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June 30, 2008

Access to Academic OneFile database discontinued on September 1

On September 1, 2008, the Library will no longer subscribe to the Academic OneFile database. We are sending out this information in advance to enable those in the planning stages for the fall semester to make other arrangements.

The library continues to offer several general and interdisciplinary databases, all of which are available through the Find Articles page and the SUMMIT Catalog (Find Books). If you need assistance selecting a database, please stop by a library service desk or use our online research assistance service.

If you have questions about this change, please contact Tasha Cooper, Social Sciences/Area Studies Bibliographer, nacoop01@syr.edu; 443-9518.

June 20, 2008

Trial Access for China Data Online

Trial access has been established for China Data Online.
Trial is through July 15th, 2008 and it is available via IP authentication.

To access the database, point your browser to: China Data Online

For Off-Campus access please point your browser to: China Data Online - Off-Campus access

China Data Online has extensive economic and social data at the city, county, provincial, and national levels; detailed census tables for 1982, 1990, 1995, and 2000; national statistical yearbooks from 1999 and provincial yearbooks from 2002; and maps including the Atlas of China. Trial access covers the following databases:
(1) Monthly Statistics
(2) National Statistics
(3) Provincial Statistics
(4) City Statistics
(5) County Statistics
(6) Monthly Industrial Data
(7) Yearly Industrial Data
(8) Statistics with Map & Charts
(9) Statistical Yearbooks

For more information or comments, please contact Natasha Cooper.

June 19, 2008

Blackwell Synergy e-journals to merge into Wiley InterScience

Effective Monday, June 30th 2008, all Blackwell journal content—including all full-text HTML and PDF versions of articles from current issues, backfiles, and issues published online before print—will be incorporated into Wiley InterScience. After June 30th, Blackwell Synergy will no longer be available.

Access to Blackwell Synergy will end at the close of business (Pacific Standard Time) on Friday, June 27th and the migration will be completed by Monday, June 30th. Over the weekend of June 28th and 29th, there will be a period when Wiley InterScience will also be unavailable while system transition and re-indexing of data occurs.

June 10, 2008

Special Collections Research Center awarded NHPRC grant for cartoon collections

The Syracuse University Library’s Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) has been awarded a grant of $79,440 by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) to support the arrangement and description of the library’s 134 unprocessed collections of original cartoon art. The funds will help support a full-time project archivist for a period of two years. The award to Syracuse was one of six “Detailed Processing Grants” awarded by NHPRC and the Archivist of the United States. Other recipients included Princeton University and the University of Chicago.

Syracuse’s collection of original cartoon art is among the most comprehensive in the U.S. It includes over 20,000 original works by approximately 173 artists and comprises more than 1,000 linear feet of material. Spanning the course of the 20th century, it includes both serial and editorial cartoons.

Among the serial cartoonists represented are: Bud Fisher, whose Mutt and Jeff was the earliest successful daily comic strip; Mort Walker, whose Beetle Bailey anticipated the changing notions of American masculinity and militarism during the Cold War; Hal Foster, whose lavishly illustrated Prince Valiant elevated the artistic ambitions of the genre; and Morrie Turner, whose Wee Pals was the first comic strip to chronicle the lives of racial and ethnic minorities in American life.

The editorial and political cartoonists represented in the collection include: William Gropper, whose leftist political cartoons in the Daily Worker raised working class consciousness during World War II; F.O. Alexander, whose everyman alter-ego “Joe Doakes” experienced the turbulence of the 1960s in the pages of the Philadelphia Bulletin; and Carey Orr, whose editorial cartoons appeared in the Chicago Tribune for nearly fifty years.

The physical cartoons in Syracuse’s collection are as wide-ranging and diverse as the artists that created them, assuming countless shapes, sizes, and media including pencil, pen, and gouache on paper. Over the next two years, the project archivist will take steps to ensure that the cartoons are housed in archival-quality containers. He or she will also draft online, searchable finding aids so that they are accessible to researchers and individuals all over the world.

