Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Not so much the green maverick on Main Street

Associated Press writer, Jeff Karoub, penned an article referring to the annual list of words compiled by the faculty at Lake Superior State University. What fun to read the list and think about the popularity (or over popularity) of words in common use.

The Oxford English Dictionary ,which is available to Georgia residents through GALILEO, has examples of the changes in meaning that words go through over time.

Here's what the OED offers on maverick

2. An unorthodox or independent-minded person; a person who refuses to conform to the views of a particular group or party; an individualist. Also in extended use.


1880 Galveston (Texas) Daily News 19 Aug. 4/5 We..will crush radicals, greenbackers and all other foes of democracy, especially those independent gentlemen, those political mavericks. 1892 R. KIPLING Life's Handicap 195 A very muzzy Maverick smote his sergeant on the nose. 1948 Chicago Daily News 11 June 16/7 One Republican Senator, and not by any means a conspicuous maverick, pointed out that the Senate might have acted. 1957 Oxf. Mag. 17 Oct. 22/2 The story is not just of local boy making good, but also, and more significantly, of maverick making friends. 1989 Money & Family Wealth Mar. 25/2 Although the Abbey National is one of the oldest building societies, in recent years it has cultivated an image as a maverick and a mould-breaker. 1994 Hypno 3 69/2 James is a maverick of disturbingly beautiful techno.


Yes, maverick has several meanings and a history to our understanding of what a maverick is!
What I noticed is the RSS feed that the OED offers to those who might like to add a word to their vocabulary. So here's to New Years resolutions- subscribe to the OED RSS feed and use that word twice before the next word appears in your feed reader. Amaze your acquaintances with the expansion of your vocabulary.

You may get the current password to access GALILEO at home from your Georgia librarian.

-kls

0-16

Part of being a librarian is having a familiarity with statistics. Knowledge of where and how to find statistics is part of the job description. Statistics are also a part of our everday lives, from the price of gas to stock prices.

One statistic that you have probably heard a lot about in the last week has been 0-16. This figure has been widely reported in all avenues of the news media, including on venues that are not sports related. 0-16 refers to the the record of the Detroit Lions football team of the National Football League. Losing Sunday, the Lions became the first team in league history to lose all 16 regular season games.

Several teams have had perfect losing seasons in the history of the league. Perhaps the best known is the 1976 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Bucs went 0-14 that year. However, the Bucs had a bit of an excuse. That year the Bucs were an expansion team, not expected to compete. (Note that the NFL expanded its regular season to 16 games in the late 1970's.) The last pure 'defeated' season before the Bucs was during World War II.

Several teams have gone winless but have managed to get a tie over the course of a season. The Dallas Cowboys, in their first year, went 0-11-1. More common is the dreaded 1-15 season, a mark achieved by several franchises, including the Patriots, Colts, Dolphins, and Jets, all of whom currently or once played in the AFC East Division. The Miami Dolphins spoiled some fans idea of the ultimate season when they won their singular victory late last year, ending the notion of having one team go undefeated in the regular season, the Patriots, with another going undefeated. The Panthers once went 1-15, winning their first game and losing the rest. The 1989 Cowboys were perhaps the most famous of the 1-15 teams, winning the Super Bowl just three years later.

One great website for football statistics is Pro-Football-Reference.com. This website contains a plethora of information on coaching records, draft picks, and player stats. And most statistics are better than the dreaded 0-16.

JWF

Monday, December 29, 2008

Boxing Day

The last week of the year . . . A time for winding down, putting away all the Christmas decor, and figuring out where you put the free 2009 calendar that you got in the mail.

Speaking of calendars, you may have noticed on yours a little known and understood holiday on December 26th known as Boxing Day. But what in the world is Boxing Day?

Boxing Day is a holiday associated with the United Kingdom, Canada, and other countries of the British Commonwealth. Boxing Day is celebrated on the 26th of December, unless that day falls on a weekend, in which case Boxing Day is often moved back to the next Monday.

There are several possible explanations for the origins of Boxing Day. The entry on Encyclopedia Britannica (available through Galileo , get the password from your Georgia Librarian) notes that Boxing Day may have started out of two possible traditions. The first was the giving of alms or donations to the poor, often collected in small boxes, at Christmas. The second was the later tradition of servants having the day after Christmas off. Servants were often given the day off and were given boxes of goodies (similar to care packages).

There are other origins of the holiday. The urban legends website Snopes.com notes that in all the origin explanations, the main theme is that of the poor being given something by the wealthy.

Boxing Day in Canada has evolved into something similar to the huge post-Christmas shopping day in the United States. Sales and returns at big box stores are often the theme of the day. Britannica also notes that, for whatever reason, English colonists in America did not carry the holiday over from England, perhaps explaining why Boxing Day is not an official holiday in the United States.

Now you can stare at December 26th on your calendar in 2009 and not be confused.

JWF

Sunday, December 21, 2008

1000 posts

When I logged in, I noticed we had 1000 posts on this blog...who would have thought I had so much to say?

Sharing the online resources (and the print resources) available to North Metro Technical College students is enjoyable. Noticing the 1000th post notation reinforces the adage- "time flies when you're having fun".

I'm on break till January 5th but as I see or hear something I'll share. Which brings me to the Early Word blog- "steal this for your next speech". It made me laugh out loud.

I used to be a part of a giant public library system that would mail books to your home.....so when Brian Williams got to the.... well- you'll see- just watch and listen...and think of me laughing.

-kls

Thursday, December 11, 2008

It's not just inked anymore

What do you think of when you hear the word encyclopedia? Several shelves of dark colored thick volumes with gold lettering on the spines and big numbers or letters at the bottom of the spine...the traditional 22 volumes of print....with an index that you might consider using if you're really into cross referencing?

Yes, that was the style encyclopedia I used for many years. In my earliest library days there were CD's that could be loaded on a computer. Then encyclopedias became available through a subscription service online. Wiki-pedia, the people's encyclopedia, became the free way online to find pop culture information (and quick facts). So what was a self respecting encyclopedia publisher to do?

Encyclopedia Britannica has moved well into the 21st century. I attended one of their webinars and came away thinking - this isn't the encyclopedia anymore!

It's a portal of information- full text articles from EB, magazine and journal articles from ProQuest and Ebsco, web sites vetted by humans, images, video-clips, and time lines. There are enough links within each page to make the most ardent web surfer happy.

Best of all you can create Workspaces and collect all those links into your personal library on a topic. We're going to use the workspace option for our History classes and English classes. We have collected web sites on delicious but this will add another dimension- best of all the link to the workspace can be e-mailed (or saved on delicious)!

What a wonderful well rounded resource the encyclopedia has become. It's available through GALILEO. You may get the password to use GALILEO at home from your Georgia librarian!


-kls

Serendipity

Yesterday I mentioned the phase of the moon in my entry. Shortly afterwards I read what Mary Ludwick on LM_NET posted from the NASA Science News for December 9, 2008 -Not all full Moons are the same. This Friday's is the biggest and brightest full Moon of the year.
The full story may be found at NASA's page!

Isn't serendipity fun!

From Encyclopedia Britannica via GALILEO:
Main Entry: ser·en·dip·i·ty
Pronunciation: -'di-p&-tE
Function: noun
Etymology: from its possession by the heroes of the Persian fairy tale The Three Princes of Serendip
: the faculty or phenomenon of finding valuable or agreeable things not sought for

You get the current password to access GALILEO at home from your Georgia librarian

-kls

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

What phase is the moon in>

A cartoon co-incidence today -Rhymes with Orange refers to T. Oedipus Rex in paleo-psychiatry while One Big Happy plays on the word Rex as wrecks.

I started thinking about Oedipus Rex and realized - my brain is turning to jello and I couldn't remember anything- was it Shakespeare or Greeks? Who wrote it?

To get a quick answer I could have done a Google search but I thought better of it- and went to our OPAC and searched. We have four titles - two print and two electronic books. All looked like more information than I really wanted.

We purchase the full Credo Reference and have a search box on the library page. A search in Credo brought me 171 results. I chose The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Houghton Mifflin (yes, it was first on the list). I was reminded of the Greek myth and the play by Sophocless with a reference to Freud.

All in a paragraph in a reputable source- just as easy as Google without the angst of worrying if this is a credible resource!


-kls

The perfect gift

Can you guess what this item is?

