New Science Books

Our science, math and engineering book collection just got a whole lot bigger!  We’ve added a large eBook collection (over 3000 titles!) to our resources!  You may browse the Springer eBook Collection or simply search the catalog for “Springer eBook Collection.”  You can also search for specific subjects, like “software engineering” and then limit the location the Electronic Access.  This collection will add a lot of depth to our resources that we would not be able to provide in print resources and you will be able to access them from anywhere on campus any time of day.

Feel free to contact us if you have any questions regarding this new collection!  Happy researching!

Wikipedia Facts

According to a study that appeared on the front page of the January 31st edition of the New York Times,  males in their mid-twenties account for 87% of  the articles written for Wikipedia.  Over 3.5 million articles in over 250 languages comprise this evolving decade-old encyclopedia, which rises to the top of almost any Google search one conducts.

Early in 2010, researchers at a joint center of the United Nations University and Maastricht University collaborated with the  Wikipedia Foundation to assess the demographics of  contributors to the website.  Now that the profile has been released, Sue Gardner, the executive director of the foundation, has set a goal of raising the gender equity of contributors to 25% by 2015.

Several industry analysts and organizational behaviorists have tried to suggest theories to explain the gender differences.  Gardner herself believes that “the traditions of the computer world and an obsessive fact-loving realm dominated by men and uncomfortable for women” has created the disparity.

Whatever the explanation, the facts speak for themselves.  So  the next time you consult the online encyclopedia for a quick refresher on a fact, take note of the article’s  authorship.  And better yet, women “know-it-alls” out there,  contribute!

For the complete article, refer to The New York Times from Monday, January 31, 2011.

Spring 2011 Library Hours

Photo courtesy of Warren Brown Photography

It’s a new year and a new semester! The Library is back to regular hours, and we’re looking forward to working with you this spring!

Monday -Thursday:    8 A.M.-11:30 P.M.
Friday:    8 A.M.-10 P.M.
Saturday:    Noon- 8 P.M.
Sunday:    Noon-11:30 P.M.

Insider’s Guide to Smartphones

On February 16, our Spring 2011 Technology on Your Own Terms workshops will begin with The Insider’s Guide to Smartphones, to be held from 12pm-1pm in WML305.

In this workshop, digital services librarian Kristen Yarmey and technology services analyst Diane Jachimowicz will discuss some of the technology behind smartphones like iPhones, Androids, and Blackberries.  We’ll talk about what terms like 3G, 4G, tethering, and jailbreaking mean in plain English, what sensors like accelerometers and compasses mean for average users, how operating systems like iOS and Android differ, and what phone features to look out for in 2011 and beyond.  A light lunch will be provided during the discussion.

All faculty and staff members are welcome, but seats are limited, so please register at www.scranton.edu/ctleregistration (under Technology On Your Own Terms).

Science and Nature, now available from the Weinberg

Great news for scientists on campus – the Weinberg now has online subscriptions to the journals Science and Nature, available from anywhere for our University of Scranton faculty, staff, and students!  

Nature is available in Nature Journals Online from the November 4, 2010 issue to the present. You can find older issues (1990 to one year ago) in our Proquest Central database.

Science is available from January 1997 to the present in Science Magazine.  As with Nature, you can find older issues of Science (1988 to 2005) in our Proquest Central database.

Remember, these are subscriptions, so if you’re not on campus be sure to log in to my.scranton in order to access full-text articles.  To all of our science faculty and students, happy searching!

Zaner-Bloser in the media

Zaner-Bloser penmanship has made it into the media!   Check out the Saturday, January 22, 2011 edition of the Scranton Times-Tribune here:  http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/the-writing-s-on-the-wall-but-no-one-can-read-it-1.1094003#axzz1BmppKM6P.  The print version includes a photograph of our Special Collections Librarian Michael Knies poring over the handwriting samples in the exhibit on the 5th floor of Weinberg Library, in the Heritage Room.  CBS Sunday Morning had a segment this Sunday entitled “A Farewell to Handwriting” and listed as “Signing Off”.  See the video here:   http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7274694n&tag=contentBody;featuredPost-PE

The Zaner-Bloser collection is the newest collection at the University of Scranton’s Weinberg Library.  For additional information about the collection, see:  http://academic.scranton.edu/department/wml/ARCHIVED/features/fall10s-7.html

The  Zaner-Bloser exhibit can be seen now on the 5th floor of the Weinberg Memorial Library in the Heritage Room.  The exhibit formally opens on Wednesday, February 2nd.

