Microfilm and Microfiche Can Now be Saved as Digital Files

Researchers can now choose to save writings from microfiche and microfilm as digital files using our new Konica Minolta Microfilm/Microfiche Digital Scanner.

The microform reader looks like the old film/fiche readers, but now, attached to a computer, it has the added capability of converting a microform image to .pdf and other formats. The image scanned from microform (for example an article from a 1907 microfilm edition of the Denver Express) can then be saved to a flash drive, e-mailed, etc. at no charge. Microform copies can also be sent to the Library's central printing area and printed for .15 per page.

The new digial scanner is located near the courtyard behind the Tech Help desk which is straight ahead of you when you walk into the library.

Connections Series: Medical Databases this Friday

Connections: Seminars on the research and teaching tools available through Auraria Library.

Location: Jackson Enhanced Learning Center (ELC), Auraria Library. When you come in the front door, make a right and keep walking. The ELC is behind the many-paned, many colored wall.

Snacks Supplied: Yes! Brown bag your lunch and we'll supply desserts and beverages.

Register Here.

  • This Friday: Medical/Health/Sports Medicine at the Auraria Library: Best Databases & Best Techniques. Fri. March 12th, 2010, 11:30 - 1:00
    In addition to scholarly articles, the Library's health resources supply ebooks, images, videos, and reference resources. Our experts, Ignacio Ferrer-Vinent and Diane Turner, will help you enhance class assignments and streamline your research. Come with your questions.
  • Next Month: eBooks and Audiobooks. Fri. April 16th, 2010, 11:30-1:00
    Learn about accessing and using scholarly and popular ebooks through Auraria Library, other libraries, free sites, and subscription services.

Films Added to Library Collection

Abe Osheroff : One Foot in the Grave, the Other Still Dancing. 46 Minutes.
CT275.O735 A2 2009. "From the front lines of the Spanish Civil War to the picket lines of the U.S. labor movement to the struggle for civil rights in Mississippi to work for human rights in Nicaragua, people know Abe Osheropeopff as an activist who threw himself into the fray with rare energy and enthusiasm through his 92 years. In this riveting documentary, Osheroff reflects on the meaning of that activism and the ideas that animated his actions in movements for social justice."-- Container.

Blind Spot, Peak Oil. 54 Minutes. HD9560.5 .B555 2009. A documentary about the current oil and energy crisis and its effect on the environment. Includes interviews with sociologist William R. Catton, evolutionary biologist Jason Bradford, environmental analyst Lester Brown, NASA's James Hansen, author Bill McKibben, and others.

Camp Amache. 5 Minutes. Streaming video available free via the Archaeology Channel. Camp Amache in Southeastern Colorado was one of 10 War Relocation Authority, or internment,
camps where US authorities forced Japanese-Americans to live after the bombing of Pearl
Harbor in World War II. Home to nearly 7,300 internees from 1942 to 1945, it now is a
National Historic Landmark. In 2008, Dr. Bonnie Clark of the University of Denver led a field school at the site, which is threatened by bottle-collecting and cattle-grazing. http://www.archaeologychannel.org/content/video/campamache.html

A Collection of 2007 Academy Award Nominated Short Films. 190 Minutes.
PN1993.9 C65 2008. Live action short films: Om Natten = In the night (At night) (2007) - Il supplente (The substitute) (2006) -- Le Mozart des pickpockets = The Mozart of pickpockets (2006) -- Tanghi Argentini (2006) -- The Tonto woman (2007) -- Animated short films: Madame Tutli-Putli (2007) / -- Même le pigeons vont au paradis = Even pigeons go to Heaven (2006) -- Prokofiev's Peter & the Wolf (2006).

Cranford. PN1992.8.H56 C7364673 2008. 2 videodiscs. Cranford, in 1842, is a market town in northwest England. It is a place governed by etiquette, custom and above all, an intricate network of ladies. For spinsters Deborah Jenkyns, the arbiter of correctness, and Matty, her demurring sister, the town is a hub of intrigue. Handsome new doctor Frank Harrison has arrived from London; a retired Captain and his daughters move in across the street and preparations for Lady Ludlow's garden party are underway. But news comes that shakes the town: a railway line from Manchester is coming to Cranford.

¿De dónde eres?: spiritual origins of the Latino/Hispanic experience in
Southern Colorado = Where are you from?
16 Minutes. F775 .D4 2009. "From the early days of Hispanic settlement in southern Colorado to the influx during the stormy days of the Mexican Revolution in the 1920s, to today's increasingly complex mix of people from all over Latin America and the Caribbean who call the Pikes Peak region their home, there is a
multifaceted and rich culture here that needs to be recorded," De dónde eres? Advisory
Committee Co-Chair Dr. José Barrera said. "The De dónde eres? initiative exists to develop
and collect oral, written, and visual resources that document the lives, customs, and
histories of the southern Colorado Hispanic/Latino Community."

