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February 23, 2006

Last Call for "Library Lock-in" Volunteers (Event Date: March 3, 10pm-2am)

This is a last call for volunteers, as well as scavenger hunt question submissions, for the 1st annual "It was a Dark and Brainy Night at Bird Library." Event date/time: March 3, 2006 (10pm-2am).

Modeled after a similar academic Library happening at Rochester Institute of Technology, this SU Library 'Lock-In' competition is a co-production between Syracuse University Library and Syracuse University's Office of Residence Life. The event's scholarly component for its undergraduate student participants consists of a scavenger hunt style series of research exercises, occurring between 10:00 PM and 2:00 AM., all taking place inside of an otherwise closed E.S. Bird Library facility.

Volunteers from multiple SUL branches and departments are mostly all signed up, but a few open volunteer slots remain. So, if you would like to help out with operations at this unique event, please 1) check with your supervisor prior to volunteering (including about any questions you may have pertaining to whether helping during these hours qualifies as "paid time" or "comp time") and 2) send an email expressing your interest to one of the event co-chairs, Michael Pasqualoni mjpasqua@syr.edu or Sue Miller smmiller@syr.edu

Office of Residence Life will be providing T-Shirts for the volunteers, free refreshments (pizza, etc), and also some volunteer only door prizes. The centerpiece prize packages being awarded to the most research savvy of the evening's student participants are expected to include:

Grand Prize: Trip for 2 (e.g., to Orlando, FL)

2nd Prize: Two (2) $200 Bookstore Gift Cards

3rd Prize: A week's worth of free Starbuck's Coffee (essentially two (2) $25 gift certificates).

Also, if you can't participate, but would like to submit some scavenger hunt questions (along with answers), feel free to send these to either Michael Pasqualoni mjpasqua@syr.edu or Sue Miller smmiller@syr.edu (i.e., questions about SUL's collections, services, research tools, library locations, exhibits or personalities in your area, those that students should know about, but might not). These submitted questions, which can be very difficult or rather simple (we favor a mix of difficulty levels), must be answerable by students using print or online sources or tools within the E.S. Bird building (note: 6th floor, SCRC will be closed during the event..so SCRC related questions should not require physical access to that floor).

Office of Residence Life will be offering van transportation to volunteers following the event, for those who prefer an escort back to their parked car/parking lot, etc.

If volunteering or submitting additional questions, please do so no later than Monday Feb 27, Midnight.

Thanks again.

"It was a dark and brainy night at Bird Library" event co-chairs:
Michael Pasqualoni-Instructional Services Librarian
Sue Miller-Instructional Services Specialist

January 12, 2005

Jan. 25 Peer to Peer Library Dialog: Seeking 21st Century Library Leadership

Are you developing the right leadership skills to guide your library through the rapid changes of the 21st century to a vibrant future in the information age? Join Jill Hurst-Wahl and other library professionals as they discuss leadership styles and qualities on January 25, 2005 from noon to 1 p.m. in the 1916 Room of Bird Library.

Jill Hurst-Wahl, MLS, is a senior instructor in the School of Information Studies and president of Hurst Associates, Ltd. Jill has taught Management Principles for Information Professionals, as well as classes on digitization and digital libraries. She has written articles for several publications, including Searcher, EContent and The One Person Library. She has also facilitated a previous Peer to Peer program: “Keeping On Top of Your Game,” on continuing education and change management for librarians.

Refreshments are always provided for these informal sessions. Bring a lunch. All are welcome!

Peer to Peer Library Dialog is a staff initiated program of monthly discussion about trends and current topics of interest in librarianship.

Send comments or questions to
Sarah Theimer, shtheime@syr.edu

October 21, 2004

On October 25 and 26 SU Library will host more than 100 librarians for the 2004 Endeavor Mid-Atlantic (EMA) Users Group Meeting.

The EMA group comprises institutions from New Jersey, Eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, and New York who use Endeavor Information Systems products such as Voyager (upon which SU Library’s SUMMIT Catalog is based). Among the universities sending library representatives to the meeting are Cornell, Hamilton, Penn, Princeton, Rochester, Skidmore, and Yale.

