Wednesday, April 29, 2009
ANNOUNCEMENT
Your faithful blogger must regrettably take a few days off from posting, but never fear! I'll be back on May 5 (Cinco de Mayo) with a fresh blog for you, and my GRADUATION RE-CAP (pun intended of course).
Fondest well wishes to the Class of 2009!!! We are proud of you, and hope you come back to visit us often and update us on your exploits and triumphs. Of course, if you ever get nostalgic for your good ol' college days and your Hill Freeman Library, point your browser back here, and I'll give you the scoop!
CONGRATULATIONS!!!
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Happy 83rd Birthday, Harper Lee!
Nelle Harper Lee was born on April 28, 1926, in Monroeville, Alabama. The recipient of a Pulitzer Prize and a Presidential Medal of Freedom, Ms. Lee has only published one novel--voted by the Library Journal as "the best novel of the century."
You can find her masterpiece on the third floor of the library under the call number PS3562.E353 T6 1982. Or, if you prefer, you can check out the 1962 movie adaptation, nominated for eight Academy awards, under PN1995.9.J8 T6. Or take my advice: reward yourself after finals by checking them both out!
Monday, April 27, 2009
Kudos to our student workers!
This gold star is for student worker Drew Childers, who was inducted yesterday as a charter member of the Reinhardt chapter of Lamda Phi Eta. Lambda Phi Eta is the official communication studies honor society of the National Communication Association. Drew, we are proud to be associated with you. Way to go!!!
In other student worker news, today was the library's annual Student Worker Appreciation Party. Stephanie Olsen presented each student worker with an award appropriate to his or her hard work and dedication to the library. The awards go to...
Drew Childers, for his Sincere Sensitivity
Brielle Chinn, for her Reliable Consistency
Jason Harmon, for his IT Skills
Kirsten Rodning, for her Meticulous Work
Amy Ross, for her Speedy Efficiency
Nahum Vigo-Fas, for his Show of Interest
and
Chris Williams, for his Superior People Skills
Our student workers were showered with appreciation and fed with pizza and fruit salad. Don't you wish you worked for the library, too? Hmmmm...
Friday, April 24, 2009
Don't try to break this record...
Book returned to school library 145 years later
While you're packing up your dorm room or apartment, check to see if you have any library items! Unreturned items can cause the college to hold your diploma. Don't let this happen to you.
Thanks to Marsha White for the link!
While you're packing up your dorm room or apartment, check to see if you have any library items! Unreturned items can cause the college to hold your diploma. Don't let this happen to you.
Thanks to Marsha White for the link!
My favorite late-night study aid
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Last Day of Classes!
Can you believe it? :)
Now is the time when things REALLY tend to get hopping at the library, with everyone working on final papers and studying hard for exams!
Just a reminder of our library hours:
M-Th 8am-11pm
Fri 8am-5pm
Sat closed
Sun 2pm-11pm
Of course our 24-hour area is always open to students with your Eagle card. Remember, those computers fill up quickly when it gets close to closing time! And please, please, please save your work frequently! If there is a power outage for any reason, you may lose that paper you've been sweating over. Bring a flash drive or save to your Reinhardt "H" drive if possible, because the library computers are wiped clean of documents every night.
Remember the Sunday hours of the Lawson computer lab, too: 3pm-7 pm.
Good luck on your exams everyone!!!
Now is the time when things REALLY tend to get hopping at the library, with everyone working on final papers and studying hard for exams!
Just a reminder of our library hours:
M-Th 8am-11pm
Fri 8am-5pm
Sat closed
Sun 2pm-11pm
Of course our 24-hour area is always open to students with your Eagle card. Remember, those computers fill up quickly when it gets close to closing time! And please, please, please save your work frequently! If there is a power outage for any reason, you may lose that paper you've been sweating over. Bring a flash drive or save to your Reinhardt "H" drive if possible, because the library computers are wiped clean of documents every night.
Remember the Sunday hours of the Lawson computer lab, too: 3pm-7 pm.
Good luck on your exams everyone!!!
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Georgia authors had "write stuff" Tuesday night
Hello! If you weren't at the Georgia Writers' Panel discussion Tuesday night at the library, you missed a treat! Thank you to all three lovely wordsmiths--Rebecca Johnston, Patricia Sprinkle and Cynthia Simmons--who generously gave their audience the benefit of their wisdom and experience.
