The mission of Voices of
Old Technology - A Museum in the Making is to enhance the educational
experience at Queens College through an interdisciplinary approach to the
exploration of technology development.
To accomplish this,
Voices
of Old Technology collects, preserves, documents,
displays and interprets
selected technologies and related materials. The collection
emphasizes,
but is not limited to, office and educational technology. Related items
collected from Queens College and other CUNY sources highlight the
history
of the College and the University. The College and CUNY items and
information are highlighted against a backdrop of what was going on in
the broader community.
Voices of Old Technology - A Museum
in the Making is not an official museum at the College.
Our exhibit catalogs and materials are designed for the web. We present below for your viewing
pleasure information about each of our exhibits.
The numbered exhibits below are the major Voices of Old Technology exhibits.
Voices... was named in Summer 2000, and has been increasingly active
since then. We posted on first website as part of the College's website
in July 2000, and mounted our first exhibit in January 2001,in
both the Rosenthal Library Barham Rotunda and in the 2nd floor
display cases (outside of Rosenthal 230). We now have some
exhibit always running in the 2nd floor display cases, and often we
have overlapping exhibits in different locations. Although some
small exhibits such as Homecoming exhibits have the same title, they
always have new material.
We have also been happy to create and install exhibits
--- on campus for Homecoming, Black History Month, the Jubilee Class events at Commencement, and the Walt Whitman celebrations
--- at the Flushing Library (five exhibits so far!).
They are listed below as well.
More
about Voices of Old Technology - A Museum in the Making
end of November 2007 - Spring 2008
Sign Up, Sign Here
Rosenthal Library - 2nd floor outside of the Rosenthal 230 Auditorium
Wall cases and standalone case to right of wall cases
This photo exhibit was installed in two parts, due to the planned use of
the 2 wall cases during December for an Art Department exhibit.
- Sign Up - in the 2 wall cases
This part of the exhibit highlights signage as
well as other SIGNS on campus and in the immediate neighborhood.
Included are "sign" related photos and other objects whose subjects
fall into a variety of categories, including that they may be primarily
--- artistic in nature
--- part of a building's original architectural design
--- historic markers and identifiers
--- for identification / direction - where am I and how do I get from here to ...?
--- to clarify what to do and not to do
--- symbolic and other types of "signs"
- Sign Here - in the standalone case to the right of the wall cases - This will be the first part of the exhibit to be installed.
On
December 27, 2007 we marked the 350th
Anniversary of the Flushing Remonstrance, a document written and signed HERE in
1657 that is generally recognized as an important landmark in our commitment to
freedom of religion.
The text of the Remonstrance will be featured, surrounded by
photos of a variety of religious institutions in the Flushing
area. Citizens of Flushing risked everything and
took a stand - they signed a document that changed their world, and still influences
ours.
Have we accomplished what the signers of the Remonstrance
envisioned? Have we gone beyond? Have we missed the mark?
We hope that you enjoy Sign Up, Sign Here, and that as
you view it you will think about
--- how changes in technology have affected each of these areas
--- how technology makes it possible for us to do what we want to do, stay current,
and have the broadest impact
--- how future technology changes can help us do it better
--- how you can help develop and implement some of those changes
Photos by: Syd Lefkoe,
Ellen Rondot
October 2007 - April 16, 2008
Celebrating the Milestones: Queens College at 50, 60, and 70
Rosenthal Library - 2nd floor outside Rosenthal 230 Auditorium
Standalone Case to left of wall cases
Queens College, which opened in
October of 1937, is celebrating its 70th anniversary this year.
This case is our "teaser" for the College's 70th Anniversary
exhibit, created by Steve Barto, College Archivist.
The three showings of the College's major exhibit Celebrate 70 Years! 1937 - 2007 Queens College have been
We have been delighted to play a small part in these exhibits put on by the College's Archives. that have been listed as:
- Prepared by Stephen Barto and Kuanhua Huang, Queens College Archives
- Assisted by Sydney Lefkoe and Ellen Rondot, “Voices of Old Technology”
October 2007 - December 2007
Flushing: Views and Visions From the Past
Flushing Library / Queens Borough Public Library
Downstairs - Outside Auditorium / 3 display cases
On
December 27, 2007 we mark the 350th
Anniversary of the Flushing Remonstrance, a document written and signed HERE in
1657 that is generally recognized as an important landmark in our commitment to
freedom of religion.
