Featured Database: Web-based and Mobile Access Newspapers
In addition to the online access to over 1,000 newspapers worldwide via the library databases, we have added subscriptions to the New York Times and Wall Street Journal web and mobile app access. The New York Times access includes Cooking, Games, and The Athletic. These sections are available for all current Cal State LA students, faculty, and staff to access for one year from your activation date.
For details on activating and accessing both papers, please click the highlighted links to review the dedicated access pages. Additionally, web and mobile access to the Chronicle of Higher Education is available via the Library Databases A-Z list.
Featured General Collection: Cultural Heritage Collection & Displays
The University Library's cultural heritage book displays create a dynamic and inclusive space for learning, appreciating, and celebrating human heritage. Featuring materials that reflect diverse cultures and perspectives, these displays align with the library's mission to foster learning, understanding, and appreciation of various cultures and histories. By showcasing a wide array of cultural narratives, the library aims to bridge gaps between different communities and promote a sense of diversity through knowledge and experiences.
Our displays highlight the traditions, histories, and narratives that shape our communities, emphasizing works by diverse authors, including those from our own community members. This approach not only celebrates our rich heritage but also gives a platform to voices that might otherwise go unheard. Each display is carefully curated to educate the campus community about different cultures, traditions, and historical events, fostering a greater understanding and appreciation of cultural diversity. Through these displays, we aim to spark curiosity, stimulate conversation, and create connections among students and faculty alike. This inspiration encourages students to explore their own identities and histories and prompts deeper reflection on the broader human experience.
The existing library displays cover a range of significant cultural and historical themes, including Black History Month, Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, LGBTQ+ Pride Month, Hispanic Heritage Month, Banned Books Week, Open Access Week, and National Native American Heritage Month. These displays are not static; we continuously develop additional themes to enrich our community's cultural experience. Each new display adds another layer of depth and understanding to our diverse knowledge, ensuring that the library remains a vibrant hub of cultural education and appreciation.
All displays are presented in the Reading Lounge on the 2nd floor of Library North. We invite everyone to check the Library Event Calendar for upcoming displays and events. By visiting these displays, and checking out the books, you can immerse yourself in the diverse tapestry of human heritage and contribute to the ongoing celebration and understanding of cultural diversity.
Featured Special Collection: The Gloria Arellanes Papers, East LA Archives
The East Los Angeles Archives (ELAA) is housed in Cal State LA's Special Collection and Archives, and is comprised of collections which document the lives and events of a historical community central to the social, political, and cultural history of the Chicano/Latino community in the United States. The ELAA is a program that advances scholarship in Chicano/Latino studies and Los Angeles history through its varied collection of primary research materials. This archive has a special interest in materials documenting the Chicano and Civil Rights movements in East Los Angeles during the 1960s and 1970s. Gloria Arellanes (1946-) and Dionne Espinoza (Professor of History, Cal State LA) identified a large percentage of the contents of the files.
Arellanes was born in East Los Angeles and raised in El Monte, California. She attended El Monte High School in the early 1960s and in the late 1960s she became Minister of Finance and Correspondence of the Chicano Brown Beret organization’s founding East Los Angeles Chapter. As Minister of Finance and Correspondence she wrote press releases, letters, and edited La Causa, the East Los Angeles based Brown Beret Newspaper. She also served as administrator of El Barrio Free Clinic and was a member of the National Chicano Moratorium Committee (1969-1970). She attended the Poor People’s Campaign in Washington, D.C. (1968), and the Denver Youth Conferences (1969 and 1970). After leaving the Brown Beret organization in early 1970, she organized the women’s group, Las Adelitas de Aztlán. She also coordinated la Clínica del Barrio and continued as a health care worker through the late 1970s.
The bulk of the collection includes political flyers and broadsides, newspapers, books, buttons, posters and photographs dating from 1967 to the late 1970s. The collection is organized into eight series: I. Subject/Topical Files; II. Programs, Flyers and Broadsides III. Newspapers; IV. Clippings V. Publications; VI. Photographs; VII. Posters; VIII. Ephemera. View the collection guide.