Columnist and former Cherokee Tribune editor Rebecca Johnston, took her listeners on a journey through Cherokee County history, courtesy of the books, photographs and newspaper clippings she's collected over the years. "I'm a person people give things to," she said with a laugh. Her self-described "pack rat" tendencies have served the Canton native well, as she is currently at work on a new history of Cherokee County. "If you have old things, be a pack rat," she advised. "You never know when you have something that will be a piece of history someday."
Ms. Johnston also gave a journalist's hard-won advice about the importance of fact-checking, especially when using Internet sources. (What? Surely we bloggers are the very soul of reliability...) "It is so hard on the Internet to get the truth! It's wonderful to research history on the Internet, but you have to verify your information. You have to dig deep."
Patricia Sprinkle, the author of 20 published mystery novels, also spoke movingly of the importance of history in her writing. "Story is one of the basic human needs," she said. "We have a need to tell stories to each other. Our history and our stories matter."
"All of history is a mystery," she continued. "People who are historians are trying to solve a mystery: what really happened...As mystery is the core of history, so history is the core of mystery... What in the past has brought us to where we are?"
Ms. Sprinkle shared how her characters have had to delve into history and genealogy to solve mysteries. ("In 11 of my books, an incident in the past has led to a murder in the present.)" She also told how she as an author has had to delve into history to be able to write her stories.
"If you're going to be a writer, please do your research," she said, echoing Ms. Johnston. "You can make up all the fiction you want, but please get the history right. If you lose a reader because of one small fact, you have lost that reader."
"History weaves in and out of mystery, and mystery weaves in and out of history," she said in conclusion. "It is almost impossible to have one without the other."
I know the aspiring writers in the audience--including this blogger--paid careful attention to the advice Cynthia Simmons gave: nuts-and-bolts advice about the business of getting happily published. She gave the example of a rare, true overnight writing success: Queen Victoria's published memoirs.
"Queen Victoria thought, 'I can write!'" Ms. Simmons said. "She didn't realize that her subjects were so curious about her life, they'd have read anything she wrote...She didn't have to work hard at writing and promoting herself, but the rest of us do." Ms. Simmons spoke of the importance of networking in writers' groups and conferences, and also of the importance of perfecting one's craft through workshops, classes and critique groups. She advised writers to know their target audience and "give them what they want!" Ms. Simmons also spoke of the importance of an author's taking the initiative in promoting herself and her book. She demonstrated how to assemble a press kit and contact media outlets.
The authors then took questions from the audience, and I was very impressed with the honesty and usefulness of the advice the writers gave. I hope last night was the first of many such events here. It was a wonderful experience! Thank you, too, to Yawn's Books and More for co-sponsoring the evening, and to Dr. Donna Coffey for her hard work in making it happen!
Columnist and former Cherokee Tribune editor Rebecca Johnston, took her listeners on a journey through Cherokee County history, courtesy of the books, photographs and newspaper clippings she's collected over the years. "I'm a person people give things to," she said with a laugh. Her self-described "pack rat" tendencies have served the Canton native well, as she is currently at work on a new history of Cherokee County. "If you have old things, be a pack rat," she advised. "You never know when you have something that will be a piece of history someday."
Ms. Johnston also gave a journalist's hard-won advice about the importance of fact-checking, especially when using Internet sources. (What? Surely we bloggers are the very soul of reliability...) "It is so hard on the Internet to get the truth! It's wonderful to research history on the Internet, but you have to verify your information. You have to dig deep."
Patricia Sprinkle, the author of 20 published mystery novels, also spoke movingly of the importance of history in her writing. "Story is one of the basic human needs," she said. "We have a need to tell stories to each other. Our history and our stories matter."
"All of history is a mystery," she continued. "People who are historians are trying to solve a mystery: what really happened...As mystery is the core of history, so history is the core of mystery... What in the past has brought us to where we are?"
Ms. Sprinkle shared how her characters have had to delve into history and genealogy to solve mysteries. ("In 11 of my books, an incident in the past has led to a murder in the present.)" She also told how she as an author has had to delve into history to be able to write her stories.
"If you're going to be a writer, please do your research," she said, echoing Ms. Johnston. "You can make up all the fiction you want, but please get the history right. If you lose a reader because of one small fact, you have lost that reader."
"History weaves in and out of mystery, and mystery weaves in and out of history," she said in conclusion. "It is almost impossible to have one without the other."
