People to See, Places to Go
Washington D.C.
For up to date events in the D.C. area during SAA, visit:
The Washington Blade, the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender newspaper, http://www.washblade.com/
Woman's Monthly, for the women's community, http://www.womo.com/
http://gay-washingtondc.com/gay-washingtondc/index_4.html (6/7/01);
http://www.sissycity.com/index2.htm (6/7/01);
http://www.washblade.com/kiosk/bars/body.htm (6/8/01);
The following are just highlights; there are many things to do and places to
go in D.C. Information came from above web sites.
*Eateries*
Annie's Paramount Steak House (Gay Owned & Operated)
1609 17th St, NW
202-232-0395
Steakhouse
Banana Cafe (gay-friendly)
1517 Connecticut Ave., NW
202-387-1462
La Tomate
1701 Connecticut Ave, NW
202-667-5505
Italian/French
Larry's Lounge
18th and T Sts., NW
202-483-1483
Mimi's American Bistro (Gay Friendly)
2120 P St., NW
202-464-6464
American cuisine
Mr. Henry's (Gay Friendly)
601 Pennsylvania Ave., SE
202-546-8412
Pub food.
Peppers
1527 17th St, NW
202-328-8193
Cajun/Caribbean/Mexican
Pizza Paradiso (Gay Friendly)
2029 P St., NW
202-223-1245
Pizza
1409 Playbill Café (Gay Owned & Operated)
1409 14th St., NW
202-265-3055
American cuisine
Raku Dupont: An Asian Diner (Gay Friendly)
1900 Q St. NW
202-265-7258
Asian cuisine
Sheridan's (Gay Owned and Operated)
1874 Old West Steakhouse
713 8th St. SE
202-546-6955
Steakhouse
Trattoria Alberto (Gay Friendly)
506 8th Street, SE
202-544-2007
Italian
Trio (Gay Friendly)
1624 Q St., NW
202-232-5611
American Cuisine - "The neighborhood's favorite greasy spoon."
Two Quail (Gay Friendly)
320 Massachusetts Ave., NE
202-543-8030
*Bars, Clubs, Dancing*
Badlands
1415 - 22nd St. NW
202-296-0505
dancing, video, men
Club Chaos
1603 17th Street, NW
202-232-4141
dancing, drag, video, men and women
DC Eagle
639 New York Ave. NW
202-347-6025
country-western, Levi/leather, pool tables, men
Ellington's on 8th
424-A 8th St., SE
202-546-8308
Restaurant, jazz, men and women
The Fireplace
2161 P St. NW
202-293-1293
video, pool table, men
Hung Jury
1819 H St., NW
202-785-8181
dancing, women
JR's Bar & Grill
1519 - 17th St., NW
202-328-0090
video, pool tables, men
Omega DC
2122 P St. NW
202-223-4917
dancing, video, pool tables, men
Phase One
525 8th St., SE
202-544-6831
dancing, women
Remington's
639 Pennsylvania Ave. SE
202-543-3113
country/western, video, karaoke, pool tables, men
News from the Vault
Schlesinger Library has opened a portion of the papers of Holly Near to
researchers. The collection documents Near's career as a singer, songwriter, and
activist co-founder of Redwood Records, who uses her music to agitate for
women's rights, gay and lesbian rights, human rights, and peace. The materials
available consist of eight linear feet of papers plus audio-visual and oversized
materials. Debbie Richards and Susan von Salis processed the collection; the
finding aid is available by clicking on "Holly Near" at
http://oasis.harvard.edu/sch.html .
To the Vault
(New Accessions)
University of Louisville Ekstrom Library has received the Williams-- Nichols
Collection. Formerly known as the Kentucky Gay and Lesbian Library and Archives,
it has been named for its founder, longtime local gay activist David Williams,
and his late lover, Norman Nichols, who died of AIDS in 1995.
The Williams-Nichols Collection is believed to be among the top ten largest
collections of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender materials in the U.S. Over
3000 books, about 14,000 print publications, nearly 400 videotapes, and
countless t-shirts, buttons, bumper stickers, and other ephemera are included.
Only four other collections are known to have more books.