  • No assembly required
  • No batteries needed
  • Does not become obsolete
  • Can be taken anywhere
  • Does not cause carpel tunnel syndrome
  • No small parts to lose
  • No annoying sound effects
  • No updates or upgrades needed
  • Never needs ironing
  • Easy to wrap
  • Good for hours of entertainment
  • Easy to store
  • Always fits
  • Will not cause strife at airport security
  • User friendly
  • Easy to share files with friends
  • Doesn't need extension cord
  • Bookmarks easy to manage
  • Great topics of conversation
  • Never comes in the wrong color or size
  • Doesn't need to be serviced by a dealer
  • Doesn't need spare parts
  • Easier to wrap than footballs
  • Looks good with any decor
  • Doesn't need watering or fertilizing
  • Won't irritate your allergies
  • Doesn't go out of style
  • Doesn't get aphids or draw ants
  • Doesn't bark or need to be walked in the middle of the night
  • Won't stretch, shrink or fade
  • Won't scratch the coffee table
  • Won't get stale
  • Doesn't have zippers that break
  • Can be used over and over by many people
  • Not empty when finished
  • You can open this again and again
Thanks to Cindy Kilpatrick for sharing this list on LM_NET


----it's a book!

I smiled as I went through the list. My youngest has asked for a complete set of the Ian Fleming, James Bond books. Nice- very nice- no batteries....

-kls

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

the House of Lords

Greetings,

Most Sunday evenings I tune in to watch the delayed broadcast of the Prime Minister's Question Time on C-SPAN. Question Time occurs live on Wednesdays from the British House of Commons in London. The House of Commons is the lower house of the British Parliament, and serves as the equivalent of our legislative branch and most of our executive branch of government. During Question Time, any Member of Parliament, or MP, can ask the current Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, a question, to which the Prime Minister replies. The 30 minute show is a jostling affair, with the members of the three main political parties hollering and cheering as their respective leaders get in various jabs and jarbs with questions and responses. The Speaker of the House tries to referee it all.

This Sunday the Question Time did not air. Instead, C-SPAN aired delayed footage of the ceremonial opening of the parliamentary session. This opening involves the monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, and the upper house of the Parliament, the House of Lords.

The House of Lords was once the domain of the titled nobility. Nobles were given membership based upon their birth into a titled house. Over time, the power of the House of Lords, like that of the monarch, declined and became rather ceremonial in nature, with most power resting in the hands of the House of Commons. Her Majesty's Government is controlled by the party that wins the most seats in the Commons, although there are members of the Government's cabinet who come from the House of Lords.

Today the Lords serves as a bit of a reviewing body on laws passed by Her Majesty's Government. Interestingly, the Lords is also the highest judiciary body in Great Britain, with a small group of 12 members of the House of Lords fulfilling this duty.

Members of the House of Lords are called 'peers.' As mentioned above, membership was once dominated by 'hereditary peers,' those peers who inherited title by birth from their families. A dark time for the House of Lords was the Commonwealth period following the English Civil War. During this time both the monarchy and the Lords were abolished, and England was ruled by general and Parliamentarian Oliver Cromwell. The Lords was restored after Cromwell's death, when the monarchy was restored.

During the mid-twentieth century, legislation was passsed which enabled the creation of Life Peerages. Life Peers are those who are given title for service to Britain. These titles are not passed down to their children but expire when they die. Many former Prime Ministers and other notable members of the House of Commons, such as former PM Margaret Thatcher, have been made life peers. (Interestingly, the last Hereditary Peerage, which can be passed on to children, given to a non-member of the royal family, went to Thatcher's husband Dennis.)

Some peers are referred to as the Lords Spiritual. These members sit because of their office within the Church of England, which is the official state church. Unlike the other peers, Lords Spiritual may not show a preference for or identify with a particular political party. Other peers may choose to identify as Labour, Conservative, or Liberal Democrat. A few peers do not identify with any of the three major political parties.

The Labour Party has been more outspoken on the issue of reforming the nature of the House of Lords when compared to the Conservative Party. At one time, the Labour Party called for the abolition of the House of Lords. One of the platforms of Tony Blair's 'New Labour' election campaign in 1997 was reform of the House of Lords. This succeed in limiting the number of hereditary peers to 92 members, a minority of the members in the House of Lords. Votes on further reform showed support for making the House either 80% elected or 100% elected. However, these votes were not binding. The current government position is to move the House into a body of which 1/3 is up for election every general election, with an elected composition of either 80% or 100%.

Regardless, of future reforms, the House of Lords is a fascinating example of an upper house of government as compared to our own US Senate here in the United States.

BBC Guide to the House of Lords

JWF

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Planning ahead

It's quite chilly outside. Several staff saw snow flurries yesterday. When I went to GALILEO to look for a database, I noticed In the Spotlight (on the right hand side of the home page) the All About Birds web site (yes, Virginia, there are web sites in GALILEO).
All About Birds is a website from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology that includes information about watching birds, learning their nesting behaviors, attracting birds, indentifying them, recording observations, and getting involved in bird conservation. The site includes guides, images, maps, sounds, videos, and much more. There is also a link to the Macaulay Library, an archive of animal sounds and videos.


I thought- winter (see the first two sentences) would be a great time to prepare for Spring- study the birds, listen to their songs. Think warm thoughts!

kls

Who invented that?

Yesterday I talked about gathering stories about your family- what if you hear that Uncle Bill invented something? How do you find out if that's 'true'? Dear Myrtle (a genealogy blogger) shares the experience of one of her readers with Google Patent. Myrt notes how one can search by name or by invention.

Thinking of simple Christmas gifts from my youth, I searched for 'hula hoop'. Amazing how many patents there are for the wide variety of hoops.

Which lead me to GALILEO to search for 'hula hoop'. From the home page I selected the Company and Industry information link, then Company information, I left the 4 suggested databases and searched for 'hula hoop'. Interesting current articles about this long lived toy!

From stories about family to stories about companies - tie them together by using authoritative resources.

kls

Monday, December 01, 2008

And we talked

Thanksgiving is a delightfully American holiday when we celebrate our blessings which range from a variety of food stuffs to friends and family. Some travel to visit kin over the long weekend. A family reunion may take place - where cousins see each other for the first time in years. The conversations around the table vary from reminiscing about long gone relatives to catching up on life's current little details. If someone in your family has started collecting the stories about the extended family, where are they keeping those tales? My family has a wiki that is accessible by invitation and password. The stories collect, get edited and enjoyed. Here's another way to preserve those stories.

Story Corps is extending the National Day of Listening through the holiday season.
This holiday season, ask the people around you about their lives — it could be your grandmother, a teacher, or someone from the neighborhood. By listening to their stories, you will be telling them that they matter and they won’t ever be forgotten. It may be the most meaningful time you spend this year.


Go listen, record, and share the stories of our lives!

kls

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Greetings,

Ah, Thanksgiving . . . A time for turkey, family, fun, fall, and football. The National Football League is closely associated with the holiday, as for many years the Detroit Lions and the Dallas Cowboys have played respective games against rotating opponents on America's turkey day. Given the dismal state of the Lions over the last decade, there has been talk of taking the games away from Detroit and Dallas and rotating all four spots among the 32 teams. However, much of this talk has died down now that the NFL Network has started to air a night/third Thanksgiving game that features two rotating teams each year.

Today, Thanksgiving Eve, the Pro Football Hall of Fame announced its twenty five seminfinalists for induction to its hallowed halls. This number will soon be paired down to fifteen and also includes two senior nominees (guys who played a long time ago). Among the semifinalists are some perpetual semifinalists, including Ray Guy, Lester Hayes (Go Raiders!), and those eligible for the first time, including Shannon Sharpe. A player must have been retired for five years to be eligible, and a coach must have been retired for one year to eligible.

Despite its name, the Pro Football Hall of Fame focuses on the NFL/National Football League. However, some of the enshrinees spent portions of their career in other leagues, such as Minnesota Coach Bud Grant in the Canadian Football League and 49ers quarterback Steve Young in the 1980's United States Football League.

The Hall is a museum that is shaped like a vertical football. Some have compared the shape to an old orange juice squeezer. The Hall is located in Canton, Ohio. Why Canton? Canton was home to the Canton Bulldogs, one of the original professional teams in the sport, and is also home to some of the most competitive high school games you will find. The area around Canton is also considered one of the birthplaces of football.

The inductees will be voted on and announced the day before the 2009 Super Bowl. Some get in their first year of eligibility, such as Steelers quarterback Terry Bradshaw, while others wait for many years to be inducted, such as Steelers wideouts Lynn Swann and John Stallworth. Other greats rise up out of the seniors pool to be inducted. Each inductee receives a distinctive yellow blazer, a ring, and has their bust cast in bronze for display in the museum.

