It was a dream internship that combined two passions: law and baseball.
Karen S谩nchez, an MLIS online student, is spending the summer working for the to help it prepare for a June 2018 Baseball Americana exhibit 鈥 a look at how the great American pastime has spread worldwide.
The exhibit will include a 鈥渕oot court鈥 on the use of the designated hitter; a small exhibit featuring items from the Law Library鈥檚 collection; and a joint program for Labor Day on baseball and free agency/players鈥 rights and how that relates to antitrust laws.
鈥淎s a law library nerd, as I call myself, I was instantly attracted to the idea of working for the Law Library of Congress,鈥 says S谩nchez.
She found out about the internship from a blog post by the LLC internship coordinator. They needed someone in Washington, D.C., to go through the stacks and find things to display in the collection. The fact that she lived in Los Angeles and had a full-time job did not dissuade her from applying.
鈥淭hey said, 鈥楾ell us in a paragraph what you think you can offer to the project,鈥欌 S谩nchez says.
She let them know she spoke Spanish, had access to her local law library, and was good at research using serials (digital journals). They offered her the position.
Persistence is a theme in S谩nchez鈥檚 life. She graduated with a B.A. in political science in 2004 from the University of Southern California and had dreams of law school, but her grades and finances were a hindrance. Her only work experience was as a work-study student in the USC Law Library, so after graduation she became a contractor with the working with law firms and corporate legal departments. She moved on to her current position with a large law firm in L.A. and has been there for 12 years.
鈥淭he thought of library education really developed over a long time. It wasn鈥檛 something that I thought I wanted to do early in my 20s,鈥 S谩nchez says. 鈥淚 defaulted to library work just because I had no other practical skills.鈥
S谩nchez is pursuing her MLIS degree to advance her career. She is the winner of several national and regional scholarships and is the incoming chair of the UW chapter of the Special Libraries Association.
As a first-generation Mexican-American, S谩nchez is passionate about making her profession more diverse. She works with high-school students through her firm鈥檚 internship program to expose them to special librarianship.
鈥淣one of them have been to their local library or knew what a librarian really does,鈥 S谩nchez says. 鈥淚 want them to see me as a Latina, that this is a viable career option should they find it interesting.鈥
For her own eight-week summer internship, S谩nchez鈥檚 preliminary research includes looking at baseball case law in antitrust, contracts, trademarks, and labor as well as gathering the legislative history of the Curt Flood Act 鈥 the act that made Major League Baseball players covered under anti-trust laws. Additionally she is writing a blog post highlighting the plight of Cuban players smuggled and trafficked into the U.S. and the implications for American-born players.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an assignment that requires me to do legal research in a way that I would never have gotten to do in my own job,鈥 says S谩nchez. 鈥淚 want to highlight the social issues that affect baseball players, particularly players who come from poor Latin American countries and Cuban refugees.鈥
Which brings us back to her passion for baseball. S谩nchez and her husband like to vacation around baseball parks. She says they have checked five stadiums from their list so far, although her husband went to Seattle鈥檚 Safeco Field without her while she was in the MLIS program orientation.
In reflecting on her career and education, S谩nchez says, 鈥淭his is one of the great things about the iSchool MLIS program, that you are able to make the connection between the workplace and your studies. I really appreciate and am grateful for the opportunity.鈥