I know the aspiring writers in the audience--including this blogger--paid careful attention to the advice Cynthia Simmons gave: nuts-and-bolts advice about the business of getting happily published. She gave the example of a rare, true overnight writing success: Queen Victoria's published memoirs.
"Queen Victoria thought, 'I can write!'" Ms. Simmons said. "She didn't realize that her subjects were so curious about her life, they'd have read anything she wrote...She didn't have to work hard at writing and promoting herself, but the rest of us do." Ms. Simmons spoke of the importance of networking in writers' groups and conferences, and also of the importance of perfecting one's craft through workshops, classes and critique groups. She advised writers to know their target audience and "give them what they want!" Ms. Simmons also spoke of the importance of an author's taking the initiative in promoting herself and her book. She demonstrated how to assemble a press kit and contact media outlets.
The authors then took questions from the audience, and I was very impressed with the honesty and usefulness of the advice the writers gave. I hope last night was the first of many such events here. It was a wonderful experience! Thank you, too, to Yawn's Books and More for co-sponsoring the evening, and to Dr. Donna Coffey for her hard work in making it happen!
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Don't miss the Georgia Writers' Panel Tonight!!!
Remember, tonight at 6:30 in the library, we'll be hosting the Georgia Writer's Panel! This event is co-sponsored by Reinhardt College and Yawn's Books & More in Canton.
"We have been working with Reinhardt for a while trying to put together an event, and it finally came together with the help of Dr. Donna Coffey," said Farris Yawn of Yawn's Books & More, Inc. "The theme will be history."
One of the guests will be columnist and former Cherokee Tribune editor Rebecca Johnston.
"Rebecca is a Canton native, and will be talking about Canton and Cherokee County history," Yawn said. "She has recently put together some of her holiday articles...into a very nice book called Hometown Holidays.
Another guest is Patricia Sprinkle, author of 20 historical mystery novels (which I recommend)!
"She will be talking about research for her books, and how important it is to get the history correct in novels," Yawn said.
Also attending will be author and historian Cynthia Simmons. A Georgia Author of the Year nominee, Ms. Simmons is the author of Struggles and Triumphs, a collection of short stories about historical women and their faith. She will also be discussing her research.
Tonight is a rare opportunity to hobnob with the literati! Don't miss it! (I won't).
"We have been working with Reinhardt for a while trying to put together an event, and it finally came together with the help of Dr. Donna Coffey," said Farris Yawn of Yawn's Books & More, Inc. "The theme will be history."
One of the guests will be columnist and former Cherokee Tribune editor Rebecca Johnston.
"Rebecca is a Canton native, and will be talking about Canton and Cherokee County history," Yawn said. "She has recently put together some of her holiday articles...into a very nice book called Hometown Holidays.
Another guest is Patricia Sprinkle, author of 20 historical mystery novels (which I recommend)!
"She will be talking about research for her books, and how important it is to get the history correct in novels," Yawn said.
Also attending will be author and historian Cynthia Simmons. A Georgia Author of the Year nominee, Ms. Simmons is the author of Struggles and Triumphs, a collection of short stories about historical women and their faith. She will also be discussing her research.
Tonight is a rare opportunity to hobnob with the literati! Don't miss it! (I won't).
Monday, April 20, 2009
Told you so...
Correction!
The Georgia Writers' Panel will be in the library at 6:30 pm tomorrow, not 7 as I originally stated. Sorry! Be sure to attend!!!
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Georgia Writers' Panel in the Library on Tuesday!
Hello, hope you're having a great weekend!
Your faithful blogger usually takes a day of rest on Sundays, but I can't help myself today. I just learned some exciting news I can't wait to share.
This Tuesday, April 21, at 6:30 pm, the Hill Freeman Library and Spruill Learning Center will play host to the Georgia Writer's Panel! Guests include Patricia Sprinkle, author of 20 mystery novels (including the Thoroughly Southern mysteries which I love and wholeheartedly recommend); local historian and newspaper columnist Rebecca Johnston; and Christian author and historian Cynthia Simmons. This event is co-sponsored by Yawn's Books in Canton.
I cannot wait!
Friday, April 17, 2009
PAT on the back
I'd like to take this opportunity to congratulate library student worker Kirsten Rodning on her induction into the Reinhardt chapter of Phi Alpha Theta, the honor society for students of history.
