Special Collections – Anteater Antics
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(Thuy Vo Dang and Kalean Ung, co-curators of the original MUSIC LETTERS HOME exhibit, during the opening reception in 2020)
When the COVID-19 lockdown was implemented in March of 2020, the Music, Letters, Home physical exhibit had just hosted a successful opening night. But as everyone sequestered themselves inside their homes, the exhibit had to wrap up its run early before anyone could really appreciate its work.
Two years later, Louis and I, as interns for the OC&SEAA center, were tasked by Dr. Thuy Vo Dang with creating a digital exhibit so it could finally get the recognition it was due. Most of the work was essentially already done for us — there was no research to be conducted like our last digital exhibition
Literally Displaced: Writing the Southeast Asian Diaspora
. Now, we just had to arrange pre-existing exhibit material in a coherent & cohesive manner to be presented.
That’s not to say it was super easy, though.
Before we started anything, Louis and I had to read through Kalean’s play first to get an idea of what the exhibition was about. Then we were required to go through Chinary Ung’s oral history and edit the corresponding transcript, which took both of us a significant amount of time to complete. And it has definitely made me gain huge respect for those who provide captions for any type of media! We then had to select sections of the oral history that we thought were the most poignant and would go well with the themes and materials present throughout the exhibit. This is where it was convenient that I had experience prior in cutting and editing audio; it made the process quicker and was completed without much hassle. Embedding the audio into the website, though, was a bit disappointing as it left the audio player with a gray background — Google Sites only allows you to do so much with its limitations. You win some, you lose some!
Speaking of Google Site’s cursed limitations, I think Louis and I managed to come up with some interesting and aesthetically pleasing designs despite the restrictions in layout options! We both found it easier to accomplish after our experience of curating a digital exhibition from scratch in our last project. There were a variety of photos and materials to select from, but we mostly added the ones that were previously on display in the physical exhibit. We did add a couple photos from the Rosenblatt (Lionel) collection that depicted the refugee camps mentioned in the exhibition, though, as well as videos we found on Youtube that displayed Chinary Ung’s music and Kalean Ung’s thoughts on her play Letters From Home. Trawling through Youtube and the many boxes of documents and photos is always a meticulous and tiring task, but gratifying in the end when we find what we’re looking for.
Music, Letters, Home Website Home Page
The digital exhibition also gave us opportunities to be creative. Louis created a map compiling all the locations Chinary Ung received letters from. I, on the other hand, was responsible for the graphics on the website as I have experience in creating digital art. It took me multiple tries to figure out what looked best — I had a few different ideas on what I wanted to do, but they were too complicated. I ultimately landed on something simple instead: musical notes, letters, and moths because they’re prominent in Kalean’s play.
Overall, Louis and I are proud of what we accomplished, and we hope this digital version of the exhibit will finally give the Music, Letters, Home exhibition its long-awaited chance to be seen.
-Annie Nguyen
Click Here to visit the Webpage!
Please join us for a free virtual event, an evening of storytelling with distinguished composer, Chinary Ung and actor, Kalean Ung as we celebrate the launch of the “Music Letters Home” digital exhibit.
Cambodian American scholars Christine Su (College of San Mateo) and Brian Sengdala (Cornell University) will join Chinary Ung and Kalean Ung in a roundtable conversation focused on memories of Cambodia and the diaspora.
JOIN US:
Here
on August 30, 2022 5:00PM – 6:30PM.
In the past academic school year 2016-2017, Asian American Studies celebrated its 25th anniversary. But with this momentous milestone, there was the realization that many people did not know about the history behind the creation of Asian American Studies on campus.
I had heard whispers of what happened from one of my professors a few years ago that a hunger strike took place in order to get the major, but other than that nothing. It was not until the 2016-2017 academic school year when footage of the 1993 protest, a protest only known to few, was graciously donated to the UCI Libraries and was shown in classes. Still, many questions arose such as who were those people in the video, how did they organize a large protest, what were the order of events.
