Monday, March 27, 2017

Special Birthday Gift Shared with the Libraries

Special Birthday Gift Shared with the Libraries
from Recently at UML… A News Release from the University of Manitoba Libraries, November 1992, News Release No. 4
A novel birthday gift has led to the enhancement of children’s literature studies at the University of Manitoba. When Miss Mabel Jean Fraser celebrated her 90th birthday, her family and friends wanted to mark the occasion by doing something that would recognize her career as teacher and librarian. Together they made a presentation to the University in honour of Miss Fraser, requesting the donation be used to add to the collection of children’s books in the Libraries.

The Children’s Literature Collection is based in the D.S. Woods Education Library and supports courses in children’s literature, language arts and reading at the Faculty of Education. The Collection comprises some volumes ranging from medal winning picture books to fairytale collections to historic boys and girls annuals. The present donation is targeted towards recent Canadian publications featuring such distinguished authors as Robert Munsch, Michael Martychenko and Stephane Poulin.

Miss Fraser, a graduate of the University of Manitoba (B.A., 1924), taught in the high schools of Boissevain, Holland and Selkirk. She eventually moved to the Correspondence Branch of the Manitoba Department of Education, and later to the Provincial Normal School in Tuxedo. She held her position there as librarian and instructor of children’s literature for 19 years. When the Normal School amalgamated with the Faculty of Education, Miss Fraser moved to the Fort Garry Campus for an additional year of service before retirement.

A luncheon was held in her honour on January 31, 1992, in the Education Building. Family, friends, representatives of the Libraries, and members of the Faculty of Education were in attendance and heard Miss Fraser speak on the lifelong values of reading. The new collection of children’s books was on display, each book bearing a plate in dedication to Miss Fraser. Family members announced their hopes that they can keep adding to this collection in the years to come.

Monday, March 20, 2017

Former Winnipeggers ride to library’s rescue

Former Winnipeggers ride to library’s rescue Millennium expansion gets boost from Toronto party by Bud Robertson from Winnipeg Free Press, Monday, February 5, 2001
SITTING down over cappuccino one afternoon, three members of the Winnipeg Library Foundation came up with an ingenious idea to raise money for its millennium expansion plan.

Throw a party in Toronto, they said, invite former Winnipeggers and business leaders who have connections with the city, and appeal to their loyalty to help fund the $25-million library project.

And so was born “Gerry’s Party” – an after-hours shmooz-fest hosted Saturday by two ex-Winnipeggers, Gerry Schwartz of Onex Corp., who couldn’t make it to the soiree in the end, and Charlie Coffey, an executive vice-president with the Royal Bank.

Inviting the guests to attend a performance of Larry’s Party, a musical based on a novel by former Winnipeg writer Carol Shields, was a natural fit, said Todd Pennell, executive director of the library foundation, who was one of those brainstorming in the cafeteria that day with city businessmen Joe Bova and Bruce Robinson.

They found sponsors to pay for the tickets and the post-play reception. The only cost to the foundation was Pennell’s airline tickets and expenses.

“We, as a foundation, can’t afford to put on a special night like this,” said Pennell. “It’s very expensive to do.”

And the foundation needs all the money it can get in its efforts to bring Winnipeg’s library system into the 21st century.

Compared to other Canadian cities – many of which have already built new libraries or expanded the ones they have – Winnipeg is trailing woefully behind, said Pennell.

The library, built in 1972, doesn’t have nearly enough materials nor computer workstations for a city of this size.

As an example, the main library in Bridgewater, N.S., a town about 7,300 people, has 125 computers with Internet access. Winnipeg’s main branch has a paltry 20.

“One out of every two people going into the library today cannot find the book that they want or must order it from another branch," said Pennell, and that’s placing a tremendous burden on already stressed library branches.

In 1999, 143,015 pieces of material – books, videos, audio tapes, etc. – were sent to the branches from the main library. In return, the branches sent 279,804 items to the main library.

“The usage is increasing at Centennial and it’s sucking the books out of the branches,” said Pennell. And that’s not all.

On a per capita basis, Winnipeg’s library ranks 31st in a list of 50 Canadian cities in terms of overall spending, a dismal 46th in terms of hours of operation, 37th in visits per capita and 34th in circulation.

Libraries in Regina and Saskatoon – cities about one-third the size of Winnipeg – also outrank Winnipeg’s library system.

The foundation hopes to add 250,000 books, 100 computer work stations, and an expansion of the children’s collection.

