Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Happy Holidays! Winter Break Hours


The Hill Freeman Library will be OPEN from 8am to 5pm Dec. 12-16, Dec. 19-22, December 27-30, and January 3-6. We will be closed on weekends. We will also be closed on December 23, December 26 and January 2. We will reopen regular hours on Monday, January 9.

We wish all of our students, faculty, staff and friends a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

Monday, October 31, 2011

Happy Halloween Everyone!


Laziness…Boredom…Distraction (will your roommate EVER stop talking?)… These are but a few of the vicious brain-eating zombies that can keep your from doing your best in college. Thankfully, the Hill Freeman Library & Spruill Learning Center is here to help! We offer a safe haven from those brain-eaters, with the tools you need to make your year successful! We’re talking 24-hour access to our study areas and online resources, access to over 50,000 print books, access to over 126,000 e-books, and access to nearly 200 databases with 34,000 full-text journals! Best of all, we have trained and dedicated staff members on hand to help you make the best use of these resources. With our help, you can even defeat the most dreaded brain-eaters of all: term papers and final exams!

Monday, October 17, 2011

TOMORROW at 6pm! SPOOKY Irish tales at the Hill Freeman Library!



Halloween is fast approaching. Get into the spooky mood tomorrow evening at 6pm in the Hill Freeman Library for Spooky Irish Tales with storyteller Betsy Doty! This free performance will send a chill up your spine with traditional tales from the darker side of the Emerald Isle. Sponsored by The Year of Ireland and Irish Heritage. (Note: this performance may be too intense for small children, but feel free to bring your "chicken" roommate).

Thursday, September 29, 2011

More groups that fight Censorship!



In honor of Banned Books Week, here is a shorhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gift list of nonprofit organizations committed to preserving your right to read freely. You can join any one of these to show your support and stay informed about First Amendment issues! (Thanks to the American Library Association for these links).

The Freedom to Read Foundation is the only organization in the US whose primary goal is to protect and promote the First Amendment in libraries. Members receive a quarterky newsletter, The FTRF News.
http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifThe Comic Book Legal Defense Fund
The American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression promotes and protects the free exchange of ideas, particularly those contained in books, by opposing restrictions on the freedom of speech.

The National Coalition Against Censorship is an alliance of 50 national nonprofits, including literary, artistic, religious, educational, professional, labor, and civil liberties groups that works to educate both members and the public at large about the dangers of censorship and how to oppose it.

And yes, this geek blogger's favorite:

The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund works to protect free speech in comics by supporting First Amendment rights for members of the comics community, fans, and professionals alike. (Gotham City Public Library librarian Barbara Gordon, aka Batgirl, would surely approve).

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

More ways to defend your right to read


(From Robert Doyle and the American Library Association)

Report censorship to ALA's Office for Intellectual Freedom. The American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom tracks attempts to remove or restrict books across the country. By reporting censorship incidents, you can help identify trends in censorship cases and document responses and solutions to censorship. All identifying information is kept confidential. You can file a report online here.

Attend and participate in public hearings.

Write letters to public officials.

Send a letter or an op-ed article to local news organizations.


Work with community groups--professional associations, civic organization, religious groups--to spread the word about intellectual freedom and ask them to lend public support to efforts to protect the right to read in your community.

Form a coalition to oppose censorship in your community. These folks did.

Seek assistance from national groups.

And importantly, SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES. Join the PTA. Join Friends of the Library groups. Participate in Banned Books Week (hey we still have a couple of buttons left).

"We are not afraid to entrust the American people with unpleasant facts, foreign ideas, alien philosophies, and competitive values. For a nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people."

-- John F. Kennedy. Remarks made on the 20th anniversary of the Voice of America at H.E.W. Auditorium, February 26, 1962

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

How You Can Protect Your Right to Read: Stay Informed



In honor of Banned Books week, here are some tips from Robert P. Doyle and the American Library Association on how you can arm yourself with information in the fight against censorship:

Be aware of what's happening.
When you encounter censorship, be prepare to speak up or let others know. Ask your public, academic or school librarian if there are any current attempts to remove materials from their shelves.

Attend school board, library boards and PTA meetings. Learn about policies governing access to information.

Subscribe to print and online news publications
to stay current on First Amendment rights and censorship issues.

Here are a few links to get you started:

The ALA Office of Intellectual Freedom:publishes the Newsletter on Intellectual Freedom and maintains a blog, a Twitter account and the IFACTION mailing list.

The First Amendment Center: maintains an online First Amendment Library and provides breaking news about First Amendment issues via its RSS newsfeed.

The McCormick Foundation's Post-Exchange has original reporting and commentary on First Amendment and intellectual freedom-related news and also publishes an electronic newsletter aggregating news from around the country and the world on these issues.

"Books won't stay banned. They won't burn. Ideas won't go to jail. In the long run of history, the censor and the inquisitor have always lost. The only weapon against bad ideas is better ideas." ~Alfred Whitney Griswold, New York Times, 24 February 1959

Monday, September 26, 2011

We're with the BANNED


“Congress Shall Make No Law Respecting an Establishment of Religion, or Prohibiting the Free Exercise Thereof; or Abridging the Freedom of Speech, or of the Press; or the Right of the People Peaceably to Assemble, and To Petition the Government for a Redress of Grievances.”—First Amendment


It's Banned Books Week 2011, celebrating its 30th anniversary this year. Banned Books Week is a celebration of the freedom to read: not only the freedom to choose what to read, but the freedom to select from the full array of possibilities. Freedom of speech and freedom of the press are rooted in the First Amendment. We are fortunate to have a greater quantity and availability of information than ever before, but we must all work to ensure that access to this material is not infringed.

Frequently a challenge is brought against a book out of the desire to protect children from material that someone finds objectionable, usually because the book contains language that is sexual, profane or racially charged. The desire to protect children is commendable. However, it is important that a parent make that decision for his or her own child, and that an adult be able to choose for himself or herself what to read. Banning or challenging a book isn't just someone expressing a point of view: it is an attempt to remove that book from the shelf of a school or library, effectively taking away your ability to make that choice for yourself or for your children!

In honor of Banned Books Week, we in the library have assembled a display of some banned and challenged books, from Huckleberry Finn to Harry Potter, from Twilight to I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings. We invite all of you to stop by and have a look. Maybe one of your favorites is in there. Maybe one of your least favorites is in there, too. We hope that you will find the exhibit thought-provoking.