In
our current exhibit, we show a variety of views of old Flushing. Some of the buildings in them still
exist. How many do you recognize?
The
commonalities of hopes, dreams, and daily life from era to era and from group
to group are significant. The hard work
of owners of Mom and Pop stores, the importance of improving educational
opportunities, the beauty of the town, the creativity and strength of the
people, and the striving for something better are themes that transcend time,
technology, race, religion, national origin.
We
don’t wish to overly romanticize either the past or the present --- the
stunning realities and seeming contradictions include that the Flushing of the past had inits
history a strong Underground Railroad as part of the route for slaves to escape
northward, as well as its own slavery of Blacks and Native Americans.
March 15, 2007 - April 30, 2007
A Woman's Place: Women and Flight
Flushing Library / Queens Borough Public Library
Downstairs - Outside Auditorium / 3 display cases
Our
"Women and Flight" exhibit uses aviation and related fields to
highlight that women can and do excel everywhere, and that this is not a new
phenomenon. Women have had major roles
in Long
Island's
development as "The Cradle of Aviation." We have tried to give a variety of images of
women in this still evolving field as well as to show a wide range of ways many
people contribute to the development of every field.
This
exhibit opens during Women's History Month.
We hope it gives you food for thought about women as well as about
everyone's contribution to helping us move ahead together.
Spring 2007 - early November 2007
Queens Kaleidoscope
Rosenthal Library - 2nd Floor Display Cases / Outside Rosenthal 230 - Auditorium
This exhibit is ***an expansion*** of one we placed in the Flushing
Library in Fall 2006 - sponsored by the Queens College Library and the Queens College
American Studies Program as part of a program of collaboration with the Queens Library
System.
As
you look through the barrel of a kaleidoscope, you can turn the wheel at the
bottom and see spectacular colorful patterns that change --- each time becoming
a yet even more beautiful image.
We
are fortunate to have the same kind of "kaleidoscope" of people,
cultures and traditions right here in Queens. Looking at the holidays celebrated here by
people of many different religions, cultures and traditions gives a colorful
and ever-changing view of where we live and work. One of the wonderful things is how celebrations
of different groups are both so similar and so different, and how different
groups have shared new holidays and have added their own traditions to old
holidays.
We
hope our exhibit will give you some food for thought and a new
perspective on our similarities and our differences.
Exhibit # 17 - Spring 2007 / Fall 2007
The Latest, The Greatest 3-in-1 Multifunction Device (circa 1949)
Barham Rotunda - Rosenthal Library
Standalone Case to right of Main Cases
This 3-in-1 multifunction device is a Sears
Silvertone Wire Recorder Combination (radio, phonograph, wire recorder). This type of device was used in some college
language labs as well as in a variety of other education, office and home
settings. It was "cutting
edge" technology.
November 2006 - January 11, 2006
Queens Kaleidoscope: Holidays, Celebrations and Traditions!!
Flushing Library / Queens Borough Public Library
Downstairs - Outside Auditorium / 3 display cases
*Exhibit Preview - November 2006*
As
you look through the barrel of a kaleidoscope, you can turn the wheel at the
bottom and see spectacular colorful patterns that change --- each time becoming
a yet even more beautiful image.
We
are fortunate to have the same kind of "kaleidoscope" of people,
cultures and traditions right here in Queens. Looking at the holidays celebrated here by
people of many different religions, cultures and traditions gives a colorful
and ever-changing view of where we live and work. One of the wonderful things is how celebrations
of different groups are both so similar and so different, and how different
groups have shared new holidays and have added their own traditions to old
holidays.
We
hope our coming December exhibit will give you some food for thought and a new
perspective on our similarities and our differences.
Jeff Castellan, Syd
Lefkoe, Ellen Rondot, and Nancy Williams
Exhibit #16 - Homecoming Day - September 30, 2006
When In Doubt, DON'T Throw It Out!
Food Court - Dining Hall as "The History Room"
Another exciting and fun exhibit
in an area shared with the Oral History Project and the QC Archives. Added
attraction: DJs (in the real sense of the word!): Virginia Wood and
Jack Verga.
Exhibit # 15 - Fall 2006
Milestone Technology Birthdays: CUNY's BITNET - and More!