Crucial to the collection are extensive newspaper clippings, newsletters,
meeting minutes, correspondence, fliers, and other print materials detailing
Kentucky's gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender history since the late 1960s.
Dr. James Sears used these primary source materials in writing his
forthcoming history of the gay and lesbian South after Stonewall. Rebels,
Rubyfruit and Rhinestones is due out in bookstores this fall.
Controversy continues to arise within the gay and lesbian community over
whether to donate lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender materials to libraries or archives or to try to retain
the materials within the community itself. The donation of the Williams--Nichols
Collection raised the issue once again. But for David Williams, there were
several practical considerations for transferring the collection.
Williams, who had housed the material in his home, found the collection
increasingly unwieldy. Materials overflowed from bookcases to piles on the floor
and to the cellar which became unusable. The chance to move it out of the house
was irresistible.
But two other situations played an important role. The Ekstrom Library offers
much greater public access than Williams could provide at his home. Secondly,
the library uses state-of-the-art techniques to preserve fragile documents. Most
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender organizations do not have the physical space to provide public access to
the materials nor the monetary backing to perform the expensive preservation
actions needed to maintain such collections properly.
The Ekstrom Library held a dedication of the collection on 28 June in
connection with the Louisville Gay Pride Celebration. In addition to a reception
after the dedication, the Special Collections area in Ekstrom will maintain a
display of several books and magazines from the collection throughout the
summer.
[Thanks to Brenda J. Marston, for this information.]
Schlesinger Library has acquired the papers of Alix Dobkin ("The Head
Lesbian"), who's Lavender Jane Loves Women was the first album of
women's music to be distributed internationally in 1973. For further
information, log on at http://www.radcliffe.edu/schles .
Archives and Special Collections Department at Northeastern University
recently received eleven cubic feet of records of The Theater Offensive. The web
site for The Theater Offensive -- http://www.thetheateroffensive.org --
indicates that "for the past ten years, The Theater Offensive has driven its
ambitious programming to the cutting edge of queer culture and politics.
Grounded in a commitment to build an activist-based artistic forum, its
groundbreaking programming has become a vital arena for the unique voice of
queer cultures." For more information on Northeastern University, see
http://www.lib.neu.edu/archives/
News About the Vault
In February, the Archives at the University of Hawai'i at Mnoa moved from
three storage areas in Sinclair Library to the new addition to Hamilton Library.
Then in March, we moved more materials from an off-site storage area into the
new facility. Further consolidating will have to wait until the beginning of
fall semester 2002 when renovation to the older parts of Hamilton Library are
finished and library departments temporarily using space in the new addition can
return to the rest of the library. Then the Congressional Papers collections and
other materials will move to the new addition to Hamilton.
Community Archives Liaison Project
Needs Your Help
(Envision here Uncle Sam
pointing a finger)
At the upcoming annual meeting the Community Archives Liaison Project,
formerly the Buddy Project, will be discussed. The idea for a Community Archives
Liaison Project started in 1994 when LAGAR's membership expressed a desire to
pair up professional archivists in LAGAR with people in community archives to
help them deal with basic archival issues.
Your input is needed on the following issues and questions: Is the LAGAR
membership still interested in doing the Community Archives Liaison Project? How
do we make community archives aware of SAA and LAGAR and aware of the ways we
might benefit these organizations?
LAGAR needs to develop a list of members willing to volunteer as consultants
on an one-time or ongoing basis with community archives. Ideally we will have
volunteers from different regions of the country. LAGAR also needs a
comprehensive list of community archives in order to create a network between
LAGAR and the groups documenting the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community.
Please bring any ideas you have to the meeting. Paula Jabloner and Debbie
Richards thank everyone who returned the survey from last year's newsletter and
volunteered to be a part of the project. If you are interested in getting
involved, please email Paula <pjabloner@sjhistory.org> or Debbie
<richards@radcliffe.edu>.
From Archives/Archivists
Floods Again
Undoubtedly many of you read the account from Mark Lambert, Special
Collections and Government Documents Librarian, South Texas College of Law
Library which he posted to the Archives Listserv last June. He had assisted
other records curators following the floods in Texas from the tropical storm.
Now the first week in August, another tropical storm is pouring rain and
bringing floods to areas with libraries, archives, museums, etc. So I thought
some of Lambert's reflections might be in order as reminders.