Launched in October 1999, the fund-raising campaign has so far raised $9.6-million -- $5-million from the city and the rest from private donors.

As soon as they have the whole $25 million in the bank, said Pennell, they’ll start the ball rolling, hopefully as early as this year.

For Pennell, it can’t come soon enough.

“The library is the single most important source of life-long learning because it is the only one that you can be two-years-old or you can be 92-years-old and you go into it and use it.”

Monday, March 13, 2017

Must be a ‘Peg party

Kelekis? Jeanne’s? Must be a ‘Peg party
Expatriates in Toronto gather to help library
From Winnipeg Free Press, Monday, February 25, 2001 A1

TORONTO – The food table is loaded up with quail eggs and caviar, but the guests are lunging for the little Kelekis hotdogs and slices of Jeanne’s cakes.
“It’s like heaven!” gushes Toronto advertising honcho Ron Telpner as h e bites into one of Mary Kelekis’s famous Winnipeg wieners. 
 
It’s the sweet taste of cherished memories for Telpner, former head of McKim Advertising, and about 100 other expatriate Winnipeggers brought together over the weekend in Hogtown to help raise money for the $25-million Winnipeg Millennium Library expansion. 
‘Expensive hotdog’  
“This could be the most expensive hotdog I’ve ever had,” Telpner says with a laugh as a server carrying a tray of Winnipeg goldeye navigates her way through the crowded reception area of the Bluma Appel Theatre at the St. Lawrence Centre in the heart of the city.  
“It’s the first time I’ve had this little hotdog,” muses Roy Perlman, a Toronto retailer who does a lot of business in Winnipeg. “It’s wonderful,” he declares.  
If the hotdogs weren’t enough to get the nostalgia bubbling to the surface, the guests were invited before the party to Saturday’s final showing of Larry’s Party, the musical adaptation of Carol Shields’ novel about a Winnipegger struggling to find himself.  
By invitations only; donations encouraged
Library boosters were in out in full force over the weekend in Toronto, trying to shake up some cash commitments for Winnipeg’s plans to upgrade Centennial Library. 
 
THE POSSE:
Glen Murray
– Winnipeg’s mayor since 1998. Murray was first elected to council in 1989. 
 
Charlie Coffey – The Royal Bank’s executive vice-president of government and community affairs, formerly worked in Winnipeg as senior vice-president and general manager for this region. Coffey has long been a champion of aboriginal economic development issues.  
Senator Mira Spivak – A former chairwoman of the Winnipeg School Division board of trustees. Spivak was appointed to the Senate in 1986. Her husband Sidney was leader of the provincial Tories in the 1970s.  
Senator Lois Wilson – Wilson, who was born in Winnipeg and attended Kelvin High School, was appointed to the Senate in 1998. She became the first woman moderator of the United Church of Canada in 1980.  
Ed Schreyer – Premier of Manitoba from 1969 to 1977, Schreyer was appointed to the position of Governor General by Pierre Trudeau in 1979.  
Arni Thorsteinson – President of the Winnipeg-based development company, Shelter Corp., Thorsteinson received his Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Manitoba.  
Others included Winnipeg businessman and community activist Joe Bova, Western Glove Work’s Bob Silver, local arts patron Kathleen Richardson and Dee and Harold Buchweld 
THE TARGETS:
Tom Axworthy
– Principal secretary to former prime minister Pierre Trudeau from 1981 to 1984. 
 
Ian Delaney – Chairman of Toronto-based mining company Sherritt International Corp. The company is noted for its investments in Cuban oil production, nickel mining, power generation, cell phones, tourism and agriculture.  
Sarah Everett – President and CEO of the Bowring gift store chain. Winnipeg-based Domo Gasoline Corp., is owned by the Everett family. At one time, Sarah served as its president.  
Douglas Gibson – President and publisher of book publishing giant McClelland & Stewart Inc. since 1988.  
Lorina Sacilotto – Executive vice-president of retail marketing with Harlequin Enterprises. The world’s largest publisher of romance novels began in Winnipeg in 1949.  
Other targets included:
Jim Allen – Thomas, Allen & Son Ltd. 
 
Penny Burk – Burk and Associates  
Alex Burstein – CEO Group  
Harold Fenn – H.B. Fenn and Co.  
Matthew Fraser – Rebecca Gottlieb  
Bob Laine – Chum Group  
Jeff Lowenstein – Kenneth Cole Fashions  
Claude Primo – HarperCollins Canada  
Arthur Gale – S & B Books 
Donald MacDonald – Goodman Private Wealth Management  
Jack Stoddard – General Publishing  
Ron Telpner – Brainstorm Group  
Julia Mettus – St. Andrews Financial

Monday, March 6, 2017

Inventors know exactly where to turn to for help

By Michael Thibault For the Free Press February 19, 1997
UNLESS YOU are a manufacturer, engineer, entrepreneur or inventor, you probably don’t know Betty Dearth.