I was also glad to see a number of our other "library frequent fliers" on the list of inductees. I'm willing to bet that's no coincidence. ;) Congratulations, all!
I was also glad to see a number of our other "library frequent fliers" on the list of inductees. I'm willing to bet that's no coincidence. ;) Congratulations, all!
Last chance! Final YM movie today!
Salutations all!
Today at 1:30 pm in the Media Room, you have your final opportunity to catch one of the free movies sponsored by the Year of the Mediterranean program. Today's offering is the 1994 Macedonian film Before the Rain, directed and written by Milco Mancevski.
The film's tagline is "Once you know the faces, you will begin to understand the story." Through the plot of three separate but interconnected tragic love stories, Before the Rain explores the nature of war and violence and their influence on human life and relationships.
The first episode, "Words," is set in Macedonia during the war in Bosnia. A young ethnic Albanian woman, accused of murder, is on the run from a mob. A monk, who has taken a vow of silence, takes her under his protection, and they attempt to escape her hunters together.
The second episode, "Faces," centers on a married editor and her attraction for a war photographer who's just returned from Bosnia, damaged by his experiences there. As she struggles with her feelings for two men, she finds that even her London home is not safe from the ravages of violence.
The third episode, "Pictures," connects these stories, as the photographer returns to Macedonian homeland, to learn that the war has divided his small village and his Albanian neighbors are now supposed to be his enemies. An Albanian woman he loves asks him to take care of her daughter--the young woman from the first story--and the film comes full circle.
Nominated for the 1995 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, Before the Rain is the recipient of honors from the Argentinean Film Critics Association Awards, the David di Donatello Awards, the Guldbagge Awards, the Independent Spirit Awards, the Stockholm Film Festival, the Sao Paulo International Film Festival and the Venice Film Festival.
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Happy National Library Week!
Happy National Library Week! This year's theme is "Worlds Connect @ Your Library." But you all knew that. I see worlds connecting every day in here, from students going on Facebook (have you visited our Facebook page yet)? to attending Year of the Mediterranean events (remember, the last YM movie is tomorrow) to researching new topics for class to browsing our Leisure Reading collection for a little escapism.
Today is actually "Support Teen Literature Day." If that means you must read Twilight (call number PZ7.M5717515 Tw 2005), I won't stop you. A lot of you are teenagers still yourselves. Even if you're not, why not check out a YA novel and see what "the kids" are reading these days? Or share a book with a teenage friend? Check out the Teens' Top Ten for recommendations!
100 Greatest First Lines
This is perhaps only tangentially-related to the library, but it does have to do with books, and as such I just had to share. As I was browsing the Internet this morning, I came across this list of the 100 Best First Lines of Novels, as chosen by the editors of American Book Review (which, as it happens, is among the approximately 35,000 journals to which we have electronic access).
It's an interesting list, but I think the best aspect of a list like this is the debate it can inspire. I'm sure many bibliophiles have a favorite first line or two they think should be included. For example, where is "Scarlett O'Hara was not beautiful, but men seldom realized it when caught by her charm as the Tarleton twins were," or "Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again," or even "There are dragons in the twins' vegetable garden?" (Bonus points if you can name that book without Googling).
Check out the list if you wish, and then argue away!
It's an interesting list, but I think the best aspect of a list like this is the debate it can inspire. I'm sure many bibliophiles have a favorite first line or two they think should be included. For example, where is "Scarlett O'Hara was not beautiful, but men seldom realized it when caught by her charm as the Tarleton twins were," or "Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again," or even "There are dragons in the twins' vegetable garden?" (Bonus points if you can name that book without Googling).
Check out the list if you wish, and then argue away!
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Journal Recycling Project
Hello all!
Forgive me if I'm a little dusty, sweaty and/or out-of-breath these days. I've been working on a big recycling project.
You've heard the librarians talk about all of our wonderful databases, I'm sure. We have access to close to 35,000 magazines and journals, most of them electronically. I've been working with our print journal archives upstairs on the third floor, and have found a number of items in our collection are duplicated on the databases. So I'm working on weeding them out now.
What does this mean for you? Well, aside from more room on your library shelves, it's also an opportunity for you to pick up some of our discarded materials. I'm putting scholarly journals out on our sale table at $0.25 a copy. I'll be rotating titles on the table regularly. Right now I have available copies of Social Forces, Strategic Management Journal and New Literary History. If you would like to add any of these to your personal collection, please see a staff member, or if there are any particular journals that interest you, ask me if they're going to be discarded. (Again, I'm only removing those to which we have full-text access in the databases. Don't worry)!