The chair of the department, Dr. Judy Wu, along with Dr. Thuy Vo Dang, director of the Southeast Asian Archive assembled a group, now called The Beginnings of Activism for the Department of Asian American Studies at UCI (BADAAS@UCI) of research interns to set out to answer those questions and more.
BADASS@UCI gathering at the OC&SEAA Center
I joined this group in Winter 2017 since I wanted to know more about it. One of my majors was Asian American Studies, and I had learned so much about myself through it. Throughout high school, most of my education was Eurocentric, and while I found that interesting, I also found that I could not completely relate. Asian American Studies gave me an opportunity to learn the world around me which I took for granted. I remember going home and telling my dad how I learned about home temples in Little Saigon. To that, he gave me a funny look and said, “We go to Little Saigon almost every weekend. Have you not been paying attention.” I could not imagine my UCI experience without it, and I wanted to know what went into making the major.
During the winter quarter, my research partners and I began our research looking at the course catalogues and the New U to figure out what time span we wanted to focus on as well as to see if there was written documentation of any of the protests. From there, we collectively chose to focus on the 90’s since though the course catalogues, we discovered that Asian American Studies became a minor in 1996 and then a major the following year in 1997. We found this fact to be odd considering the University claimed it was the 25th anniversary when the minor was created twenty years ago.
Through the New U, we learned of ESCAPE (Ethnic Students Coalition Against Prejudicial Education). During Wayzgoose in 1991, now called Celebrate UCI, 200 protesters marched during the event demanding for Ethnic Studies. This protest was not only for Asian American Studies, but also for African American Studies, Chicano/Latino Studies, Native American Studies. From ESCAPE, the school made each group certain promises such as developing a program or more faculty. From there, we went up to the Special Collections and Archive to look at Rice Paper, Academic Senate Records, and later on the Cross Cultural Center Records.
Rice Paper was a student run newspaper that started out as East/West Ties in 1983. In 1991, East/West Ties changed its name in 1991 in order to transition its focus to more Asian American issues. Rice Paper was like a treasure trove because it offered insight into what the students were concerned about during that time and provided contextual background. To our disappointment, Rice Paper ended in 1997 citing a growing apathy to Asian American issues.
Issue#? of Rice Paper – UCI Irvine’s Asian Pacific Newsmagzine
The Academic Senate Records were also disappointing. We had gone through many boxes, but our findings were scarce. Because we knew the years that Asian American Studies became a minor and a major, we knew there had to be corresponding paperwork. We were unable to find the minor proposal, but we were able to find the major proposal. The Cross Cultural Center Records were like gold. We found newspaper clippings from local newspapers of the protest, documentation of the hunger strike, letter correspondences, and forms. We had finally found physical evidence, and we were able to construct a basic timeline.
In 1991, the protest during Wayzgoose occurred, and the school had made several concessions in order to appease the groups. However as many of the other groups got what they demanded for, Asian American Studies was left behind. In 1992, the students were able to get onto the hiring committee, but problems arose during the hiring process. In 1993, the students protested on April 22nd, 1993 by occupying the Chancellor’s Office which was later followed by a 35 day rotational hunger strike. On the last day of school, June 10th, 1993, they decided to occupy the Chancellor’s Office again to show the administration that they were not going to go away and will be a presence at UCI. They had slogans such as “World Class, My Ass” calling out the school for claiming that they were a World Class University while ignoring the fact that 42.6% were Asian American. Following those protests, Professor Yong Chen, now the Associate Dean of the School of Humanities, was hired in 1993 as a joint appointment in Asian American Studies and History. A search committee, which included one graduate student representative and one undergraduate representative, was formed to hire more faculty. From this Professor Dorothy Fujita-Rony and Professor Claire Jean Kim were hired.
During the Spring quarter, we transitioned to oral histories. We found names from our research in Special Collections and began searching for their contact information. Some of the names were already at UCI like the professors that still taught here. Our first interview was with Professor Yong Chen, who told us his journey to UCI. We then interviewed former staff and faculty who have either moved on or retired. Dr. Mary Ann Takemoto enlightened us about how there was a need for Asian American Studies while Professor John Liu told us the inner-workings of the department and how it was initially formed.
