Friday, December 27, 2024

What We're Reading: December 2024

For the last installment for the year of recommended articles from the staff at the Magazines and Newspapers Center, we have two articles from the blockbuster Christmas Day issue of the Los Angeles Times (which one librarian read in full at a California airport that day), as well as a couple fun articles, one investigating the secret language between plants and insects, and another that's a big old throwback to the hippie counter culture of the late 60s and early 70s. Enjoy and best wishes for the New Year! 

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Photo of an egptian cotton leafworm with the caption "Scientists wondered if the Egyptian cotton leafworm, which can hear the sounds produced by some plants, would use those sounds to decide where to lay eggs.Credit...Valter Jacinto, via Getty Images"

When They Hear Plants Crying, Moths Make a Decision

New York Times, December 6, 2024 

Insects, specifically a moth called the Egyptian cotton leafworm, are proven to use a secret language to understand messages from plants. This study shows that the moths heed the mournful clicking noise plants are known to make when in distress, and avoid laying their eggs on such plants. File this one under "more things humans don't know just because we can't hear some sounds." Reminder: you can get access to the New York Times several ways through SFPL.

Trump Starts to Walk Back Promises; After Casting Himself As a Problem Solver, the President-elect Is Throwing in Caveats

Los Angeles Times, December 25, 2024

Try not to do a big round of "told ya so" when reading this article. For those of us curious from a media studies perspective of how Trump has been covered in the news, this article is evidence of papers not doing enough before the election to show the doubtful side of Trump, perhaps, but delighting in exposing his rhetoric and claims now that the deal is done. Journalist Kevin Rector tracks specific promises made by Trump on the campaign trail that the president-elect is now walking back in order to "manage expectations." The piece explores the rhetorical moves utilized by Trump and puts them in historical context of past presidents' practice of elocution, while explaining why voters tend to believe Trump based on the promises he has made good on.

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Is Wells Fargo's move a bad sign for state? San Francisco bank's shift to leased offices may be the latest evidence of sector's drift from California.

Los Angeles Times, December 25, 2024 
 
With the safety of distance, the Times' Darmiento examines the history of the financial industry in San Francisco and what Wells Fargo's selling of its property at 420 Montgomery could signal for our downtown recovery. While the financial sector was an industry propping up white collar workers in the City alongside the boom and bust tech industry over the past 30 years, apparently that grandeur started fading away in the 1990s, and Wells Fargo, being helmed from New York City currently, could put the final stake in the coffin. In terms of the Los Angeles Times, the entire Christmas Day issue was captivating; we encourage you to check it out on ProQuest. 
 

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For What It's Worth

San Francisco Good Times, July 10, 1969

Early Greil Marcus offers a retrospective of Neil Young as the musician was transitioning from "old Neil Young" to a new chapter of joining Crosby, Stills and Nash. Marcus's landmark book Mystery Train: Images of America in Rock n Roll Music would come out 6 years later. Marcus wrote regularly for this counterculture newspaper published in San Francisco from 1969-1972. Now anyone in the world can delight in a total flashback to San Francisco 55 years ago by reading Good Times in Independent Voices from Reveal Digital, an open access collection hosted on the JSTOR platform. All the titles from the collection will now appear in Periodical Finder, scanned at high-resolution and full text searchable. If you crave feeling that brittle newsprint under the tips of your fingers, the San Francisco History Center has some issues of the paper in its collection as well.

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Presentation: The Photography of Moneta Sleet, Jr. from Ebony Magazine

 

Presentation: The Photography of Moneta Sleet, Jr. from Ebony Magazine

Friday, 1/17/2025
11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Virtual Library
Questions: mnc@sfpl.org

Delight in the life and photographic works of Moneta Sleet, Jr., staff photographer at Ebony magazine for over forty years.  

Jehoiada Calvin, Archivist at the Johnson Publishing Company (JPC) Archive, presents on the life and legacy of Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Moneta Sleet, Jr. (1926-1996). Starting in 1955, Sleet captured images of Black people in America and throughout the world for JPC magazines like Ebony and Jet and produced iconic images of the Civil Rights Movement, particularly of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In 1969 Sleet became the first Black person to win a Pulitzer Prize, which was awarded for his photograph of Coretta Scott King at her husband’s funeral. Jehoiada shares images from the Archive of Sleet's published and unpublished work while exploring how his photographs have impacted visual culture and politics today. 

headshot of Jehoiada CalvinJehoiada Calvin is a memory worker, writer, and zine-maker from Chicago. Jehoiada is the Archives Assistant for the Johnson Publishing Company Archive, helping to process the historic photograph collection for Ebony, Jet, and other magazines and programs. Jehoiada is a fellow in the University of Alabama’s Social Justice for Archivists Master of Library and Information Studies program, focusing on memory work that supports practices rooted in culture and politics outside of institutional archives. Read his writings about Sleet and the JPC photo archive at Sixty Inches from Center

Connect

Johnson Publishing Company Archive – Website  

Jehoiada Calvin – X/Twitter  

Ebony Magazine Digital Archive – Courtesy of SFPL

Jet Magazine Digital Archive – Courtesy of SFPL

Header image of Geoffrey Holder by Moneta Sleet, Jr. from the Johnson Publishing Company Archive. Courtesy J. Paul Getty Trust and Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. Made possible by the Ford Foundation, J. Paul Getty Trust, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and Smithsonian Institution.