The museum also houses famous memorabilia from past games. My personal favorites from my two visits are the white cleets Cowboys running back Tony Dorsett wore when he ran the 99 yard run from scrimmage against the Vikings and a pair of Rams running back Eric Dickerson's goggles. They also have Oilers coach Bum Phillip's belt buckle, which was the size of a small helicopter pad.

If you are ever in Canton/Stark County, give the Hall of Fame a visit.

JWF

Monday, November 24, 2008

Bidding for what

Over the weekend various channels were running stories about the assassination of JFK 45 years ago.

Mike Huckabee interviewed Dan Rather for Saturdays show on Fox. Mr. Rather shared the story about the bidding for the film taken by Abraham Zapruder.



Who would bid today - with the ubiquitous news crews and the everyday person with a camera phone who may post to their blog, YouTube, MySpace, Flickr - providing immediate, unfiltered access to the event.

-kls

The Power of Art at the Library

Greetings,

Need a bit of art in your life to spice up the drab days of late fall and early winter? Look no further than the North Metro Tech Library.

We have just acquired the DVD edition of the BBC/PBS series 'the Power of Art' by Simon Schama. The series focuses on eight great works of art. Each episode takes the viewer back in time to the creation of the piece and examines the cultural and social context in which it was created. The episodes also look at the life of the artist and how that shaped the creation and style of the work. The episodes span several different periods in time and art.

We also have the companion book to the series, for those of you seeking further information. Both the dvd and book are reserve materials, which means that they are available for use within the library.

Schama is a writer well known for his works on the French Revolution and slavery, among other topics. You may recognize him from his tv series 'A History of Britain,' which aired on the History Channel several years ago. Schama is known for his distinctive delivery and narrative prose.

JWF

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Get in Shape Georgia

The President's Challenge is a government program designed to get Americans into better physical shape. The website for the program is very interactive and has programs and activities geared toward children, teens, adults, and seniors.

You can create an account on the website and use your account to log your activity. At the adult age level, there are bronze, silver, and gold award levels. You achieve these awards by logging your activity in your account. The website tabulates up the amount of points you earn for each activity based upon time, distance, degree of intensity. The website keeps track of your points and will display the progress that you have made toward your goal. Once you have reached an award level, you are eligible for a certificate from the office of the President.

There are many great features on this website. It also saves you the time of having to keep track of your activity on paper. I am personally using the website. I have a goal of completing the bronze level before President Bush leaves office and getting a certificate from him, then getting a certificate from President Obama for the silver level. At present I am over 50% complete with the bronze level.

JWF

Monday, November 10, 2008

Cornhusks and the Electoral College

Greetings,

The eyes of the electoral world were upon the state of Nebraska for a brief moment on Friday. It was announced that Barack Obama had won one of the state's five electoral votes. This is due to a system of awarding some of the state's electoral votes based upon who wins in a particular Congressional district, not on who wins the popular vote statewide.

All fifty states have electoral votes. Each state has two for its US Senators, and at least one for the number of members it has in the House of Representatives. Example, California: 2+53=55, Wyoming: 2+1=3, Tennessee: 2+9=11. Remember, it is not the candidate who wins the national popular vote who becomes President, but rather the candidate who wins the most electoral votes. As a result, candidates fight to win individual 'swing' states to gain the most electors rather than run a campaing to pile up the biggest amount of votes nationwide. (Note: It is possible to come in 2nd in the popular vote but win the electoral vote and become President. Ex. Rutherford B. Hayes in 1876 and George W. Bush in 2000).

Forty-eight of the fifty states currently award all of their electoral votes to the candidate who wins the popular vote within the state. Some have argued the fairness of this system, as a candidate might win California by one vote (theoretically), but not pick up any of its 53 electoral votes. Colorado voters in 2004 defeated a statewide referendum that would have awarded their electoral votes on a proportional basis.

Nebraska and Maine are the two exceptions. These states award their electoral votes in a unique way. The two electoral votes for the two US Senators in each state are awarded to the winner of the statewide popular vote. As a result, McCain picked up two in Nebraska and Obama two in Maine.

Here's where it gets a bit trickier. The remaining votes are awarded based upon the candidate who wins the most votes in each of the Congressional districts in the state. Until 2008, there was nothing unusual about this as in both Maine and Nebraska the statewide winner also won in each state's Congressional districts. However, that changed in 2008. After the counting of mail-in ballots, it was determined that Barack Obama had won more votes than John McCain in the Nebraska 2nd Congressional district (the smallest district in the state, which includes the city of Omaha). As a result, one of the Nebraska electoral votes was awarded to Obama for a 4 to 1 McCain to Obama split in the state's electoral votes. (Maine awarded all votes to Obama). Also, the Republican candidate in the 2nd district won the Congressional election, which would seem to indicate that many voters in the Nebraska second congressional district voted a split ticket.

And in a further peace of trivia, Nebraska is the only state government to not have an upper and lower house in its legislature. It operates on a unicameral system, one where there is only one house in the legislature and one in which the members are officially non-partisan.

JWF

Thursday, November 06, 2008

A swift goodbye

The Official Michael Crichton site notes his passing. Blogs and news outlets have shared the information. Wiki Pedia has a complete list of his work with links.

At NMTC, we don't have many pleasure reading books - but in our netLibrary collection there is the 1996 edition of Michael Crichton : a critical companion by Elizabeth A. Trembley.

The summary notes: Until now, Michael Crichton's many readers have had nowhere to turn for more information on one of America's most popular novelists. This companion features clear analyses of Crichton's life and literary influences, as well as chapters on each of his 13 novels to date. It will help Crichton's readers to learn more about how significant events in his life affected the development of his fiction and literary style and how the heritage of popular fiction, including mystery, gothic, adventure, and science fiction, influenced his writing. This study provides close textual analysis of each of his novels in turn, focusing on plot, character development, theme, and critical interpretation.

You can check World Cat in GALILEO for the nearest library that owns a Michael Chrichton title. You may also do an Interlibrary Loan request through World Cat. We'll borrow the book for you from another library! Save on gas - let your computer do the searching.

-kls

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Through the air with the greatest of ease

Just reading the news - and this story grabbed me - Pilot completes jetpack challenge ....Known as "Fusionman," he was aiming to follow the route taken by French airman Louis Blériot 99 years ago when he became the first person to fly across the English Channel in a plane.

Which reminded me of the Caldecott winner in our collection, The Glorious Flight: Across the Channel with Louis Bleriot July 25, 1909 by Alice Provensen [TL 721.B5 P76 1987]

The pictures are gorgeous - which one would expect from a Caldecott winner. The story is inspiring as well. It wouldn't take long to read either.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

New Native American Related Resources at the Library




Excelsior!
Greetings. Here at the NMTC Library we would like to inform you of two books we have recently received, both of which relate to Native American studies.

The first is a 2008 biography of noted Lakota chief Sitting Bull. This book is by Bill Yenne. The cover is interesing because it features a very stoic portrait of the man himself. Also, at the bottom center of the cover, you can see the autograph of the English version of his name that Sitting Bull learned to write. Just beyond the title page, the book quotes the Dictionary of Canadian Biography as follows: "the greatest Indian engima of his time, perhaps of all time."


A review of this work is available in Galileo . Go to Databases A-Z, then go to 'B,' then go to Book Index with Reviews. Search by title and limit the publication dates to 2008. Then you will find a review of this work.

We also have the book 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus. The book deals with how the Native Americans lived prior to the arrival of the Europeans in 1492. (Although the Vikings got to North America before that and some say that English fisherman had contact with First Nations tribes off the coast of Newfoundland in the mid-1400's.) One area the book focuses on is the large cities that Native Americans constructed, such as Tenochtitlan in Mexico and Cahokia in Illinois.

A review is available of this work as well in Book Index with Reviews. Do a title search for 1491.

We are very pleased to have both of these resources available at the North Metro Technical College Library for your use. The 1491 book is considered one of the definitive popular books on Native American studies of the last few years.

JWF



To be or not to be


...that is the question posed in Hamlet. We're building our Shakespeare collection to support the growing number (and depth) of our English literature classes.

I'm fond of the No Fear Shakespeare series. It has 'regular' English on one side and 'Shakespearean' English on the other. The cover notes"the play plus a translation anyone can understand".

Quite handy. Check it out - you'll find our No Fear collection amidst the Shakespeare titles PR 2807 etc.

-kls

Monday, November 03, 2008

Election Day and the Fab Five

As Americans go to the polls tomorrow, our thoughts turn to New Wave.

Confused? You shouldn't be if you are a fan of New Wave/New Romance. New Wave was a genre that emerged as both a response to and an extension of punk rock in the early 1980's. Heavy on the synth, New Wave is remembered for its flashy fashions and its lyrics that contrasted from light to brooding and angst ridden.