Rosenthal Library - Barham Rotunda
We hear things like "50 years of... ,
" "125 years since..." and "25 years ago
today..." What technology milestones are worthy of being recognized in
this way? The date something new was heralded at a major event? The day
some critical piece fell into place? The year that economics or size made it
practical? Or maybe the inventor's year of birth or death? Do we celebrate the
anniversary of its appearance in a consumer magazine as an eagerly anticipated
hot new item? Does it really matter what date we choose, as long as it helps
encourage our own creativity, our appreciation of the creative process, and an
interest in the details of our history?
In this exhibit, we highlight a few of what
we consider milestone technology birthdays for 2006 - primarily in the areas of
educational and office technology. Some of the important events highlighted are
of course related to CUNY, Queens College, and local
history.
Otis Elevator, ENIAC, UNIVAC, BITNET, the Kurzweil Reading Machine for
the Blind, and the Four-Color Theorum are just a few of the milestones
drawing attention in this exhibit.
One of the exhibit items emphasizes a familiar theme of Voices... - "When in Doubt, DON'T THROW IT OUT!" Christie's Auction House listed the actual sales price of the big-ticket items at their 2005 "Origins of Cyberspace" sale.
An 8-page, typed, somewhat yellowed proposal from 1946 on the
future of networking computers --- by the two hardware experts who
developed ENIAC --- sold for $ 72,000! The caption suggests that
the viewers of this exhibit might want to think twice before
discounting or discarding a variety of items that may have some
historical interest --- it asks "What have you tossed out?"
The section on Lewis Latimer focuses
on how each invention has many descendants and cousins, and that the
inventor has no way of knowing for sure how others will move ahead
creatively from that invention and what other things will become
possible because of it.
June 20, 2006 - August 2006
Summer - A Good Time to Explore, Discover and Enjoy Queens!!
Flushing Library / Queens Borough Public Library
Downstairs - Outside Auditorium / 3 display cases
Here's
a preview of some things to do and places to see in Queens. We have parks, beaches, gardens, historical
places, colleges, and cultural institutions. There's always something
interesting going on, new places to explore, and an incredible variety of
ethnic celebrations and foods. Free
outdoor programs are easy to find in the Summer. Many of these places can be
enjoyed year round.
While
our focus is the Flushing area, we hope this reminds you of the wide
diversity of opportunities to have fun in our beautiful Borough of Queens, and
encourages you to find more. Take a
mini-vacation in your own back yard!
This is our fourth exhibit in the Flushing Library. Exhibit
co-sponsored by Queens College Library and the Queens College's American
Studies Program, as part of a continuing collaboration with the Flushing Library.
Jeff Castellan, Syd Lefkoe,
Ellen Rondot, and Nancy Williams
Exhibit # 14 - June 2006 - Fall 2006 (extended!)
When Creativity Blossoms: Three Mini-Exhibits
1) Francisco Patino - Our American Inventor
2) Measure for Measure (exhibit preview)
3) It's Spring in Queens! (part of our Spring 2006 exhibit at the Flushing Library)
Rosenthal Library - Standalone case on right side in Barham
Rotunda, and 2nd Floor Display Cases / Outside Rosenthal 230 / Auditorium
Exhibit Flyer
Three separate exhibits - or are they?
More about Francisco Patino: The College's press release about the May 18, 2006 QC event during the ABC-TV American Inventor finals is at http://www.qc.cuny.edu/nis/Releases/viewNews.php?id=205.
June 1, 2006
QC Commencement / Jubilee Class Event
for the QC Class of 1956 - 50th Anniversary of their Graduation
Event, exhibits and lunch
for the Class of 1956, after Commencement --- in coordination with the
QC Oral History Project and the QC Office of Alumni Affairs and Events.
May 17, 2006 - May 26, 2006
It's Spring in Queens! Enjoy it With Us!
Flushing Library / Queens Borough Public Library
Downstairs - Outside Auditorium / 3 display cases
What a
beautiful Spring! Our third exhibit at the Flushing Library,
co-sponsored by Queens College Library and the Queens College's
American Studies Program., as part of a continuing collaboration with the Flushing Library. Photos by Jeff Castellan, Syd Lefkoe,
and Ellen Rondot --- at Queens College, the Queens Botanical Garden,
and a Greenstreets space on Union Turnpike.
February 2006 - April 2006
This Little Light of Mine... I'm Gonna Let it Shine
Flushing Library / Queens Borough Public Library
Downstairs - Outside Auditorium / 3 display cases
American Studies Program web page about this exhibit
We were
pleased to bring a second exhibit to the Flushing Library. Exhibit
co-sponsored by Queens College Library, Queens College's American
Studies Program, and the Queens College Office of Events, as part of a continuing collaboration with the Flushing Library..