 

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

New Resource: The Wall Street Journal Online (WSJ.COM)

 
SFPL now offers free three-day digital access to The Wall Street Journal (wsj.com).
The subscription includes the following features:
  • Unlimited articles on WSJ.com
  • Four-year archive/article search
  • e-Replica of that day’s paper
  • Onsite and remote access with SFPL card
  • More than 30 newsletters and alerts
  • Informative videos and podcasts, featuring interviews with WSJ editors and notable influencers
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You can find the WSJ access links on our eMagazines and eNews webpage as well, in addition to the traditional access option through ProQuest. Click Access eNews Collections to reveal the section that contains the all the access information for WSJ:

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Reminder: we also get three copies of the print newspaper delivered every day to the Magazines and Newspapers Center at the Main Library (5th floor), which we keep until we receive the microfilm of that date. Most SFPL branch libraries also get the WSJ paper delivered, and keep the most current 2 weeks. Check the catalog record to see if your local branch carries it. 
 


Saturday, December 7, 2024

What We're Reading: November 2024

Election 2024. It dominated the news cycle for the majority of the year, and now that it has come to pass, we are stuck examining the outcome and figuring out how it happened. The selections for this month feature analysis of the election on the national, state, and local levels. We pull articles from the New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, and the San Francisco Standard for this reflection, with an emphasis on the data graphics each paper employed to tell the story with more than words. And lastly, for a little bit of something else, we have an article from the Chronicle about the ongoing issues around transgendered players in the college women's volleyball scene that puts SJSU at the center of the drama. The Chronicle has been doing in-depth, targeted reporting on the issue, which should be highlighted.

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Key to Trump's Win: Big Losses for Harris Across the Country

New York Times, November 23, 2024

So many of us San Francisco voters are wondering what went wrong in the election at the beginning of this month. This piece from the New York Times takes a look at the voting behaviors of the country as a whole, offering compelling graphics that chart the voting change from 2020 to 2024. Read it in PressReader, which offers a digital replica of the print paper, so you can see the graphics in their printed glory, or read it on NYTimes.com where you can interact with the data with this courtesy link.

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Hanging out in SF’s Trumpiest neighborhoods

San Francisco Standard, November 11, 2024

The Standard uses data from the San Francisco Department of Elections and interviews with residents to dig into the trend towards Trump observed in the City's southeast corner, including Visitacion Valley and the Portola District. The handiwork of the Standard's data graphics person, Noah Baustin, is on display in an interactive graphic that maps votes by precinct in this piece as well as others filed under Election 2024, for example the article reporting on the low(er) voter turnout this year. The Chronicle put out a similar piece with interactive maps that explores the Trump trend in the southeast corner of SF, getting even more granular by highlighting, on a map, the two "Trumpiest" precincts in the entire City, showcasing the handiwork of graphics reporter Harsha Devulapalli and

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2024 Election Results

San Francisco Chronicle, last updated Dec. 7, 2024

As a special project dashboard, the SF Chronicle's 2024 election results page has been updated daily since the election and provides many interactive graphical representations of voting trends on a national, state, and local level. We offer this to you with a gift link to bypass any potential paywalls since this is the type of dynamic reporting not available in the library's subscription to the Chronicle through NewsBank. You can also view their California election dashboard and their San Francisco election dashboard. One of the most striking graphics is the change from blue to red of many counties in California, as well. 

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Legal Bid to Bench Trans Player Spiked 

San Francisco Chronicle, November 27, 2024

This article is the penultimate piece to date in the Chronicle's reporting on the lawsuit barring transgender women from playing college volleyball as brought forth by some players on the San Jose State University team. Now, the SJSU volleyball season is over, but several lawsuits and the future of women's sports remain. You can check out reporter Anne Killion's most recent piece to see where everything stands at the moment.

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Workshop: New Years Zines (Thur., December 12)

 

Workshop: New Year Zines

Thursday, 12/12/2024
5:00 - 7:00 p.m.
Learning Studio - 5th Fl
Main Library

100 Larkin Street
San Francisco, CA 94102

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