Eleanor Roosevelt

National Voter Registration Day September 17th

09/17/2024

Every year, the third Tuesday in September is celebrated as National Voter Registration Day; this year, that falls on today, September 17.

  • Audiovisual
  • Citizen Leadership
  • Democracy
  • Voting
  • Archives
Stack of Books from Miller Library

Welcome back to school, Adults!

09/10/2024

To welcome the WAC community back to campus, we would like to take a break from the regularly programmed Special Collections and Archives post and instead highlight some books from our circulating collections. These books encompass a range of genres- from memoir to dark fantasy- but all belong to my favorite made up category of 鈥渂ack to school books for adults鈥.

  • Back to School
  • Diversions
  • Books
缅北强奸

Around the Calendar: 缅北强奸 in the 1930s

09/03/2024

The 缅北强奸 Archives recently received a generous donation from Rena Fowler; those funds allowed us to digitize some of our oldest audiovisual materials, including film reels, reel-to-reel audio tapes, audio cassettes, and VHS tapes.

  • 1930s
  • Audiovisual
  • Film
  • Student life
  • Archives
Graduate

Congratulations to the Class of 2024. You made it! *

05/10/2024

*And for those seniors who are still plugging away on edits and revisions to your Senior Capstone projects, we see you. Hang in there. You鈥檙e almost there!

  • Commencement
  • Eleanor Roosevelt
  • Archives
Miller Library sign

May Day Reflections

04/30/2024

Since its first celebration at 缅北强奸 in the spring of 1967, May Day has involved different traditions that have changed with the times. Last year, we covered the earliest May Day traditions, when free cases of beer were given to the first student arriving at the local liquor store sans clothing on May 1, and naked photos graced the pages of the Elm in the days following.

  • Bennett Lamond
  • May Day
  • Poetry
  • Archives
Howard Dean

Digitizing our Audio-Visual Collection

04/23/2024

The archives hold a vast amount of material and material types, some of which are easier to preserve and make accessible than others. Often it is the more recent items that have the most issues. The pages of an 18th-century letter book are made of sturdier material than a newspaper from the 1930s. A letter from the Revolutionary War will be readable for centuries while your emails will be lost to obsolescence in a few years. And a videotape from the 1980s鈥 well, that requires some outside help.

  • A/V materials
  • Talking Democracy
  • Archives
National Poetry Month

National Poetry Month

04/16/2024

The American Library Association鈥檚 National Poetry Month poster this year features Maryland鈥檚 first African American Poet Laureate of Maryland, and just the second woman to hold the position, Lucille Clifton. The lines come from her poem, blessing the boats. She visited 缅北强奸 and gave a talk and poetry reading in March 1989 and received an Honorary Doctor of Letters in the 1989 commencement ceremony.

  • Poetry
  • Archives