One of the artists that defined the New Romance expression was a group from Birmingham, England not Alabama, called Duran Duran. (Named for a character in the Jane Fonda camp classic Barbarella.) Made up of singer Simon Le Bon, keyboardist Nick Rhodes, bass player John Taylor, drummer Roger Taylor, and guitarist Andy Taylor, Duran Duran approached a Beatlesque level of popularity for a few years, leading to their nickname of the 'Fab Five.' Girls swooned at the sight of the band, and fans bought up their record in drove. Note that none of the Taylors were related.

The look of Duran propelled the band to stardom as much as their music. Duran was able to form a synergy between the two elements using the newly popular genre of the music video. Duran seized on the young medium of MTV to display what were then some of the most creative and innovative music videos on the airwaves. Duran videos captured the look and feel of 1980's New Romance as much as any other entry into the field. The videos were especially known for their exotic third world shooting locales. The band even cut the title track for the last Roger Moore James Bond film 'A View to a Kill.'

All things must come to an end, and Duran Duran's last performance in their original incarnation was at the Live Aid superconcert until they reunited in 2001. Just prior to Andy Taylor and Roger Taylor leaving the band in the late 1980's, the band formed two side projects. John and Andy helped form the Power Station, a group that had some commerical success with Robert Palmer as the lead singer. Nick, Roger, and Simon formed a group called Arcadia, which cut a studio album but never toured.

Arcadia's one hit from their one album was entitled 'Election Day.' The song features a spoken word moment by Grace Jones, who played an evil Bond girl in the film 'A View to a Kill.' So for true believers in Duran, the term 'election day' conjures up thoughts of music as much as votes.

Duran has a special meaning for me as well. My best friend and his father share names with two of the Taylors in Duran, and yes the two Taylors that I know are related. My friend was married back in the spring, with yours truly as best man, near the city of Gainesville, Georgia. During the drive down and back, I listened to the music of Duran, forming an association of Duran with that wedding weekend.

Andy Taylor, who left the band in the 1980's for a solo career, has left the reunited Duran Duran. He has recently released a book on his experiences in rock and roll. You can read a review of it in Galileo. Go from the Galileo homepage to 'databases a-z' then select 'b.' Then go to Book Index with Reviews. Type 'Andy Taylor' in the search bar and the fourth result will be for his book 'Wild Boy: My Life in Duran Duran.' Click on the result link to read a review of the book (the book has received mixed reviews).

Now isn't all that just as interesting as ballot boxes, dimpled chads, swing states, and red to blue/blue to red?

JWF

Another chance to vote

The old saying about Chicago is the party bosses want you to vote early and vote often....

Now that you're in the mood to vote - try out the GALILEO survey:
When you open the GALILEO website today, you will see an invitation to participate in the annual user survey. Don't miss this chance to provide your feedback on your experience with GALILEO and to enter the drawing to win an iPod Nano. The annual surveys, conducted since 1997, have provided valuable firsthand feedback from users about what they think about the GALILEO web site, as well as experiential feedback from library staff on how their patrons are navigating the site and finding the content they need. Be sure to encourage your users to complete the survey to be entered into the drawing. The survey will be conducted November 3-9, 2008. Just click on the GALILEO User Survey link on the GALILEO home page to participate....info from Karen Minton


The staff at GALILEO take this survey as seriously as a Presidential election. They really do want to hear from their users! So go vote.

-kls

Friday, October 31, 2008

Ooooooooo

Gregory McNamee on the Britannica Blog offers a link to The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving. Very appropriate for today!

Thinking about Washington Irving led me to look in Credo Reference. When was he born, where did he live? Portraits, facts, information about Washington Irving are noted in reference works like the Cambridge Guide to Children's Books in English.

Which led me to wonder about the number of Washington Irving titles available for children. I went to GALILEO to look in NoveList.

NoveList noted 40 titles in an author search for Washington Irving. There are many variations of the Sleepy Hollow and Rip Van Winkle stories, plus collections of ghost stories. I learned Mr. Irving wrote Bracebridge Hall, tales of a traveller, the Alhambra. That didn't sound otherworldly.

Clicking on the WorldCat link showed libraries that owned the print title. NMTC didn't show up.

I wondered if NMTC had any Washington Irving titles that were not listed in WorldCat. Searching the NMTC catalog turned up Bracebridge Hall as well as A Tour on the Prairies , both in our netLibrary collection. I started reading A Tour on the Prairies and was drawn in to his description of the west in 1832.

All this wondering and wandering around started with a scary story. Where does a story lead you? Don't be afraid - wander down that crooked path to a new adventure.

Get the password to use GALILEO at home from your Georgia librarian. Pick up the password to use Credo from the NMTC librarian.

-kls

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Flying with the greatest of ease

Our Visual Communication department is hosting a Second Life presentation this afternoon. They want to show instructors, students and administrators what educational (and commercial) value might be found in Second Life.

I have created a newbie avatar. I'll be attending and learning. Flying is harder than it sounds. I keep bumping into the roof. I've got to learn to fly outside and not inside!

We've purchased several books to support the program. The first one that arrived, 'Second Life : A Guide to Your Visual World' by Brian White is chock full of interesting tips and hints for both the newbie and experienced SL resident. I have had the book at my side as I try to learn a bit about living in Second Life.

When the hard copies are checked out, we do have two titles in netLibrary on Second Life. I did a search in netLibrary itself limiting my search to the title and the phrase Second Life. 6 titles were retrieved. Two actually have to do with the virtual world. You'll notice they have current copyright dates.

- Second Life Herald: The Virtual Tabloid That Witnessed the Dawn of the Metaverse
by Ludlow, Peter.; Wallace, M. Publication: Cambridge, Mass MIT Press, 2007.

- How to Make Real Money in Second Life: Boost Your Business, Market Your Services, and Sell Your Products in the World's Hottest Virtual Community
McGraw Hill Professional by Freedman, Robert.Publication: New York McGraw-Hill Professional, 2008.

We have a good collection in netLibrary. You may access our electronic books three ways: from our catalog, from GALILEO, and from netLibrary itself! You do need to create your free account (Library Card) on campus to use netLibrary off campus. A hint- you may create your account off campus by going the GALILEO. netLibrary will recognize you as a NMTC patron when you go through GALILEO.

Your Geogria librarian can give you the current password to access GALILEO at home.


Read - and learn to fly without hitting the roof.

-kls

Monday, October 27, 2008

Boo!

Just in time The Haunted Library series is back on the Encyclopedia Britannica blog:
...Each entry has been completely updated and about a dozen new libraries added. George has also included links to the websites of most of the libraries mentioned (as requested by a reader last year), as well as references to relevant entries in Britannica and other sources that have extra information.

I went to GALILEO and looked in NoveList for haunted library. Over 100 titles were found with haunted but the library part wasn't as clear. When I did a search with "haunted library" linked by the quotes only two titles were retrieved. Yet, these two titles seemed quite appropriate. The quotes made all the difference in narrowing my search.

You may get the password to use GALILEO at home from your Georgia librarian!


-kls

If it weren't for blogs

The blogs I subscribe to keep me up to date - Give 'em what they want : News for Collection Development and Readers Advisory Librarians noted today that Tony Hillerman has died. Nora Rawlinson offers links to USA Today and the NY Times for the obituaries.

I checked our catalog, being a tech school we don't have much fiction for fun. However in our e-book collection we have Tony Hillerman : a critical companion by John M. Reilly. The summary notes:
Edgar Award-winning writer Tony Hillerman has earned a reputation as a Grand Master of the popular mystery. This is the first full-length examination of his work. One of the most successful contemporary American writers, Hillerman has made his stories of Native American detectives instrumental in understanding modern American life. Through the creation of his Navajo detective characters, Hillerman has given new vigor to the popular genre of mystery with his treatment of the problems of order and identity in modern society. This study examines each of his 13 novels in turn and includes a biographical chapter and a chapter on his innovations in the genre of detective fiction.


The fun thing about the netLibrary books - one can read them from your desk, a few pages at a time. Create your free account (get your netLibrary card) on campus. Explore the wide variety of titles available through our catalog.

-kls

Friday, October 24, 2008

"Our subject is not death or evil .....

our Subject is the law. "

And that is how “Bound by Law? Tales from the Public Domain” begins. The print version has arrived and is on the shelf- maybe not for long since Jeff told the faculty about its existence.

