Viewing entries tagged "campuspublications"

Reports, Student Creative Writing, and Yearbooks Shared Online by Durham Technical Community College

finaldraft2014durh_0001We’ve helped Durham Technical Community College add several additional campus publications to their collection of digitized materials on DigitalNC.

Recent issues of The Final Draft, 2013-2015. The Final Draft is a journal that shares creative works produced by Durham Tech students and faculty. These journals include poetry, short stories, and visual art.

Recent issues of Learning Matters, 2010-2014. Learning Matters is the journal of the Durham Technical Community College Teaching-Learning Center, and includes articles on “the scholarship of teaching and learning.”

Two additional volumes (1968, 1969) of The Widget. Durham Tech’s yearbook, these two join one earlier volume already on the site.

View all of the items Durham Technical Community College has shared via DigitalNC.


North Carolina HBCU History Available on DigitalNC

Students at Shaw University, 1911.

Students at Shaw University, 1911.

With the recent addition of student yearbooks from Livingstone College, DigitalNC now hosts historic materials from ten different Historically Black Colleges and Universities in North Carolina. These materials document more than a century of African American higher education in North Carolina. From our earliest projects in 2010 to the present, the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center has worked closely with libraries and archives at historically Black colleges around the state, and we continue to add materials from these collections on a regular basis. Follow the links below to browse yearbooks, newspapers, photos, scrapbooks, and more materials by school.

Bennett College (Greensboro)

Elizabeth City State University

Fayetteville State University

Johnson C. Smith University (Charlotte)

Livingstone College (Salisbury)

North Carolina A&T (Greensboro)

North Carolina Central University (Durham)

Saint Augustine’s University (Raleigh)

Shaw University (Raleigh)

Winston-Salem State University

Sophomore class officers at North Carolina Central University, 1963.

Sophomore class officers at North Carolina Central University, 1963.


Early Issues of The Salemite, Salem College’s Student Newspaper, Now On DigitalNC

salemiteillustrationIn partnership with Salem College’s library, hundreds of early issues of The Salemite, the school’s student newspaper, are now available on DigitalNC.

The Salemite has been published continuously under that name from 1920 until the present day. We’ve just finished digitizing issues from 1920 through 1948. These early issues of the paper include school news, advertisements from local merchants hoping to attract the business of the student body, and announcements of events both on campus and in the surrounding Salem community. As with many school papers, social anecdotes and inside jokes abound.

Formed by Moravians in 1772, the school now known as Salem College is recognized as one of the oldest women’s colleges in the nation. We have also partnered with Salem College to digitize their yearbooks and other historic items. You can view all of these, along with The Salemite, at DigitalNC.


Historic Women’s College Yearbooks and More from Charlotte Mecklenburg Now Online

The Charlotte Mecklenburg Library sent us quite a few yearbooks from the early 20th century. The majority come from Presbyterian College for Women (later Queens College and Queens University), Elizabeth College, and Mecklenburg Female College. These yearbooks highlight the friendships built among the young women, as well as their concerns and interests.

Git-More Chafing Dish Club, Presbyterian College for Women, 1905.

Git-More Chafing Dish Club, Presbyterian College for Women, 1905.

These 21 yearbooks, dating from 1904-1934, come to us from Queens University of Charlotte and its several precursor schools. According to NCpedia, the women’s school in Charlotte was founded in 1857 and known in sequence as: Charlotte Female Institute, Seminary for Girls, Presbyterian College for Women, and Queens College. It merged with the South Carolina school Chicora College in 1930 and was known as Queens-Chicora College for almost a decade. The school began accepting both genders in 1946, and in 2002 became Queens University of Charlotte.

The yearbooks are full of personality, with delightful drawings and quirky clubs. Some favorites: Git-More Chafing Dish Club, Gitchimanito Club (i.e. “get ye a man or two”), The Suffragettes, Old Maids’ Club, Babes in the Wood, Tom Thumb Crowd (for students who measured five feet or less), the Red-Headed Stepchildren, and Witches’ Club. Many volumes also include delightful drawings.

Witches Club, Presbyterian College for Women, 1910.

Witches Club, Presbyterian College for Women, 1910.

Jockey Club, Presbyterian College for Women, 1908.

Jockey Club, Presbyterian College for Women, 1908.

Mustard Pickles, The Elizabethan, Elizabeth College, 1914.

Mustard Pickles, The Elizabethan, Elizabeth College, 1914.