He indicated a 1 cubic foot record center carton full of records, when submerged in water, and then allowed to partially drain excess water, will expand to more than 1.5 cubic feet and will burst the box open. The weight will have doubled with the water. The soggy handles of that 1 cubic foot box will now tear under the load of the box.
The weight of soaking wet boxes will wear out your emergency recovery team
workers quickly. Compare your recovery effort to moving the archives. Realize
before the flood occurs, you will need more workers and shorter shifts than you
would to move boxes of dry papers.
Given the effects of water upon materials, Mark questioned the capacity of
cantilever library shelving, which some archives have rather than four-post
shelving, to hold up when the contents suddenly doubles in wait. For those of us
with this cantilever style of shelving, usually handed down from the books
stacks to archives, perhaps the floods give another reason to appeal to
administrators for good shelving.
Leather Archives & Museum
Seeks Executive Director
The Leather Archives & Museum, located in Chicago, is searching for a new Executive Director. Joseph W. Bean, the current ED, says, "I do everything from water the grass to design the exhibits to ... you get
it." The LA&M is buying a building to house its collection. Bean feels that "the time has come to get someone with the right education and information in
the E. D. slot."
If you or anyone you know might be interested in becoming "the Boss (go
ahead, tell yourself what to do next) at the Leather Archives," contact Joseph W. Bean at archives@leatherarchives.org
for more information or send your resume and/or query to
Leather Archives & Museum
6418 N. Greenview Avenue
Chicago, IL 60626
telephone: (773) 761-9200
New Addition to Google Search
Peter A. Kurilecz, frequent poster of summaries of archives news, indicates that Google has now added an image search feature to their advanced search page. While only in beta, he indicates that it is pretty good. The url is
http://www.google.com/advanced_search Kurilecz cautions to be sure to select
the number of results to be displayed before beginning your search.
Digital Acquisitions Policies
Desired by Library of Congress
The Library of Congress is seeking papers or sample collection development/ management policy statements concerning the acquisition,
treatment, and preservation of digital materials. This includes electronic
resources, such as subscription databases; e-books and e-journals; digital music and film; contents from the Internet; digital archival collections;
government publication that are produced and exist exclusively in digital
form; and CD-ROMs and videodiscs.
This information will assist the Library in developing a national strategy for the long-term access and preservation of digital information content. Contact person is Ms. Emily C. Howie, Program Specialist/ Librarian. Email her at emho@loc.gov or write her at:
National Digital Library Program. Library of Congress
101 Independence Ave., S.E.
Washington, D.C. 20540-1300
Gay and Lesbian
Community Center
of South Florida
On 11 May 2001, Stonewall Library and Archives (SLA) celebrated the grand
opening of a new 2300 square foot space at the Gay and Lesbian Community Center
of South Florida. In its existence, Stonewall Library and Archives has had
several temporary homes; it is hoped that this is its last move. Dr. John C.
Graves made a generous donation of funds for the renovation of the current
space.
The newly renovated space holds the John C. Graves Reading Room with over
10,000 volumes of books, videos and CDs. Approximately 90% of the collection was
donated by individuals.
The library is open five days a week from 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Since the move to the Community Center, circulation has quadrupled and the number of visitors to the library has increased five-fold.
The archives are housed in an 800 square foot facility adjacent to the
library. With funding from the Gill Foundation, the Dade Human Rights Campaign
and the Florida Local Historical Records Program, compact shelving was purchased
to hold the 4000 linear foot collection of materials. The grants also allowed
for the purchase of over $10,000 of preservation supplies to stabilize the
collection.
The archives holds the records of many local south Florida organizations. Additionally, the archives holds the Richard Inman papers, founder of the Florida Mattachine Society; and the Joel Starkey papers, founder of the Southern Gay Archives. The periodical collection has over 1000 titles with thousands of issues of early magazines, journals, and newspapers important in the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community.
The Gay and Lesbian Community Center is at 1717 North Andrews Avenue, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311- 4813. The telephone number is (954) 763-8565; FAX is (954) 563-9007. One may reach SLA through email at info@stonewall-library.org or through the web site at www.stonewall-library.org.