The Afterword, which is subtitled "Why Three Stodgy Academics Wrote a Comic Book", has a sentence that made me smile broadly:
"For some strange reason, none of our intended audiences seem eager to read scholarly law review articles."
In fact, I laughed as I finished reading the afterword - the law is serious but this book makes copyright understandable and even enjoyable. I might even enjoy these academics law classes if they teach the way they share copyright information.


-kls

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Boy and dogs = great story

The latest Oprah's Book Club book arrived this week- The Story of Edgar Sawtelle by David Wroblewski.

The summary from our catalog : “A tale reminiscent of "Hamlet" that also celebrates the alliance between humans and dogs follows speech-disabled Wisconsin youth Edgar, who bonds with three yearling canines and struggles to prove that his sinister uncle is responsible for his father's death.”

I will confess – I borrowed this book the day it was processed and read very late- the tale does catch you and grab you….

We have 25 titles from Oprah’s list-
Look in our catalog
On the left side (blue column)
Look for Browse
Select Recommendations
You’ll see lists we’ve compiled for Award winners, the Doran Fuller Horticulture Collection, and Oprah!

-kls

What is the answer?

Libraries are using Instant Messaging, e-mail, Ask A Librarian links, phone reference, MySpace, Facebook, blogs, wikis and text messaging as life lines for the sinking researcher- the person who is overwhelmed by resources and just wants an answer.

netconnect, the supplement to Library Journal, has an interesting article titled "Mobile Delivery :Information Anywhere". (neither Ebsco nor Proquest have posted the Fall 2008 Net Connect issue - but they will - so you will be able to read this article in GALILEO - you can set up an RSS feed in both databases that will alert you when the new issue is posted).

Back to my point - throwing out the lifeline, getting the answers - the other librarian shared this with our faculty:
Kate and I came across an article pointing out that reference information services are now often available for cell phones. Cell users can text a question to one of several services and have the question answered within a few minutes.

The two services I used in a test run were Google and ChaCha (google.com/sms) and (chacha.com). I asked both services ‘what is the capital of Canada?’ The google service responded very quickly with the correct answer, as did the chacha service. Chacha uses live humans to answer their questions while google’s service is automated to some degree.

Google-466453 and ChaCha-242242. Please note that if you have to pay for texts or other cell fees then the cost of that will show up on your cell bill. Otherwise the services are free.

This should come in handy for when you are broken down on the side of the road and need to know the name of the British Prime Minister (Gordon Brown).


Now there's another way to get the answers.....

-kls/JWF

to get the password to use GALILEO at home, ask your Georgia librarian

Monday, October 20, 2008

Using Galileo for Book Reviews

One useful feature of Galileo that you might not be aware of is finding book reviews. You can find reviews of fiction books through a database entitled NoveList. If there is a particular title that you are interested in, you can look up the book in NoveList. The listing for the book in this database will give you publication information, as well as a few books reviews from various sources. This will help you in making selections when reading for pleasure.

What to do if North Metro Tech does not have the book you are interested in? Simply use another Galileo database, entitled WorldCat, to find libraries worldwide that own the book. If you are interested, contact the library and we will request the book for you from a library that owns it through a process called interlibrary loan.

I used NoveList to find a review on a book I just read entitled Three Day Road. The listing in NoveList contained several reviews on the book. The novel tells the story of two Cree/First Nation Canadian snipers during World War II as well as the experience of their aunt, one of the last Cree to live according to very traditional values. A good story if you are into Canada, First Nations, World War I, and/or snipers.

JWF

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Canadian Election Update

Greetings friends.

The 2008 Canadian federal election was last night. If you read my posting from a few days back, you got a bit of a preview of Tuesday night's action. Some of you may have even watched the election feed from the CBC, via CSPAN, last night in prime time. (You actually might have seen more than some Canadians did as the USA received the feed when it kicked on in Atlantic Canada. The rest of Canada did not get the feed as early.)

Check out this map of the results that has been released into the public domain. Note that the darker the shade of one color a province is, the stronger the share of the vote for the party that received the most votes was in that province.

The results were not much of a surprise in some respects. Canada will have its third straight (one Liberal, two Conservative) minority government as the ruling Conservative party failed to gain over 50 percent of the seats in the House of Commons. The reason the Conservatives had called for an election was because polls in the late summer showed that they could very well gain enough seats to get a majority, which would have been their first since 1988 when they were known as the Progressive Conservatives. Analysts are saying that their failure to do so can be blamed on two things. First, they ran a poor campaign in Quebec, managing to hold their seats in that province, failing to make any real headway against the Bloc Quebecois. Second, the provincial Progressive Conservative party in Newfoundland and Labrador ran an 'ABC' (Anybody But Conservative) campaign against the federal Conservatives. The ABC campaign was a result of the provincials feeling that the federal party was too conservative in the American mold and was too far adrift from the 'Red Tory' philosophy of the Atlantic provincial conservatives. As a result, the Conservatives lost all three of their seats in Newfoundland and Labrador. Still, three more seats would not have given them a majority.

However, while Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservatives failed to gain a majority, they did pick up a net of 17 seats, giving them a total of 143 in the new house. Despite the results of ABC in Newfoundland, the Conservatives/Tories picked up seats in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. They even picked up a seat in Prince Edward Island, their first in the province since 1988, when they held three of the current four PEI seats (the one they picked up being the one of the four they didn't have in 1988 naturally). All in all, Atlantic Canada was a win for the Tories and saw Liberal losses, which was unexpected.

Quebec saw the Bloc Quebecois stiffle any dreams of Conservative majority. They lost one seat to the Liberals, to the son of former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, and they gained one seat from the Tories. This demonstrates a problem the Conservatives seem to have. When the Tories make gains in Quebec, as in 2006, they don't seem to make headway in Ontario. Gains in Ontario, as in 2008, are not accompanied by gains in Quebec.

Ontario was a score for both the Conservatives and the New Democratic Party. Both parties took seats from the Liberal party. The Liberals lost 16 seats in the province. The Liberals poor performance has many questioning if Liberal leader Stephane Dion will make it through an upcoming leadership review. He may find himself replaced by a fellow Liberal MP as Opposition Leader. The New Democrats as a whole made gains in most of Canada, not quite approaching their best ever performance in 1984 under Ed Broadbent.

The Prairies and Alberta saw little change. Conservative strength was solid here, as expected. One surprise was the Conservatives losing their complete hold on Alberta when the NDP candidate won by less than 500 votes in the riding of Edmonton-Strathcona. Still, it is difficult for any one party to hold all the ridings in any province and the Tories typically do not hold one of the Edmonton ridings. The Tories now control all but two of the ridings in Alberta and Saskatchewan combined.

British Columbia saw the Tories make headway against the Liberals. They performed better than they did in 2006. The three northern/arctic ridings are now split among each of the three main parties. The Conservatives won the seat in Nunavut from the Liberals. Commentators have suggested that this may be due to the increased focus on Arctic Canada by the Conservatives.

One election down, one to go with the US election coming up in early November. Political pundits are in a bit of heaven right now.

JWF

Monday, October 13, 2008

Paddington Bear is 50

Check out the Google logo for Monday October 13.

I went to GALILEO and selected from the Subject list Literature, Language and Literary Criticism, then I selected Literature and Literary Criticism.

There are 5 databases offered for searching:
  • Academic Search Complete
  • LION (Literature Online)
  • Literary Reference Center
  • Literature Online Reference Edition
  • Research Library (at ProQuest)

I was able to add NoveList and Book Index with Reviews to the list

I searched for Paddington bear. Delightful articles came up.

Remember that NoveList has curriculum guides that help extend a story!

You may get the current password to use GALILEO at home from your Georgia librarian.

-kls

Sailing, sailing

over the Ocean Blue...today we remember Christopher Columbus and his adventures that began in 1492.

There are several books available on-line that might open your eyes to the man, the myth, and the perception. Columbus Then and Now: A Life Reexamined by Miles H. Davidson takes primary and secondary sources to pull together the facts. Mr. Davidson in the epilogue notes he is neither a historian nor a biographer but an accumulator of facts. He has placed the sources he used and why at the beginning of the book. It's not a traditional bibliography but a telling of what, where and why the information came to be used in this history.

Amazon shares the review by Margaret Flanagan from Booklist:
Davidson offers a comprehensive overview of the life of Christopher Columbus while analyzing a host of modern versions of the Columbus myth. Rather than relying on secondary sources, the author utilizes fifteenth-and sixteenth-century manuscripts, diaries, letters, naval records, and shipping logs to compile a detailed chronology of the facts and events that shaped the life of the much lauded and much reviled navigator....

The facts add up to more than the myths. Read about the man - online through netLibrary!