The Book of the Snow

Philip Mosley reads from his translation of François Jacqmin’s poems with classical guitar punctuations by Jason Smeltzer.

Philip Mosley,  Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Penn State Worthington Scranton, will perform a reading of his translations of the poems of François Jacqmin on Thursday, February 10 at 7:30 p.m. in the Heritage Room of Weinberg Library.

Dr. Mosley’s translation of The Book of the Snow, a volume of 112 ten-line poems by  Jacqmin, has just been published in a bilingual edition by Arc in the UK in its “Visible Poets” series. Jacqmin, who died in 1992, is considered to be one of the foremost Belgian francophone poets of the last fifty years. His poetry is elemental, philosophical, and witty. He was also associated with Phantomas, an iconoclastic neo-surrealist group of artists and writers. Dr. Mosley’s reading will be accompanied by classical guitar punctuations by Jason Smeltzer.

Dr. Mosley is an Associate Editor of Comparative Literature Studies and a member of the Board of the Pennsylvania Humanities Council, having been involved with the Council since 1996 as a Commonwealth Speaker, a Read About It! book discussion group leader, and an outside evaluator.  As well as his PHC activities, he has been prominent in the cultural life of northeastern Pennsylvania, organizing and participating in a number of film festivals and literary events, and serving on museum and film boards.  Philips book publications include Ingmar Bergman: The Cinema as Mistress (1982); Georges Rodenbach: Critical Essays (1996); Split Screen: Belgian Cinema and Cultural Identity (2001); and Anthracite! An Anthology of Pennsylvania Coal Region Plays (2006).  His latest book, The Cinema of Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne: Responsible Realism, is forthcoming from Wallflower Press in London.  Additionally, he has translated a number of Belgian authors from French to English including Guy Vaes (October Long Sunday, 1997), Georges Rodenbach (Bruges-la-Morte, 2007), Maurice Maeterlinck (The Intelligence of Flowers, 2008), and Francois Jacqmin (The Book of the Snow, 2010). He was awarded the 2008 Literary Translation Prize by the French Community of Belgium in recognition of his contribution to the dissemination of Belgian francophone literature.  A native of England who immigrated to the U.S.A. in 1988, Philip holds a B.A .in English from the University of Leeds, an M.A. in European Literature and a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature, both from the University of East Anglia.  In 2000 he was Visiting Professor at the University of Toulouse, France, and in 2003-04 was Fulbright Visiting Professor at the Free University of Brussels, Belgium.

Library Closing Early

 

Image courtesy of Martin Cathrae, under a Creative Commons license

Due to the weather conditions the library will be closing at 8pm tonight (Tuesday, January 18, 2011).

The Library’s two 24 hour rooms will be open for student use and are accessible by swiping your Royal Card. Both 24 hour rooms have computer access and printing is available.

Help is available for any questions you may have through the library’s Virtual Reference Service. You can Chat 24/7 with a librarian by clicking the embedded link.

Be safe, everyone!

Bus Trip to NYPL for Three Faiths Exhibit

This Spring, the Schemel Forum is running a bus trip to the New York Public Library to visit their latest exhibition, Three Faiths: Judaism, Christianity, Islam.  The trip, scheduled for February 19th, features a guided tour of the exhibition, which includes great manuscripts from the Judaic, Christian, and Islam traditions.

Reservations are required, so if you’re interested, contact Kym Fetsko at fetskok2@scranton.edu.  The trip runs from 7:30am through 7:45pm and has a fee of $50 to cover round-trip bus fare and the guided tour.