Regional History Project, University Library UC Santa Cruz

Title: Allan J. Dyson: Managing the UCSC Library, 1979-2003

Author: Dyson, Allan J. Reti, Irene

Publication Date: July 1, 2006

Series: Other Recent Work

Permalink: http://escholarship.org/uc/item/3nj8f076

Keywords: , Santa Cruz history, University Library Administration

Abstract: Allan J. [Lan] Dyson was appointed University Librarian at UC Santa Cruz's University Library in August 1979, and retired in July 2003. This oral history, conducted as part of the Regional History Project's University History Series, is a singular contribution to the documentation of twenty- four years of history, not only of UCSC's University Library, but also of a period of extensive technological and cultural transformations in academic librarianship in the United States.

Supporting material: Dyson Full Audio

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University of California, Santa Cruz

University Library

Allan J. Dyson:

Managing the UCSC Library, 1979-2003

Interviewed and Edited by Irene Reti

Santa Cruz, California

2006

All uses of this manuscript are covered by an agreement between the Regents of the University of California and Allan J. Dyson, dated July 10, 2006. The manuscript is thereby made available for research purposes. All the literary rights in the manuscript, including the right to publish, are reserved to the University of California, Santa Cruz. No part of the manuscript may be quoted for publication without the permission of the University Librarian of the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Table of Contents

Introduction i

Early Life 1

Harvard University 3

Going into the Army 4

Watertown Arsenal 5

Simmons College Library School 8

Columbia University Library 10

Moffitt Undergraduate Library, UC Berkeley 13

Applying for the University Librarian Position at UC Santa Cruz 16

The Early Years at the University Library 22

Early Impressions of the UC Santa Cruz Campus 30

The College Libraries and the Liaison Librarians 31

Public Relations 33

UCSC as an Undergraduate-Oriented Institution 35

The Need for a New Science Library Building at UCSC 38

The University of California Libraries Plan for Development 45

Start-up Funds 55

Enrollment Increases and FTE Allocations 56

The Jitney to UC Berkeley 59

Service-Oriented Philosophy 61

Academic Senate Library Committees 65

Interactions with Academic and Executive Vice Chancellors 72

Relationships with the other University Librarians at UC 73

Librarians Association of the University of California [LAUC] 83

The Design and Construction of the Science and Engineering Library 87

Chairing the Campus Lands Management Advisory Committee 118

Multicultural Outreach 127

The Librarians Association of the University of California 136

Librarians and Collective Bargaining 141

Librarian Recruitments 157

Managing Middle Managers 162

A Flat Organizational Chart 164

Media Services 169

Automated Catalog Systems 178

The California Digital Library 183

The Library Collections Budget 191

Budgetary Challenges 193

Library Fundraising and Development 200

The McHenry Library Building Addition 212

The Friends of the UCSC Library 232

A Series of Challenging Events 240

The Stack O’ Wheats Controversy 241

Personal Tragedies for Library Staff 250

The Loma Prieta Earthquake 254

The Jazz Photos Exhibit Incident 264

The Bankruptcy of the Faxon Company 274

Impressions of the Academic and Executive Vice Chancellors 279

Impressions of the UCSC Chancellors 289

Susan Cooper 299

Women in Librarianship 301

Other Changes in Librarianship 307

Challenges and Rewards 310

Issues Facing the University Library 317

Retirement 319

Index 322

Lan Dyson: Introduction page i

Introduction

Allan J. [Lan] Dyson was appointed University Librarian at UC Santa Cruz’s University

Library in August 1979, and retired in July 2003. This oral history, conducted as part of the Regional History Project’s University History Series, is a singular contribution to the documentation of twenty-four years of history, not only of UCSC’s University Library, but also of a period of extensive technological and cultural transformations in academic librarianship in the United States.1

Born in 1942, Dyson grew up in Salem, New Hampshire, then a relatively rural area of

New England. He was among the first students at his public high school to win a scholarship to an Ivy League school. At Harvard, he played a leadership role in the largest student-run social service organization, and received a military commission through the Reserve Officer Training Corps. After graduation, he was assigned as a U.S.

Army second lieutenant to the nearby Watertown Arsenal. There he was appointed the chief administrative services officer, developing management skills that would serve him well in future positions in library administration.

