Leopold terminal was moved in Jan. 1975.
<p>These folders include general brochures introducing Community Memory to users and the public; "The Young People's Yellow Pages: the first (and only) computerized catalogue of fun, fashion and fact built by teens, for teens in Berkeley" -- developed by Community Memory volunteers; advertisements for new Community Memory terminals in different locations; a "pocket guide to Community Memory;" and a report on the Community Memory Alameda County War Memorial project.</p>
<p>Black and white image of seven people posted in front of a terminal that has "touch me" on the display. From left to right, Carl Farrington, Michael Rossman, Phil Kohn, Lee Felsenstein, Karen Paulsell, Terre Beynart, Ken Constad. The sign above reads "Community Memory -read and add messages -exchange information -make a connection".</p>
This folder includes transcripts of interviews with Lee Felsenstein and Sandy Emerson, short essays by Felsenstein, and handwritten notes about Community Memory history.
Part 1: inumbered tems with keywords Part 2: alphabetical keyword index with all items shown Directory is printed on continuous-feed paper [this is the original of 102805156]
Notes by Lipkin on searching, taxonomy, indexing, and other functions of the Community Memory programs.
From first page: "The attached table lists the index words used in searches, in order of frequency (and in alphabetic [sic] order within a frequnecy)." Also included is a table that shows the total number of searches performed and the average number of searches per day. In this index from 1987, the index words most commonly searched for (with the total number of times searched in parenthesis) are: adam (379), sex (316), love (205), jokes (147), housing (138), car (134), eku (133), art (117), computer (114), gay (96), fantasy (90), joke (88), and apartment (83).
Several photocopy articles and drafts of Community Memory publications, including a couple of Journal of Community Communications (duplicates of items elswhere).
This folder includes issues of the Community Memory Network, Community Memory News, and Resource One Newsletter.
Object a large plastic bottle with its mouth closed by a screw-fastened rubber stopper. Inside are dozens of folded sheets of paper with individual messages on them. The texts that can be read appear to be messages to the future or predictions of the future. This may have been set up as a "time capsule." On the side is a paper label with the "brain" diagram and logo of the Community Memory Project of Berkeley.