UCLA LibraryThe UCLA Library Preservation and Conservation (#UCLALibPres) team gives behind-the-scenes tour of the Audiovisual (AV) Digitization Lab by showing how they conserve audio cassettes and VHS footage 📼 #AskAConservator
#AskAConservator | Audiovisual (AV) preservation: How are cassettes & VHS conserved at UCLA Library?UCLA Library2023-11-03 | The UCLA Library Preservation and Conservation (#UCLALibPres) team gives behind-the-scenes tour of the Audiovisual (AV) Digitization Lab by showing how they conserve audio cassettes and VHS footage 📼 #AskAConservator
Full series info: https://ucla.in/49mMY7B More about the UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation Department: https://ucla.in/3HGm52g
#UCLALibrary #UCLA #AskAConservatorDay #library #conservator #preservation #avpreservation #openreelRobot is 100! | Opening the Doors to Contemporary LiteratureUCLA Library2024-09-19 | (February 4, 2021) The Consulate General of the Czech Republic in Los Angeles an UCLA Library coordinated this virtual panel discussion "Robot is 100!" exploring the influence of the sci-fi play "R.U.R." on many art forms and the future of robotics, moderated by Czech diplomat Jaroslav Olša Jr.
Speakers: Maja Matarić | Chan Soon-Shiong Distinguished Professor of Computer Science, Neuroscience, and Pediatrics at USC, founding director of the USC Robotics and Autonomous Systems Center and interim Vice President of Research at USC
Alvaro Zinos-Amaro | Hugo and Locus finalist with some forty stories published in professional magazines and numerous anthologies, including Analog, Galaxy's Edge, Lightspeed, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, and Nature.
Jaroslav Veis | Czech journalist, freelance writer, scriptwriter, translator and editor. He is the author of five sci-fi short story collections published in a time span of more than four decades, starting with "Experiment protřetí planetu" (Experiment for the Third Planet, 1976), and has translated a wide range of authors, such as Isaac Asimov, Brian W. Aldiss,
Cole Remmen | PhD candidate in the Theater Studies program at the University of California, Santa Barbara.Armenian Poetry: Exploring the Los Angeles VoicesUCLA Library2024-05-17 | (May 16, 2023) This event was a discussion on Armenian poetry and featured a reading of two talented Los Angeles-based poets, Shahé Mankerian and Arthur Kayzakian, at UCLA Library.
Organized by UCLA Library's International & Area Studies Department as part of the event series "Opening the Doors to Contemporary Literature". Learn more about the series: https://ucla.in/3WFJBovInterview with Czech Author Bianca BellováUCLA Library2024-05-17 | (November 8, 2022) This event was a reading and Q&A with the Czech author Bianca Bellová, award-winning author of The Lake (2016), hosted by UCLA Library and the Czech Consulate General in Los Angeles.
Organized by UCLA Library's International & Area Studies Department as part of the event series "Opening the Doors to Contemporary Literature." Learn more about the series: https://ucla.in/3WFJBovL.A. Stories | Inside Richard Neutra’s Architectural Archive at UCLA LibraryUCLA Library2024-04-16 | In the second installment of the UCLA Library series “L.A. Stories,” scholars and Library experts discuss the legacy of Richard Neutra and the important work of preserving his physical archive, the Richard and Dion Neutra Papers, stewarded by UCLA Library Special Collections.
Richard Neutra (1892-1970) was an Austrian-American architect whose seminal mid-century designs significantly influenced the aesthetics and philosophy of modern architecture in Los Angeles and beyond. Over his career, Neutra designed hundreds of houses, schools and civic buildings locally and internationally. His designs are known for their seamless integration of indoor and outdoor spaces and emphasis on functionality, beauty and well-being.
The L.A. Stories series elevates UCLA Library’s regional collections, including diverse communities, cultures and historical landmarks. We invite researchers and others to visit the Library’s website to access these and other collections: go.library.ucla.edu/la-storiesL.A. Stories | Inside Richard Neutra’s Architectural Archive at UCLA LibraryUCLA Library2024-04-16 | In the second installment of the UCLA Library series “L.A. Stories,” scholars and UCLA Library experts discuss the legacy of Richard Neutra and the important work of preserving his physical archive, the Richard and Dion Neutra Papers, stewarded by UCLA Library Special Collections. The materials will be of interest to researchers from a number of different domains.