Meeting sessions will take place in E.S. Bird Library and the Schine Student Center. Many of these sessions will focus on using the technology to improve services for users. The complete program is available on the EMA web site: emausers.org/schedule.html.

For further information, contact Nancy Turner, Electronic Resources Librarian at Syracuse University Library (nbturner@syr.edu).


July 23, 2004

OPAC Open Forum

Please join the OPAC Development Team for a brief Open Forum in the

1916 Room

on

Wednesday, August 4 at 2:00 p.m.

We will unveil a number of OPAC enhancements that will be implemented in advance of the fall semester.

Continue reading "OPAC Open Forum" »

July 22, 2004

Digital Imaging Services Center (DISC) Open House

WHEN: Friday, August 6, 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. (followed by the next SUL Happy Hour - see details below)

WHERE: The DISC, Room 045, Lower Level, E.S. Bird Library

WHY:
1.) "Tour" the new imaging center
2.) Learn about our services
3.) Meet Penelope Singer, our new Technical Specialist
4.) Eat good food
5.) Enjoy the company of your colleagues
6.) Walk away with a free gift:
Bring a favorite photograph (up to 54") and we will create a digital copy
for you to take with you on CD!
7.) Confirm your plans to attend the upcoming happy hour (details below)

Continue reading "Digital Imaging Services Center (DISC) Open House" »

April 23, 2004

Next Peer-to-Peer Library Dialog, "Shared Reading Programs for First-Year Students: A Role for Libraries" to be held May 5th

Join Mariana Lebron, Director of SU's Orientation and Transition Services, and Professor Jerry Evensky, SU's Faculty Assistant for the First- Year Experience, for a Peer to Peer discussion entitled:

Shared Reading Programs for First-Year Students: A Role for Libraries

Peer to Peer Library Dialog
Wednesday May 5
Noon - 1pm
1916 Room - E.S. Bird Library

In recent years, colleges and universities have begun to give special attention to first-year students, often introducing summer reading projects tied to the first-year experience. For example, the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill chooses a book to be read by all incoming freshman, the goals being "to enhance students' participation in the intellectual life of the campus through stimulating discussion and critical thinking around a current topic, to enhance a sense of community between students, faculty and staff, and to provide a common experience for incoming students" (See UNC-CH Website listed below.).

In 2003, Syracuse University, too, established a summer reading program for entering freshmen. We will focus on ways in which libraries can contribute to initiatives for enriching students' first-year experiences.

You may wish to consider the following articles and Web sites (Articles are available via SUMMIT Catalog-online course reserve-"LBR 100."):

Rodney, Mae L. "Building Community Partnerships: The 'One Book, One Community' Experience." College and Research Libraries News. (March 2004), 65 (3), p. 130-132, 155. http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlpubs/crlnews/backissues2004/march04/communitypartnerships.htm

O'Connor, Erin. "Misreading What Reading Is For." Chronicle of Higher Education. (September 5, 2003), p. 20.

Cornell University Library's Web site, "Antigone: 2003 New Student Reading Project: Library Resources": http://www.library.cornell.edu/iris/antigone/

University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill's Web site, "Carolina Summer Reading Program" (already featuring the selection for 2004): http://www.unc.edu/srp/

Web site of the Policy Center on the First Year of College: http://www.brevard.edu/fyc/


Hope to see you there. Light refreshments provided. Bring a lunch. All are welcome!

Peer to Peer Library Dialog is a staff initiated program of monthly discussion about trends and current topics of interest in librarianship. Send comments or questions to Lydia Wasylenko lwwasyle@syr.edu

March 16, 2004

J.P. Carley to Discuss the Libraries of King Henry VIII

Friday, April 2, 2004
4pm
Hillyer Room
E.S. Bird Library

J.P. Carley, Distinguished Research Professor at York University in Toronto, will lecture on April 2, 2004, at 4 p.m. in the Hillyer Room on the sixth floor of E.S. Bird Library on the Syracuse University campus. His lecture is titled "The Libraries of King Henry VIII: The Ones that Got Away."

