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"State University of New York at Albany"
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Working for Peace and Justice
2012,2013
A longtime agitator against war and social injustice,
Lawrence Wittner has been tear-gassed, threatened by police
with drawn guns, charged by soldiers with fixed bayonets, spied
upon by the U.S. government, arrested, and purged from his job
for political -reasons. To say that this
teacher-historian-activist has led an interesting life is a
considerable understatement. In this absorbing memoir, Wittner
traces the dramatic course of a life and career that took him
from a Brooklyn boyhood in the 1940s and ’50s to an
education at Columbia University and the University of
Wisconsin to the front lines of peace activism, the fight for
racial equality, and the struggles of the labor movement. He
details his family background, which included the bloody
anti-Semitic pogroms of late-nineteenth-century Eastern Europe,
and chronicles his long teaching career, which comprised
positions at a small black college in Virginia, an elite
women’s liberal arts college north of New York City, and
finally a permanent home at the Albany campus of the State
University of New York. Throughout, he packs the narrative with
colorful vignettes describing such activities as fighting
racism in Louisiana and Mississippi during the early 1960s,
collaborating with peace-oriented intellectuals in
Gorbachev’s Soviet Union, and leading thousands of
antinuclear demonstrators through the streets of Hiroshima. As
the book also reveals, Wittner’s work as an activist was
matched by scholarly achievements that made him one of the
world’s foremost authorities on the history of the peace
and nuclear disarmament movements—a research specialty
that led to revealing encounters with such diverse figures as
Norman Thomas, the Unabomber, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Caspar
Weinberger, and David Horowitz. A tenured professor and
renowned author who has nevertheless lived in tension with the
broader currents of his society, Lawrence Wittner tells an
engaging personal story that includes some of the most
turbulent and significant events of recent history. Lawrence S.
Wittner, emeritus professor of history at the University at
Albany, SUNY, is the author of numerous scholarly works,
including the award-winning three-volume
Struggle Against the Bomb . Among other awards and
honors, he has received major grants or fellowships from the
National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of
Learned Societies, the Aspen Institute, the United States
Institute of Peace, and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation.
Known-Item Search Failure in an OPAC
by
Dwyer, Catherine M.
,
Martin, Lynne M.
,
Gossen, Eleanor A.
in
Academic libraries
,
Bibliographic records
,
Card catalogs
1991
This study attempts to identify specific reasons for the failure of library patrons to locate known items in an online catalog. Interlibrary loan request forms submitted by library patrons for items already owned by the University Libraries were analyzed to identify specific reasons for search failure. Suggestions are made for ways to correct search failure, and the reasons why a certain percentage of search-failure errors cannot be avoided are discussed. The study, while specific to the University Libraries at the University at Albany, State University of New York, suggests a broader application to known-item search behavior in online public access catalogs in general.
Journal Article