But if your occupation is one of those, or something similar, then you may have needed Dearth’s help on more than one occasion.

Dearth is the librarian of the Industrial Technology Centre Library, located on Niakwa Road in St. Boniface. The library, which resides in the Industrial Technology Centre (ITC), is a highly specialized resource library which caters to local busineses, entrepreneurs and innovators in all matters technical.

“We’re basically a source of applied technical information – the how-to stuff,” says Dearth.

There are over 5,000 sources of information, in both book and catalogue form, available to anyone who needs it, she says.

Unlike regular public libraries which cover a wide range of subjects, Dearth says the highly specialized nature of the library cuts down on the amount of traffic coming through the doors.

“We’re much more focused, but that makes us more useful to a smaller audience,” she says.

Some of the more interesting patrons of the ITC library are inventors.

The librarian says everyone from game creators to those with new ideas on fishing equipment show up to find out how they should proceed.

Dearth says she first introduces the budding Edisons to the literature on patents and copyrighting.

The ITC itself has some facilities to help in the creation of a prototype of an invention, plus the capability to test new products.

Like all resource centres in the nineties, the ITC Library is on-line at http://www.itc.mb.ca. Users can gain access to the ITC Library catalog and search for books themselves.

The ITC Library is a member of the Manitoba chapter of the Canadian Association of Special Libraries and Information Services (CASLIS). The organization has membership from about 30 small specialized libraries in the city.

Dearth says the libraries in CASLIS assist one another in helping their patrons.

“The bigger network we have, the better we can help people,” she says.

Dearth says although not many people know of the ITC Library, or the city’s other smaller libraries, she points out that they do play an important role in the province.

The librarian says that often a manufacturer will rely on information at the library, such as official product specifications, to develop their own product.

Dearth says she knows the value of the library to its users. “Those who use us, continue to use us,” she says.

Judy Kendle, a representative with CASLIS, says small specialized libraries are “hidden treasures.”

Kendle points to another CASLIS member, the J. W. Crane Memorial Library on Portage Avenue as an example of the quality of information contained in small libraries.

According to Kendle, the J. W. Crane Memorial Library is Canada’s largest and best-known special library on aging.

Monday, February 27, 2017

New Library exciting at St. Emile’s

By Michael Thibault For the Free Press October 21, 1998
THE KIDS of St. Emile’s School in St. Vital have found a new hangout – the library. The school, a small private Catholic school now nearly 40 years old, has just reopened its library after completely restocking and renovating it.

“The kids love it,” says library technician Judith Enns.

Enns says the school had little choice in updating their library. Aside from many of the books being out-of-date, there were also many that were in very poor condition.

The process of rebuilding the library started about a year ago. At that time a library committee was struck and a library consultant was hired to assess the library and make suggestions.

“One of those suggestions was that the school should hire a library technician,” says Enns, explaining how she got her job.

The library technician started her new position in January, with her first role being to “weed out” the existing library book stock.

“I would say we got rid of around 75 per cent of the books that were here,” she says.

Once that was complete, a book wish list was devised which included suggestions from school administrators, teachers and students.

“We sent a note out to teachers (and others) and asked what they would like to see in the library,” Enns says.

Aside from a wide variety of fiction and educational books, the library also had to purchase new encyclopedias.

“We have spent $5,000 on new books so far,” says Enns, indicating that the book-buying spree was only the first of more to come. “We have to keep spending money and buying books.”

But books aren’t the only things that are new in the library. First and foremost in interesting new items for a lot of kids in the pre-kindergarten to grade 8 school are the new computers.

Enns says the library “is also the technology room. And now we have new computers for kids to work on.”

In fact, the library technician says while giving tours of the library to students recently, the first thing many of them wanted to know was where the new computers were.

Aesthetically, the library also invested in new items such as carpeting and bookshelves, and also received a paint job.

“The kids are amazed when they come in here. Many of them comment on the difference from a year ago,” says Enns.

The money used to renovate the library was raised by the school’s parent association, which held fund-raising events such as raffles and bike-a-thons. According to Enns, $10,000 was raised by the parents for the new-look library.

