The 2010 Weinberg Memorial Library Book & Plant Sale starts today at 4pm with a special preview sale for Friends of the Library and Schemel Forum members. The sale opens to the public tomorrow, April 24, from 9am – 9pm and Sunday, April 25 from 12pm – 4pm.
Category: News
Seniors, Vote for Teacher of the Year
Our friends at the Center for Teaching and Learning Excellence (CTLE) asked us to remind graduating seniors put in their votes for the 2010 Teacher of the Year award.
CTLE says…
Each year the Graduating Senior Class selects its “Teacher of the Year.” Beginning Monday, April 19th, please vote for the faculty member who you believe best exhibits the following characteristics:
• Maintains the highest standards of academic excellence and fairness.
• Inspires interest in the discipline through personal enthusiasm and dedication.
• Is consistently effective in communication.
• Is available outside of the classroom.
To vote, make sure to cast your electronic ballot between 9am on Monday, April 19th and 5pm on Friday, April 23rd. The award will be presented during Class Night on Friday, May 28.
Class of 2010, your vote counts – so be sure to remember and recognize a faculty member whose teaching has inspired you!
Wiki Wiki WHAT!?: A Very Wiki Workshop
This semester in the Technology On Your Own Terms series, we’ve had some great discussions about digital photography, photo sharing, and privacy settings in Facebook. We’ll be wrapping up the spring series next Wednesday with one last workshop for our University of Scranton faculty and staff.
Most people have heard the word wiki (even just in reference to Wikipedia), but not everyone knows what it means. In a workshop titled “Wiki Wiki WHAT?!: What You Need to Know to Understand, Create, and Maintain Wikis,” public services librarian George Aulisio will help participants understand not just what the word wiki means but why wikis are useful tools. In this session, George will help attendees set up a wiki account and add content to a wiki page.
The workshop will be held Wednesday, April 28th in Weinberg Memorial Library room 306 from 12pm-1pm. If you’d like to attend, please register at www.scranton.edu/ctleregistration.
Image courtesy of Flickr user nojhan under a Creative Commons license
Earth Week in the Library

This year marks the 40th anniversary of Earth Day, and we green-minded folk here in the Library will be celebrating all week. Since this is our first year officially celebrating Earth Week, we thought we’d put up a few displays to encourage everyone to start thinking about how the Library could be more sustainable. So if you visit our building this week, be sure to take a look at:
1) Our 5’3″ stack of paper in the second floor computer lab, which represents the 45,000 sheets of paper our Library printers use up each week.
2) Our growing collection of recycled paper, showing how much paper is thrown into the recycling bin in the computer lab each week. While we’re glad that this paper is being recycled rather than just thrown away, we hope to impress upon all of our patrons just how much paper is wasted each week. Please only print when necessary!
3) Our “These Come From Trees” reminder stickers, now on every Library printer, copier, and paper towel dispenser.
4) A display of sustainability-themed books in our fourth floor Quiet Study Room.
5) Recommendations for sustainability-related resources from our faculty and staff, on the first floor right inside the Library’s terrace entrance
6) A big sheet of paper (reused, naturally!) where you can write down your own ideas and suggestions for how the Library should go green in 2010.
Also, check back here at Infospot @ WML throughout the week for green-themed books that we’ve just recently added to our collection.
And when you’re not in the Library, be sure to participate in some of the joint University of Scranton/City of Scranton Earth Week activities, starting with tonight’s concert by alternative rock band Monty Are I and culminating on Friday with the popular Fair Trade Fair.
Game Night 2.0 Was Pretty Awesome
Game Night 2.0 was as successful as version 1.0 back in February! From 8-11 pm, the 5th floor Heritage Room was filled with students.
We had everything.
Food:
Trivial Pursuit:
And of course, video games:
Digital Services Librarian Kristen Yarmey-Tylutki and Part Time Reference Librarian Neil Grimes also stopped by to enjoy the fun:
Overall, the night was a success.
This time, we were equipped with a Wii Fit, two Wiis (would the plural of “Wii” be “Woo”?) — one hooked up to Rock Band and the other to Mario Kart. We even had a Sega and an original Nintendo!
Like last time, we had a raffle with fabulous prizes and while the counts aren’t in yet, there were a lot of people that texted us their names and email addresses in order to enter -– the winners will be emailed soon with information on how to claim their $10 Amazon gift cards.
In the end, after all the food was gone, and everyone had cleared out, Public Services Librarians George Aulisio and Donna Mazziotti rocked out to Alanis Morissette on Rock Band:

