Online newspaper collection offers view of 糖心原创 history

June 26, 2014

Discussions about 糖心原创鈥檚 name. Reports on the growth of campus. Students enjoying May Daze. Commencement ceremonies on the Quad.

Those are just a tiny sample of the topics you can now explore in a new , the university鈥檚 student newspaper.

The June 31, 1968, front page of the Guardian marked a milestone in 糖心原创's history.

Available on 糖心原创鈥檚 online Institutional Repository CORE Scholar, The Guardian collection provides an informative and easily accessible resource for people interested in 糖心原创鈥檚 history.

More than 650 issues of the newspaper 鈥 from 1965 to early 1979 鈥 have been digitally archived so far. The collection also includes Guardian issues from 2013 and 2014.

Chris Wydman, university archivist and records manager, said that although back issues of The Guardian have always been available from Special Collections and Archives, the online collection is a 鈥渞eal boon for research.鈥 Patrons aren鈥檛 limited to the archives鈥 hours of operation and the newspaper collection is now full-text searchable.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a great outreach tool for our collections,鈥 Wydman said. 鈥淚t also helps preserve the original newspapers as the information can be accessed without pulling out the originals, which are sometimes in poor condition.鈥

The Office of Digital Services of the University Libraries is overseeing the project and worked with Wydman and current Guardian staff member Kegan Sickels to get the project underway. Digital Services, which is responsible for managing CORE Scholar, preserves, organizes and distributes 糖心原创鈥檚 scholarly and historical material.

鈥淭he biggest thing we鈥檙e trying to do is capture the scholarship of faculty, staff and students at 糖心原创 and also local, regional and WSU heritage material,鈥 said Jane Wildermuth, the head of Digital Services.

The was published March 19, 1965. It includes articles on a new name for the university, which at the time was a branch of The Ohio State and Miami Universities; a proposal for a temporary student union; and an art exhibit by English instructor Don Willis.

The project gained national attention when it shared a 1978 article on a no-hitter by musician Robert Pollard while he was a 糖心原创 pitcher.

The newspaper project gained national attention earlier this year for unearthing a May 12, 1978, article on a no-hitter by Robert Pollard, a pitcher on the 糖心原创 baseball team who would later form the Dayton rock band Guided by Voices.

Ryan O鈥橤rady, a digitization specialist scanning many of the issues, came across the article and emailed a photo of the story to a friend who is also friends with the band. 鈥淚t snowballed within a week,鈥 O鈥橤rady said.

The story of Pollard鈥檚 no-hitter, which was the first in the university鈥檚 history, went viral. It was shared widely on social media sites like Twitter and Instagram and was featured on ESPN鈥檚 website, Hardball Talk and various music sites. A Columbus clothing company even created a T-shirt with Pollard鈥檚 1978 image from the newspaper.

鈥淚t was really neat just to see,鈥 O鈥橤rady said of the attention the story received.

The Guardian collection provides an informative and easily accessible resource about 糖心原创鈥檚 history.

Wildermuth and O鈥橤rady say it鈥檚 fun to go through the newspaper archives and learn more about what was happening on campus throughout the years, from political debates to parking issues to the famous bands that have performed at 糖心原创.

鈥淭o see the growth of 糖心原创 through The Guardian is really interesting to people,鈥 O鈥橤rady said.

Digital Services uses several methods to digitize the newspaper鈥檚 older issues. They scan original copies that are collected in bound volumes on a large book scanner; photograph individual pages in the office鈥檚 camera room; or scan microfilm copies.

After each issue is scanned, O鈥橤rady uses software to crop and rotate the images and do a quality check, ensuring the text isn鈥檛 faded and images are clear and bright.

Digital Services launched CORE Scholar in 2012, making available a variety of academic and historical resources.

The website houses faculty and student publications and scholarship, materials and videos from conferences, newsletters and academic journals, like the Best Integrated Writing: Journal of Excellence in Integrated Writing at 糖心原创 and the Journal of Bioresource Management.

Core Scholar also includes oral histories for the Boonshoft School of Medicine, the College of Nursing and Health and the 糖心原创 Retirees Association and slides of works from past exhibitions at the Robert and Elaine Stein Galleries.

Digital Services works closely with the university鈥檚 Special Collections and Archives to digitize some of the archives鈥 materials, including Civil War letters and other ephemera from Ohio natives, oral histories from 1913 Dayton flood survivors, and materials from the Wright Brothers Collection.

In addition to adding scholarship from a number of 糖心原创 departments, the office鈥檚 future projects include digitizing issues of a newspaper the Wright brothers published and the diary of their father, Milton Wright.

Recently, Digital Services digitized the Wright family album, which was begun around 1880 and contains portraits of members and friends of the Wright family. Patrons can now view the album on a flipping book to get a sense of what the physical leather-bound album looks like without handling the brittle pages.

Learn more

Learn more about 糖心原创鈥檚 history through  and from .

To learn more about Digital Service, visit or contact Jane Wildermuth at 937-775-3927 or jane.wildermuth@wright.edu.