-kls

Friday, October 10, 2008

Canadian Federal Election 2008

You Yanks aren't the only ones with a market on elections this season, eh?

That line, uttered by an imaginary Canadian who lives in my own mind, refers to the fact that there are two major elections in North America this fall. The first, long planned on a regular schedule that dates back to the late 1700's, is the US Presidential and Congressional election. The second, which will occur first, has only been in the works since September.

Canada will be having a general election on October 14, 2008. This will be the 40th Canadian federal election. The election was called when Prime Minister Stephen Harper asked the Governor General to dissolve Parliament and call elections. The Prime Minister and Governor General split the roles of the US President. The Governor General is a ceremonial position, while the Prime Minister is acknowledged as the leader of the country, fulfilling the decision making roles that our President does.

The Prime Minister is also similar to our Speaker of the House of Representatives. Like the Speaker of the House, the Prime Minister is elected to the Canadian House of Commons as a representative of an election district and is not elected directly to the office by a vote of the whole country. The members of the House of Commons, including the Prime Minister, are called 'MPs' for Members of Parliament. The district they represent is called a 'riding.' The Prime Minister's riding is called Calgary Southwest. Most of the ridings have geographic names rather than the generic state and number labels given to US Congressional Districts, ex. the Georgia First Congressional District. Some of the ridings in Canada are named for people in the province of Quebec, and some riding names are quite creative, such as Wild Rose in Alberta.

Canada operates under a Westminster system of government similar to the United Kingdom/Great Britain. As in our American system, there is both an upper house and a lower house in the legislative branch. The main difference is that in Canada and Britian, most of the executive power rests in the lower house of the legislative branch. Both nations call the lower house the House of Commons. The Canadian upper house, the Senate, is made up of appointed members whose function is ceremonial to a great degree.

Power in the Canadian House of Commons rests with the political party that gets the greatest number of its members elected to the House. The last election in 2006 saw the Conservatives come out with the greatest number of MPs. Their win ended a thirteen year run in power for their main competitors, the rival Liberal party. However, the Conservatives did not get over half the seats in the House, meaning that they are called a minority government. The Conservatives elect one of their own as Prime Minister, they appoint member to the cabinet, they are the governing party, but the other parties have more total members.

Which brings us back to the upcoming election. Prime Minister Harper decided to call for elections to try and increase his party's numbers in the House of Commons. Elections have to be called no later than five years from the last election, but can be called at anytime in between. This often occurs when the governing party thinks its popularity is at a peak, allowing them to maintain or increase the number of MPs they have in Parliament. Sometimes the governing party will wait until the last minute to hold an election if they are unpopular, hoping that their polling will improve before time. The old Progressive Conservative party tried this in 1993 to no avail. All of their members but two were defeated.

When elections were called, things looked good for Harper and the Conservatives. However, polls have tightened due in large part to a decline in the Canadian economy as a result of the financial office here in the US. It now looks as though the Conservatives will maintain their current amount of representation, with perhaps a slight increase. Still, anything could happen. Liberal leader Stephane Dion, referred to as the Leader of the Opposition in the House, is not viewed as the Liberal's greatest leader ever. Jack Layton leads the New Democratic Party, the third largest party in Canada, which is strong in Ontario and British Columbia. The fourth party, the Bloc Quebecois, is lead by Gilles Duceppe and is a regional party concerned with independence for the provence of Quebec. The Bloc does not field candidates outside Quebec. The Green Party has seen a slight rise in its modest support. The Conservatives, also called the Tories, are seeing a dip in their popularity as the election approaches.

It may all come down to Ontario. If the Conservatives take away seats in Ontario from the Liberals, it will probably be viewed as a successful election for them, especially if they come to hold the majority of the Ontario seats. The Conservatives will also be looking to take away seats from the Bloc in Quebec. Atlantic Canada is a strong area for the Liberals, while the Prarie Provinces, especially Alberta, are strong for the Conservatives.

Here are some links related to the Canadian election:

Election Prediction Project
A Blog on the election
Hill and Knowlton Election Prediction Project

The election should be covered by C-SPAN or C-SPAN2 here in the USA. They usually show the feed from the CBC for a few hours. Will the Conservatives Party continue to drop? Will the New Democrats close in on the Liberals as the second biggest party? Will the Edmonton Oilers win the Stanley Cup this year? Tune in and find out.

JWF

Who do they look like?

Have you played the 'who do they look like' game with babies? You gather family photos and look at the photo and look at the baby and everyone says 'oh, he has their nose' or 'oh she has their eyes'....it's a fun game. I love to play. But what if you don't have any pictures of ancestors? Folks who've lived through floods may no longer have their collection of family memorabilia.

I attended a webinar for Ancestry.com Library Edition yesterday. I learned about the photos section.

I have used the census section a lot. I had not checked out the photos though. Ancestry Library Edition has US Yearbooks!

About U.S. School Yearbooks
This database is a collection of middle school, junior high, and high school yearbooks from across the United States.While yearbooks may not provide information about the vital events that are usually associated with genealogical research, they do provide other information about individuals' lives. This information helps place people in historical context as well as provides detail that helps turn individuals, sometimes only known by names and dates, into actual people.

They provide the approximate birth year, the school name, the school location, and the year the yearbook was published. School pictures are school pictures - even those from 1915. They do capture the era. These pictures can provide a link with your family!

Ancestry.com Library Edition is only available at the library.

-kls

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Saving arm muscles

You're looking for snippets of information. The Reference section has book after book with brief explanations arranged in dictionary style. Grab the book and flip to the page and voila- just the correct amount of information. Sometimes you need to pull one reference book after another to find the right fact but the facts are there. It's good for triceps and biceps- reach, pull, lift...

What if you're not in the physical library? A quick search in Google or even Wiki-pedia might turn up that elusive smidgen of information. Can you rely on those sources?

Credo Reference offers 354 reference books online. To test the search results in Credo, I tried to think of something I would need just facts about. A person's biography seemed the way to go. (Yes, I like genealogy so looking for folks birth dates and death dates was a natural choice.) I searched for Edison.

1706 results came up. Sources like The Columbia Encyclopedia from Columbia University Press, Britannica Concise Encyclopedia, The Cambridge Dictionary of Scientists, The Crystal Reference Encyclopedia and more....

Nice. I didn't have to stand in the library pulling volume after volume off the shelf.

NMTC has purchased access to all of Credo Reference. A search box for Credo is on the NMTC Library page and the Blog and the MySpace. Students can pick up the login password from the library or they can access it through GALILEO.

Save those arm muscles - use the online reference works!

Monday, October 06, 2008

A little color showing

Fall is in the air and the trees are beginning to turn just a bit. The color in autumn is so cheerful. It gives me a psychic lift just as we enter the cold and dark season. The "American household botany : a history of useful plants 1620-1900" [SB 108 .U5 585 2004] by Judith Sumner notes practical uses for plants.

The review from Booklist posted on Amazon
Sumner examines nearly two hundred years of American know-how, offering a captivating perspective on how plants have been used in the home. The foodstuffs of Native American agriculture and the gardens of European settlers are first studied, from the preparation of many kinds of grains to arrays of fruits, berries, and vegetables found in the kitchen gardens at Monticello. Early "herbals" and cookbooks provide background, which is supplemented by descriptions of botanical aspects such as toxic compounds or helpful medicinal properties..."


Ms. Sumner doesn't mention color as a useful feature of plants but I know the change of seasons helps this city person get through life!

Thursday, October 02, 2008

The view changes a bit

North Metro will be joined by Chattahoochee Tech in Marietta to form the largest technical college in Georgia. Today the President of the new school was announced.

We'll have different resources to talk about!

Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Now this is a library!

Thanks to The Distant Librarian who thanked Darlene for this portrait of a spectacular personal library noted in Wired.com.

What an amazing space!

-kls

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Pretty is, as pretty does

Shelving horticulture books is such a pleasure. The pictures are magnificent. I stand and flip through the pages all for the purpose of being able to tell students where the best books on horticulture may be found. At least that's what I tell myself.

Yet, sometimes one can't get to the shelves to peruse the pictures. Our netLibrary collection has 37 titles published by Timber Press. I found them by using the advanced search link in netLibrary and typing in Timber Press for the publisher. There are more books for gardeners in netLibrary just search by your favorite plant!

Hort folks know that Timber Press publishes some 'fine' books for gardeners!

You do need to create your 'free account' (your library card) in netLibrary either on campus or through GALILEO.

And where do you get the current password to use GALILEO? Yes, your Georgia librarian.


-kls

Monday, September 29, 2008

Online resources

There is a gas crunch in the Atlanta area. The lack of gas makes our online resources very attractive!