Do you have a favorite banned or challenged book? Come by and tell us! We also have a limited supply of Banned Books Week buttons. Pick one up and advertise your commitment to a free society that reads freely.

“If all mankind minus one, were of one opinion, and only one person were of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power, would be justified in silencing mankind. Were an opinion a personal possession of no value except to the owner; if to be obstructed in the enjoyment of it were simply a private injury, it would make some difference whether the injury was inflicted only on a few persons or on many. But the peculiar evil of silencing the expression of an opinion is, that it is robbing the human race; posterity as well as the existing generation; those who dissent from the opinion, still more than those who hold it. If the opinion is right, they are deprived of the opportunity of exchanging error for truth: if wrong, they lose, what is almost as great a benefit, the clearer perception and livelier impression of truth, produced by its collision with error.”—On Liberty, John Stuart Mill


“Only the suppressed word is dangerous.”—Ludwig Börne

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Year of Ireland speakers THIS THURSDAY in the Library!

Slainte!

The Year of Ireland and Irish Heritage will present two very special programs this Thursday, September 22, and the Hill Freeman Library & Spruill Learning Center is fortunate to host both of them.

At 2pm on the third floor of the library, Dr. Elizabeth Corrie of the Candler School of Theology at Emory University will be here to discuss the East Belfast Mission and provide an overview of religious conflict and reconciliation in Northern Ireland. Dr. Corrie traveled to Northern Ireland this past summer as part of Emory's Journeys of Reconciliation program. Dr. Corrie is dedicated to the preparation of young people to become citizens of the world. Her research interests include nonviolent social change, the religious roots of both violence and nonviolence, international peacebuilding initiatives, and character education and moral development in children and youth.

Then at 6pm, also on the third floor of the library, Kevin Conboy will speak on the topic of economic development in Ireland and its ties to the southeastern United States. A dual citizen of Ireland and the United States, Mr. Conboy serves as the president of the Atlanta chapter of the Ireland Chamber of Commerce. He has worked with Irish clients as well as U.S. clients doing business in Ireland, and led a trade mission to Ireland and Northern Ireland in 2007 with Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue. He has served as interim president and on the board of directors for the Atlanta St. Patrick's Foundation, a nonprofit group that works with the Atlanta St. Patrick's Day Parade and raises funds for children's charities.


Click here for a complete schedule of upcoming Year of Ireland and Irish Heritage events.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

9/11 Remembered


If you have a chance to come by the library today from 2pm to 11pm, Melissa Doyle has put together an excellent display of books on topics related to the attack on America and its aftermath. Something profoundly changed in our nation that day ten years ago. I don't think we ever considered ourselves safe or untouchable again. Most of our students were just children on 9/11. I am very interested to hear their recollections. They may not remember what life was like before that day. Sometimes I can't.

There was division in our country before, and there was division afterward, but for a little while there none of that mattered. We were united in our shock and grief. This blogger had a small daughter who was two days away from celebrating her first birthday, and I wondered what kind of a world we had brought her into. I couldn't envision what 9/11/11 would be like. I am proud to see that ten years later, our flag is still waving.

Maybe with the passage of time, we can reflect on actions we did or did not take personally or as a nation. Not everyone is in agreement with the paths we took. There will always be time for debate on important issues like war and individual liberties. Some of the books in our display can give different perspectives as we wrestle with these questions. I am proud to be associated with an institution of higher learning in which we can discuss these issues seriously and openly. I am even more proud to live in a country where this is possible.

Ten years ago our world changed

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Check out Irish music in the library!


Cead Mile Failte! A hundred thousand welcomes to you!

As part of the Year of Ireland celebration at Reinhardt, the library has several CDs of Irish music on reserve for your listening pleasure. These range from very traditional tunes to music about the Irish immigrant experience, from Celtic/country fusion that reveals the roots of Appalachian music to the Pogues and Dropkick Murphys for those who like a little punk with their world music.

Currently we have "Another Country," "Further Down the Old Plank Road," and "The Essential Chieftains" by the Chieftains. We also have the concert video for "Another Country", in which the Chieftains perform with Nashville stars such as Ricky Skaggs, Willie Nelson and Emmylou Harris. (I must add from personal experience, if you ever have a chance to see these fellows perform live, TAKE IT)! We also have The Pogues: Very Best Of, The Green Fields of America, Dropkick Murphys: The Singles Collection, and Gaelic Storm: Special Reserve (you may remember Gaelic Storm as the "steerage band" in the movie "Titanic"). More music will likely be added to these. The CDs are kept behind the circulation desk and are available for two-hour checkout.

Here's a preview of some of the offerings:





And this one you may recall from the Subaru commercial where the hockey mom shuttles her kids around:



Just ask at the desk to see any of these CDs!

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Get ready for the Year of Ireland and Irish Heritage


A blogger named McGee can't help being excited about this year's "Year Of" program, so much so that I gave the blog a green makeover for the occasion!

As most of you probably know, the "Year Of" program focuses each year on a different region of the world. Through cross-disciplinary study and special events, students gain understanding of different cultures' faiths, practices, beliefs, social norms, art, literature, businesses and geographies. Since its beginning in 2003, the "Year Of" program has explored the Americas, Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Eastern Europe and Russia, the Mediterranean, the Indigenous Peoples of North America, Oceania, and now Ireland and the Irish diaspora. The "Year Of" program helps prepare members of the Reinhardt community to become true "citizens of the world."

"The 'Year Of' program is extremely important because it allows the students, the faculty and the staff to explore and learn about different regions, different cultures and different peoples they would probably never learn about in ordinary circumstances: their cultures, beliefs, lifestyles, histories, folktales and literature," said Michael Martinez, director of the Hill Freeman Library and Spruill Learning Center and chair of the Year of Ireland committee. "With this new understanding, hopefully everyone will come to better realize that even though people have different languages, live in different areas and have different beliefs, we are still people of one world, and must learn to coexist in...peace and harmony."

Of this year's subject, Martinez said, "Ireland is extremely interesting because there are a lot of people in this region whose ancestors came from Ireland and intermixed with other cultures and the native population. You must understand your past if you are going to have any kind of a future."