Following his two years of active duty in the army, Dyson entered Simmons College library school in 1966. He was interested in pursuing library management as a career and therefore planned to work in public libraries, where more management positions existed at the time. But fate and opportunity led in other directions, and Dyson was offered the position of assistant to the director of libraries at Columbia University, where

1In 1993 the Regional History Project published Donald T. Clark: Early UCSC History and the Founding of the University Library. Those readers who peruse both Dyson’s and Clark’s volumes can trace nearly all of the history of the University Library.—Editor.

page ii Lan Dyson: Introduction he stayed for three years, working under three different directors, each with distinct management styles. There he also developed skills and experience in the emerging field of library instruction, and attended a pre-conference session on library instruction in the undergraduate library at the American Library Association’s conference in Dallas in

1971. At that event he was recruited by the University of California at Berkeley for the position of head of their new Moffitt Undergraduate Library. Dyson held this position from September 1971 to July 1979, during a period of great political upheaval, as well as expansion of the library’s collection and staff.

Dyson arrived as university librarian at UCSC in 1979, just as the University Library faced a series of formidable challenges. The first was coping with some volatile interpersonal conflicts among managers that had arisen in a period of turmoil during which the previous university librarian and two assistant university librarians had been removed from their positions. “The situation at UCSC was pretty ugly at that point,”

Dyson recalls. “I was actually told I should not take the job because the UCSC library was a ‘snake pit.’” A second challenge was implementing the library’s first automated circulation system, Computer Library Systems Incorporated [CLSI]. When Dyson arrived, little had been accomplished in planning to bring this soon-to-arrive system online.

A third problem afflicting the young library was the woefully inadequate nature of the building which housed its science collections. UCSC’s Science Library at the time was a building that was originally meant to store the collections of the Lick Observatory, a

“fortress” that lacked bathrooms and adequate office space for library staff, had almost

Lan Dyson: Introduction page iii no windows, and only a dumb-waiter for an elevator. The basement of the building, originally intended to be a storage room, had been utilized for the expanding collections.

The ceiling was so low that taller patrons were in danger of hitting their heads on the protruding fire sprinklers. Furthermore, the size of the collection had outstripped the space available in the Science Library, and many of the books and journals had been shifted to McHenry Library. This created a situation where irritated and sweaty library users hiked up and down a rather steep hill to secure their research materials. One of

Dyson’s most impressive accomplishments was leading the planning, design and implementation of a new, world-class Science Library, which opened in 1991. Dyson took an unusual, hands-on role in the design and planning of this project; he chaired the building committee and participated in almost all construction meetings. The prestigious architectural firm Esherick, Homsey, Dodge, and Davis (who also designed the world-famous Monterey Bay Aquarium) was selected to design the new library. The

firm solicited input from faculty, library staff and students. The new Science Library is

filled with light that filters through the coastal redwoods that surround the site. The building won the 1993 Gold Medal award from the American Institute of Architects/

American Library Association, among other accolades. In 2001 it was renamed the

Science and Engineering Library. Dyson’s lively and detailed narration of the many considered steps that went into completing this remarkable building is one of the most fascinating contributions of this oral history.

Dyson also discusses the benefits and challenges of being the smallest library within the

UC system. As a small research library UCSC also had “to make up, in terms of service, what we lacked in terms of resources,” Dyson explains, and it is this service-oriented

page iv Lan Dyson: Introduction approach which formed the heart of his management philosophy. The cultivation of a strong and expert library staff was a core element of this managerial approach, as was maintaining a relatively flat organizational chart, where staff had easy access to management. Dyson characterizes his management philosophy as one based in

“effervescence theory,” in which a manager creates a climate where staff feel encouraged to share creative ideas which then “bubble up” to management. This model fostered the excellence of many of the dedicated professional and support staff who have contributed to the high quality of the University Library.

This narrative also provides a window into the general history of the UC Santa Cruz campus. Dyson served under several academic and executive vice chancellors, as well as four chancellors, and shares his recollections of each of those figures. He chaired the

Campus Lands Management Advisory Committee for many years, and outlines some of the controversial land use issues the UCSC campus faced during this period of considerable growth.

Somewhat atypically for a university librarian, Dyson had served as systemwide president of the Librarians Association of the University of California before coming to

UCSC . He discusses the evolution and complexities of that organization. This chapter of the interview is an insightful contribution to the history of librarianship within the

University of California.

When Dyson attended a student-organized meeting protesting the marginal position of ethnic studies and students of color at UCSC in the late 1980s, he experienced an epiphany regarding the lack of multicultural representation on the library staff, and how

Lan Dyson: Introduction page v

this impacted students at UCSC. From that point