Even more from the SAH Newsletter:
International Survey of Jewish Monuments Research Project – The International Survey of Jewish Monuments (ISJM) is launching a new documentation initiative aimed at gathering information about the architecture, art and the condition of modern American synagogues built in the second half of the 20th century. The emphasis of the survey will be on buildings designed and erected between 1945 and 1975 as these are most at risk. Research has shown that many of these buildings – even when designed by master architects – are poorly documented, and often threatened with radical alteration or complete demolition due to specific congregational factors and larger demographics shifts. Synagogues built in the 1950s and 1960s are regularly altered, expanded, sold and demolished due to expanding congregations, new liturgical and congregational expectations, changing tastes in style, and sometime high cost of maintaining deteriorated materials. Plans call for an organizing committee of volunteers for this project, each to be responsible for collating inventories and organizing documentation based on location. At a future date ISJM may contact SAH members to help facilitate documentation of a particular building. If you are interested in participating as an organizer, documentarian, sponsor or organizational partner please contact ISJM c/o Samuel D. Gruber 123 Clarke Street Syracuse, NY 13210 Tel. 315.474.2350 Fax 309.403.1858 or samuelgruber@gmail.com
Call for Nominations to the SAH Board – The 2010 SAH Nominating Committee seeks your recommendations for new SAH Board members who would begin their terms in April 2010 and serve for three years. The final slate of nominees should represent the diversity of the field of architectural history. Self-nominations are welcome as are nominations of emerging scholars and independent and non-affiliated historians of architectural history, landscape history and their related disciplines. Nominations of practitioners in architecture, historic preservation and related fields are also encouraged, as are nominations of people who chose architectural history as their avocation. Please note that the SAH Board has adopted a policy to increase the diversity of our profession by expanding the racial and ethnic populations we represent, topics we address in our publications, programs and meetings, and promotion of these issues in the field of architectural history at large. To that end SAH would welcome the nomination of candidates who will add racial and ethnic diversity to the SAH Board. Please email nominations to Pauline Saliga, SAH Executive Director, psaliga@sah.org. Nominations will be forwarded directly to the Chair of the Nominating Committee. Nominations should include the name, affiliation (if applicable), and contact information for the candidate, particularly telephone number. Also the nominator should provide a short explanation of the nominee’s qualifications and why they feel the nominee should be considered for the SAH Board.
![PIN1988[03] PIN1988[03]](http://sahgradstudentblog.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/pin198803.jpg?w=500)
Update on SAHARA from Pauline Saliga:
From Pauline Saliga:
Make No Little Plans Daniel Burnham and the American City, a new