Richard Neutra (1892-1970) was an Austrian-American architect whose seminal mid-century designs significantly influenced the aesthetics and philosophy of modern architecture in Los Angeles and beyond. One of the most influential architects of the twentieth century, Neutra immigrated to the U.S. in the 1920s to work with the architect Frank Lloyd Wright, subsequently moving to L.A. in 1925. Over his career, Neutra designed hundreds of houses, schools and civic buildings locally and internationally. His designs are known for their seamless integration of indoor and outdoor spaces and emphasis on functionality, beauty and well-being.
Featuring: • Simon V. Elliot, visual materials specialist and licensing coordinator, UCLA Library Special Collections • Barbara Lamprecht, M.Arch., PhD, architectural historian and historic preservation consultant • Devin Mattlin, paper conservator, UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation department • Consuela (Chela) Metzger, head of Preservation & Conservation at UCLA Library • Raymond Neutra, president of the Neutra Institute for Survival Through Design
The L.A. Stories series elevates UCLA Library’s regional collections, including diverse communities, cultures and historical landmarks. We invite researchers and others to visit the Library’s website to access these and other collections: https://go.library.ucla.edu/la-storiesUCLA Library tutorial: PubMedUCLA Library2024-03-25 | Bob Johnson, Clinical and Research Support Librarian at UCLA Library, demonstrates how to find citations via PubMed, a database with references and abstracts primarily on life sciences and biomedical topics. He discusses how to effectively use saved searches, the advanced search tool and filters.UCLA Library tutorial: Web of ScienceUCLA Library2024-03-25 | Bob Johnson, Clinical and Research Support Librarian at UCLA Library, discusses the Web of Science database that utilizes specialized tools to provide data about the citations and references within each cited work. This tutorial demonstrates how to effectively use the database including showing cited reference searching, filters and impact factor tools.L.A. Stories | Documenting the History of Labor Movements in Los AngelesUCLA Library2024-01-09 | L.A. recently gained attention as a hub of organized labor activity, but its culture of community-lead social change emerged long before 2023's "Hot Labor Summer."
In the first installment of L.A. Stories, a new UCLA Library series, Tobias Higbie, UCLA Professor of History and Labor Studies, and Vivian Rothstein, retired Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy (LAANE) and UNITE HERE Local 11 organizer, discuss labor movements in Los Angeles over the years and the role of UCLA Library in preserving this important history.
Learn more about the collections: https://go.library.ucla.edu/la-stories#AskAConservator | Audiovisual (AV) preservation: How are open reels conserved at UCLA Library?UCLA Library2023-11-03 | The UCLA Library Preservation and Conservation (#UCLALibPres) team gives behind-the-scenes tour of the Audiovisual (AV) Digitization Lab 🔊🎥. Learn how materials make their way over to the Lab and the open reel conservation process. #AskAConservator
Full series info: https://ucla.in/49mMY7B More about the UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation Department: https://ucla.in/3HGm52g
#UCLALibrary #UCLA #AskAConservatorDay #library #conservator #preservation #avpreservation #openreel#AskAConservator | How does UCLA Library handle wet books?UCLA Library2023-11-03 | The UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation Department (#UCLALibPres) spotlights the typical process our conservators do when books from our collections encounter unexpected puddles ☂️🌧️
Learn how we work to revive borrowed books after an accidental encounter with a rain shower! #AskAConservator
Full series info: https://ucla.in/49mMY7B More about the UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation Department: https://ucla.in/3HGm52g
#BookConservation #UCLALibrary #UCLA #AskAConservatorDay #library#AskAConservator | How does UCLA Library circulate books with degraded spines?UCLA Library2023-11-03 | Conservators at the UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation Department (#UCLALibPres) help make the Library’s collections accessible. Watch to learn how we're able to circulate books with degraded spines! 👀 #AskAConservator
Full series info: https://ucla.in/49mMY7B More about the UCLA Library Preservation & Conservation Department: https://ucla.in/3HGm52g
#BookConservation #UCLALibrary #UCLA #AskAConservatorDay #librariesThe Latest Decisions in Fair Use, 2023UCLA Library2023-03-01 | The Fair Use exception to copyright law continues to evolve through judicial decisions. This session will talk about the landmark cases that reached the U.S. Supreme Court since the exception was codified in 1976, and discuss how they shape decision making. We will also review a few recent cases that will further tweak our understanding of the proper application of Fair Use. Come hear this roundup of cases, and learn how these new developments can and will impact how fair use decisions are properly made.What the F.U.? Fair Use, Licenses, and DnDUCLA Library2023-02-27 | You have a right to Fair Use in US Copyright law, but what just what is Fair Use? How can your right to Fair Use be expanded or limited through licenses? And what's this have to do with Dungeons & Dragons?