As of recent, our interviews have been former students. Those interviews were extremely valuable since they provided something the records and the archives could not provide. The records and archives had factual evidence, but they contained information that the university deemed important and they could not convey the social relations between the protesters and faculty or the emotional tensions they faced. The records lacked the social interactions that we found to be interesting and crucial to our research. The interviews illuminated that as well as their thoughts of what happened of each other. Some people were more open than others and openly told us what they thought. Others were quiet and did not want to answer the question or evaded it. One of my favorite anecdotes of the interviews was with some of the former students. We had asked them how were they able to get everyone together since social media was nonexistent at the time. Facebook did not exist. What they would do was get up in the middle of the night and make chalk body outlines along Ring Road with the caption, “Asian American Studies is dead.” Arrows would accompany the outlines and point towards the Chancellor’s Office, and that was how people knew where to go. The records did not have any mention of that, but that story is fascinating.
Primary source material we discovered through our research
My partners and I have been able to present our research in various ways. We gave our first talk in the OC&SEAA and a few days later at UROP. We then presented our findings during the Asian American Studies Graduation Reception. There, we invited all the old alumni back to thank them for giving us the opportunity to major into something amazing, and we wanted to honor them. When they had set out on their protests, they knew that they would not have the chance to benefit from their protest. They would have graduated and would be unable to major into something they advocated for, but their efforts gave the students after them an opportunity to learn more about themselves. I myself benefited from their hard work, and I am eternally grateful for what they did.
In the past month or so, we attended the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) conference at Washington DC where we presented our research. We are now trying to wrap up interviews and move on towards creating an exhibit and making a documentary. Some of our interviewees were generous enough to give us materials from that time period. Eileen Chun-Fruto, the Asian Pacific Student Association (APSA) Vice Chair during the 1993 protests, still kept the placards that some of the students wore during the protests. We are in the process of trying to get more materials, and we hope to create a collection by the end.
It was with great shock and sadness that the Special Collections and Archives staff learned that Ralph Cicerone passed away on November 5, 2016. Ralph Cicerone was UCI’s fourth chancellor from 1998-2005. He left the university to become president of the National Academy of Sciences, a position he retired from in June 2016. His life’s work and accomplishments are highlighted by the
OC Register
UCI School of Physical Sciences
, and
The Washington Post
. While we could easily add to the list of Dr. Cicerone’s incredible contributions to our planet, we would instead like to reflect on the archives’ and archivists’ relationship with Chancellor Cicerone.
The university archives has held the
formal records from his chancellorship
since 2005. These records contain administrative files, meeting notes, correspondence, and other documentation of his work and achievements as chancellor at UCI. Earlier this year, Dr. Cicerone graciously decided to donate his personal papers to UCI’s Special Collections and Archives. UCI archivists had been working with him and his staff at the National Academy of Sciences to transfer his papers from Washington, D.C. In June, Assistant University Archivist, Laura Uglean Jackson, had the pleasure of traveling to D.C. to appraise, box, and ship Cicerone’s personal papers stored at the Academy. While there, she met with Dr. Cicerone to talk about his papers and how they would be cared for and organized at UCI. She recalls, “Dr. Cicerone was one of the most accomplished people I have ever worked with, and he was also one of the kindest. I met with him just a few days before his retirement when he was very busy and facing a major life change. Despite this, he was incredibly calm and very nice to work with. He even offered me cookies that someone had brought him. I will always remember the respect and humility that Dr. Cicerone showed to me and his staff while I worked in his office. While I didn’t know him for long, I will always remember him as an exceptional and exemplary person.”
The Ralph Cicerone papers contain approximately 50 linear feet of material documenting his life’s work in the field of atmospheric science and chemistry. It includes photos, speeches, correspondence, committee files, research files, and much more. The university archives is in the process of making the collection available.
The Special Collections & Archives holds two other notable collections documenting Cicerone’s work and contributions: an
oral history
with Ralph Cicerone by Spence Olin in 2004 ,and the
F. Sherwood Rowland papers
. This collection contains a significant amount of correspondence to Rowland from Cicerone, who was recognized on the citation for the 1995 Nobel Prize in chemistry awarded to Rowland.