Elizabeth College, founded in 1897, was another early women’s college in the Queen City. The school merged with Roanoke College for Women in 1915 and moved to Salem, Virginia until 1921, when it burned and was never re-established. The Elizabeth College buildings in Charlotte endured, housing Presbyterian Hospital and the School of Nursing until it was torn down in 1980. Two yearbooks, 1914 and 1915, add to the existing eight yearbooks on DigitalNC dating from 1901. These two most recent The Elizabethan yearbooks are as charming as they are informative. Like The Edelweiss volumes from Presbyterian College for Women/Queen’s College, the club descriptions and photographs show the women both playfully and earnestly asserting their personalities, friendships, and interests. Some favorite clubs are Anti-Fat Club, Do As You Please, and Mustard Pickles. There’s also some analysis of how the women of the class of 1914 conformed (or not) to Victorian standards.

  • Mecklenburg Female College

This 1868 volume is part yearbook, part literary magazine, as is characteristic of many early campus publications. This 1868 volume is both the first and penultimate volume; the school for women was only in existence for two years. The buildings were rented from the North Carolina Military Institute (later the Carolina Military Institute, also called the Charlotte Military Institute). For more information on the former Mecklenburg Female College, a broadside distributed by the college and digitized by DocSouth is particularly useful.

Several other items were also digitized from Charlotte Mecklenburg Library, including yearbook volumes 1961 and 1963 from King’s College, a small school in Charlotte founded in 1901.

Adding to our high school yearbook collection, East Mecklenburg High School years 1953 and 1954 are now available on DigitalNC. Long Creek High School, 1947 is also available.

The final item from Charlotte Mecklenburg Library is a program from the 16th Women’s History Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony by the Charlotte Club of the National Association of Negro Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, Incorporated. The four inductees were Carolyn A. Flowers, Shirley L. Fulton, Vi A. Lyles, and Joyce D. Waddell. The program also includes a list of all members of the the Women’s History Hall of Fame.

You can view all of the items digitized for Charlotte Mecklenburg Library on DigitalNC here.


More Wake Forest Student Issues Now Available

Last September, we added issues of The Wake Forest Student dating from 1882-1891 to DigitalNC. Additional issues are now available, dating 1892-1900The Wake Forest Student was a literary magazine at Wake Forest University published by the Euzelian Society. As with earlier issues, the Student‘s contents include essays by local authors, reprints of well-known stories and poems, an editorial section that includes both traditional editorials as well as college and state news, and a section for alumni to provide updates on their activities and lives. The literary magazine still exists as Three to Four Ounces, which is published twice per year by Wake Forest University students.

wakeforeststuden03wake_0092

Pages 2 and 3 of Volume 3, No. 3, November 1883. (pages 92 and 93 in bound item)

You can also view yearbooks, catalogs, and commencement programs from Wake Forest University on DigitalNC.


Student handbooks from Cleveland Community College now online

 

Cleveland County Technical Institute Campus, 1973

Cleveland County Technical Institute Campus, 1973

Academic bulletins and course catalogs from our partner Cleveland Community College have been added to DigitalNC. In addition to course listings, the student handbooks outline the history, courses of study, accreditations, and core policies of the institution.

clevelandcountyt1973clev_0001

Cover of the 1973-1975 Cleveland County Technical Institute General Catalog

Cleveland Community College was originally established in 1965 as a unit of Gaston College under the name Cleveland County Indusrial and Adult Education Center. In 1967, it became a unit of the North Carolina Community Colleges and the name was changed to Cleveland County Technical Institute to reflect a new focus on technical education. In 1980, the institution was renamed again; it was known as Cleveland Technical College from 1980 to 1988 when its name was officially changed to its current form.

General catalogs, academic bulletins, and student handbooks from three incarnations of the institution–Cleveland County Technical Institute, Cleveland Technical College, and Cleveland Community College–can be found in this batch of campus publications; these publications range in date from 1973 to 2002. Additional student handbooks from 2003 to the present can be found on the Cleveland Community College website.

 


Gardner-Webb University Student Newspaper, The Pilot, Now Online at DigitalNC

Front Page of The Pilot, Gardner-Webb College newspaper, September 14, 1971

Front Page of The Pilot, Gardner-Webb College newspaper, September 14, 1971

Issues of Gardner-Webb University’s student newspaper dating from 1942-2011 are now online at DigitalNC.