Eijanaika. 151 Minutes. PN1997 .E353 1990. A view of Edo-period Japan set in 1866 on the eve of Japan's Meiji Restoration. In Japanese, with English subtitles.

Faith and Doubt at Ground Zero. 120 Minutes. HV6432.7 .F35 2004. TV program Frontline illuminates the myriad spiritual questions that have come out of the terror,
pain, and destruction of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York.

Global Banquet. HD9000.6 .G556 2001. Discussion of corporate farming and its global effects. Part 1. Who's invited? (25 min.) -- Part 2. What's on the menu? (25 min.).

Grave of the Fireflies. Includes English dubbed and Japanese versions and English
subtitles. PN1997 .H678 2002. 88 Minutes. Originally produced as a motion picture in 1988 in Japan and in an English version in 1992. Two orphans in war-time Kobe, Japan, face fire-bombs, hunger, homelessness, and despair as the war and their lives come to an end.

Memorias de las tres Colonias = Memories of the Three Colonies . 57 Minutes. F784.F56 M46 2008. “Memorias de las Tres Colonias,” a collection of oral interviews by six families who share memories of their lives in the Andersonville, Alta Vista and Buckingham neighborhood. The conversations capture the thoughts and feelings of local Hispanic family members who participated in the production of sugar from sugar beets during the middle years of the twentieth century. The interviews cover a wide range of topics from food to family, religion to social justice, and work to cultural celebrations.

Passing Strange. 135 Minutes. M1500 .P37 2010. A young man leaves behind his mother and life in a Los Angeles neighborhood and sets out on a journey of self-discovery in Europe during the 1970s in order to find his purpose in life through his music. Produced and directed by Spike Lee; A theatrical stage production of the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical.

Pedro Calderón de la Barca. 20 Minutes. PQ6300 .P43 2007. Pedro Calderón de la
Barca would become one of Spain's most important dramatists, dominating the latter half of Spain's Golden Age of theatre. He studied law, and began writing plays in his
twenties, later serving as the court dramatist for Philip IV. Calderón wrote more than
70 secular plays and 80 autos sacramentales. As a dramatist, he had a keen dramatic sense, a lofty philosophic imagination, a wealth of poetic diction, and was a typical representative of
the devout, chivalrous, patriotic, and artificial society in which he moved.

What's the Matter with Kansas? 90 Minutes. F686.2 .W43 2009. Focuses on the political beliefs of Kansas citizens, particularly the intersection of evangelical Christianity and conservatism.

White Light, Black Rain: the Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 85 Minutes. D767.25.H6 W45 2007. In August 1945, the world was transformed in the blink of an eye when American forces dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and then Nagasaki. The destruction was unprecedented and the bombings precipitated the end of World War II. Contains archival footage and stunning photography. Interviews are from both Japanese survivors and the Americans who believed that their involvement would help end a brutal conflict.

Why Save a Language? 27 Minutes. PM205 .W537 2006. Representatives from tribes in North and South Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washington, and Oregon, all of whom have indigenous language programs, discuss how the indigenous languages were broken by residential schools and why the indigenous languages should be saved as the language of religion, culture and cultural identity and as storehouses of environmental knowledge. They discuss the positive effects on children of learning the tribal language from an early age.

Auraria campus faculty members: Do you need the Library to acquire a film or films to support your teaching? Contact Ellen.Metter(at)ucdenver.edu.

Booking Videos for Viewing: New Person to Help with Questions

Faculty members: When you'd like to book a film for class or home viewing, please use the booking request form at least 24-hours in advance to confirm availability of the film: http://library.auraria.edu/services/reserves/documents/VideoReq070709.pdf.

Films can be picked up at the AskUs Desk.

Booking forms are not required when you just want to walk into the Library and take out a film -- but a booking form can assure you that a film will be available and is not already booked.

Farhad Vakilitabar is now handling any questions related to booking videos and reports of damaged videos. Farhad's contact information is:

Farhad.Vakilitabar@ucdenver.edu or 303-556-5275.

Note that Ellen Metter is still your contact when it comes to purchasing new videos.

Historic Newspaper Websites Linked to Catalog

These three historic newspaper sites, free on the web, will soon be linked to the Auraria Library catalog:

Virginia Gazette. The colonial-era Virginia Gazette was published in Williamsburg between 1736 and 1780. This valuable primary resource covered news for all Virginia and also supplied some news of other colonies, Scotland, England, etc. Though really three papers published successfully by competing publishers, this site presents the full-text of the three iterations of the Virginia Gazette. Thanks to the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation for supplying access to the Virginia Gazette at no charge. (This is not as sophisticated an index as what is offered through a subscription service like the Burney Collection which is now on trial - but the price is right.)

Georgia Historic Newspapers. This collection contains issues of three historic Georgia newspapers: the Cherokee Phoenix, the Dublin Post, and the Colored Tribune.

North Carolina Newspaper Digitization Project. A searchable online collection of early North Carolina newspapers from the mid-18th through 19th century.