The staff of the Special Collections and Archives sends its sincere condolences to his wife Carol, daughter Sara, and to all who had the pleasure of knowing and working with him.
Ralph and Carol Cicerone
Chancellor Ralph Cicerone
Chancellor Ralph Cicerone
Chancellor Ralph Cicerone
Chancellor Ralph Cicerone
Inauguration of Chancellor Cicerone
Inauguration of Chancellor Cicerone
Cicerone with Students
Cicerone with Students
Cicerone with Students
Cicerone Receives Bower Award
Last year, we brought UCI Libraries Zinefest to UC Irvine! Zines are short for “fanzines”, which are DIY mini-magazines that allow anyone to express their opinions in a fun and cost effective way. Zinefest combined educational and creative aspects to form an engaging event open to students and the public, allowing them to express their unique opinions, ideas, and concerns in the form of a zine. Attendees were also able to listen to three guest speakers. These speakers were educational, bringing attention to resources available to the public to express themselves and research further into zines.
The student organization Uncultivated Rabbits represents their zine, Uncultivated Underground.
Zinefest succeeded in reaching out to and educating the UCI community about zines as well as the UCI Libraries’ collections, and how anyone can express their ideas and thoughts easily through creating a zine.
Students creating zines.
After the success of last year’s Zinefest, the UCI Libraries will continue this fun tradition of public outreach to the Anteater Community. There are fun and new things in store for this year’s event, which is held during International Open Access Week, an international celebration of public access to information. One of UCI’s contributions to this international event is Zinefest, allowing free access to information and viewing of zines, along with showcasing the information resources that UCI’s libraries have to offer.
In addition to the previous year’s activities, including DIY zine making, guest speakers, and presentations on resources UCI offers to the public, 2016 brings the opportunity to contribute to a community zine. This will provide a format for the community to work collaboratively on zines, inviting participants to come together and express their opinions with their fellow Anteaters.
We’ll also have buttons! And the button maker, so you can make your own.
This year, attendees will be able to create their own DIY zines and buttons, encouraging the UCI community to be creative and expressive. The event is free, and if you choose, you can donate your zine to the UCI Libraries’ zine collection. Plus, you will even be able to meet Peter the Antreader!
Peter the Antreader getting his zine on!
Zinefest 2016 will host even more guest speakers than the year before. Attendees will get the opportunity to hear from speakers with a wide variety of focuses. Speakers include returning speaker Professor Jeanne Scheper from the Gender and Sexuality Department. This year there will be new speakers, including zinesters Ziba Perez Zehdar and Jon-O Gazdecki of ZebraPizza Zine (
/). Alison Regan of the UCI Libraries and Tamara Austin of the Cross Cultural Center will also speak to audiences. In addition, the public will get the chance to see an exhibition of the UCI Libraries’ collection of zines. This exhibition will be curated by Laura Uglean Jackson, Assistant University Archivist of the Special Collections Archives.
Combine all of these fun opportunities that Zinefest has to offer, and the event this year is sure to be one for the books! Zinefest 2016 is on October 26th, from 12-4 PM, so make sure to bring your friends and stop by the Gateway Plaza next to Langson Library for one of the most fun and educational events hosted by the UCI Libraries of the year. The UCI Libraries can’t wait to see you there!
Program information and updates are available on the facebook page:
Ready for 50+ anteater antics told through conversations between former and current anteaters? Zot zot! Anteaters come together to share memories, events, and changes throughout UC Irvine’s 50 years of history.
The UCI Libraries announce the opening of an exciting new exhibit called
UCI Stories: 50th Anniversary Oral History Project
, on Monday, May 23rd at 6:30PM in Langson Library, UCI.
RSVP
here:
Inspired and imprinted with words spoken during the filmed oral histories
, UCI Stories
highlights the bright past and brilliant future of UCI through the memories, reflections, and predictions of its community. Artfully curated quotes of
campus leaders, innovators, alumni, faculty and staff
, document how over the past 50 years, UCI has given birth to generations of community-oriented difference-makers driven by a pioneering spirit that has permeated the campus long before a physical building ever stood on the land.