The first major event for the Year of Ireland is a visit from speaker Kevin Conboy on September 22 at 6pm right here in the library. Mr. Conboy is a dual citizen of Ireland and the United States and the current president of the Atlanta chapter of the Ireland Chamber of Commerce. He will be speaking on economic development in Ireland and its ties to the southeastern United States. On October 18, just in time for Halloween, acclaimed storyteller Betsy Doty will be here to tell spooky and traditional Irish tales. The event to which I'm looking forward the most is the visit from the Atlanta Irish Music School in February. After their performance the group will lead attendees in a brief Irish dancing lesson! You can also look forward to an Irish Country Fair in March, timed to coincide with St. Patrick's Day.

There will be a film and discussion series again this year, starting with the comedy Waking Ned Devine on September 15. Other movies scheduled for this semester will be Michael Collins, My Left Foot, Circle of Friends and The Kings. Watch this space for further information about the film series.

We will be having the "Year Of" essay contest again this year. To enter, submit an original essay on an Ireland-related subject to Stephanie Olsen in the library. This can be a review of an Irish movie, book, or "Year of" event, a paper written for a class, or original research of your own. The essay must be at least a page in length. The writers of the best essays of each month will receive a Year of Ireland t-shirt (designed by our own Ms. Olsen) and be entered into a drawing for a Nintendo Wii to be given away at the end of the year.

We will also be having periodic Irish trivia questions. This month's trivia question is "According to Celtic mythology, who had four eyes in her back and led the Fomorii into battle against Partholon?" If you think you know the answer, email Stephanie at sfo@reinhardt.edu. A winner will be chosen each week from among the correct responses; this winner will also be awarded a Year Of Ireland t-shirt. The luck of the Irish be with you!

For more information about the Year of Ireland, see the official page here. I will also be keeping this space updated with Year of Ireland events and activities. Slán leat!







Monday, August 22, 2011

Welcome back! Happy New Year!


It is so good to walk out on the Reinhardt campus, blinking into the light to see the place filled with students again! We've missed you this summer. Stop by and tell us of all your adventures, and we'll be happy to clue you in about what's been going on here. We have a lot of exciting events planned for the Year of Ireland and Irish Heritage, and some new resources for you as well.

There's something about the beginning of a new school year. It's like New Year's Day. It's a chance to make a fresh start. Do you have any "new year's resolutions" for 2011-2012? Whatever they may be, there's a very good chance that we can help. Take a look at your class schedule, and then come by the library and scout out the resources you'll need. We'll be here to help you every step of the way from First Day to graduation and beyond.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Library resources are music to dean's ears


When Dr. Dennis McIntire, Interim Dean and Assistant Dean of the School of Music, first came to Reinhardt in the fall of 2003, the music department was part of the School of Communication, Arts and Music. Dr. McIntire came to help start the music education program. “We had 17 music majors,” he said. “Now we have just over 100 undergraduate music majors and 18 graduate students.” The music program currently offers a Master of Music Degree in the fields of Conducting, Music Education and Piano Pedagogy, with evening and summer classes to accommodate working teachers.
Dr. McIntire says he is pleased with what Reinhardt’s library offers his students. “There are wonderful databases. We have an excellent representation. I think we have everything that Alexander Street [Publishing] offers. We don’t have to buy CDs because we can do all of our listening through the databases.” When asked to pick a favorite music database, Dr. McIntire shook his head. “I like all of them.” He did indicate that he’s found Naxos Music Library to be particularly helpful, that many students have discovered Opera in Video, and that the graduate students appreciate the International Index to Music Periodicals and Oxford Music Online, the home of Grove Music Online.
The music databases are accessible to faculty and students anywhere with Internet access, but those aren’t the only library resources at the music program’s fingertips. Many resources are housed at the music library, located at the Falany Performing Arts Center. These materials are not for check out and must be used in the library. “The music library runs on the honor system, and it works on the honor system,” Dr. McIntire said. He is beginning his ninth year at Reinhardt, and he said in all that time the music library hasn’t lost anything as far as he can tell. The books and other materials are all catalogued in the library’s system, and student workers come in regularly to shelve books and keep things tidy. There students have access to monument editions of the collected works of major composers (a collection that grows every year), music education resources and four computer stations where students can do research. “And if that’s not enough, the piano lab upstairs has twelve more computer stations,” Dr. McIntire added.
The music department is currently preparing for the process of renewing its accreditation with the National Association of Schools of Music. “When they came five years ago, one of the evaluators was from [a major state university] and he was astounded. We have a lot of stuff that they didn’t have,” Dr. McIntire said. “We have as much or more than all the schools around us, plus our music library is very friendly, open and accessible. It’s important that the library is here. Our faculty can walk down the hall, take something and use it for a class. It’s a very hands-on library.”

Monday, June 6, 2011

A staff member returns from Peru!



Congratulations and welcome back to library staff member Melissa Doyle! Melissa just returned from a three-week stint in Peru, studying abroad and helping out with a library automation project. Melissa shares details about the journey here at http://librarymelissainperu.wordpress.com/.

This map of Peru was taken from one of my favorite library databases, Global Road Warrior, a great guide for practical business and pleasure travel as well as a resource for studying about other countries and cultures.

Peru just had its second round of presidential elections yesterday. For timely political and economic updates about countries around the world, check out another library database, CountryWatch. Both CountryWatch and Global Road Warrior are accessible from the library website.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Zombies love libraries!


Libraries improve brains! Zombies eat brains! Therefore, zombies have a vested interest in protecting libraries! It's a no-brainer!

This article shows how Oakland residents got creative--and creepy--to protest library closings. Well done!

Monday, April 11, 2011

Finals Time! Library Study Hours Announced

April 13th & 14th: 24 Hours (Tentative)
April 15th: 8-5
April 16th 1-6
April 17th (starting at 2 pm)-April 21st:24 Hours
Library CLOSED for Easter holiday: April 22-April 24
April 25th-27th: 24 Hours


Check back with us for further updates!

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Getting Ready for Grad School Part Two – The Application Process


Special Guest Blog by Kirsten Rodning

In this chapter of my “Getting Ready for Grad School” blog series, I am going to discuss the steps that each student should take before and during the process of applying to graduate schools. At this point, you have already figured out what to do when the time comes to take the GRE, but what are the next steps?

Before you do anything else, you should make a list of all of the universities you are interested in. Go to their websites and determine what the application due date is for each school. Every school will have a different due date, and it is imperative that you keep track of when materials are due for each school.

Next, narrow down which schools you will actually apply to. Do this by researching your program of interest within each university. Make sure you look at the faculty and what their individual specialties are, the courses available in the school’s academic catalog, and the location and physical appearance of the campus itself. Since application fees are often very high, narrowing down your school choices to three or four options is a good idea.