Enns says working at St. Emile’s has been a dream job. The opportunity to enter a library and help rebuild it from the ground up is an exciting occasion in the library world.

“I look forward to coming to work every day,” she says.

Enns adds one of the things she is most proud of is how she is contributing to the education of the students in the school. It is a feeling that is often reaffirmed by the number of kids who hang around the library these days.

“We want to excite kids about reading,” adds Carolyn Lamoureux, who, along with Sylvia Kozaveich, is a library helper, as well as an instructional aid at the school.

The St. Emile’s School library grand reopening was held recently. The event included local dignitaries, as well as entertainment and refreshments.

Monday, February 20, 2017

Aboriginal Justice Inquiry collection is presented to the E. K. Williams Law Library

from Recently at UML… A News Release from the University of Manitoba Libraries, March 1992, News Release No. 5
On March 11, 1992, a ceremony was held at the E. K. Williams Law Library to officially accept the gift of the library collection from the Manitoba Public Inquiry into the Administration of Justice and Aboriginal People.

The collection of approximately 1,200 items includes government reports, studies, unpublished papers, as well as published material, and covers a wide range of topics to issues of aboriginal justice: prison, myth and legend, land claims, police, aboriginal courts, and self-government. The material was collected mostly from North America, but also includes foreign and comparative material dealing with aboriginal issues in other countries, such as Australia and New Zealand. It also includes the transcripts of the community hearings: the verbatim record of public hearings held in approximately 30 Manitoba communities, and summaries of the 790 presentations made to the Commission, including a subject index. In addition, there are 42 independent studies prepared for the Commission, covering various aspects of the relationship between the justice system and aboriginal peoples of Manitoba.

This gift collection augments the existing resources of the E. K. Williams Law Library and the University of Manitoba Libraries, and marks a major contribution in the development of a strong research collection to support initiatives by the Faculty of Law and the University of Manitoba in Aboriginal Justice and Native Studies.

Special mention must be made of the work of Wanda Chandler, a former staff member in the E. K. Williams Law Library, who was seconded part-time for a year and half to the Inquiry, and did much to integrate the building of the collection with the material held by the E. K. Williams Law Library, as well as acting as the link between the resources of the University of Manitoba and the Inquiry’s researchers.

The ceremony was attended by representatives from the Faculty of Law, the University of Manitoba Libraries, the University of Manitoba, as well as the two commissioners from the Aboriginal Justice Inquiry, Associate Chief Justice A. C. Hamilton and Associate Chief Judge C. M. Sinclair.

Monday, February 13, 2017

St. Boniface General Hospital Library joins UML

from Recently at UML… A News Release from the University of Manitoba Libraries, November 1998, News Release No. 53
After many months of preparation and negotiation, the Carolyn Sifton-Helene Fuld Library at St. Boniface General Hospital (SBGH) was consolidated with the University of Manitoba Libraries. The official transfer took place on August 1, 1998, at which time the SBGH Library became a satellite operation of the Neil John Maclean Health Sciences Library. According to the formal agreement signed in June, the hospital library’s complete baseline budget, the collection, furnishings, and office equipment were transferred to the University in exchange for full academic library services at the St. Boniface sites. SBGH Library staff became employees of the University Libraries as part of the agreement. 
The restructured SGBH Library is staffed by two professional librarians, two library assistants, and a casual shelver. The collection of 400 current periodicals and 7,000 books will be maintained on site, and the library will continue to offer a full range of reference, orientation and bibliographic instruction, literature searching, and document delivery services. “As a special library at Winnipeg’s second largest hospital, our priority is to respond quickly and effectively to the information needs of clinical staff and researchers,” say library assistants, Sonja Paas and Michele Coutts. “And now University faculty and students working on the Taché campus have equal access to academic library services on site.” Within the structure of the University of Manitoba Libraries, the SBGH Library is well positioned to improve service to all its varied clientele. 
“We succeeded in making the change as transparent as possible for library users,” says Hospital Librarian, Mark Rabnett. “We’re happy with the results. Ada Ducas, Head of NJMHS Library, was a great help in making this important transition. Thanks should also go out to all those who worked so hard over the past year.” The Carolyn Sifton-Helene Fuld library remains an active member of the Manitoba Health Libraries Association. As part of the large University community, the library continues to work towards improving access to information in the health sciences. 
For more information, please contact Mark Rabnett, Head, Carolyn Sifton-Helene Fuld Library at 237-2808, or by e-mail at rabnett@sbrc.umanitoba.ca