December 2005 - January 12, 2006
Did You Know I was Your Neighbor?
Flushing Library / Queens Borough Public Library
Downstairs - Outside Auditorium / Two Walls and 3 display cases
American Studies Program web page about this exhibit
QC Webzine - Spring 2006, page 8 - photo and clip about the exhibit
We were
pleased to bring an enhanced / expanded exhibit on Walt Whitman in
Queens to the Flushing Library in December 2005. It was a follow
up to the Walt Whitman Garden dedication
at the College in July 2005 (see entry for this exhibit a few items below). Exhibit
co-sponsored by Queens College Library, Queens College's American
Studies Program, and the Queens College Office of Events, as part of a continuing collaboration with the Flushing Library..
Exhibit #13 - Homecoming Day - October 1, 2005
When In Doubt, DON'T Throw It Out!
Food Court - Dining Hall as "The History Room"
Another exciting and fun exhibit
in an area shared with the Oral History Project and the QC Archives. Added
attraction: DJs (in the real sense of the word!): Virginia Wood and
Jack Verga.
Exhibit #12 - Fall 2005 - Spring 2006
That Music We Just Can't Forget
Rosenthal Library - Standalone case on right side in Barham
Rotunda, and 2nd Floor Display Cases / Outside Rosenthal 230 / Auditorium
For
many of us, our favorite music is the music we grew up with - the music itself,
the artists, the special quality of the instruments and devices that played it,
and the related defining / important moments of our lives. The distinctive sound of … (whatever it was)
just can't be beat!
In
this exhibit, we share images of different generations enjoying their music. Many of these images are from our yearbook -
the QC Silhouette - through the College's history. We highlight some of the instruments and
devices, as well as some of the people who made the difference --- many of them
with ties to Queens College and the Borough of
Queens.
Exhibit Catalog on the web (in progress)
Selected Publicity
PageDown - Rosenthal Library newsletter -Spring 2006 - page 3 - http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/Library/pagedown/PD_11_1_Spring06.pdf
July 14, 2005
As part of the Walt Whitman Garden dedication
at the entrance to the parking lot near the Student Union, we were
pleased to assist in the preparation and mounting of the exhibit in the
SU Corner Bistro that accompanied the program.
June 2, 2005
QC Commencement / Jubilee Class Event
for the QC Class of 1955 - 50th Anniversary of their Graduation
Event, exhibits and lunch for the Class of 1955, after Commencement --- in coordination with the QC Oral History Project and
the QC Office of Alumni Affairs and Events.
Spring / Summer 2005 - Black History: Local Stories of Struggles, Accomplishments, and Contrasts
As part of Black History
Month, we were pleased to prepare and mount one of the Black History
Month exhibits, in the cases we usually use for our Voices of Old
Technology exhibits. This exhibit remained throughout the Spring and
Summer. See the QC February 2005 Black History Month Website
PageDown Rosenthal
Library Newsletter - Spring 2005 - page 6, 8
Exhibit #11 - Homecoming Day - October 2, 2004
When In Doubt, DON'T Throw It Out!
BYOL Club - Dining Hall as "The History Room"
An exciting and fun exhibit
in an area shared with the Oral History Project and the QC Archives. Added
attraction: DJs (in the real sense of the word!): Virginia Wood and
Jack Verga.
Exhibit #10 - Fall 2004
Queens In Flight - From Balloons to Seaplanes to Space Shuttles
Rosenthal Library - Barham
Rotunda and 2nd Floor Display Cases / Outside Rosenthal 230 / Auditorium
Fall 2004
Exhibit Catalog on the Web (in progress)
Pick a field – any field - and you’ll find many
landmark dates and exciting times in technology development and education, with
Queens College and Queens people heavily involved.
“Queens in Flight…” amplifies the VOICES and FACES of
local aviation history by highlighting stories of creativity, technology
development and the lure and excitement of flight. This latest exhibit by “Voices of Old
Technology – A Museum in the Making” shares:
- Stories of local residents, QC alums, faculty, staff
and retirees;
- Little known aspects of development of a few local
companies and airports;
- Local approaches to encouraging excitement and
creativity, and the development of talent in the field;
- Perspectives on common themes in the development and
growth of new technologies.
We hope this exhibit helps you rediscover some of that
childhood joy and wonder as you see and hear the ever-changing patterns of
flight over campus.