Once you’ve chosen a few schools, your next step is to look at the application itself and find out exactly what you are required to submit. Usually the requirements will be different for each department, so make sure you look at the department requirements and not just the overall school requirements. For instance, when I applied for Georgia State University, each applicant was required to look at a specific page for their department, and applications were sent directly to a specific school, or college, within the university. As an English major, I looked at the English department’s page for application requirements, and I submitted my application directly to the College of Arts and Sciences through an online form (See an example of a degree requirements page here and an example of an application checklist here.

After you have all of that straightened out, it’s time to write a statement of purpose and an academic resume, along with pulling together a writing sample or portfolio. Some schools don’t require all of these items, but chances are good that you will have to submit each of them for at least one school. I can’t tell you exactly how to write each of these, but we do have several good books and resources here in the library to assist with this process. Just ask a librarian at the reference desk for help, and he or she can lead you to the books that discuss graduate school applications (Some examples of book titles that are held behind the circulation desk include Kaplan’s Get Into Graduate School, Graduate School: Winning Strategies for Getting in With or Without Excellent Grades, Graduate School Companion, and Graduate Admissions Essays). You can also visit the Center for Student Success for more help with your application process.

Two other things that you need to keep in mind during this process are your letters of recommendation and your college transcripts. Make sure you request your letters of recommendation from teachers or employers several weeks before the application deadlines, so you can give your letter writers plenty of time to write the letters and mail them to the schools. The resources we have in the library will also assist you with picking letter writers and asking them for letters. Having your transcripts mailed to your prospective schools is a much easier task. All you have to do is visit the Registrar’s office and fill out a short form and pay a small fee, and they will mail a copy of your transcript to your school of choice. If you have attended any other school before Reinhardt, you will also have to request transcripts from each school you attended.

This concludes part two of the “Getting Ready for Grad School” blog series. Good luck with your applications!

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Meet Charlie!


Meet Charlie the Robot, our newest art installation here at the library. Charlie was created by Jamie Thomas and Bo Higgins.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Subject: Getting Ready for Grad School Part One -- Preparing for and Taking the GRE


The following is a guest blog by Reinhardt alumna and Hill Freeman Library & Spruill Learning Center employee Kirsten Rodning



Hello, Kirsten here. I am one of the newest members of the Hill Freeman Library and Spruill Learning Center team, having started work here after graduating from Reinhardt last spring. After graduation, I had to think through a lot of different options for my future, and while I was fortunate to get a job here at the library, I also decided to start planning for a future in Graduate School.

One of my first steps in preparing for Grad School was to take the GRE (the Graduate Record Exam). After doing a bit of google research and asking the friendly Reinhardt library staff for help, I discovered that I could easily sign up for a test date at a local test center on the Educational Testing Service’s website (http://www.ets.org/gre/). I signed up for a date that was a couple of months away, so I would have time to study before taking the test. The website also gave me many useful pieces of information regarding the GRE. The most important piece of information that I needed to know before signing up, however, was that there was a $160 fee that I was required to pay at the time of sign-up. This means that if you choose to take the GRE, you should make sure you have saved some money for the process.

After I had signed up for a test date, my next step was to visit Amazon.com and purchase study books to help with preparation for the test. I read reviews of various different study books, and finally chose the Princeton Review’s Cracking the GRE, along with a book of advanced study of the verbal section from Kaplan (this was especially important for me as an English major, since English programs look almost exclusively at the verbal section of the test). I also used the books and resources that we have available here in the Reinhardt library. These books included sample questions, practice tests, and other hints and tips for test day. Prospective GRE testees may wish to note that after taking the exam I donated all of my GRE test books to the library, so they will be available to other Reinhardt students as needed.

Finally, two months later, my test date arrived. While I cannot tell you what was on the test (I was sworn to secrecy!), I can tell what you should expect from the testing center and the conditions in which you will take the test. The first thing I am going to tell you is of vital importance: do NOT stress out too much over the test. Working yourself into a panic will only cause you to leave the test with worse scores than you were expecting. As long as you have given yourself plenty of time to study (several months – preferably more than two, as I felt rushed with that amount of study time), there is nothing else you can do. Just relax. It is also important to visit the testing center prior to your test date. This way you won’t get lost on the way and you’ll have a better feel for what the place is like.

The following is a list of things that you might want to bring with you when you go to take your exam: food/ drink (these will be left in a locker, but you will have a break in which you can grab a quick snack), Jacket (though if you choose to wear it, you must keep it on the whole time. If you take it off during the test, someone will interrupt you to take your jacket away – yes, I speak from experience), Earplugs (the testing center may have some they can give you, but you probably want to have these, as you will be in a room where other people are typing, sneezing, and tapping their pencils), your up-to-date Driver’s License or state issued ID (It can not be expired, and you will not be allowed to take the test without this), and a printout of your confirmation for your test date.

I also have a list of things that you might think are necessary, but should be left at home, in your car, or in the provided locker: study books (these are no longer needed!), a watch (you will not be allowed to have this in the test room), and your cell phone (also contraband).

Once I finished the test, my scores on the verbal and quantitative sections were shown to me (the writing score came in the mail a few weeks later). After I signed out of the testing center, I was free and clear! My scores were mailed to the Universities of my choice, and my next step was to begin filling out grad school applications (which will be covered in the next exciting blog entry!).

Monday, March 21, 2011

The Irish in Southern Cultures


Check out the current issue of Southern Cultures from the University of North Carolina Press. It focuses on the Irish in the American South and the "outsized imprint" they left on southern culture in history, literature and music. I'm excited about it personally as a southerner and an Irish-American, but in light of next year's "Year Of" focus on the Irish diaspora, I think many of you would like to read up and get a head start. From Irish soldiers in the Confederacy to African-Americans and Irish-Americans making music together, from U2 and BB King to Gone With the Wind, there's some fascinating material in this issue.

We just got the print copy on our shelves, but we also have access to this publication on many of our databases. Check out the E-Journal link on our library home page.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Happy Freedom of Information Day!



Freedom of Information Day is held annually on or near March 16. Why March 16? Because this is the birthday of our fourth President and political philosopher James Madison, widely known as the Father of our Constitution and held as the foremost advocate for openness in government.

"A popular government without popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce, or a tragedy, or perhaps both."
James Madison


Enacted in 1966, and taking effect on July 5, 1967, the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) protects the rights of American citizens to obtain access to federal agency records. A FOIA request can be made for any agency record. For more information about the Freedom of Information Act and your rights under it, see the official government site at FOIA.gov.