Learn how to use the Fair Use Test so that you can use copyrighted materials without first having to get permission. Find out just why Dungeons and Dragons was in the Copyright news... and how the controversy has impacted creators everywhere.
Taught by Jennifer Chan, scholarly communication librarian, UCLARequesting UCLA Library Special Collections Materials Described in the Online Archive of CaliforniaUCLA Library2022-07-16 | ...Entangled Collections: Colonial Histories and the Ethics of Ownership and StewardshipUCLA Library2022-06-13 | May 18, 2022 | Session two of "Contested Collections: Grappling With History and Forging Pathways for Repatriation," a virtual symposium hosted by the UCLA Library's International and Area Studies Department: bit.ly/uclal-symposium.
This session provided an overview of the global history of colonialism and its outsized role in the development of cultural heritage collections, particularly in the Western world. Using examples of repatriation to Africa and Southeast Asia, panelists discussed the ethics of ownership and stewardship, the fight by formerly colonized countries to reclaim their heritage, and what constitutes full restitution.
Speakers (in order of appearance):
– Alice Procter, art historian and writer
– Ndubuisi Ezeluomba, Françoise Billion Richardson Curator of African Art, New Orleans Museum of Art
– Panggah Ardiyansyah, PhD candidate, History of Art and Archaeology Department, SOAS University of London
– Moderator: Susan Slyomovics, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, UCLABeyond NAGPRA: Centering Cultural Sovereignty and Indigenous Knowledge SystemsUCLA Library2022-06-13 | May 18, 2022 | Session three of "Contested Collections: Grappling With History and Forging Pathways for Repatriation," a virtual symposium hosted by the UCLA Library's International and Area Studies Department: bit.ly/uclal-symposium.
The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) is the law that covers repatriation in the United States. Considering its limitations, what is the responsibility of libraries, archives, and museums in relinquishing ownership of other Native items? How have other countries dealt with repatriation? The panelists examined these issues, provided repatriation examples, and discussed how Indigenous communities, knowledge systems, and processes could and should be centered moving forward.
Speakers (in order of appearance):
– Wendy Giddens Teeter, Cultural Resources Archaeologist, Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians
– Mishuana Goeman (Tonawanda Band of Seneca), Professor of Gender Studies and American Indian Studies; Special Advisor to the Chancellor on Native American and Indigenous Affairs, UCLA
– Jennifer R. O’Neal (The Confederated Tribes of Grande Ronde), Assistant Professor, Department of Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies, University of Oregon
– Moderator: Camille Callison (Tahltan Nation), University Librarian, University of the Fraser Valley; Co-Lead, National Indigenous Knowledge and Language AlliancePaving a Way Forward: Current and Future Approaches to RestitutionUCLA Library2022-06-13 | May 19, 2022 | Final session of "Contested Collections: Grappling With History and Forging Pathways for Repatriation," a virtual symposium hosted by the UCLA Library's International and Area Studies Department: bit.ly/uclal-symposium.
Due to colonialism and looting, many Western cultural heritage institutions have numerous items in their collections that belong to other countries and communities. What can be done to amend the status quo? This session provided examples of current policies and processes of governments, institutions, and individuals related to the repatriation of cultural objects. Panelists discussed the challenges of and opportunities for decolonizing libraries, archives, and museums, including the importance of reparative and cooperative practices.
Speakers (in order of appearance):
– Leila Amineddoleh, Founding Partner, Amineddoleh & Associates, LLC; Adjunct Professor of Law, New York University
– Damien Webb (Palawa), Manager, Indigenous Engagement Branch, State Library of New South Wales
– Khadija von Zinnenburg Carroll, Professor, Central European University - Vienna
– Moderator: T-Kay Sangwand, Librarian for Digital Collection Development, UCLA LibraryReturning Home: Reclaiming Nazi-Looted Jewish MaterialsUCLA Library2022-06-13 | May 17, 2022 | Session one of "Contested Collections: Grappling With History and Forging Pathways for Repatriation," a virtual symposium hosted by the UCLA Library's International and Area Studies Department: bit.ly/uclal-symposium.