It is especially fitting that this exhibit is at QC
and is in the Benjamin Rosenthal Library, which was named in memory of Queens
Congressman Benjamin Rosenthal. Among
Congressman Rosenthal’s focal interests were airport safety and the reduction
of aviation-related noise levels in the community.
Selected Publicity/Reviews:
PageDown Rosenthal
Library Newsletter - Fall 2004, page 2.
[ PDF
Version ][Text
version ]
FYI Faculty Staff Newsletter
- October 2004 - page 8 [ PDF Version ][Text Version]
June 3, 2004
QC Commencement / Jubilee Class Event
for the QC Class of 1954 - 50th Anniversary of their Graduation
Event, exhibits and lunch for the Class of 1954, after Commencement --- in coordination with the QC Oral History Project and
the QC Office of Alumni Affairs and Events.
Exhibit #9 - May 2004 through mid-September 2004
Travel in Time and Space: Reflections on International Museum Day
Rosenthal Library - 2nd floor
Display Cases --- Outside Rosenthal 230 / Auditorium
Mid-May 2004 through Mid-September 2004
The Zenith Laptop at the
top of this web page above is circa late 1980s, and was used at the
College. It is part of this exhibit.
Exhibit Catalog on the Web
Forget for the
moment whatever "museum" means to you - especially if it means musty,
dark and dull. Wherever you go, if you pay attention, look around, and
keep your eyes open, you will be delighted by a sometimes surprising array of
wondrous artistic and historic items - not always in a formal museum - to
appreciate and understand! This exhibit looks at selected museums, galleries, collections and displays on and off campus. Some very
pleasant museum surprises may be related to an exhibit topic that goes beyond
what we expect at a specific museum.
Exhibit #8
Creativity and "Point-and-Shoot"
Photography
Rosenthal Library - 2nd floor
Display Cases --- Outside of Rosenthal 230 / Auditorium
January 29, 2004 - March 5,
2004 *** EXTENDED THROUGH MID-MAY ***
Featuring selected circa 1940s technology
used at the college, as well as photographs by Ellen Rondot, Jeff Castellan,
and Syd Lefkoe.
Exhibit
Catalog on the Web (photos by Syd Lefkoe and Ellen Rondot)
Exhibit Flier - PDF Format / HTML Format
Exhibit #7
Perspectives on Our History
--- Through Technology
When In Doubt, DON'T Throw
It Out!
Homecoming Day, October 4,
2003
Patio Room Area - Food Court
as "The History Room"
An exciting and fun exhibit
in an area shared with the Oral History Project and the QC Archives. Added
attraction: DJs (in the real sense of the word!): Virginia Wood and
Jack Verga.
Selected Publicity / Reviews:
Pictures
of the History Room - from the Alumni Affairs Web Site (photos by Nancy
Bareis)
Exhibit #6
Perspectives on Our History
--- Through Technology
Inquiring Fingers, Inquiring
Minds
Rosenthal Library - Barham
Rotunda and 2nd floor Display Cases
September 22 - November 26,
2003
*** On October 20th, the
upstairs portion of the exhibit closed, and the remaining exhibit continued outside the RO 230 Auditorium.
Exhibit
Catalog on the Web (photos by Syd Lefkoe and Judy Chiang)
We wouldn't
put this discarded old metal Queens College fan (displayed in the exhibit) in our office waiting rooms
today. The wide openings and metal blades could easily hurt inquiring
little fingers. New designs protect those fingers.
But should
we try to "protect" inquiring minds? And how do we help students
discover their creative potential? There has long been a tension
between a perceived need to protect our freedom by curtailing it, and the
importance of encouraging learning, questioning and creativity. We
hope to highlight this tension in our exhibit, and to encourage discussion.
Selected Publicity
FYI Faculty Staff Newsletter - November 2003 -page 4 - http://www.qc.cuny.edu/nis/newsletter_archive/fyi/FYI_November03.pdf
Exhibit #5
Perspectives on Our History
--- Through Technology
Photography Sidebar
Rosenthal Library - Barham
Rotunda, Side Case, May - August 2003
Exhibit Overview:
Beyond the Device: Photography
Society moves ahead when each
of us is creative in what we do. When we are not merely passive technology
users, technology can help to feed this process. We see some of the
themes common to technology change as we begin to look at photography and
cameras.