The New York Public Library, in its blog for The Huffington Post, asked Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter David Barstow of the New York Times some questions about FOIA, freedom of information and freedom of the press. (Both the current and previous presidential administrations have been the subject of controversy about how much access they've allowed the public to have). Join in the conversation here.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Women's History Month


The Library of Congress, National Archives and Records Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum join in paying tribute to the generations of women whose commitment to nature and the planet have proved invaluable to society.

Before the 1970s, the topic of women’s history was largely missing from general public consciousness. To address this situation, the Education Task Force of the Sonoma County (California) Commission on the Status of Women initiated a “Women’s History Week” celebration in 1978 and chose the week of March 8 to coincide with International Women’s Day.

In 1987, the National Women’s History Project petitioned Congress to expand the celebration to the entire month of March. Since then, the National Women’s History Month Resolution has been approved every year with bipartisan support in both the House and Senate.

Source: National Women’s History Project

About This Year's Theme: Our History is Our Strength
“Our shared history unites families, communities, and nations. Although women’s history is intertwined with the history shared with men, several factors - social, religious, economic, and biological - have worked to create a unique sphere of women's history.”

Source: National Women’s History Project

Women’s History Month @ Your Library
Hill Freeman Library & Spruill Learning Center is celebrating all women of the world this month. From the female convicts who were forced into Australia by the British government in the Nineteenth Century to the American feminists of the 1960s, the library has books and other sources of information about the illustrious history of women.

There is a display of recommended titles and other media on the second floor of the library which reflect women’s history in America as well as around the world throughout time.

Books include:
Convict Maids: The Forced Migration of Women to Australia, by Deborah Oxley (This is a Year of Oceania book!)
Madame Curie: A Biography, by Eve Curie.
Rural Women in Urban China: Gender, Migration, and Social Change, by Tamara Jacka
Who Cooked the Last Supper? The Women’s History of the World, by Rosalind Miles
A German Women’s Movement: Class and Gender in Hanover, 1860-1933, by Nancy R. Reagin
Women in Revolutionary Paris, 1789-1795, by Levy, Applewhite, and Johnson

…and many more!

The library also has access to databases such as Women and Social Movements and North American Women’s Drama, both available through the library’s website.

Additional Resources Online

Women’s History Month at the National Women’s History Project


Women’s History Month at the Library of Congress


Women’s History Month Activities, History, Timelines, Ideas, Facts and Quizzes


Free Resources for Women’s History Month

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Wikipedia Beneath the Surface

http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/tutorials/wikipedia/

This excellent short video from North Carolina State University's libraries takes you "behind the scenes" of a Wikipedia page.

March Trivia Contest

Time to put on your thinking caps for another Oceania Trivia question.

To win an Oceania T-Shirt answer the following:

Why do the Maluka people call the outback the Never-Never?


Contact Stephanie Olsen at sfo@reinhardt.edu with your answer!

Today at 2pm in Tarpley 213: Ten Canoes



Check out a parable of forbidden love from Australia's past. "Ten Canoes" will be shown today at 2pm in Tarpley 213. This film is sponsored by the Year of Oceania.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Laissez les bon temps rouler!


Happy Mardi Gras everyone! At a loss as to how to celebrate Fat Tuesday in Waleska? Want a last blast before the fast? Maybe you just want to see Reinhardt faculty and staff let their hair down (what's left of it)?

Check out the fourth annual Reinhardt Hootenanny performance, starting tonight at 7 pm in the Glass House. Jessica Akers, Dr. Donna Coffey, Monica Daniels, Dr. Robert Driscoll, Glowka, Joel Griswell, Shalyn Hernandez, Kenny Johnson, Mary Laing, Dr. Roger Lee, Dr. Dennis McIntire, Randy Dobson, Dr. Julie Schultz, Nicole Weston, Dr. Kenneth Wheeler and Dianna Zima will be singing and dancing for you, performing their versions of songs by Peter, Paul and Mary and the Beatles, and just maybe a few newer tunes too.

The Reinhardt community looks forward to this event every year that brings together faculty, staff and students to have some good, clean fun--and just maybe that scary tough professor won't seem so intimidating after you've heard his version of "Proud Mary."

Monday, March 7, 2011

Welcome Back! Congratulations to our winners!



Welcome back! I hope everyone had a fun break and is coming back rested and rejuvenated for the second half of the semester!

If you didn't get to travel as much as you'd like, or if you're still in the mood for adventure, I'd like to remind you of our ongoing Year Of Oceania activities! What better destination for a mental escape than the exotic South Pacific, from Hawaii to Australia? Remember, you can always stop by the library and check out one of our "Year Of" books or "Year Of" movies just for enjoyment. If you'd like, you can write a brief review of the book or movie and submit it to Stephanie Olsen in the library (sfo@reinhardt.edu) for consideration in our monthly essay contest. Our essay winner for February is Mi Vuong.

We also have the winners for our February trivia contest. The question:

"According to the Maori, what is the term used to denote 'descendant,' and what is its meaning?"

The answer:
The Maori term for "descendant" is uri; its precise meaning is "offspring or issue".

The winners are:
Thomas Bagley
Ashley Davis
Karen Garland
Jayne Hunter
Denny Jones
Jamie Landers
Lauren Long
Kirsten Mazur
Morgan Sparks
Sandra Zuniga


Congratulations to all of our winners. Each will receive a super-sharp "Year of Oceania" t-shirt, designed by our own Stephanie Olsen.

There's still a chance to get your t-shirt! Be watching for our next contest.

Don't forget the ongoing "Year of Oceania" film series. The next movie, "The Man from Snowy River," will be shown at 2 pm this Thursday in Tarpley 213.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

HAPPY SPRING BREAK!

Hope you all are enjoying your Spring Break! If you need us, we'll be open from 8 am to 6 pm Monday through Thursday, and 8 am to 5 pm on Friday. We'll be closed on Saturday and Sunday, but we'll open up again for our regular hours at 8 am Monday morning! Have a safe and fun break!

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Screenwriter visits the Hill Freeman Library


It was wonderful to see so many of you here yesterday for the visit by screenwriter Brenda Fontaine! We had a full house for the table read from Ms. Fontaine's script for The Magic Man. The script was delightful, and so were the actors, including Wayne Glowka, Cassie Wright, Jamie Thomas and Connor Williams as the Magic Man. This particular script focuses on a seriously ill young mother, a writer of adventure stories, who determines to bring one of her adventures to life as a last gift to her family.