As for some of the less-scholarly magazines (such as Time or Newsweek, for example), I'll be recycling those pretty heavily in the next few months. Marketing students and faculty, I'm looking at you! I know some of you like to use magazine advertisements in your classes. See me before they're all gone!
The more journals we can receive digitally, the greener our library will be.
Remember Earth Day is April 22!
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Would you like to take a survey?
Yo! The Hill Freeman Library & Spruill Learning Center needs your help!
We need some input from our loyal patrons about your use of social software. You know, things like Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, THIS BLOG for instance... Please take a few moments out of your crazy schedules to answer a few questions for us! We want to know how we can best use these resources to enhance YOUR library experience!
After all, in this blog I get to give you my opinion all the time. Now it's your turn.
Click Here to take survey
The survey will end on May 1.
Thank you so much!
We need some input from our loyal patrons about your use of social software. You know, things like Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, THIS BLOG for instance... Please take a few moments out of your crazy schedules to answer a few questions for us! We want to know how we can best use these resources to enhance YOUR library experience!
After all, in this blog I get to give you my opinion all the time. Now it's your turn.
Click Here to take survey
The survey will end on May 1.
Thank you so much!
Monday, April 13, 2009
Power's back on!
Sorry for anyone who was inconvenienced this morning when the power was out! The good news is the power is back on and so is the Internet (obviously, or else I couldn't be blogging this). So come on down!
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Holiday Hours
Further Adventures of the Reinhardt Anime Club...
Hello again!
I gave the Reinhardt Anime Club a plug earlier, but I thought it would be nice to sit and chat with some of its members for tonight's blog. It's Thursday night, after all, and the club meets every Thursday at 6 pm right here in the library.
This is the club's third year in existence at Reinhardt, but the first year they've met in the library. It's been a mutually-beneficial arrangement. The club members get to kick back on the comfy couches in our Media Room and enjoy the best of Japanese animation on our large screen TV, and we get the benefit of their advice when it comes to developing our anime collection. In fact, the club has even contributed to the collection. They were the champion trivia team at this year's Late Night Breakfast, and used their winnings to buy episodes of "Stellvia and "Appleseed", which they then donated to the library.
Library director Michael Martinez is the anime club's advisor. "They're just a great bunch of people," he said.
Robert Small, who serves as co-president along with Derek Moon, says the club is open to anyone and everyone. "We don't discriminate. Everyone is welcome." The club officially has about 15 members. According to Small, the club makes an effort to participate in all college activities such as Fall Day, Spring Day, etc.
"We've also been to [Anime Weekend Atlanta] for the past couple of years, which is always interesting," Small adds.
According to the "Grand High Flunky" (Small's designation for club officer Carl Lilja), the club tends to have its first meeting of the year within the first few weeks of school. A campus-wide email is distributed listing the films the club plans to show that year.
Small says he enjoys anime for its distinctive art style, its attention to continuity, and especially its strong character development.
"You can have different levels of anime, some for kids, some for adults," adds club member (and library student worker) Brielle Chinn. "Anime can suit just about anyone's interests."
"There's a kid inside each and every person on the planet who cries out to be entertained," Small says. Anime, he says, satisfies that kid's need, but doesn't insult the adult's taste and intelligence.
Want to see for yourself? Come join us on Thursday nights!
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Freelance writing advice-- free!
Hello all!
Recently public services librarian Karen Preslock and your faithful library blogger were approached by Middle Grades Education professor Dr. Julie Schultz to offer her students advice about submitting articles to education journals. Karen and I prepared a list of some education-oriented magazines that accept freelance submissions, and we put together a guide for them. (If you aren't in Dr. Schultz's class, and you would like a copy, see us in the library, and we will make one for you).
As part of the packet we put together, I jotted down some helpful tips for the budding freelance writer, some things I have picked up over the years from my experience as both a writer and an editor. These tips are tailored to the students in Dr. Schultz's class, but I think there's some good general advice here, so I wanted to share them. Freelance writing can be a good way of supplementing one's income, and if one is good, persistent and enterprising, freelance writing can even be a career path! (Who needs job security? Starving builds character! I kid, I kid. If you love to write, find someone who'll pay you to do it! Of course you could always become a humble blogger...)