The photographer wants the
equipment to permit flexibility as well as control over various aspects
of the image as it will appear, and selects equipment that will be right
for a specific type of photography. As technology develops, it has
permitted this in ways that may seem comical to us today. Note the
instructions in this exhibit case for new 1920s era flash photography,
describing how to use a match with a flash sheet to set off the flash.
Sigismund Blumann describes
photography as art in his book Enlarging Manual (Photoart Publisher, San
Francisco, 1940):
…Another premise upon
which the spirit of this book is built is that photography may be made
a means of producing exemplars of Fine Art. That the camera shall
not be limited to making reproductions of facts but may be used to express
poesy and imagination…
May 29, 2003
QC Commencement / Jubilee Class Event
for the QC Class of 1953 - 50th Anniversary of their Graduation
Event, exhibits and lunch after
for the Class of 1955, Commencement --- in coordination with the QC Oral History Project and
the QC Office of Alumni Affairs and Events.
Exhibit #4
Perspectives on Our History
--- Through Technology
Bing Crosby Sidebar
Rosenthal Library - Barham
Rotunda, Side Case, March - April, 2003
Exhibit Overview:
Creativity and Change: Bing
Crosby
Society moves ahead when each
of us is creative in what we do. When we are not merely passive technology
users, technology can help to feed this process. We see some of the
themes common to technology change as we begin to look at the career of
Bing Crosby:
· Bing Crosby
played a significant role in supporting development of technology that
would meet his needs;
· he found ways to
exploit new technologies through his art;
· his fans continue
to add new formats of his work to their collections, in order to enjoy
them on new devices designed to enhance his work.
Exhibit #3
Perspectives on Our History
--- Through Technology
When: January
27 - March 4, 2003
Where: Rosenthal
Library Rotunda and 2nd floor Display Cases
Special One-Day Bonus Exhibit:
February
10, 2003
Rosenthal Library Barham
Rotunda, in front of the exhibit cases
Downstairs Cases only:
Continued
thru August 2003
See
the Exhibit PLUS the Bonus Exhibit (links to publicity included)
Selected Publicity and Reviews:
PageDown Rosenthal
Library Newsletter - Spring 2003, page 3.
[ PDF
Version ][Text
version ]
FYI Faculty Staff Newsletter
- Spring 2003 - page 2
[PDF
version ][ Text
version ]
Exhibit #2
Perspectives on Our History
--- Through Technology
In a Different Light
When: Alumni Day
- October 5, 2002, 11:00 am - 4:00 pm
Where: BYOL Club
- in the Dining Hall
An exciting and fun exhibit
"Perspectives on Our History --- Through Technology," highlighting some
pre-computer educational and office technology, as well as "Short Takes"
on a variety of other topics. Added attraction: DJs (in the real
sense of the word!): Virginia Wood and Jack Verga.
Selected Publicity/Reviews:
Picture
From the Alumni Affairs Web Site (photos by Nancy Bareis)
Exhibit #1
The Voices of Old Technology:
A Museum In the Making
When: January
29, 2001 through March 16, 2001 - EXTENDED through March 23, 2001
Where: Rosenthal
Library Rotunda and 2nd Floor Display Cases
Reception: Thursday,
February
1, 2001 from 3 pm - 6 pm; Rosenthal Library Rotunda
Panel plus Reception: Edison,
Gates and You (What's So Funny?) - A Panel Presentation on Creativity and
Invention
Wednesday,
March 21, 2001
at
4:00 pm; Rosenthal Library Auditorium
Selected Pictures,Publicity
and Reviews:
Picture
of Two of the Upstairs Panels - and The Tech Muse
PageDown Rosenthal
Library Newsletter - Spring 2001[jpg
version][Text version]
FYI Faculty Staff Newsletter
- Spring 2001 - page 2 column
1[PDF
version ][ Text version]
Voices of Old Technology - A Museum in
the Making
Curator:
Syd Lefkoe
Member, Society
for the History of Technology (SHOT)
Member, Oral
History Association
Curatorial and Aquisitions
Assistance by:
Jeff Castellan, Ellen Rondot,
Nancy Williams
Our "Museum in the Making"
is
not an official museum of the College.
Still in the "startup"
stage, it is a
Member, American
Association of Museums (AAM)
Photos by Syd Lefkoe
unless otherwise attributed
Technology and Web Accessibility
for People with Disabilities
CUNY's
Statement on Accessibility
Web
Site of the CUNY University Faculty Senate Committee on Disabilities Issues

© copyright 2004 by Syd
Lefkoe
Queens
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