The paper, published continuously throughout that time as The Pilot, covers everything from famous speakers to the development of the campus. There is also, of course, plenty of commentary by students about exams, politics, and student life in general.

While working on this paper, we learned that Gardner-Webb University (then Gardner-Webb College) awarded an honorary doctorate to Johnny Cash in September 1971. The October 1971 issue of The Pilot describes “Johnny Cash Day,” which included an hour-long concert and an award ceremony at the stadium. Cash as well as his wife and 18-month old son were present for the festivities. We found a number of images of the occasion in the Hugh Morton Collection of Photographs and Films (North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill).

We’re pleased to have worked with Gardner-Webb to include these newspapers on DigitalNC, where you can view the entire run of The Pilot as well as the school’s yearbooks and catalogs.


Season’s Greetings… from Cigarette Santa

The R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company ran full-page, full-color ads from 1935-1942, all featuring a Santa who stresses that tobacco is above all such an acceptable gift, though he is never pictured smoking himself. R.J. Reynolds, located in Winston-Salem, N.C., ran these advertisements in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Carolina Magazine, a long-running campus publication that served as a literary supplement to the Daily Tar Heel, the campus newspaper.

1935: “Of course you’ll give cigarettes for Christmas. They’re such an acceptable gift.”

"Of course you'll give cigarettes for Christmas. They're such an acceptable gift."

 

1937: “A gift of Camels says: ‘Happy Holidays AND Happy Smoking!'”

1937: "A gift of Camels says: "Happy Holidays AND Happy Smoking!""

 

1940: “No problem about those pipe-smokers on your gift list!”

1940: "No problem about those pipe-smokers on your gift list!"

 

 

1941: “More smokers prefer Camels than any other cigarette. And that preference holds for men in the Army, Navy, the Marines, and the Coast Guard, too! So remember those lads in uniform…”

1941: "More smokers prefer Camles than any other cigarette. And that preference holds for men in the Army, Navy, the Marines, and the Coast Guard, too! So remember those lads in uniform..."

 

 

In 1942, another tobacco comopany, the Virginia-based Liggett & Myers, switched their Chesterfield advertising tack focus from glamorous winter women to Santa, perhaps following RJ Reynolds’ success with their campaign.

1942: War Santa urges you to “Send them to the ones you’re thinking of…their cheerful appearance says I wish you A Merry Christmas, and says it well…”

1942: War Santa urges you to "Send them to the ones you're thinking of...their cheerful appearance says I wish you A Merry Christimas, and says it well..."

 

1944: “Your Chesterfield Santa Claus” offers you a a cigarette jovially, while a holly-draped V reminds you to “Say it with Bonds for Victory”.

1944: "Your Chesterfield Santa Claus" offers you a a cigarette jovially, while a holly-draped V reminds you "Say it with Bonds for Victory".

Then, just as suddenly as they started in 1935, there are no more holiday-themed tobacco ads in the Carolina Magazine. The magazine itself continues until 1948, and various tobacco advertisements still appear, but none are as festive as these.

To see more cigarette ads from the Carolina Magazine, check out tumblr; or view the full Carolina Magazines from 1892-1948 on DigitalNC.

 


Photographs, Documents from Old Jamestown High School Available Online

Jamestown High School photo, circa 1919Photographs, commencement programs, and other documents from Jamestown High School (later Ragsdale High School) of Jamestown, N.C. have been added to DigitalNC. The Old Jamestown School Association, which preserves the history of the Guilford County school and operates out of the Jamestown Public Library, has partnered with us to share these items online along with 17 yearbooks added back in June.

Included are photos dating back to the early 20th century, showing students and faculty as well as the school building and dormitories. There are also commencement programs from the 1880s to the 1970s, two school catalogs, report cards, and a few issues of the school newspaper.

You can view all items from the Old Jamestown School Association on DigitalNC here.


Randolph Community College Scrapbooks, Campus Publications, Now Online

Randolph Community College Ad with Richard Petty, 1986

Randolph Community College Ad with Richard Petty, 1986

Nine scrapbooks documenting the history of Randolph Community College, as well as campus publications and reports, have been added to DigitalNC.

The latest addition of five scrapbooks (1977-1987) join four earlier volumes to further describe the College’s history through newspaper clippings and ephemera that talk about the College’s funding, events, curriculum changes, and student accomplishments.

A campus fine arts magazine, Uwharrie Dreams has also been added, along with recent school catalogs and reports.

You can view all of Randolph Community College’s items on DigitalNC (including yearbooks) here.


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