UCI Stories
captures how this spirit glues UCI together, and often after graduation calls Anteaters back home. Every great story has three main parts: characters with whom you can identify, a memorable and imaginable setting, and a plot based on the unexpected experiences of protagonists. This is
UCI Stories
Opening night speakers are Robert Cohen (UCI Claire Trevor Professor of Drama, Emeritus/Founding Faculty), Jenny Doh ’91 (UCI’s First Student Regent/Past President, UCI Alumni Association), Elizabeth Toomey (Daughter of Founding Chancellor Aldrich/Retired UCI Assistant Vice Chancellor, Community and Government Relations), and Joseph L. White (UCI Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Psychiatry), will engage in a fascinating conversation on UCI’s history and thoughts for the future; with panel moderation by Krystal Tribbett, UCI Libraries 50th Anniversary Project Historian.
The program will be followed by a light reception and exhibit viewing in Langson Library, UCI. The event is free and open to the public. Space is limited; reservations are first come, first served.
UCI Stories Program. May 23, 2016.
Please go to
to make an online reservation. For further information please call 949.824.4651 or email
partners@uci.edu
The
UCI Stories
Project is a unique oral history project, launched by UCI Libraries, that pairs over 100 UCI affiliates for dynamic conversations to commemorate UCI’s 50th Anniversary. The reminiscences collected offer first-hand perspectives that tell the multifaceted story of UCI’s intellectual contributions, key turning points, and unique legacy. The UCI Libraries’ 50th Anniversary Exhibit, “UCI Stories” is a product of this effort.
More information is available here:
Speaking Up: Fifty Years of Student Publications at UCI
Monday, May 2, 2016 through Friday, July 22nd, 2016, (Special Collections & Archives, 5th Floor of Langson Library)
peaking Up: Fifty Years of Student Publications at UCI
showcases a variety of student-generated writing from throughout the history of the campus. Bringing together periodicals, newsletters, literary magazines, and other materials from University Archives in Special Collections & Archives, this exhibit examines how students and student organizations make their voices heard within the UCI community and beyond. The publications reflect engagement with many pressing issues, from political debates about war and peace to efforts to promote equality and diversity in the curriculum, on the campus, and in society more broadly.
The exhibit is a joint effort of the UCI Libraries’ Special Collections & Archives and the UCI Office of the Campus Writing Coordinator.
Curated by Steve MacLeod, Public Services Librarian, and Laura Uglean Jackson, Assistant University Archivist. Assisted by Jens Lloyd, Campus Writing Fellow. Additional assistance from Allison Dziuba, Maureen Fitzsimmons, Lance Langdon, and Jasmine Lee.
Join us as we celebrate 400 years of William Shakespeare’s legacy!
2016 commemorates 400 years since the death of William Shakespeare. In honor of his life’s works, the First Folio will make a rare public appearance in the Langson Library lobby! Other activities will include: a flash mob appearance by Shaken Shakespeare; First Folio title page puzzle and coloring sheets; free Shakespeare-themed buttons; and an appearance by Julia Lupton, UCI Professor of English and Comparative Literature; Co-Director of UCI Shakespeare Center; and Associate Dean for Research, School of Humanities.
An exhibit of additional Shakespeare material will be on display in the Langson Library 5th floor lobby, just outside of Special Collections & Archives, from April 25th-28th.
Date:
Monday, April 25, 2016
Time:
10am – 2pm
Location:
Langson Library lobby, UCI Libraries
Questions?