Without further ado, here are my tips for the freelance writer:
Tips for the Freelance Writer
Read the submission guidelines. If they are not available online, you can generally request them by email. Some editors want query letters only, and some want finished articles. Be careful about sending the same submission to more than one place. Some editors are touchy about this and will not accept “simultaneous submissions.” They want to be able to say yes or no before another magazine gets a crack at it. Others do not mind. This policy is usually spelled out in the guidelines. Most magazines will only accept electronic submissions these days, and they may be particular about the format. A few (Instructor, for example) still prefer a hard copy.
Be careful with your grammar. I think this would be especially important when writing for an audience of teachers. They would probably enjoy pointing out a mistake! Speaking as a former editor, I know grammatical and spelling errors can be fixed, but the article would have to be pretty compelling to be worth the trouble. Copyeditors are on a deadline, and an article that is too messy might be passed over for one with fewer glaring errors.
READ THE MAGAZINE if at all possible. Editors would beg this of you. Research the publication to see what sort of articles they like and accept. Will your article fit well with the tone and flow of the magazine? On the other hand, is it too similar? Did they just print an essay from a prospective teacher about her tutoring experience in the last issue? Don’t waste your time and effort sending your personal essay to a publication that only accepts heavy research dissertations. Find an appropriate home for your “baby,” and you’re more likely to get happily published.
Oh, and one more thing: make sure you get the editor’s name right. It’s worth a call or an email just to check. ;)
Good luck! I hope to read your articles in one of the nearly 35,000 journals to which we have access here in the library! (And if you become an editor or publisher someday, keep me in mind for your freelance writing needs).
Recently public services librarian Karen Preslock and your faithful library blogger were approached by Middle Grades Education professor Dr. Julie Schultz to offer her students advice about submitting articles to education journals. Karen and I prepared a list of some education-oriented magazines that accept freelance submissions, and we put together a guide for them. (If you aren't in Dr. Schultz's class, and you would like a copy, see us in the library, and we will make one for you).
As part of the packet we put together, I jotted down some helpful tips for the budding freelance writer, some things I have picked up over the years from my experience as both a writer and an editor. These tips are tailored to the students in Dr. Schultz's class, but I think there's some good general advice here, so I wanted to share them. Freelance writing can be a good way of supplementing one's income, and if one is good, persistent and enterprising, freelance writing can even be a career path! (Who needs job security? Starving builds character! I kid, I kid. If you love to write, find someone who'll pay you to do it! Of course you could always become a humble blogger...)
Without further ado, here are my tips for the freelance writer:
Tips for the Freelance Writer
Read the submission guidelines. If they are not available online, you can generally request them by email. Some editors want query letters only, and some want finished articles. Be careful about sending the same submission to more than one place. Some editors are touchy about this and will not accept “simultaneous submissions.” They want to be able to say yes or no before another magazine gets a crack at it. Others do not mind. This policy is usually spelled out in the guidelines. Most magazines will only accept electronic submissions these days, and they may be particular about the format. A few (Instructor, for example) still prefer a hard copy.
Be careful with your grammar. I think this would be especially important when writing for an audience of teachers. They would probably enjoy pointing out a mistake! Speaking as a former editor, I know grammatical and spelling errors can be fixed, but the article would have to be pretty compelling to be worth the trouble. Copyeditors are on a deadline, and an article that is too messy might be passed over for one with fewer glaring errors.
READ THE MAGAZINE if at all possible. Editors would beg this of you. Research the publication to see what sort of articles they like and accept. Will your article fit well with the tone and flow of the magazine? On the other hand, is it too similar? Did they just print an essay from a prospective teacher about her tutoring experience in the last issue? Don’t waste your time and effort sending your personal essay to a publication that only accepts heavy research dissertations. Find an appropriate home for your “baby,” and you’re more likely to get happily published.
Oh, and one more thing: make sure you get the editor’s name right. It’s worth a call or an email just to check. ;)
Good luck! I hope to read your articles in one of the nearly 35,000 journals to which we have access here in the library! (And if you become an editor or publisher someday, keep me in mind for your freelance writing needs).
Tuesday, April 7, 2009
Trial databases not to be missed!
Just in time for final research papers, and for the rest of this month, the library has trial access to some interesting databases you won't want to miss!