While there was little she could say about it due to nondisclosure agreements, Ms. Fontaine revealed that she has recently signed a contract for a new film, Harry's House.

The audience, which I believe consisted mostly of creative writing students and other aspiring writers, was excited to hear Ms. Fontaine tell the story of how she get her start as a screenwriter. Since writing her first script less than 5 years ago, she has found her passion. Writing "defines her life," as she put it. A natural storyteller, Ms. Fontaine says her ideas begin in fantasy but soon become rooted in her personal experience. She writes, she said, from the universal experiences we all share.

While Ms. Fontaine has written poetry and prose, it is screenwriting that is her natural medium. She credited the screenwriting guides by Syd Fields with helping her learn the nuts and bolts of the craft, and some classes she took from Academy Award winner Ernest Thompson (On Golden Pond) with changing her life. She promised she would give Dr. Donna Coffey some information about these classes, so please see Dr. Coffey if you're interested in taking some. (I know I am).

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Check out Coretta Scott King award winners



In honor of Black History Month, stop by and check out our display of Coretta Scott King Book Award winners in the library! The American Library Association awards this distinction annually to African American authors and illustrators for "outstanding inspirational and educational contributions." The award honors Mrs. King's courage and determination to work for world brotherhood and non-violent social change. Coretta Scott King Book Award winners are recognized for their "understanding and appreciation of the culture of all peoples and their advancement of the American dream of a pluralistic society."

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

"Year Of Oceania" winners announced

Congratulations to the following winners of our Year Of Oceania Valentine's Day contest: Marlana Camp, Heather Crook, Anna Dollar, Nahum Vigo-Fas, Kellie Richardson, Ontarius Shelly, Ann Smith, Cathy Wilson, Sandra Zuniga! These folks each won a "Year of Oceania" t-shirt for sharing with us which "Year of" events have touched them the most this year. Their input will help the Year of Oceania committee plan more events in the future!

Hope all of you had a wonderful Valentine's Day! We <3 our Reinhardt patrons!

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Review of our library, by an actual user!

A marketing student at Reinhardt wrote the following paper for a class. We obtained permission to share it here! All views expressed here are his:

The Library

Over the past few years at Reinhardt University, I have used the library many times. This past semester I took eighteen hours so I was in the library three to four nights a week. I feel that the library is a great service that is provided to the students by the university. The library's many resources and tools help students to better complete their schoolwork, study, or use the internet.
In my opinion, the best thing about the library is the twenty-four hour internet access. Not everyone on campus has their own laptop, and I think that it is great that the students here have a place to go to get on the internet whenever they need to. Also, the internet in the residence halls can be very bad at times, and it's nice to know that one can just go to the library if they really need to use the internet.

The research tools that the library provides are very helpful as well. One tool that is very helpful are the databases that provide copious amounts of information on various subjects. I have used these databases on numerous occasions, and they are great if one is scholarly source that is reliable. Google and Wikipedia aren't alwys trustworthy, and these databases are a solid source of legitimate information.

Books are another great source of information. There is a librarian on duty until 11 pm [Monday through Thursday],...and he or she will be able to help one find the book that they are looking for. Although the selection of books is not that great, it is sufficient enough to do research. One can also check out books for leisurely reading. The fees for late books are not very severe, either. I accidentally kept a book for an entire summer once, and I think the fee was about six dollars.

The library is also great for studying. There are cubicles on the third floor, which is usually deserted, that students may use to study their books or notes from class. This is a great alternative to studying in one's room, which can be very distracting at times. Overall, the library is a great tool for success at Reinhardt. One is able to have unlimited amounts of research at their fingertips twenty-four hours a day. The staff is very helpful if one needs to find something or use the hole punch machine or stapler. I do not have any serious complaints about the library. My main concern is about the noise level on the second floor. This is the room with most of the computers and it can become crowded at times. Occasionally people will begin to talk too loudly or even play music using their cell phones. This can be very distracting, and depending on who is working at the time, something may never be said to the noise polluter. Other than this small problem, I think the library is one of the best services that Reinhardt offers its students. A survey of various Reinhardt students revealed that approximately 80% of students thought that the library was a sufficient resource for students to enhance their learning experience. This survey had a relatively small sample size and the data may not accurately reflect the opinion of the student body of Reinhardt University as a whole.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Readers' theatre brings local history to life


Got plans for this weekend (other than Homecoming activities of course)? Well, scrap 'em, because you won't want to miss "Echoes of Cherokee County," presented by Reinhardt University Theatre. This readers' theatre features letters, newspaper reports, legal documents, and other primary documents outlining just a few of the important events and movements that affected this area during the half-century leading up to the the Civil War.

"It's about 40 minutes of legal documents, letters, diaries, and newspaper reports. It covers gold rushes, school building, preaching, Indian removal and oppression, and, for the finale, a truly terrifying speech delivered on the eve of the war to the Cherokee Riflemen by a women's sewing guild. Goes WAY beyond "war of northern aggression" rhetoric," said RU professor of English and Theatre Dr. Kevin Crawford.

Crwaford was helped in researching the material for the show by RU History professor Dr. Ken Wheeler and local historian/library favorite G. Richard Wright.

"It's a fun way to interact with this material," said Wright, who will also be speaking at the event.

"Echoes of Cherokee County" will be held at the historic Canton Theatre in downtown Canton on February 11th and 12th at 7:30 pm. Tickets are only $5 (cash or check only). Don't miss it! I won't.

Monday, February 7, 2011

Black History Month: 1966, Reinhardt integrates

February is African American History Month. As I sat thinking about the display I might assemble in the library this month (I'm thinking it will be a collection of Coretta Scott King Book Award winners), it suddenly occurred to me that I didn't know anything about when Reinhardt was integrated. I didn't even know the name of our first African American student. Fortunately I do know our archivist, Joel Langford, and he pointed me in the right direction.

As it turns out, compared to some other colleges and universities in the South, the desegregation of Reinhardt was relatively peaceful. There were some minor tensions in the early years, but for the most part, the integration of Reinhardt went very smoothly.

