| Upcoming Events |
Author Daniel Czitrom lecture, Thursday March 19 4 p.m. in the Peter Graham Room Bird Library
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| Colab event
this Friday night in Bird Library! |
"Selling Out & ID+ Art Show"
Friday, March 20th 7-10 p.m. Bird Library Lower Level
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Come have lunch with Dean Thorin and Dale King! |
The next monthly adminstrative brown bag Q&A session is scheduled for Friday, March 20th from 12-1 p.m. in the Hillyer Room. This session is open to all staff. We hope to see you there!
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On Wednesday, March 18th, LITS finished installing 22 new computers on the first floor of the Learning Commons. Within the first half hour, all of the new workstations were being used by students! |
 4th Annual Library Lock-In
Library Lock-In 2009, "A Dark and Brainy Night at Bird Library," was held on Friday evening, 2/20, from 10 p.m.-1 a.m. The Lock-In, "one of the best events they have on campus" according to one participant interviewed for Citrus TV, continues a long running partnership between the Library and Syracuse University's Office of Residence Life. Fifty undergraduate students participated in the event, competing in pairs to answer the challenging three-part "test" (about 75 research questions total). For many of the students, it was their second time competing. Between rounds of the competition, students and event volunteers enjoyed refreshments, raffle prizes, music, and games - including a Nintendo Wii on a large screen (new this year!).
First place winners won a $250 team member gift certificate to SU Bookstore; second place winners received $100 team member gift certificate to Carousel Mall; and third place winners received a $50 team member gift certificate to Best Buy. Other
prizes included Starbucks and Barnes & Noble gift cards, t-shirts,
frisbees, and sweatshirts.
For video coverage, see http://www.citrustv.net/ and scroll to February 24th on the Latest Videos section on the right side.
Sincere thanks go out to the numerous volunteers who devoted their time to help make this a memorable experience for all participants. This year's team was led by event chair Bren Price, Jr.; Lesley Pease and Abby Kasowitz-Scheer served as co-chairs; and Michael Pasqualoni offered critical input on questions, scoring and other details. The Library Lock-In coordinators thank the Office of Residence Life staff for their generous donations of food and decorations, coordinating the prizes, publicity, and registration, and for infusing their enthusiasm into the event. Congratulations to everyone who participated in Lock-In 2009! |
What's new on the 3rd and 4th floors
If you haven't already stopped by to see the changes on the 3rd and 4th floor, come and take a look. The
Video service desk, equipment and collections, previously in Media, are
now located on the 4th floor in the Limited Access area. Patrons can now view a movie, listen to a CD or LP, digitize a video, image or sound recording, or scan an image from an art book, all in one location. A group viewing room is also available, providing space for small groups as well as access to a variety of video equipment.
We have also instituted a new video drop-off and pick-up service in the Learning Commons for faculty who can't make it up to the 4th floor. Faculty and other patrons can find Isabella
Arezzo on the 4th floor to help with
film bookings and any questions related to the video collection.
In addition to the relocated video services, the 4th floor is now home to an enhanced Mac and PC digitizing work area providing digitizing options for a variety of audio, images and video formats including LPs, cassettes, slides, VHS and print images. Patrons may reserve consultation time with Stephen Singer who can provide in-depth expertise and assistance with audio, video and image digitizing projects.
Adaptive technology space and equipment have been relocated from the lower level to room 452. Support, assistance and reservations for the room are provided by staff at the 4th floor service desk.
The 3rd floor is now home to the microfilm "research collection," comprised of higher-use microfilm titles. There are two microfilm viewers available for scanning, one microfilm viewer and one dual microfilm/fiche viewer attached to printers located on the floor as well. The remaining microfilm and microfiche continue to be housed on the lower level and will be retrieved for patrons upon request from any service desk.
New to the GSIC Lab is an additional scanner formerly located in Media. All the computers attached to the scanners have the Omnipage OCR software that enables users to scan and edit documents.
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SU Library awarded $350,000 NEH grant for Marcel Breuer digital project
The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) has awarded the Syracuse University Library a $350,000 grant to create a digital scholarly edition of the works of Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer. The project, entitled "Marcel Breuer, Architect: Life and Work, 1922-1955" will run from May 2009 through April 2011 and culminate in the release of the web-based edition in May 2011.
Breuer began donating his papers to Syracuse University Library more than forty years ago, in 1964. Today, the Syracuse Breuer collection includes thousands of original oversized drawings and blueprints, correspondence, and photographs. Upon Breuer's death in 1981, his widow donated many of his remaining papers to the Smithsonian Institution's Archives of American Art. This NEH-funded project will unite these geographically separate collections in an online edition of 50,000 items. It will also incorporate Breuer materials from other international archival repositories.
Based in the Library's Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) and led by its director, Sean Quimby, the project is a partnership with the SU School of Architecture. SOA students and faculty will assist with usability testing as the web project develops. SOA faculty member Jonathan Massey and Barry Bergdoll, Philip Johnson Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art will serve on an advisory board.
"The Breuer project will not only enable a new generation of Breuer scholarship, it will open a whole new set of questions about the profile and issues of American modernism from the 1930s through the late 1970s,"Bergdoll said in a letter supporting the proposal. Marcel Breuer was born in Pécs, Hungary, in 1902. At the age of 21, he went to work in the office of Walter Gropius, founder of the modernist Bauhaus school of design. At the Bauhaus school, Breuer taught furniture design, and in 1925 earned critical acclaim for his "Wassily" chair, which combined the radical simplicity of form with tubular steel and fabric. He and Gropius emigrated to the United States in the late 1930s, where they taught at Harvard University and maintained a joint architectural firm in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In 1941, Breuer established a singular reputation for his "bi-nuclear" house, which organized physical space around new modes of day-to-day life. The "bi-nuclear" house, along with his demonstration house in the garden of New York's Museum of Modern Art (1949), helped to inspire America's fascination with housing in the post-war era. By the mid 1950s, Breuer had designed some 60 private residences and had begun to undertake large-scale, institutional projects, like the UNESCO headquarters in Paris (1953), the Whitney Museum of Art in New York (1966), buildings on the campuses of New York University and St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota, and the Cleveland Museum of Art (1970). The collections at Syracuse, the Smithsonian, and elsewhere document not only those buildings which were completed, but also projects that never came to fruition. Together, they document the career of a man that Time magazine in 1956 called one of the "form-givers of the twentieth century." For more information on the project, contact Sean Quimby at 315 443-9759 or smquimby@syr.edu.
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NYSHEI Annual Meeting on June 9th
The New York State Higher Education Initiative (NYSHEI) will holds its annual meeting on June 9 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Standish Room of the Science Library at the University at Albany.
Keynote
speaker is New York State Librarian Bernard Margolis, who will share
his vision for New York's libraries.
Learn about NYSHEI advocacy
efforts on behalf of New York's academic libraries and hear from state policy makers on our economic climate, higher education and research innovation. Come a day early and join the NYSHEI Board for a day of academic library advocacy at the Capitol. To encourage broad participation, there will be no registration fee for this year's meeting.
For more information, visit nyshei.org or contact Pamela McLaughlin, chair-elect of the NYSHEI Executive Board at x9788 or pwmclaug@syr.edu.
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Tell Us!
We are very interested in your feedback on the Newsletter's new look. Please send your comments, questions or story ideas to libcom@syr.edu.
Many thanks for your interest! The Editors
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