Celebrated for his magnificence, daring in his defiance of papal authority, and restless in his choice of wives, Henry VIII was also one of the most intelligent and widely read monarchs of the Renaissance. In the wake of the destruction of the monasteries, he acquired a vast quantity of books, and with them filled the shelves of his palace libraries. His is one of the foundation collections of the British Library-though, over the centuries, many interesting items escaped to the New World.

J.P. Carley specializes in the late medieval and early modern period. His previous work has included editions of texts from Glastonbury Abbey and a general history of the Abbey. He has co-edited a collection of essays on the Tudor translator Henry Parker, Lord Morley; and he is one of the editors in the Corpus of British Medieval Library Catalogues series published by the British Library; The Books of King Henry VIII and His Wives is a companion piece to his volume on The Libraries of King Henry VIII in this series.

This event is part of The History of the Book Seminar Series at Syracuse University, sponsored by the University Library; the Dean's Office, College of Arts and Sciences; the Departments of Anthropology English, History, Philosophy, and Religion, and of Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics; and the School of Information Studies.

This event is free and open to the public.

February 18, 2004

OPAC Brown Bag / Open Forum

Please join the OPAC Development Team and the Library Management System Administrator, Merritt Lennox, for a Brown Bag/ Open Forum in the 1916 Room on

Tuesday, February 24 at noon

OR

Wednesday, February 25 at 3:30 p.m.

We will unveil a number of OPAC enhancements that will be implemented during the week of Spring Break. The enhancements, based in large part on recommendations we gathered from staff in 2003, are focused on the areas of search help, limits functionality, displays, and new titles.

February 16, 2004

March Peer to Peer Dialog to focus on Library computer systems

Peer to Peer Library Dialog
Wednesday March 3
Noon - 1pm
1916A Room - E.S. Bird Library

Join Yuming Tung, Head of Syracuse University Library's Information Systems Division, and SU Library systems staff, for a Peer to Peer discussion entitled:

Everything You Always Wanted to Know about the Library's Network and Computer System...But Were Afraid to Ask.

Stop by for a brief explanation of the servers and computer networks we use at SU Library everyday, followed by discussion of topics such as: What are the Pros and Cons of Decentralized vs. Centralized Computing? Why the Different Configurations for Public vs. Staff Workstations? How are we Responding to Viruses, Security Holes and Spyware? Which Specific New Technologies are Impacting Academic Libraries and Campuses Most (e.g., wireless networking, etc.)

Those interested in reading more about this topic are also welcome to review the following online articles:


1. Bradley Mitchell's "About" page on Wireless/Networking
http://compnetworking.about.com/

2. Crawford, G & Rudy, Julia A. (2003). Fourth Annual EDUCAUSE Survey Identifies Current IT Issues. EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 26(2), 12-26.
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/eqm0322.pdf

3. Canadian Broadcasting Company (2003, July 23). Beware Using Public Computers.
http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2003/07/23/Consumers/Internet_030723

Hope to see you there.

Peer to Peer Library Dialog is a staff initiated program of monthly discussion about trends and current topics of interest in librarianship. Send comments or questions to Michael Pasqualoni mjpasqua@syr.edu

November 21, 2003

Peer to Peer Library Dialog: Librarians on the Global Stage - IFLA

Wednesday December 3
Noon - 1pm
1916A Room - E.S. Bird Library

Join Bill Garrison, Associate University Librarian for Information Management Services, and George Abbott, Librarian and Head of Media Services, for a discussion of IFLA, The International Federation of Library Associations. Both attended IFLA's 69th General Conference in Berlin, Germany this past August and will share their thoughts about this central organization for cooperative international librarianship. Bill is one of two ALA representatives on the IFLA Cataloguing Section. George serves on a standing committee of IFLA's Audiovisual and Multimedia Section.

