Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Top Ten Tuesday - Newspapers!

Did you read the newspapers that were available around campus? I know we sure had a lot of papers scattered around the library, so lots of folks were enjoying them.

If you miss seeing the news…the Library can help. Our top ten list for today:

Top 10 USA Newspapers by Circulation (Newspapers.com):

  1. USA Today – 2,281,831
  2. Wall Street Journal – 2,070,498
  3. New York Times – 1,121,623
  4. Los Angeles Times – 907,997
  5. Washington Post – 740,947
  6. New York Daily News – 708,773
  7. Chicago Tribune – 643,086
  8. New York Post – 565,679
  9. Long Island Newsday – 527,744
  10. Houston Chronicle - 477,493

The Library can help you read and enjoy all of these newspapers!

Our database, Access World News from Newsbank, provides access to all of these titles as well as 1,748 others from all over the world! It also includes 45 Texas newspapers – Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, etc.

If you have a question about newspapers and how to access them, please call the library's reference desk @ 254-968-9249.

Monday, October 6, 2008

If it sounds too good to be true...

Rebates! Extended Warranties! Free Gas! Peanut butter!

The large print giveth and the small print taketh away. Be good consumers! Read mouseprint.org to be an educated consumer.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Tarleton Thursdays: Did You Know?


The September 17, 1957 J-TAC reported that the "Tarleton students spend the majority of their study time in the library. We have one of the most complete libraries in the state. The Tarleton Library offers periodical, government, reference, and novel material. This air conditioned "land of study" was completed and dedicated early last year."

VOTE! or Not...Monday October 6th

To be able to vote in the Election in November, you must be REGISTERED to vote by MONDAY October 6th!!!!!

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Top Ten Tuesday: 10 Most Challenged Books of 2007

It's Top Ten Tuesday Again! In honor of Banned Books week, here are the "10 Most Challenged Books of 2007" according the ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom

1. "And Tango Makes Three," by Justin Richardson/Peter Parnell

Reasons: Anti-Ethnic, Sexism, Homosexuality, Anti-Family, Religious Viewpoint, Unsuited to Age Group


2. "The Chocolate War," by Robert Cormier

Reasons: Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language, Violence



3. "Olive's Ocean," by Kevin Henkes

Reasons: Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language



4. "The Golden Compass," by Philip Pullman

Reasons: Religious Viewpoint



5. "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," by Mark Twain

Reasons: Racism

6. "The Color Purple," by Alice Walker

Reasons: Homosexuality, Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language,

7. "TTYL," by Lauren Myracle

Reasons: Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language, Unsuited to Age Group

8. "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," by Maya Angelou

Reasons: Sexually Explicit

9. "It's Perfectly Normal," by Robie Harris

Reasons: Sex Education, Sexually Explicit

10. "The Perks of Being A Wallflower," by Stephen Chbosky

Reasons: Homosexuality, Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language, Unsuited to Age Group


More Links about Banned Books

Most Challenged Books of 21st Century (20002005)

Ten Most Frequently Challenged Books of 2007 (PIO)

The Most Frequently Challenged Books of 2006

The Most Frequently Challenged Authors of 2006

Top Ten Challenged Authors 19902004

100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 19902000

Top 10 Most Frequently Challenged Authors, 19902004

Top 100 Challenged Books 19901999

Graphs: Challenges by Initiator, Institution, Type, and Year

Most Frequently Challenged Books Written by Authors of Color,19902000

Explore Banned Books with Google

Library Association Ranks Most Challenged Books in America

Banned and/or Challenged Books from the Radcliffe Publishing Course Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century

Monday, September 29, 2008

Library Off-Campus/Distance Learning Services

Are you a student taking classes online or off-campus?

Even though you don’t come to campus for class, the library can still help you with your research needs. Reference services are available through a variety of methods:

Online Reference: Submit your research questions via email directly to a reference librarian through the “Ask a Librarian” service at http://www.tarleton.edu/~library/askaref.html or email reference@tarleton.edu.

Phone: If you need assistance over the phone, call 254-968-9249 or TOLL-FREE at (866) 339-5555. Reference librarians are available to answer your questions during regular library hours.

Fax: Fax your reference questions to 254-968-9467.

Online Access: You can access the Library’s online resources via your Tarleton network account 24/7.

Need books? You can borrow library materials housed in our library or libraries around the country via Interlibrary Loan (ILLiad) .

We will deliver materials to your home/office if you qualify and register with the library as a Distance Learner. Items will be delivered with a postage paid return label.
Sign-up for home/office delivery services today @ http://www.tarleton.edu/~library/dsform.html.

Are you taking classes in Fort Worth, Killeen, Weatherford, or Waco? Take advantage of the university courier. We can send materials requested through your ILLiad account to you via the campus courier. The courier picks-up and delivers materials to these campuses each Tuesday and Thursday.