This session told the story of the UCLA Library's repatriation of Judaica books to the Jewish Museum in Prague (JMP) within the context of the Holocaust and the looting of Jewish cultural artifacts. It detailed JMP's efforts at recovering lost materials and UCLA's process in preparing the items for return. It also included a case study of a restituted collection that was donated to the UCLA Library.
Speakers (in order of appearance):
– Lisa Leff, Professor of History, American University; Director of the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
– Michal Bušek, Jewish Studies Researcher, Jewish Museum in Prague
– Diane Mizrachi, Librarian for Jewish and Israel Studies and Social Sciences, UCLA Library
– Russell Johnson, Curator for History of Medicine and the Sciences, UCLA Library Special Collections
– Moderator: Renata Fuchs, Lecturer, Department of European Languages and Transcultural Studies and Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies, UCLACelebrating the UCLA Librarys 2022 GraduatesUCLA Library2022-06-10 | A virtual procession for the UCLA Library's graduating workers! We are excited to see you flourish in your future professional and academic pursuits. Congratulate and tag any familiar faces you see among these #UCLA2022 grads!
Read their favorite Library employment memories at bit.ly/uclal-grad22.Adulting 101 | Hit the Road: All About TravelUCLA Library2022-05-18 | This edition of the UCLA Library’s Adulting 101 series – in partnership with UCLA's International Education Office – focuses on study abroad opportunities, as well as how to travel longer, further and more efficiently while keeping costs manageable!
Panelists: – Magdalena Barragan, Executive Director of the UCLA International Education Office (https://ieo.ucla.edu/), discussing upcoming opportunities for Bruins (starting at 2:35) – Library staff member Gissel Rios and IEO Intake Advisor Jaquelin Tafolla reflecting on their study abroad experiences in Denmark and Mexico, respectively (starting at 30:18) – Library communications manager Ben Alkaly sharing tips and tricks learned during his visits to 42 countries and 37 states (starting at 41:45)
For the archive of past UCLA Library Adulting 101 sessions, visit https://guides.library.ucla.edu/Adulting101Pamelas Learning Narrative VideoUCLA Library2022-01-31 | Visit our website for more research and writing tips from your friends at WI+RE: uclalibrary.github.io/research-tipsWI+RE Learning Narratives: AbigailUCLA Library2022-01-10 | Visit our website for more research and writing tips from your friends at WI+RE: uclalibrary.github.io/research-tipsFinding Books and More Using UC Library SearchUCLA Library2021-11-05 | With millions titles available to students, finding books and other resources at UCLA can sometimes seem like a daunting task. But we at the Library are here to help you navigate our resources so that you can find the best information for your needs. With our quick tips, you will navigate UC Library Search, and pick up some time-saving skills to use while doing your research!
You can follow along with our search or start your own by going to the UCLA Library homepage at library.ucla.edu. So, open the Library website in a new tab, and let's get started!
Visit our website for more research and writing tips from your friends at WI+RE: https://uclalibrary.github.io/researc...Saving Books and More to ZoteroUCLA Library2021-09-23 | Hey there Bruins! Zotero is a great (and free!) software program that helps you save your sources, organize your research, and create bibliographies in virtually any citation style with just the click of a button.
Let us know what you think!Saving Articles to ZoteroUCLA Library2021-09-23 | Hey there Bruins! Zotero is a great (and free!) software program that helps you save your sources, organize your research, and create bibliographies in virtually any citation style with just the click of a button.
