Category Archives: Friday Feature

Friday Feature: the old stuff that makes me happy

It should come as no surprise that archivists just really love old stuff… SCARC staff are really quite lucky to have such fabulous opportunities to see, read, add, and work with great collections and great people.

For the Friday Feature this week I want to share a few of my favorite things!

  • Taste of the ‘Chives delicious dishes… Remember you can taste for yourself on Oct 29!
  • From 2009 Cheese & Pimiento Salad: “Stuff canned pimientos with cream cheese, cut into slices, and serve one or two slices to each person on lettuce leaves with French dressing.”

    This is the sixth version of Benny Beaver, and the fifth version of Benny’s costume (used 1984-1998).

    From the Eta Sigma Gamma, OSU Alpha Tau chapter (Health Science Honorary) Collection…

    Bike trip? Flickr folks pose

    “Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hardin meet Woodsy Owl. Woodsy is the newest environmental symbol of the United States,” from the Gerald Williams Collection circa 1970.

    What are some of your favorite things? Let me know at tiah.edmunson-morton@oregonstate.edu!

    Friday Feature: the social side of SCARC

    Who says archivists are introverted? We love to get social!

    You have found this blog, obviously, but did you know that we have 2 other blogs that you should check out? For this Friday Feature we’re featuring something else and want you to go forth and explore…

    • The Pauling Blog: Your weekly source for fascinating new stories from the world of Linus Pauling. The Pauling Blog also provides an inside glimpse into the latest Pauling-related news and activities being carried out by our department.
    • The Oregon Multicultural Archives Blog: Up-to-date information regarding current projects, new collections, and recently digitized materials pertaining to the histories that document Oregon’s African American, Asian American, Latino/a, and Native American communities.

    For all our social media hot spots make sure to explore SCARC’s “Social Media Digital Resources” page.

    Enjoy!

    Friday Feature: Ten Little Lessons on Vitamins by Eugene Christian

    Ten Little Lessons on Vitamins, by Eugene Christian

    Ten Little Lessons on Vitamins, by Eugene Christian

    This charming set of booklets was recently added to our History of Science collections to complement a collection emphasis on the history of vitamins and micronutrients, and their use in nutrition and alternative approaches to health and diet.

    After Casimir Funk’s first work on vitamins in 1911, there was a notable emphasis on vitamins and their impact in American popular press and advertising. Americans were thrilled by the power, hope, and promise of vitamins, and looked to vitamin consumption as a quick fix to a multitude of health problems. Published in 1922, Ten Little Lessons on Vitamins was part of this new wave of interest in nutrition and diet.

    In the introductory lesson, author Eugene Christian tells his story recovering health by eating only uncooked, natural foods. After recommending his approach to diet to numerous friends and acquaintances, Christian published Uncooked Foods and how to Use Them, a Treatise on How to Get the Highest Form of Animal Energy from Food, with Recipes for Preparation, Healthful Combinations, and Menus in 1901, and his career as nutritional activist was launched.

    Through the Little Lessons, Christian wished to bring the “lessons of the new nutrition” out of the scientific literature and into clear language for laypersons, for use in their daily diet and “applications in the household.” He sought to convince a populace he claims was increasingly busy and reliant on unwholesome foods of the importance of “Vitamin Science,” and the consumption of “whole foods to which nothing has been added, and from which nothing has been taken away.” In the Little Lessons, Christian strongly advocated for a “Pure Food Movement” to restore nutritive value to American daily diets.

    A self-proclaimed “prophet” of advances in nutrition, Christian headed many groups between 1915-1930 (including the Health-Culture Society, the Corrective Eating Society, and the Christian Dietetic Society), and published prolifically to spread his message of good health through better eating.  Ten Little Lessons on  Vitamins, and the numerous other works documenting the history of vitamins, natural foods, and orthomolecular medicine in our collections are of interest to scholars and students of the history of public health, popular culture, nutritional history, and alternative health.

     

     

    Friday Feature: new Braceros in Oregon exhibit installation!

    Christy in the case

    The sun shone most days as we put up our new exhibit to to highlight an important piece of Oregon’s Latino History in honor of Latino/a Heritage Month. And, of course, we took pictures and released a new Flickr set called “The day we put up The Braceros Collection exhibit.” Catchy, eh?

    You can read more about the display on the OMA blog and see the text panels in the Flickr set “Braceros In Oregon Exhibit, 2012 .”

    Stop by the 5th floor of the Valley Library until October 26 to check it out!

     

     

    Friday Feature: the day we drilled a hole in the floor

    Anticipating a flood of new and excited researchers this fall, all clamoring to see our new merged public service point on the 5th floor, we decided we needed to do some remodeling. Namely, we needed to turn the 2 big tables in our reading room into 4 smaller tables. However, since the big tables were fixed to the beautiful bamboo floor and plugged into inconvenient sockets we had to do some drilling.

    Okay, so truth be told we didn’t actually drill the hole, but the nice folks at Facilities Services came by on Wednesday to cut the floor and drill through the concrete slab that separates floor 4 from floor 5! And, another truth to be told, they drilled four holes!

    In any case, soon we’ll move the big tables out, smaller tables in, and will be set to receive all sorts of new researchers — and accommodate those who don’t want to have to share a table.

    Want to see more? Take a peek at our Flickr set.