These databases from Readex Publishing include African American Newspapers, Hispanic American Newspapers, Pacific Northwest Historic Newspapers, The U.S. Congressional Serial Set, House and Senate Journals, Senate Executive Journals, FBIS Daily Reports, the Archive of Americana (including America's Historical Newspapers), Latin American Newspapers, African Papers, and American Broadsides and Ephemera. These databases are listed on our homepage on the left side under "Trial Databases."
These databases are a wonderful resource because they contain primary sources. You aren't getting someone else's scholarship from a hundred years later; you actually get to see the source material for yourself. Reading these old newspapers gives you an idea of how historical events actually affected the people of the day, and what people thought about them. The House and Senate Journals go all the way back to the very first session of Congress. If you're working on a paper for your American History or Government class, you can't get much closer to your subject than this. Did you know that in our nation's early years, any citizen could address Congress on any topic? You can read the reports and see not only what the elected officials discussed, but also what the common man thought was important. (Of course, as you can imagine, these addresses ranged from the intellectual to the crackpot. That's democracy for you)!
The broadsides and ephemera are what I personally find the most interesting. This is a collection of all sorts of documents which have survived over the years. (The "library rules" in this post came from the ephemera collection). There's something for students of practically any discipline. Marketing students might be interested in looking at advertisements from the nineteenth century, theater students at old playbills, religion students at sermons and hymns, education majors at report cards from 1840. There's humor; there are cartoons. There are military registers, menus, geneaologies, obituaries, campaign literature and memoirs. There's even erotica! (Before you get too scandalized--or excited--I must caution you that what titillated people in 1838 might not strike a 2009 audience in exactly the same way). If you have a term paper coming up and no idea what your topic is going to be, try browsing the ephemera for inspiration! Who knows, you may do your dissertation on Victorian erotica someday.
Again, these databases are only available to us for a limited time. So make use of them while you can, and if you enjoy them, please let us know!
These databases from Readex Publishing include African American Newspapers, Hispanic American Newspapers, Pacific Northwest Historic Newspapers, The U.S. Congressional Serial Set, House and Senate Journals, Senate Executive Journals, FBIS Daily Reports, the Archive of Americana (including America's Historical Newspapers), Latin American Newspapers, African Papers, and American Broadsides and Ephemera. These databases are listed on our homepage on the left side under "Trial Databases."
These databases are a wonderful resource because they contain primary sources. You aren't getting someone else's scholarship from a hundred years later; you actually get to see the source material for yourself. Reading these old newspapers gives you an idea of how historical events actually affected the people of the day, and what people thought about them. The House and Senate Journals go all the way back to the very first session of Congress. If you're working on a paper for your American History or Government class, you can't get much closer to your subject than this. Did you know that in our nation's early years, any citizen could address Congress on any topic? You can read the reports and see not only what the elected officials discussed, but also what the common man thought was important. (Of course, as you can imagine, these addresses ranged from the intellectual to the crackpot. That's democracy for you)!
The broadsides and ephemera are what I personally find the most interesting. This is a collection of all sorts of documents which have survived over the years. (The "library rules" in this post came from the ephemera collection). There's something for students of practically any discipline. Marketing students might be interested in looking at advertisements from the nineteenth century, theater students at old playbills, religion students at sermons and hymns, education majors at report cards from 1840. There's humor; there are cartoons. There are military registers, menus, geneaologies, obituaries, campaign literature and memoirs. There's even erotica! (Before you get too scandalized--or excited--I must caution you that what titillated people in 1838 might not strike a 2009 audience in exactly the same way). If you have a term paper coming up and no idea what your topic is going to be, try browsing the ephemera for inspiration! Who knows, you may do your dissertation on Victorian erotica someday.
Again, these databases are only available to us for a limited time. So make use of them while you can, and if you enjoy them, please let us know!
Monday, April 6, 2009
Yar
Ahoy there, Reinhardt students, staff, faculty and friends!
It's not as if your faithful blogger here is obsessed with pirates. It's surely a coincidence that I happened to find an old picture of myself dressed as a pirate to illustrate this post.
I will, however, be very excited to attend tomorrow's Year of the Mediterranean lecture. At 2:00 pm on Tuesday on the third floor of the library, Mark Aloisio of Colorado State University will present "Pirates and Privateers in the Pre-Modern Mediterranean."