Email: spcoll@uci.edu Phone: (949)824-3947
P.S. If you can’t make it April 25th, come to the Shakespeare First Folio Fridays Seminars August 12 & 26, 2016 at Langson Library. For further information, please call (949)824-4651 or email partners@uci.edu
In September of 2011, we posted a story about the very interesting history of the canoe that is on display in the stairwell of the Social Science Tower —
We were all very sad to learn of the recent passing, on Monday, January 25th, of Taloolema’agao Uliulileava Olano, the Samoan chief and canoe builder, from relatives in Western Samoa. Affectionately known as Uliuli, he was 84 years old. He is survived by his loving children and grandchildren. Bill Maurer, the Dean of the School of Social Sciences, has been planning an event to commemorate the making of the canoe this spring, as part of the 50th Anniversary celebration here at UCI. One of Uliuli’s granddaughters, upon learning of this event, shared that “It would be a great honor and a dream come true to see what my grandfather built. He was such an inspiration to everyone around him and was dearly loved by all. His legacy will continue to live on. Thank you for acknowledging my grandfather’s work.” A niece shared this: “We are very thankful for all his hard work he has set forth, his teachings and encouragements will never be forgotten. We lost not only a dear relative, but a great late chief.” Another granddaughter said: “He was known as a man of wisdom, strong and always proud of his family as well as his culture. He is gone but will never be forgotten.”
Below are photographs of Uliuli while he was here at UCI, showing his expertise as a boat builder and the canoe he built at the Social Science Farm in 1968. We also have two videos of Uliuli that were given to Special Collections and Archives by the Department of Anthropology.
One video (on the right) shows the canoe being built and , the other (on the left) shows the launch of the canoe in Newport Bay and the canoe in numerous locations in Newport Bay and in the Pacific Ocean — https://goo.gl/6EPxjE
Documenting Uliuli’s life while here and other activities at the Farm during that era was an exhibit on campus in 2012 — http://sites.uci.edu/thefarm/
Also, a book,
Learning and Doing at the Farm
, written by former UCI graduate students Robert J. Kett and Anna Kryczka was published in 2014 — http://soberscove.com/book/learning-by-doing/
Our thoughts are with all of the relatives and many friends of Taloolema’agao Uliulileava Olano. He truly was a great man. His funeral took place in Western Samoa on Wednesday, February 3, 2016.
as-061_s00154_017
as-061_s00154_018
On this date, January 23rd, in 1957, the Wham-O toy company issued the first Frisbee.
In Bridgeport, Connecticut, William Frisbie opened the Frisbie Pie Company in 1871. Students from nearby universities would throw the empty pie tins to each other, yelling “Frisbie!” In 1948, Walter Frederick Morrison and his partner Warren Franscioni invented a plastic version of the disc called the “Flying Saucer” that could fly further and more accurately than the tin pie plates. After splitting with Franscioni, Morrison made an improved model in 1955 and sold it to the new toy company Wham-O as the “Pluto Platter”–an attempt to cash in on the public craze over space and Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs).
In 1958, a year after the toy’s first release, Wham-O changed the name to the Frisbee disc, misspelling the name of the historic pie company. A company designer, Ed Headrick, patented the design for the modern Frisbee in December 1967, adding a band of raised ridges on the disc’s surface–called the Rings–to stabilize flight. By aggressively marketing Frisbee-playing as a new sport, Wham-O sold over 100 million units of its famous toy by 1977.
High school students in Maplewood, New Jersey, invented Ultimate Frisbee in 1967. UCI students have always been addicted to the various Frisbee games that have been invented over the years, from Ultimate Frisbee (shown in the photos above in 1980), to Frisbee Golf, Freestyle Frisbee, etc.
Today, at least 60 manufacturers produce the flying discs–generally made out of plastic and measuring roughly 20-25 centimeters (8-10 inches) in diameter with a curved lip. The official Frisbee is owned by Mattel Toy Manufacturers, who bought the toy from Wham-O in 1994.
With a site for the new University of California, Irvine campus selected and William Pereira chosen as the architect, Clark Kerr’s next step was to select a new Chancellor for the campus. On January 19, 1962, Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr., age 44, the University’s Statewide Dean of Agriculture, was appointed the first UCI Chancellor. He would be at UCI for 22 years.
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UCI Libraries Special Collections & Archives
Music, Letters, Home – Digital Exhibit
The Beginnings of Activism for the Department of Asian American Studies at UCI
The Passing of Dr. Ralph Cicerone, UCI’s Fourth Chancellor
UCI Libraries Zinefest! Oct 26, 12-4pm
UCI Stories exhibit opens Monday, May 23
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