Upon receiving notice from the United States Office of Education that Reinhardt would have to sign an agreement not to discriminate in the admission of students if it wanted to continue to receive federal financial aid, then-president Dr. Rowland Burgess called a meeting of the executive committee of the board of trustees. Burgess suggested that they vote to sign the agreement, providing there was no protest from the other members of the board. According to Burgess's memoirs, chairman Mills Lane responded, "No. Let's authorize the agreement and notify them that we have done so." Burgess expected that he would have to cast the deciding vote, but the committee vote was unanimous. Reinhardt would integrate.

Reinhardt University, then Reinhardt College, was integrated in the fall of 1966 with one African American student. His name was James Jordan. Burgess's memoirs describe Jordan as "a...young man with a ready smile...a very popular student." Jordan was a member of Omega Kappa Pi fraternity and was elected to the Student Government Association.

Jordan graduated from Reinhardt (which was then a two-year junior college) in 1968. Some time later, Burgess related, he and his wife saw Jordan and his girlfriend at a gas station in Newnan: "As we rushed toward each other to shake hands, I noticed the nervous movement and scowling faces of some men sitting nearby. Suddenly the thought hit me! This is the first time in your life you forgot that a person was black."
Above, James Jordan from the 1966-1967 Cherokee Phoenix, Reinhardt's yearbook. Right, Dr. Rowland Burgess, the same year.

Friday, February 4, 2011

The Lord of the Libraries

Hello all!

I wanted to share with you this wonderful video from the library at the University of Kansas! It was written and directed in 2004 by Emmy award-winning writer Chris Martin ("Heroes") when he was a student. Enjoy!

Thursday, February 3, 2011

TIME-SENSITIVE! Read all you want--for two days!




Springer has offered us a trial of their excellent multidisciplinary book and image files. These contain over 43,000 books and 2,843,990 images.

You can find the link on the library home page, on the left-hand side under "Trial Databases."

If you see a green box by a book title, we have temporary access to it.

Take advantage of these now! The trial ends Saturday. Trial databases are only accessible from campus.

Check it out here.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

OCEANIA TRIVIA CONTEST


We have a winner of our January trivia contest--three winners to be exact!

The question: New Zealand has a healthy population of marine mammals, thanks to its extensive coastline. What are the three main groups?

The answer: Whales, Dolphins, and Seals/Sea Lions.

Congratulations to Ashley Bryant, Michael Cass, and Peggy Collins Feehery! Their names were drawn from the correct entries.

Didn't win this time? Don't give up! Our February Trivia Contest has begun. This month's question is:

According to the Maori, what is the term they use to denote "descendant", and what is its meaning?

Stop by the library this month to submit your answer! Winners will be drawn... from correct entries. Good luck!

Monday, January 31, 2011

News from Egypt

At a historic but turbulent time in world events, here's a dispatch from Egypt. The nation may be in chaos, but the Library is safe.

From bibalex, the new Library of Alexandria

To our friends around the world: The Events in Egypt
30 Jan 2011


The world has witnessed an unprecedented popular action in the streets of Egypt. Led by Egypt’s youth, with their justified demands for more freedom, more democracy, lower prices for necessities and more employment opportunities. These youths demanded immediate and far-reaching changes. This was met by violent conflicts with the police, who were routed. The army was called in and was welcomed by the demonstrators, but initially their presence was more symbolic than active. Events deteriorated as lawless bands of thugs, and maybe agents provocateurs, appeared and looting began. The young people organized themselves into groups that directed traffic, protected neighborhoods and guarded public buildings of value such as the Egyptian Museum and the Library of Alexandria. They are collaborating with the army. This makeshift arrangement is in place until full public order returns.

The library is safe thanks to Egypt’s youth, whether they be the staff of the Library or the representatives of the demonstrators, who are joining us in guarding the building from potential vandals and looters. I am there daily within the bounds of the curfew hours. However, the Library will be closed to the public for the next few days until the curfew is lifted and events unfold towards an end to the lawlessness and a move towards the resolution of the political issues that triggered the demonstrations.
Ismail Serageldin
Librarian of Alexandria
Director of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina

Friday, January 28, 2011

Friday Funnies

Q. Do you know how many librarians it takes to screw in a light bulb?
A. No, but I know where you can look it up!

Q. How many reference librarians does it take to change a light bulb?
A. Well, what kind of light bulb were you thinking about?

Why did the librarian slip and fall on the library floor?
Because she was in the non-friction section.

Customer: I am looking for a globe of the earth.
Librarian: We have a table-top model over here.
Customer: No, that's not good enough. Don't you have a life-size?
Librarian: [pauses] Yes, but it's in use right now.'

Marion [none too bright] walks into the library and says to the librarian, 'Can I have a burger and fries?'
Librarian [whispering]: 'Ssssh…Sorry, this is a library.'
Marion: [whispering also] 'Oh, may I have a burger and fries.'

And for my fellow Star Wars fans..
Dark Side of the Library

* Adventure. Heh! Remuneration. Heh! A librarian craves not these things.
* You must learn the ways of the MARC.
* AACR can have a strong influence on the weak-minded.
* Sir, the possibility of successfully negotiating a pay rise is approximately 3,720 to 1.
* When ten years long service you reach, look as good you will not.
* If this is the the diplomatic section where is your copy of Statesmans Yearbook?
* You are a member of the vandal alliance and a traitor. Take her away.
* The Wheel has turned full circle. When we last met I was but a library assistant. Now I am a librarian.
Only a Librarian of Evil, Darth.
* I see you have constructed a new Marc Record. Now your skills are complete.
* The Cataloguer will show you the true nature of Dewey.
* And now Mrs Abathnot we will discuss the location of the missing library books.
* Fear will keep the outlying patrons in line. Fear of this work station.
* This was your Fathers card catalogue. Not as clumsy or as random as an OPAC. A more civilised catalogue for a more elegant age.
* That's no small branch library.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Year of Oceania Movie Today

If you're looking for some entertainment this afternoon, don't forget today's Year of Oceania movie, "The Year of Living Dangerously," starring Mel Gibson and Sigourney Weaver. The movie will be shown today at 2 pm in Tarpley 213.

This 1982 Peter Weir film is set in Indonesia in 1965. Journalist Guy Hamilton (Gibson) is a foreign correspondent on his first assignment. He makes key contacts in the form of a Chinese-Australian photographer named Billy Kwan (a male character portrayed by a female actor, Linda Hunt) and a British diplomat named Jill Bryant (Weaver). Bryant and Hamilton fall in love. When Bryant learns that the Communist Party of Indonesia (the PKI) are planning to overthrow the government with the help of Communist China, she warns Hamilton so he can escape before the bloodshed. Hamilton instead wants to stay and cover the rebellion and the overthrow of President Sukarno.