Visit our website for more research and writing tips from your friends at WI+RE: uclalibrary.github.io/research-tipsHow to Write a Thesis Statement (3/3) Relate Prompts to InterestsUCLA Library2021-09-10 | ...How to Write a Thesis Statement (2/3) Looking at Your SourcesUCLA Library2021-09-10 | ...How to Write a Thesis Statement Introduction (1/3)UCLA Library2021-09-10 | Hey Bruins! Brush up on your knowledge on how to write a thesis statement with this 3 part video series part of a bigger project on our WIRE site!Navigating UC Library SearchUCLA Library2021-08-09 | ...2021 UCLA Library Prize Winner ShowcaseUCLA Library2021-06-23 | Join us to hear fascinating presentations from Bruins who have been recognized by the UCLA Library for excellence in undergraduate research in 2021. · Anisha Chandra '23 presented “The Role of Diet and Exercise in the Gut Microbiota and Metabolism.” (Starting at 5:50) · J.W. Clark '21 presented “Voicing the Fox: Vulpine Bodies and the Zoopolitics of Listening.” (18:08) · Tamar Ervin '22 presented “Coronal Hole Detection using Machine Learning Techniques.” (29:20) · Kristen Tam '23 presented “Stimulating Antitrust Enforcement to Expand the Regenerative Agriculture Movement.” (40:50)
For more information and to see a complete list of 2021’s winners visit https://www.library.ucla.edu/news/2021-ucla-library-prize-undergraduate-research-winnersCelebrating the Librarys 2021 Graduates!UCLA Library2021-06-11 | A virtual procession for the UCLA Library's graduating workers! We are excited to watch you flourish in your future professional and academic pursuits. Congratulate and tag any familiar faces you see among these #UCLA2021 grads! ----------- Read their favorite Library employment memories at ucla.in/3fZ5byhTransgender Health: Focus on Gender Identity & Inclusivity | April 5, 2021UCLA Library2021-04-29 | The Network of the National Library of Medicine is funded by the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services. Learn more at nnlm.gov
The Network of the National Library of Medicine Pacific Southwest Region at the UCLA Biomedical Library and Southeastern Atlantic Region at the University of Maryland-Baltimore are excited to announce the first NNLM Transgender Health webinar series. With approximately 1 million adults in the U.S. identifying Transgender/Gender Non-Binary (TGNB), this series will promote awareness of the social determinants of health, health disparities, and resilience in these individuals and communities.
Transgender Health Webinar Series: nnlm.gov/classes/nnlm-transgender-health-seriesTransgender Health: Focus on Mental Health & Resiliency | April 12, 2021UCLA Library2021-04-29 | The Network of the National Library of Medicine is funded by the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services. Learn more at https://nnlm.gov.
The Network of the National Library of Medicine Pacific Southwest Region at the UCLA Biomedical Library and Southeastern Atlantic Region at the University of Maryland-Baltimore are excited to announce the first NNLM Transgender Health webinar series. With approximately 1 million adults in the U.S. identifying Transgender/Gender Non-Binary (TGNB), this series will promote awareness of the social determinants of health, health disparities, and resilience in these individuals and communities.
Transgender Health Webinar Series: nnlm.gov/classes/nnlm-transgender-health-seriesBehind the Scenes at the UCLA Film & Television ArchiveUCLA Library2021-04-26 | Explore UCLA's world-renowned Film & Television Archive with its experts as your guide. Join new FTVA Director May Hong HaDuong along with staff Mark Quigley, Maya Montañez Smukler, and Todd Wiener for an inside look at the collections, preservation work and research opportunities that make this archive so special.Wi+Re Learning Narratives: MoniqueUCLA Library2021-04-09 | ...How to Use Simpsons Diversity IndexUCLA Library2021-04-06 | ...WI+RE Learning Narratives: NéhaUCLA Library2021-04-01 | ...History of Belarusian Vyzhyvanka WebinarUCLA Library2021-03-26 | On March 3rd, the UCLA Library hosted a webinar on the history of Belarusian Vyzhyvanka. The program was co-sponsored by the UCLA Department of Slavic, East European and Eurasian Languages and Cultures, the UCLA Center for European and Russian Studies and Chrysalis Mag.
The online panel was moderated by Dr. Sasha Razor, a recent alumna of UCLA's Department Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies and exhibition curator.