You may use the over 45,000 e-books in netLibrary (register for a netLibrary account at your Georgia library)) and the over 300 Reference books in Credo Reference, not to mention the over 2000 periodicals available through GALILEO(password from your Georgia librarian)!

We do offer a full service library online.

-kls

Registration

Four orientations today.
A full house at the first session.
Students coming to the library to register.
The Fall Quarter begins on Wednesday.

-kls

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Calling all cars

In honor of Constitution Day- read the Preamble. This art piece was created by Mike Wilkins.

Please note the states are in alphabetical order! Mr. Wilkins must be a librarian at heart.


-kls

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Shh, We're writing....

They wrote and wrote and wrote...fortunately the Library of Congress has collected and digitized some of the writings at the Documents from the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention.
The Continental Congress Broadside Collection (256 titles) and the Constitutional Convention Broadside Collection (21 titles) contain 277 documents relating to the work of Congress and the drafting and ratification of the Constitution. Items include extracts of the journals of Congress, resolutions, proclamations, committee reports, treaties, and early printed versions of the United States Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. Most broadsides are one page in length; others range from 1 to 28 pages. A number of these items contain manuscript annotations not recorded elsewhere that offer insight into the delicate process of creating consensus. In many cases, multiple copies bearing manuscript annotations are available to compare and contrast.


My title came from the book by Jean Fritz, "Shh! We're writing the Constitution".

Using GALILEO I found the title in Book Index with Reviews. The first time I searched in BIR, I had too many h's in the Shhhh. When I tried by author, the title came right up. Spelling does count.

I looked for the title in NoveList and couldn't find it by author or by title.I was surprised it's not listed in NoveList. I really was looking for extenders for the classroom. I noticed the NoveList K-8 as I was scrolling through the GALILEO list - so I thought- well, maybe it's in that database - nope - not there either.

All three databases are published by EBSCO. Interesting. You get the password to use GALILEO at home from your Georgia librarian.


-kls

Monday, September 15, 2008

Reference Wiki

Greetings.

One resource that we would like to make you aware of is our reference wiki North Metro Tech Reference Wiki.

First, what is a reference wiki? A reference wiki is a tool that is being increasingly used by libraries and librarians. The purpose of a reference wiki is to allow library staff, and in some cases library users, to create editable information about the library and its resources.

There are several reasons for creating this wiki:

The wiki provides alternate routes to valuable library resources in case that the other routes are disabled.

The wiki provides basic information about the library and its resources.

Librarians post received or asked questions to the wiki. This allows librarians to share with other librarians their past experiences in helping a patron. It also allows a librarian to remember how they did something in the past.

The wiki is easily editable in case resources become out of date or there is a better way of helping a patron with a particular issue.

The format we chose to use for the reference wiki is Wetpaint. We felt that this was the format that was capable of being edited the easiest. There have been some complaints about Wetpaint being too commercial. However, you can request Wetpain remove any ads from your wiki if you declare yourself to be an educational wiki.

JWF

violating copyright

I went looking for YouTube videos about the Preamble of the US Constitution. Someone has uploaded the School House Rocks version- which is very clever, easy to sing and probably violates copyright- but it is Constitution week- you may be tested on your knowledge of the Preamble and this is an easy way to learn it!

We the People

We the People of the United States,
.....(that’s all of us- you and me)

in Order to form a more perfect Union,
.....(better than the old country)

establish Justice,
.....(everyone is equal under the law)

insure domestic Tranquility,
.....(my neighborhood should be safe and so should your neighborhood)

provide for the common defense,
.....(we’ll fight together against attackers)


promote the general Welfare,
.....(we’ll look out for each other)

and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity,
.....(we’ll be free people and so will our children and grandchildren)

do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

Monday, September 08, 2008

Read All About it

Just in from Karen Minton at GALILEO:
The Digital Library of Georgia is pleased to announce the availability of a new online resource:

The Macon Telegraph Archive (1826-1908).

The Macon Telegraph Archive provides online access to early issues of the Macon Telegraph ranging from its inception as a weekly newspaper in 1826, through the daily issues of the early twentieth century. Consisting of over 50,000 newspaper pages, the archive provides historical images that are both full-text searchable and can be browsed by date.

Launched just three years after the city of Macon was incorporated, the Macon Telegraph provides an inside view into the initial years of the city’s growth. Macon’s central location within the state provided the paper with a unique perspective of the news through a period when middle Georgia was both geographically and politically a focal point of the state. During the early publication of the newspaper, Macon and its surrounding areas were guided politically, economically, and racially by the growth of cotton. Through that lens the paper provides historical insight into the development of the state during the sectionalism of the antebellum period, the devastation of the Civil War, and the rise of the “New South” in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

The Macon Telegraph Archive is a project of the Digital Library of Georgia as part of the Georgia HomePLACE initiative. The project is supported with federal LSTA funds administered by the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Georgia Public Library Service, a unit of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia.



-kls

Thursday, September 04, 2008

The sky turned green

News from the Digital Library of Georgia:
Explore the dramatic story of “The 1936 Gainesville Tornado: Disaster and Recovery” at the Digital Library of Georgia (DLG) – now substantially expanded and enhanced through completion of the second phase of a collaborative digitization project with the Hall County Library System and the Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection, as part of Georgia HomePLACE.

The initial phase, completed last year, provided online access to a digitized version of original historical film depicting extensive storm damage in Gainesville from the severe 1936 multi-funnel tornado strike, generally regarded as the fifth deadliest in U.S. history. An interactive map provided geographically-based access to selected film clips for which shooting locations have been identified.

The recently completed second phase adds a multi-media online exhibit to tell a more complete story covering both the tornado strike as well as the extensive recovery effort afterwards (including the important role of President Franklin D. Roosevelt). Website visitors can follow the exhibit narrative sequentially through chronological stages (tornado outbreak, damage and destruction, relief and rescue, rebuilding) or alternatively drill down to specific information about any particular aspect of the disaster or recovery. The exhibit integrates selected clips from the film footage, related still images (photographs and
postcards) from the Hall County Library Historic Photograph Collection and the Vanishing Georgia collection, and dramatic quotes from eye witnesses.

To accommodate the more complex selection and presentation of digitized historical materials, DLG also redesigned and enlarged the project website, which now includes separate tabbed sections for the exhibit, primary sources, the interactive map, and additional resources (archival, reading, related links). The project is supported with federal LSTA funds administered by the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Georgia Public Library Service, a unit of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia.



-kls

Career Advice for Those Who Don't Like to Read Books

Okay, let's admit it, not everyone likes to read books. There are a lot of reasons for this, which we shall not digress into at this juncture.

The growth of graphic novels, books that present their content in a format similar to comic books, is in part due to the preferences of some to not read traditional books. Even so, those who choose not to read or are uncomfortable doing so may find that they still need the advice and help that is available through books. This may be especially true of many of our students, who often seek guidance as to their future and their future career.

A solution has presented itself. The library has a copy of the book 'the Adventures of Johnny Bunko: the Last Career Guide You'll Ever Need.' This book is a career/work/life guide, but one that is presented in the format of a graphic novel. The book may be a career guide solution for those of you who don't want to read through a 'normal' book about careers or work choices. The book's website claims that you should be able to read the book within an hour. The graphic style of the book is manga, a Japanese format that is quite popular with younger readers in the United States. The website has other information about the book, including a brief trailer for the book, done in the anime style (which is animated manga). The book may offer some brief tips about career paths and choices while holding your attention with its unusual style.

JWF

Ping, whoosh, shush, ping, whoosh

What is that sound?
Did it come from the left front, the right front, the back left, the back right, under the hood.....
Is it rhythmic or sporadic?
Can the car make that sound for anyone but me?

When the automobile works, it works very well.
When it doesn't - oh my!

Fortunately most automobiles work very well with just the minimum of maintenance. What do you need to do to keep your vehicle running well? If you purchased a new car, the owners manual gives hints and tips. If you purchased from a large dealer they may send letters or e-mails reminding you when routine service needs to be done. What if you didn't buy a new car? How do you keep up with those oil changes, etc?

We purchased Auto Upkeep : Basic Car Care, Maintenance, and Repair 2nd edition [TL 152 .G6387 2007]by Michael E. Gray and Linda E. Gray. The Preface notes:
Auto Upkeep : Basic Car Care, Maintenance, and Repair is an introductory book that is intended to provide individuals with the knowledge to make economical decisions and take preventative measures to enhance the overall satisfaction of being an automotive consumer

Auto Upkeep is used by some as a textbook. The Gray's provide links both in the text and online to resources pertaining to each chapter (manufacturers, oil companies, etc).

