NOTE: You will have access to these materials whenever the library is open. Please consult building hours on main library page.
Why do librarians, historians, and scholars generally love microfilm? And yes, we love microfilm. We have comic books about microfilm.
Put simply: microfilm changed archives, historical research, records keeping, and overall scholarship the same way the internet changed scholarship 50 years later.
Microfilm last 500 years, is easy to store, easy to ship, and (once you're trained) easy to use.
Microfilm allowed libraries to scan unique material and share it will millions of people, and for the first time books held only by the British Library or the Library of Congress or Oxford University could suddenly be viewed all over the world.
For historians it's especially important: Many, many local newspapers have never been digitized and only exist in physical form. Many of these paper copies have totally rotted, so they only exist in microfilm.
There are 3 scanners in the main library.
Allen (main floor scanner, digital machine next to makerspace lab)
Bruce (Analog machine, main floor, near the Maker Space)
This is an older machine but it is great for skimming. Bruce is not digital, so it cannot save to PDF. Users can make paper copies, but the quality is not very clear.
When you're done, rewind, pull the tray out, unlock the maglock.
Charlie (Digital Machine, near microform in Read & Relax).