The Keynote address was delivered by Rufina Bazlova, a Prague–based Belarusian artist, followed by a discussion by Nadzeya Norton, Antonina Stebur, and Alisa Lozhkina.Celebration of the Powell Society 2021UCLA Library2021-03-25 | An exclusive live event with University Librarian Virginia Steel in conversation with Eric Nusbaum, author of "Stealing Home: Los Angeles, the Dodgers, and the Lives Caught in Between." A story about baseball, the American Dream, and the community displaced by the fight to turn Los Angeles into a big league city, research for Stealing Home was conducted using UCLA Library collections.Positionality & Research: Awareness StrategiesUCLA Library2021-03-17 | Positionality in research refers to how our identities and experiences not only influence the choices we make in the research process but also how those factors shape the way others see us and give us power and/or insight in a specific research context. This dynamic of perception, experience and power, has a profound impact on us as we do research. This resource introduces learners to strategies to remain aware of the positionality going into the research process.Positionality & Research: How our Identities Shape InquiryUCLA Library2021-03-16 | Positionality in research refers to how our identities and experiences not only influence the choices we make in the research process but also how those factors shape the way others see us and give us power and/or insight in a specific research context. This dynamic of perception, experience and power, has a profound impact on us as we do research. This resource introduces learners to the significance of positionality in research and helps them identify ways to remain aware of their positionality throughout the research process.Genetic Drift: Founder Effect vs. BottleneckUCLA Library2021-03-05 | Here's the link to the full Genetic Drift tutorial on the UCLA WI+RE website: uclalibrary.github.io/research-tips/genetic-drift
Animations by: Cymfenee Dean-Phifer Voiceover by: Cymfenee Dean-Phifer and Kian Ravaei Sound Effects by: Kian RavaeiHardy-Weinberg Equilibrium: The Five AssumptionsUCLA Library2021-03-02 | Here's the link to the full Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium tutorial on the UCLA WI+RE website: uclalibrary.github.io/research-tips/what-is-hardy-weinberg-equilibrium
Animations and Voiceover by: Cymfenee Dean-Phifer Sound Effects by: Kian RavaeiFrom the Map Room to the Grand Canyon: Library Collections in the FieldUCLA Library2021-02-26 | UCLA Librarian Wynn Tranfield shares how map collections are deployed in the sciences, from first year students exploring the SEL/Geology Library's Map Room to maps (and librarians!) accompanying upper level geology students as they gain essential fieldwork experience.Sounds Fair to Me! the Copyright Game ShowUCLA Library2021-02-26 | Sounds Fair to Me! was recorded in front of a live studio audience in February 2020.
Featuring our Panel of Copyright Experts: - Judith Finell, Music Industry Professor, UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music - Robert Fisk, Music Industry Program Chair, UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music - David Nimmer, UCLA Law Professor and author of "Nimmer on Copyright" Your Host: Martin J. Brennan.
UCLA Library Production Team: Salma Abumeeiz, Ben Alkaly, Christopher Brennan, Chris Hightower, Simon Lee, Suzy Lee, Alison Scott, Hannah Sutherland, Matthew Vest. MMA Consultant: Kyra Folk-Farber, UC Santa Barbara. Videographer: Robert Macaisa. Disc Jockey: Matthew Gilbert.
Made possible by the UCLA Music Library and generous support from Julie and Joseph Kwan.
During this presentation, UCLA librarians share how they engage students at all levels with primary sources (including rare books, archives, manuscripts, and oral histories) as we invest in active spaces for active learning.Drawn to Paradise: Jewish Musicians in Los AngelesUCLA Library2021-01-20 | UCLA Library Jewish and Israel Studies Librarian Diane Mizrachi and Music Librarian Matthew Vest explore the history of Jewish musicians who made important contributions to musical and cultural life in Los Angeles through unique objects from the UCLA Library's collection.
Explore the Drawn to Paradise virtual exhibit: https://guides.library.ucla.edu/drawntoparadise
The songs shared in the video have been reduced in length due to copyright restrictions. Below is a list of the song titles and artists for reference. Fanny Brice, “Becky Is Back in the Ballet” Naomi Schemer, “Jerusalem of Gold” Eddy Manson, “Suite From Little Fugitive” Kiss, “Rock’n Roll All Night” Eric Zeisl, “Requiem Ebraico” Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, “3 Sephardic Songs, No. 1. Alte Montagne” Arnold Schoenberg, “A Survivor from Warsaw”Telling UCLAs Stories: An Inside Look at the University ArchivesUCLA Library2020-11-20 | Featuring materials from UCLA Library Special Collections, University Archivist Heather Briston shared seldom-heard stories of Bruin people, places, and events on Nov. 18, 2020. Attendees then asked their own questions about campus history during a Q&A session hosted by Library Special Collections Director Athena Jackson.