Don't forget that Auto Repair Reference Center in GALILEO has the Chilton manuals for most vehicles. You remember how to get the password to use GALILEO at home?

Prevent odd and unusual noises from emanating from your vehicle by keeping up with the routine maintenance and care! We have print and online resources to keep you moving.

-kls

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

And their job was?

Labor Day always reminds me of the hymn "Come Labor On". I think about all the people who've worked to make our lives better. I started wondering how I could find statistics about how many people did a certain job at a certain time.

I played with Ancestry.com (Library edition) in GALILEO. It's not able to sort by job but then I got distracted. You know how it is to get distracted while online.

I typed in Scott Joplin as a person to search for- I'm not sure why I thought of Scott Joplin but there you go. He shows up in the 1880 Texas census as Going to School, in the 1900 Missouri census as Musician, and then in the 1910 NY census as a Musician Composer! This little be of searching helped flesh out what I "know" about Scott Joplin.

You may only access Ancestry.com through GALILEO on campus but it is a very intriguing primary source for any content area not just for your own personal genealogy.

-kls

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Another Neat Election Resource

One interesting resource related to the Presidential election is 270toWin.com. This website has a wide variety of maps, polls, and historical data that allows you to look at past elections. The website does a good job of explaining the complicated electoral college system and what it takes to become the President. One of the neatest features offered by the website is a simulation of the upcoming election, which is generated by polling data collected by the website. If you don't like the way the simulation turned out, then you can run it again and get a different result.

You may examine an individual state's page on the site. This will give you a current graphic barometer of polling data in the state. It will also show you how the state has voted in recent Presidential elections, as well as the number of electoral votes the state has had historically.

The site is very current with RSS feeds available, and there is a blog maintained by the website. There is a small section on the 2008 Senate races, and there is an interactive Senate map that allows you to pick the winners of these races. You can tell that the website has done their homework because they are aware that both Wyoming and Mississippi have two Senate seats up for grabs this year. You have the ability to pick one of each party as the winner in each of these states or each for the same party.

Perhaps the most interesting feature of the website, to me at least, is the answers section. You can find this under the 'more' tab. This section allows you, among other things, to find out when the last time the Democrats/Republicans won the election while losing both 'state x' and 'state y.' Doing this, you learn that no Republican has ever won the White House while losing Maryland and Massachusetts and Kansas. You can also learn that Minnesota has not voted Republican since 1972 (making it the only state Ronald Reagan never won an election in.)

This section is also a good tool for teaching Boolean Logic. Connecting two or three states using an 'and' or 'or' is a simple way to demonstrate to students just what Boolean logic is. The fact that the Boolean is represented graphically may also help visual learners.

Highest possible personal recommendation on this website.

JWF

Interesting Election Resource

This resource may be of interest if you are a political junkie. The American Past allows you to look back upon past Presidential elections and related data. You can use the maps on the site to examine previous margins of victory, among other data, on a county by county level.

The neatest feature of this site is the interactive movies section. One interactive movie will take you through every Presidential election since 1840 and show you the results on a county by county basis. It takes about three to four minutes to watch the film. It is interesting to note how the north and south have flip-flopped over the last 150 years on supporting the Democrats and Republicans.

The website has been created by the Digital Scholarship Lab at the University of Richmond.

JWF

Monday, August 25, 2008

Bidenmania

Unless you've been living under a media and/or digital rock, you should know that Senator Joe Biden, Democrat from Delaware, has been tapped to be the Vice-Presidential nominee of Barack Obama. Some of you may have even received a text message at 3:30 am Saturday morning informing you of Biden's nod.

Who is Biden? The USA Today for today described him as Pennsylvania's Third Senator (perhaps due to the proximity of Delaware to Pennsylvania and the fact he was born in the Keystone State). Many talking heads on the television have noted Biden's tendency to talk and talk and talk and talk . . . Well, you get the idea.

One place to find information about Biden is his official US Senate website, which you can access here. Understand that is this is an official Senate website maintained by Biden and his staff, it is not the best place to look for hard-hitting, critical analysis of Biden or his record. You can learn that by looking in the biography section that he won election to the US Senate at the age of 29. Under the terms of the Constitution, this would make him too young to serve as a US Senator. However, Biden did turn 30 by the time he took office in 1973. Also, you can sign up to receive the aptly named 'Biden Bulletin' which is an email newsletter.

One source of information about Biden is our old friend Galileo. From Browse by Subject, you can go to Social Sciences and select Political Science. Once there, you can do a search for 'Joe Biden' in the first search bar. The third result you get is actually a piece from USA Today that Biden wrote about Afghanistan.

Notice though, that when you change the search to 'Joe' in the first search bar and 'Biden' in the second search bar, the results are slightly different. This is also true when you change Joe to Joseph. A search for 'Joseph Biden' in the search bar gives us a set of results where the third result in Academic Search Complete is an an article relating to the future possible makeup of the Obama cabinet.

Another possibility is to go to Galileo and click on the 'Search' tab. At this point, you have the ability to search many databases by clicking on the show more databases link and selecting each database you want to search in. A search for 'Biden' and 'plagiarism' in Academic Search Complete and Research Library gives us a handful of results related to some incidents involving Senator Biden and accusations of plagiarism from his first presidential campaign in 1988.

Get ready for an information glut on Biden over the next week, just as you will get one when John McCain announces his VP pick on Friday (probably).

JWF

It begins tonight

The political junkies are salivating as the Democratic convention coverage begins tonight. Where can one read about the conventions - past and present?

Current information can be gathered with a Google search, a scan of CNN or Fox. What if you'd like to read about the last convention or even the 1980 Democratic Convention. You know I'm going to send you to GALILEO!

I selected Browse by Type because I knew I wanted newspaper articles. The Newspaper link opens with a list of newspaper sources. I can't search through them the way I can search when I use the Browse by Subjects tab. I tried the New York Times links (both current and Archive) only to discover they end up being "I pay" sites.

What can I access as part of GALILEO? ProQuest offers The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, (plus the Christian Science Monitor, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal through the Newspapers database.

ProQuest is easy to use. The Advanced tab allowed me to limit my search by year. I wanted to check out the 1980 convention - there are 69 articles from 1 Jan 1980 to 31 Dec 1980 about the Democratic Convention! The drawback is I found nothing for the 1976 or earlier conventions.

Now what? I went to Browse by Subject, selected Social Science, selected Political Science and Administration - limited my search for Democratic convention (no quotes) to 1976 and several articles came up through Academic Search Complete. There were even a few with a search limited to 1972.

For the confirmed political junkie, GALILEO offers access to resources to feed your addiction for information about the political process!

Your Georgia librarian has the password to use GALILEO at home! Watch the coverage and read the articles!


-kls

Friday, August 22, 2008

Access limited to location

It is very frustrating to have vendors limit access to a database based on IP addresses. Our auto guys are having difficulty using the Shop Key / Mitchell 1 resources because they are only available on campus. We had password access last year to Shop Key which made it very handy for students to do homework and for the instructor to prepare lesson plans. This year when we added the Mitchel 1 resource for the diesel program - slam - IP address access only....and the Mitchell 1 costs 4 times as much as the Shop Key...

What can a library do?

We offer Auto Repair Reference Center by Ebsco through GALILEO
The Auto Repair Reference Center database includes automotive repair information supplied by Point 5 Technologies, Inc., under license from Nichols Publishing, the former publisher of Chilton® Information and information from Delphi Integrated Service Solutions. Auto Repair Reference Center contains information on most major manufacturers of domestic and imported vehicles, with repair information for most vintage makes starting as far back as 1945. Database content includes approximately 28,350 vehicles covered from 1945 to present; over 191,000 drawings and step-by-step photographs; approximately 72,000 technical service bulletins & recalls issued by the original equipment vehicle manufacturer; over 114,000 enhanced wiring diagrams for easy viewing and printing; specifications & maintenance schedules; Labor Time Guide & Estimator; Auto IQ; Quick Tips, a complete guide to vehicle ownership & maintenance; unlimited remote access and much more. New repair procedures and updates will also be added continuously. All of the content in Auto Repair Reference Center has been created by ASE certified technicians.

I admit I haven't played with either enough to do a clear compare and contrast. The auto guys prefer the Shop Key resource. It could be they haven't played with the Ebsco product.

I do like the videos in the Ebsco Auto IQ tab. I tried to look up my car but it's too new- the ARRC only goes to 2007.

Maybe I'll offer treats and they can show me Shop Key and I'll show them ARRC!


-kls