These services are free to Tarleton students, staff, and faculty. For more information, contact Jennifer Barrera or checkout the Off-Campus/Distance Learning Services webpage.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

School Myths

We've all heard the tales:
  • A student paid for his college education by asking for one-cent donations.
  • Students taking the SAT get 400 points for spelling their names correctly.
  • The government once considered classifying ketchup as a vegetable to cut school lunch program costs.
  • A university library is sinking because the architect did not design it to support the weight of books.
  • and others.

Think you know the answers? Take the MythBusters quiz and find out!

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Tarleton Thursdays: Did You Know?

Our benefactor, John Tarleton, died September 10, 1895, 113 years ago this month. Not only did he leave his estate in Texas for the establishment of a school in Stephenville, he also left his estate in Tennessee for the establishment of the John Tarleton Institute in Knoxville, where he lived prior to coming to Texas. The Knoxville Journal, September 25, 1895, stated that the John Tarleton Institute's purpose would be "to teach children, educate them in the common branches and teach them some sort of trade and prepare them to earn an honorable living in the future." The John Tarleton Home still exists today in Knoxville. Be sure to see the display of Tarleton history in the library foyer.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Banned Books Week

September 27 through October 4 is Banned Books Week – Celebrating the Freedom to Read! Read about Banned Books Week basics as well as frequently challenged books.

There is already a display on the lower level showing just a few of the many children’s books that have been challenged, and there will a display on the main floor by the end of the week with adult books. Keep in mind that just because a book is challenged, does not mean it is necessarily banned.

Another great resource is the ACLU Foundation of Texas Banned Book Project, which produces an annual report of books that have been banned, challenged or restricted in Texas schools during the previous school year. The reports since 2002 are available online, with the 2008 report to be posted on September 27.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Top Ten Tuesday

A new feature for the Blog - Want to know how your favorites stack up? Check out the LOL blog on Tuesdays and see how things are ranked. Top Tens from all over the place! If you have a list you would like to see, post a comment and let us know.

We will start with something from the library.

The Top Ten most selected online resources so far this semester:

1 Library Catalog 4009
2 Academic Search Complete 2030
3 Metalib - Quick Search 1055
4 Metalib - Subject Search 876
5 Ebsco Host 811
6 Business Source Complete 792
7 SFX - Title Search
757
8 Jstor 745
9 Eric 512
10 Psychology Journals 493


Wow...you guys have used over 20,743 online resources already this semester and 12,080 have come from this top ten list!

Monday, September 22, 2008

Brown Bag: Shaping Texas History - The Alamo

Dates: Thursday - September 25, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM
Location: Library - Multipurpose Room
Category: University Events
Contact: Cathy Wilterding, DIck Smith Library, 254-968-9456

Description: Dr. Mike Milford presents "Revising the Can[n]on: Inclusion and Exclusion in Alamo Mythology."

The presentation will explore the mythology surrounding the Alamo:
-- how social myths are created,
-- the relationship between myth and social structure, and
-- how myths are purposefully shaped.

A Door Prize drawing will follow the presentation.
Sponsored by The Dick Smith Library

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Meet Our Staff: Chris Grantham

Chris Grantham
End User Support Specialist
254-968-9030
grantham@tarleton.edu
Dick Smith Library – Upper Level – room 250

Chris joined the staff in July 2008 as a computer technician tasked with maintaining the hardware and software on over 200 public and staff PCs and laptops in the Dick Smith Library.

He retired from the Air Force in 2004 with 20 years of service in administrative and computer support with assignments in Europe (Germany & Italy) as well as numerous locations in Arizona and Texas. In his last assignment in San Antonio supporting the Air Force Recruiting Service, he provided technical support to recruiters across 110,000 square miles of South Texas and was responsible for transitioning them from dial-up networks to high-speed broadband networks.

An avid outdoors man, he enjoys hunting, fishing, skiing (both water and snow). Having taken up cycling with in Italy, he was the participated in the “Hotter than Hell” event twice and has taken part in a number of the Multiple Sclerosis Society’s MS150 events (Houston to Austin, Houston to Galveston, and San Antonio to Corpus Christi). He is also a certified scuba diver. When not outside, he enjoys reading science fiction and military novels.

[For the next few weeks, new Library staff members will be introduced here on Wednesdays.]

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Lessons@Lunch - Learn about blogging!

University Librarian Donna Savage invites you to Lessons@ Lunch - Blogging!

Learn about blogging by attending “Create a Blog: Become a Web-Published Author!”presented by Dr. Jennifer T. Edwards, Assistant Professor of Communication Studies. This Lessons@Lunch session will be held on Thursday, September 18th at 12:10 p.m. in the Library Instruction Classroom (Room 139) of the Dick Smith Library.

Through this session, participants will learn:

a) how to create a blog,

b) how to effectively promote a blog, and

c) benefits and disadvantages of blogging.

Blogs have many different functions, which range from extending classroom discussions and serving as online diaries to providing personal accounts of current events. This online technology is creating “citizen journalists” out of everyday people.

Learn how to create a virtual gathering place for friends, so you can share ideas, pictures, and conversations!