Linda Hunt won an Academy award for her portrayal of Kwan. The movie was banned from being shown in Indonesia until 1999.

Dr. Theresa Ast will be on hand to lead discussion of the film and answer any questions.

This is an excellent opportunity to enter the Year of Oceania essay contest! All you need to do is read any "Year Of" book (available in the library), see any "Year Of" film or attend any "Year Of" event. Write a brief review of the book, movie or event and submit it to Stephanie Olsen or Michael Martinez in the library. One winner will be chosen each month to receive a free "Year of Oceania" t-shirt with the turtle logo.

Another way to win a t-shirt is by entering our monthly trivia contest. This month's question:

New Zealand has a healthy population of marine mammals, thanks to its extensive coastline. What are the three main groups?

Stop by the library to fill out a form with your answer. All correct answers will be put into a drawing. Don't forget to include your phone number! Good luck.




Wednesday, January 26, 2011


Hello,

Just wanted to remind everyone of two of our newer databases! I know many of you, particularly faculty and staff, come to the library to read The Chronicle of Higher Education, and with good reason. The Chronicle is a premier source of news, information and advice about the world of academia.The journal is a nine-time finalist for the National Magazine Awards, and one of its columnists was a finalist for a 2005 Pulitzer Prize. In 2007, an Erdos & Morgan survey ranked The Chronicle among the 10 most credible news sources. Recently, the library purchased a site license for
The Chronicle of Higher Education online. This gives you online access to all Chronicle content, plus daily news and advice columns, job listings, active discussion forums, and career-building tools such as online CV management, salary databases and more.

We have also added a site license to The Chronicle of Philanthropy. This is a news source for nonprofit leaders, fund raisers, grant makers, and others involved in the philanthropic world. It offers such service features as lists of grants, fundraising ideas and techniques, statistics, reports on tax and court rulings, summaries of books, and a calendar of events.

Check them both out!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

This date in history: Georgia secedes


One hundred and fifty years ago today, a special Georgia state convention met in Milledgeville, which was then the state capital. The convention had debated for three days before voting 208-89 to leave the Union, becoming the fifth state to do so (the first four were South Carolina, Florida, Mississippi, and Alabama).

The following Articles of Secession were adopted:

""We, the people of the State of Georgia, in Convention assembled, do declare and ordain, and it is hereby declared and ordained: "That the ordinance adopted by the people of the State of Georgia in Convention on the second day of January in the year of our Lord seventeen hundred and eight-eight, whereby the Constitution of the United States of America was assented to, ratified and adopted; and also all acts and parts of acts of the General Assembly of this State ratifying and adopting amendments of the said Constitution are hereby repealed, rescinded and abrogated. "We do further declare and ordain, That the Union now subsisting between the State of Georgia and other States, under the name of the "United States of America," is hereby dissolved, and that the State of Georgia is in full possession and exercise of all those rights of sovereignty which belong and appertain to a free and independent State."


This would be a great day to come to the library and check out our Triplett Memorial Military History Collection. We have more than 3,000 materials in this collection on the shelves, with more being added every day, and almost a third of them focus on various aspects of the Civil War. I think you'll find it quite impressive! We'll be planning a number of events in conjunction with the war's sesquicentennial, so be on the lookout!

Sources: The Georgia Historical Society, History.com, Georgia Public Broadcasting.

Photo: The old state capital building in Milledgeville. The building is now part of the campus of the Georgia Military College, and serves as a museum. Image source: Library of Congress

Friday, January 14, 2011

Yes, we're open today! Finally!

Hello, Reinhardt folks, did you enjoy your unexpected week off? I sure did! It's back to business as usual in snowy Waleska today. The library is warm, the computers are functioning, and our stacks of books are inviting, so come on in and take the chill off! I would advise you to watch your step, though, especially if you're attempting to navigate the rear entrance near the first floor study area. The last time I checked, that was still pretty icy. The front entrance looks to be a little safer (and check out those beautiful icicles on the crape myrtle just to the right)!

Congratulations are due for PHOEBE BUDD! Phoebe is the winner of this month's Year of Oceania essay contest. Her prize is an Oceania t-shirt and a 4-gig flash drive.

There are still several chances to win! To enter, all you have to do is read any book or watch any movie about the Oceania region (located near the service desk on the 2nd floor of the library) or attend any "Year Of" event. Then write a 2- or 3-paragraph summary of the movie, book, or event. Turn it in at the library to either Michael Martinez or Stephanie Olsen by the 28th of each month for your chance to win.

In case you're wondering, we do encourage "double-dipping." If you read a book or watch a movie about Oceania for one of your classes this year, we will accept the work you did for that class as an entry. There's no reason not to enter!

Good luck!

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Check out Cherokee Tribune 1/6/11



Check out today's issue of the Cherokee Tribune, either online (at cherokeetribune.com) or at the library for a couple of interesting front-page articles.

Your eye will first be drawn to a great picture of chemistry major Cam Rosenfeld hard at work in the stacks of the Hill Freeman Library. There's an accompanying article by Kristal Dixon discussing Reinhardt University's plans for the near future, including new graduate programs in Education and in Spanish and the possibility of fielding our own football team. (College football in Waleska? I have to admit, I'm rooting for a "yes" decision from the Board of Trustees this May).

After you check that article out, be sure to read the lead story about Cherokee County's 2011 budget. The good news is the budget has been balanced without the need to cut county government staff or government-provided services--but outside agencies that receive county funding--including the Sequoyah Regional Library System--may see a shortfall.

Check it out.

(Photograph by Todd Hull of the Cherokee Tribune)

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Library now open on SATURDAYS!


Welcome back, students! I hope you all had a nice break, with whatever appropriate winter holidays and a happy new year's included! Now, you're all nice and rested, recharged and ready for a new semester, RIGHT?

Well, we've got some great news for you! This semester, for the first time, we've added SATURDAY hours to our schedule! The library will be open from 1 pm until 6 pm on Saturdays all semester long (excluding holiday weekends and school breaks).

We also got a lot of positive feedback for our 24-hour study days during finals last semester, so you can look forward to more of those around finals time in April.

Of course, as always, students have access 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year to our after-hours area. All you need is your Eagle card to gain entry.

Good luck to all of you! We at your library are here to support you and help make Spring 2011 your best semester yet at Reinhardt!