The NHPRC grant is exciting news for scholars who specialize in the genre, casual fans, and, of course, for Syracuse University, which has held many of these collections since the 1960s. For the full list of the Commission’s 2008 grants, see http://www.archives.gov/press/press-releases/2008/nr08-106.html

About the Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Library

With more than 100,000 printed works and 2,000 manuscript and archival collections, SCRC holds some of Syracuse University’s most precious treasures, including early printed editions of Gutenberg, Galileo, and Sir Isaac Newton as well as the library of 19th century German historian Leopold von Ranke (1795-1886). SCRC’s holdings are particularly strong in the 20th century; they include the personal papers and manuscripts of such luminaries as artist Grace Hartigan (1922- ), inspirational preacher Norman Vincent Peale (1898-1993), author Joyce Carol Oates (1938- ), photojournalist Margaret Bourke White (1904-1971), and architect Marcel Breuer (1902-1981). SCRC strives to be a “humanities laboratory” where librarians and scholars collaborate with the artifacts of history in an ongoing and vital learning process. Home to a new, state-of-the-art instructional seminar room, SCRC also regularly hosts exhibitions, lectures and classes focusing on its collections. For more information, visit the web site at http://library.syr.edu/information/spcollections/index.html

For more information on this project, contact Sean Quimby, director of the Special Collections Research Center at 315 443-9759 or smquimby@syr.edu.

June 4, 2008

Pamela McLaughlin elected NYSHEI Board chair-elect

Pamela McLaughlin was elected to the position of chair-elect of the board of the New York State Higher Education Initiative (NYSHEI) at the group’s recent annual meeting in Syracuse. McLaughlin, who is director of communications and external relations at Syracuse University Library, was also elected to a three-year term on the board, representing very large private institutions.

Founded in 2002 and based in Albany, NYSHEI represents the interests of public and private academic and research libraries in New York State and serves as an advocacy group for academic libraries before elected officials and their staff. Its stated mission is “To develop, enhance and preserve our research and educational services, collections and resources for the benefit of faculty, students and the larger research community, and to promote new methods of scholarly communication.”

NYSHEI assists over 130 member institutions in providing the broadest possible access to information, fostering the academic enterprise, and advancing industry-academic partnerships in support of the innovation economy. The group is currently working on legislation to secure statewide funding for access to science, technology, and medical information resources.

For more information on NYSHEI and its activities, see http://nyshei.org/

New York Center for the Book reauthorized through 2010

The New York Center for the Book at Syracuse University Library has been reauthorized by the Library of Congress to continue through 2010. The New York Center is a state affiliate of the Library of Congress (LC) Center for the Book, which was founded in 1977 as a public-private partnership to “promote books, reading, libraries, and literacy.” Syracuse University Library has been the home to the New York Center since 2002 and collaborates with the LC Center in its annual, nationwide program to encourage reading and writing

Pamela McLaughlin, Director of Communications and External Relations at Syracuse University Library, was appointed Executive Director of the New York Center in November 2007. She works with an advisory board of librarians and interested others from across the state to develop the Center and its programs. Bart Harloe, University Librarian at St. Lawrence University, is the current chair of the board.

A key activity of the Center for the Book is the annual Letters About Literature contest. One of the Center’s most successful literacy programs for students, the contest invites students to write a letter to an author explaining how their work has changed the way they view themselves or the world. State winners receive a cash prize and gift cards provided by contest sponsor Target Stores. Participation in New York has grown steadily over the last three years, from 350 entries in the 2005-06 school year to over 1,800 entries in 2007-08. This year, two of New York’s first place winners also received honorable mention awards at the national level of the contest. Syracuse University Library underwrites the program and manages the related administrative functions.

Interests of the New York Center include scholarship relating to all aspects of the book, books as artifacts, the aesthetics of books, book arts, book publishing and distribution, and reading for pleasure and enlightenment. For information about the national center’s activities and programs, visit http://www.loc.gov/cfbook. For more information about the New York Center for the Book, see http://nybook.org or contact Pamela McLaughlin at (315) 443-9788 or pwmclaug@syr.edu.


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