We asked students if they would want to have another Game Night…
The responses were fairly consistent:
Something tells me there will be a Game Night 3.0. Keep your eyes out for it.
Wii Want you @ the Library
In Celebration of National Library Week…
The Weinberg Memorial Library will be hosting its second ever Library Gaming Night on Monday, April 12th.
Due to the success of the first gaming night held on Mardi Gras, we have decided to expand. This time there will be more gaming systems and more food.
All students are welcome to join us in the Heritage Room (5th floor) to Play Games, Eat Food, Enter our Raffle for Gift Cards, and/or just come to hang out with your friends.
The event starts at 8pm and will go on til 11pm.
See you Monday!
Jay Parini speaks on his “found novel”, The Last Station

Scranton native Jay Parini spoke at today’s Schemel Forum luncheon about his 1990 novel, The Last Station, which was recently transformed into an Oscar-nominated film by the same name.
The novel describes the last year of Leo Tolstoy‘s life and focuses on the battle between Tolstoy’s wife Sophia and his disciple Chertkov for Tolstoy’s soul. Parini wrote the novel after reading several diaries written by people who lived in Tolstoy’s house during the tumultuous year. In today’s talk, Parini described his work as a “found novel,” a narrative shaped from the layered viewpoints of those diaries.
Parini has authored 21 books and is currently working on a new novel on the life of Herman Melville. When it’s done, we hope he’ll find his way back home to Scranton for another visit with the Schemel Forum!
P.S. The Last Station has been shown in cities all over the world – but not in Scranton. Tolstoy fans will have to drive to Tunkhannock’s Deitrich Theater, where the film will be shown on three different days (4/14, 4/18, and 4/22) during this month’s Spring Film Festival.
Update: A video of Parini’s talk is now available on the University’s YouTube channel!
Share with Surety: Facebook Privacy Settings Workshop

Take a second to Google the phrase “facebook privacy” and you will probably come across a few anxiety-provoking results. You might see links to articles with headlines like “Facebook’s Privacy Changes: When Will it Go Too Far (and will you even notice)?”, “Facebook’s New Privacy Changes: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly”, and even “Facebook’s Zuckerberg Says the Age of Privacy is Over.”
For experienced Facebook users, these concerns might be old hat. But if you’re a relatively new Facebook user and you’re not sure how to tweak your profile to account for all of these changes, we’ve got a workshop for you.
Next Wednesday, April 7 from 12pm-1pm in WML306, Public Services librarian Donna Mazziotti will teach a Technology on Your Own Terms workshop that she’s titled “Share With Surety: Facebook Privacy Settings for the Casual Facebook User.” During the session, Donna will walk participants through customizing their own Facebook Privacy Settings and will help attendees understand what each setting means.
The workshop is open to University of Scranton faculty and staff members, so if you’re interested, please let us know by registering at www.scranton.edu/ctleregistration. The workshop will be hands-on, and we’re assuming that attendees already have a Facebook account. If you plan to participate, make sure that you’ll be able to remember your account information when you arrive at the workshop. Hope to see you there!
Printer Problems?
The computers in the Library are networked using a system called UniPrint. Sometimes UniPrint goes down. The Library now has a backup plan in place for students when this happens which uses a “crash cart” with a stand-alone computer and printer. The “crash cart” will be located in the alcove adjacent to the Reference Desk on the 2nd floor of the Library. If this happens, you’ll need to save the document you want to print to a flash/thumb drive or e-mail the document to yourself. If you need any help, you can ask one of the Reference Librarians.









