THAT SHALL ARISE And Another Shall Rise After Them, and He Shall Be Diverse from the First, and IT WAS DIVERSE To Bb wh WIRE EL HE SHALL SUBDUE THREE KINGS TEN HORNS. The chart as folded to explain Daniel's vision of the four beasts recorded nn Daniel 7 1 do not see how it could be excelled, "It ought to be in the hands of every Bible worker and minister. C. P. BOLLAMAN. 4 --------------------------- CLAW OF Gg | we Gop QIMLTIC Sra, Is HERE | IS WISDOM AS GIVEN BY JEHOVAH | REVELATION to 820 Thos Follow® Aoutiar Acre) v E “ : BABYLON iS FALLEN, IS FALLEN. hi ; 7 COME OUT OF HER, © ¢ . MY PEOPLE ’ t fe mR wr! A A Lo R " | \ v nr $ | | F LET HIM Thal n ATH F | COUNT TH. NUMBER OF i L THE BEAST L I l } THE NUMBER OF A MAN l | ! ‘ SIX HUNDRED : D THREE SCORE and D - IE SIX E I I ! 666 —— | LHHLONU MEER OF 105 Name The chart arranged to show the second angel's mes- sage. The right-hand page shows the triple crown with name in jeweled letters: also text found in Rev. 13:18 in display type. After becoming acquainted with the chart, I don't know how could afford to be without it in my Bible work. HATTIE ALLEMS, I.,ondon, Ontario. 11 — --------------------------- The Virst Was Like THESE A LION, GREAT BEASTS And Had Eagle's Wings Which are Four - The Second Was Like AREFOUR KINGS + mam (OR KINGDOMS) With Three Ribs WHICH en I Beteld voother | ike SHALL ARISE OUT A LEOPARD, OF THE EARTH Mott ab bopoe fs Bek FINK WINGS alg and The Boast [IRR FITTERS THE PAPACY. c 0 Sen FOURTH KINGDOM UPON EARTH ce And the Ten Hurns out of . This Kingdom are Per " THE FOURTH BEAST rt TEN KINGS THAT SHALL ARIST cn And Another Shall Rise After Them: and He Shall . J . Be Diverse trom the le tn AND tEn (DN Th be Ty First, and el . fot ETeLENES TFA MAN . I - . ANCA MIUTH He SHALL SUBOLE THREE KINGS So SPEAKING GREAT THINGS. The chart arranged to show the change that ap- peared among the ten horns of the (dread- ful and terrible beast of Daniel. It is the most complete chart I have ever seen. It will surely be a great aid to anyone desiring to explain the prophecies to others. A. J. HAYSMER, Kingston, Jamaica. --------------------------- SHALL THE cur FOR THE JEWS - 1810 DAY S| REMAINING Showing when davs commence, and the time to the Messiah. THEN THE CLEANSED cut FOR THE JEWS + {1810 DAY S| REMAINING Showing the remaining week still remaining for the Jews in the middle of which the Messiah was cut off. GOSPEL GOES THE GENTILES. THE cur FOR THE JEWS ~ 1810 DAY S| REMAINING Showing the beginning and ending of the 2,300 days, with main events that transpired. The folding chart is a unique arrangement. I cheerfully recom- mend it. N. W. ALLEE. 15 --------------------------- Wn QOWNETC S¥yg, THE Book DANIEL SPt ARNG GREAT THINGS. The chart as folded to review the symbols of Daniel side by side. I most cheerfully commend it to the attention of our ministers, teachers, Bible workers, and colporteurs. It is also an excellent help to those wishing interestingly to instruct children in their own homes, J. N. LOUGHBOROUGH --------------------------- ' AS GIVEN BY JEHOVAH | | sw ner we re i EE REEREIR NY YEON TA Es Hea HE SHALL THINK TO CHANGE TIMES LAWS Daniel 7:25 AND BEASLD IN IRIS HORN | WERE EYES LINE IME EYES OF A MAN | AND A MCUTH SPEAKING GREAT THINGS. The chart as arranged to show only the fourth beast, in its two phases; also one of the presumptuous acts of the little horn, in display type. We take pleasure in pronouncing it the most complete and by far the most easy to trace and understand of any prophetic chart we have ever seen. WM. OSTRANDER. . D. GOWELL. --------------------------- The chart as folded to explain the 2,300 days. LTHE SANCTUARY BE CLEANSED As open to show the time cut off for the Jews, peers ai re UNTO 2300 DAYS THEN SHALL THE SANCTUARY BE CLEANSED = T I “633 or, [CUT O(F FOR THE JEWS -| 13731810 DAY S| REMAINING Showing the remaining time of the whole period. ‘I do not hesitate to commend it to the students of Daniel and the Revelation. J. A. BRUNSON. 14 --------------------------- + AW OF Gg, | w \ W OF Gay, | ROVHEHIC Stig, THE SEAL J EH OVAH REVELATION : GOD 1 THE HOUR OF HIS JuDC- AS FOUND IN Mm OME: HIS LAW tn I The Name of the Giver IL His Right to Rule | IIL The Extent of His Dominion The chart arranged to show the first angel's message; also showing how the fourth commandment is the seal of God's Law. It will be noticed that the message contains the words of the fourth commandment, and the angel points to those words. It is the most neatlv arranged chart I have ever seen, I bespeak for it an extensive circulation. S. G. HAUGHEY, I.ondon, England. 10 --------------------------- w bron | QUVILTIC Styg, 7c HERE JEHOVAH REVELATION IS WISDOM . . | 5 v : EO wave wa wine | ( i | C I 00 ¢ | A 0 A R 0 R " {i y 5 ¥ S 0 Ss F 0 °F | (I L 50 L 5 1 I I P| “ Db 500 1D £ 0 E > . | I I I 666 The chart as arranged to show the third angel's mes- sage ; also the interpretation of the number of the name found on the triple crown mentioned in Rev. 13:17, 18. 1 had one of each of the charts for the wall, and vet, for several reasons that will be self-evident to the chart user, I was glad to get one of these, C. S. HADLEY. 12 --------------------------- JAMES WHITE LIBRARY Oy T— ANDRE WS UNIVER! + BL INOSPRING ICHAT mmm WEEE GADL PNP NN, PANN, An Explanation OF THE NEW FOLDING PROPHETIC CHART showing some of the ways that it can be arranged in explaining the symbols of : ; Daniel and the Revelation. re BEAUTIFULLY LITHOGRAPHED IN COLORS See Price on the Last Page CINL IASI NS INPINS PASS AS INPING INS NS INPINS PNPING INI INSINS PNPIN INT NS PNP NS ...
- Creador:
Review and Herald Publishing Association
- Date:
1899
- Tema:
Seventh-day Adventist publications and Bible -- Prophecies -- Charts, diagrams, etc
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Date:
1901
- Tema:
Seventh-day Adventist hospitals -- Massachusetts and New England Sanitarium and Hospital
- Descripción:
Group photograph of workers at the New England Sanitarium in South Lancaster, Massachusetts, in 1901. Written on back:
Group of workers at South Lancaster. Standing: Ethel Breed, Mary Muchler, Mr. ______, Mr. & Mrs. Wilson, Mary Cady, Lida Price. Front row: Miss Cole, Miss Thans, Francis Smith (B.C. Grad). 1901.
...
-
- Item contents:
- ... ...
- Creador:
Andrews University
- Date:
05-06-2023
- Descripción:
Spring Graduation 2023 Graduate Baccalaureate Church Service.
- « Anterior
- Siguiente »
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4