Peer to Peer Library Dialog is a staff initiated program of monthly discussion about trends and current topics of interest in librarianship. Send comments or questions to Michael Pasqualoni mjpasqua@syr.edu


November 19, 2003

LibChat Brown Bag Session

If you were unable to attend October's LibChat brown bag update, you have another chance. A second update is scheduled for November 25, from 12-1, in room 1916A. Please let Tom Keays (htkeays@syr.edu) or Tasha Cooper (nacoop01@syr.edu) know if you are interested in attending this session on the 25th.

Topics for discussion include: LibChat use during the fall and plans for the spring semester. The session is open to all who are interested. Comments, suggestions and questions about the service are welcome.

Also, Tom Keays and Tasha Cooper invite those with questions about LibChat to drop in on the LibChat coordinators' weekly meetings. Upcoming meeting dates and times are:

Friday, Nov. 21; 9:30 - 10:30 a.m.; 210A
Friday, Dec. 5; 9:30 - 10:30 a.m.; 210A
Wednesday, Dec. 10; 9:30 - 10:30 a.m.; 210A
Wednesday, Dec. 17; 9:30 - 10:30 a.m.; 210A

If you have suggestions or questions about the service or the software, please stop by during these times.

Tasha Cooper
Reference Department

November 11, 2003

SULA meeting and United Way

The SULA PROGRAM meeting featuring Bonnie Ryan and Prof. Arthur Flowers is scheduled for Nov. 18 at 2:30 pm in the 1916 room.

Continue reading "SULA meeting and United Way" »

NYCLU Presentation: The Patriot Act & Other Post 9/11 Erosions of Civil Liberties

On this coming Tuesday, November 11th, Barrie Gewanter, the Director of the Central New York Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) will give a presentation on "The Patriot Act & Other Post 9/11 Erosions of Civil Liberties." The presentation will begin at 7:00 pm at Hendricks Chapel on the campus of Syracuse University. The event is free and open to the public.

Continue reading "NYCLU Presentation: The Patriot Act & Other Post 9/11 Erosions of Civil Liberties" »

November 05, 2003

Slide Lecture Recreates L. Frank Baum's Tour of Egypt

At 4 p.m. on Thursday, November 20, in the 1916 Room on the first floor of E.S. Bird Library, David Moyer will deliver a slide lecture titled, "Up the Nile in Style: L. Frank Baum's 'Grand Tour' of Egypt." In this lecture Moyer will recreate a 1906 tour through Egypt by the author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and his wife, Maud.

Continue reading "Slide Lecture Recreates L. Frank Baum's Tour of Egypt" »

October 20, 2003

Coming November 5-Peer to Peer Library Dialog program: The Intentional Campus?

Wednesday Nov. 5, 2003
E.S. Bird Library - 1916 Room
Noon - 1pm

Continue reading "Coming November 5-Peer to Peer Library Dialog program: The Intentional Campus?" »

Reminder of Hollander events

All Library staff are welcome to attend the following events:

At 4 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 16, in the 1916 Room, Robert Hollander will deliver a lecture titled
"Justice and Poetry: Dante's Book of the Dead."

At 11 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 17 in the Hillyer Room, Robert Hollander will give a 30-
minute presentation titled "The Princeton Dante Project: A Web-based Resource for
Teaching and Research," followed by discussion.

At noon, Friday, Oct. 17, in the 1916B Room, Robert and Jean Hollander
will give a brown-bag luncheon presentation titled "Translating Dante Together: Can
Your Marriage Survive?" They will mix readings from their joint translation of Dante's
Comedy with an overview of the history of Dante translation and the problems that
translators face rendering Dante in the American idiom.

Continue reading "Reminder of Hollander events" »

Victorian women artists event

VICTORIAN WOMEN ARTISTS THE SUBJECT OF THREE-PART PRESENTATION

The work of three Victorian women artists—a photographer, a novelist, and a poet—will be freshly interpreted during a three-part presentation at 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, October 15, 2003, in the 1916 Room, first floor of E.S. Bird Library.

Continue reading "Victorian women artists event" »

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