Dr. Anne Good provided the following preview of the lecture:
"Renegade pirates and state-licensed corsairs were the scourge of Mediterranean sea lanes in medieval and even early modern times. Few coastal zones were immune to the threat posed by pirates and privateers and there was practically no maritime city, state or people whose seamen were not involved in this activity.
"Renegade pirates and state-licensed corsairs were the scourge of Mediterranean sea lanes in medieval and even early modern times. Few coastal zones were immune to the threat posed by pirates and privateers and there was practically no maritime city, state or people whose seamen were not involved in this activity.
In fact, piracy and privateering not only represented a potential source of profit for the direct participants but was an integral part of the Mediterranean economic system: pirates became merchants and merchants became pirates; individuals from all walks of life invested their capital in piratical ventures as they would in any commercial enterprise; entire communities made a living by supplying the necessary provisions and equipment that this naval activity required; and the authorities provided facilities and took a cut of the profits. For medieval and early modern rulers, pirates and corsairs sometimes served as an instrument of state policy and hence an extension of their military might. As a result, privateering became a critical aspect of the continuous wars between Christian and Muslim states across the Mediterranean basin.
This lecture will examine many of these issues from the perspective of a particular Mediterranean community: the islands of Malta and Gozo in late medieval and early modern times. The lecture will highlight not only the extent to which the inhabitants of these small islands participated in piratical and corsairing activity but also the cost which the population was forced to bear as a result that participation."
This is the final scheduled YM lecture. So be there--or be prepared to walk the plank!
(Note: the enthusiasm of the blogger does not imply in any way that the Hill Freeman Library and Spruill Learning Center condones piracy. Nor does the blogger have access to a plank.)
Friday, April 3, 2009
YM Movie Today: The Battle of Algiers
The time for today's Year of the Mediterranean film has been changed from 1:30 to 4:00.
Today in the library Media Room, the Year of the Mediterranean program will present The Battle of Algiers, the 1966 Italian film depicting events during the 1954-1962 Algerian War against French rule. The movie is in black-and-white documentary style, so realistic that a disclaimer was added for American showings: "not one foot" of actual newsreel was used.
Although commissioned by the Algerian government, the film has been hailed for its even-handedness, portraying the atrocities committed on both sides: the torture used by the French, the use of bombs in soda shops by the Algerian insurgents. Still, the movie was banned in France for five years.
In 2003, the Pentagon offered a special screening of the film, comparing the events of the film to the problems faced by the US military in Iraq.
The Battle of Algiers was nominated for three Academy Awards and won the UN Award at the 1972 BAFTA Awards, three Silver Ribbon awards from the Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists, the 1968 Kinema Junpo award for Best Foreign Language Film, and the Golden Lion and FIPRESCI prize at the 1966 Venice Film Festival.
The Library's Spring Day Booth
For those of you who might have missed it, yesterday was Spring Day. It's an annual celebration at Reinhardt when all day classes are cancelled, and the students, faculty and staff gather for Varsity grub and various fun activities. There are usually a few inflatable moonwalk-type attractions. This year there were booths offering airbrushed tattoos, funky hairstyles, flower pens, doughnut races, Mediterranean desserts and tote bag painting, among other things. The library sponsored a "Q&C" booth: question and cookie. I had various library-related questions in a Cookie Monster-shaped cookie jar. If a person could answer the question, he or she was rewarded with cookies and milk. If the person didn't know the answer, we gave them the answer--along with cookies and milk!
Here's what the booth looked like:
Here's what the booth looked like:
Sign by the multitalented Nikki Preslock:
"C" is for cookie...
Had to promote the blog of course...
"Yes, sir! Would you like to answer a question for a cookie?"
Another satisfied customer...
The library staff got to take a break and enjoy the day's offerings! Here director Michael Martinez offers advice to the chess players.
Of course he gave in to temptation and played a game, while Joel Langford returned the favor and lent him a hand. Or was he heckling him?
Stephanie Olsen molded her hand in wax.
Is there no limit to the ways your loyal blogger will humiliate herself for the library? Just kidding--doesn't my hair look AWESOME?
"Say cheese!"
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Spring Day update
It was great to see so many of you out at Spring Day today! I'll be posting some pictures tomorrow, along with some info about the YM movie. You all did GREAT with the questions I asked you, and I hope you enjoyed your cookies!
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Spring Day
Be sure to stop by my table at Spring Day--remember, there will be cookies in it for ya!!!
See you tomorrow!
See you tomorrow!
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