Friday, October 24, 2008

Going Green?

Trying to go green but don't know how?
Check out Wikia Green - here you learn about ways to reduce your carbon footprint, get information about hybrid cars, get tips on eating green, or find out where to purchase green clothing and accessories. There is also a link to other green blogs for more information.

Want to get more involved? Help out with stubs - Stubs are short articles that can use more content. Take a look at the stubs on Green Wikia and share your knowledge wherever you are inspired!

The content is written from a green point of view, focusing on things you can do. So if your thinking of going green -- check it out.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Tarleton Thursdays: Did You Know?

Tarleton athletics was in the beginning stages of development in the early 1900s. "Begun in 1901, these football, baseball, and track meets were held on an intramural basis. It was not until 1904 when Tarleton joined the West Texas College League that the school’s organized athletic tradition officially began."

"These early teams did not possess an official name. A campus legend contends that in 1925, Athletic Director W.J. Wisdom offered a five-dollar prize to the person who thought of the best mascot for the teams. However, Wisdom himself came up with the title of Plowboys.” (Chamberlain, The Early Years of Tarleton Athletics, Dick Smith Library Cross Timbers Historic Images Project)

In October 1908, one hundred years ago this month, Tarleton held a track meet. Our library website has a photograph of this track meet which shows how the people, the area, and our campus looked 100 years ago. To view this photograph, and to read the narrative The Early Years of Tarleton Athletics, by Frank Chamberlain in its entirety, go to the Dick Smith Library homepage and under Special Collections and Archives, click on Cross Timbers Historic Images Project. Search by: John Tarleton College Track Meet 1908. (http://www.tarleton.edu/library )

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Meet Our Staff: Melissa Cookson

Melissa Cookson
Cataloging Coordinator
254-968-9339
cookson@tarleton.edu
Dick Smith Library – Main Floor – Rm109J

I began working at the library on October 1, 2008. As the Catalog Librarian, my job primarily involves cataloging library materials (books, DVDs, audio books, etc.) and maintaining records that are already in the catalog. In addition, I’m the liaison to the Biological Sciences Department.

As a student at Colorado College in Colorado Springs, I majored in Anthropology and minored in German, but I also took courses in a wide variety of other subjects, such as psychology, Chinese art history, and Japanese culture. I received my Master’s in Library Science at Indiana University in Bloomington. My cataloging courses were always some of my favorites, so I’m happy to be here, doing what I love best. Prior to coming to the Dick Smith Library, I worked as a Cataloging Assistant at Colorado College’s Tutt Library and volunteered as a computer class assistant for the Pikes Peak Library District.

When I’m not working, I enjoy reading. My favorite genres are romance, fantasy, mystery, and science fiction. I’m a huge fan of Japanese animation and manga – if I haven’t already seen or read something, I’ve probably at least heard about it or know where to find information about it. I also love rats and have had pet rats off and on for several years. Currently, I have two boys named Bear and Yuki.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Top Ten Tuesday – Items checked out

Today's Top Ten is in reverse order.

Here is a list of the items that have circulated the most since 2002. Find your favorite item in the library, check it out and raise its ranking! I bet you can guess the number one item(s)…

10. WHY MOSQUITOES BUZZ IN PEOPLE'S EARS - 157
9. Are you there God? It's me, Margaret - 162
8. The very busy spider - 168
7. The legend of the bluebonnet - 170
6. State Board of Education rules for curriculum - 243
5. The Mental measurements yearbook - 577
4. Graph theory - 288
3. Essays in law and politics - 661
2. Dictionary of occupational titles - 719
1. Laptops - 13,237

Over 4,457 items have been checked out already this semester! (not counting laptops) You guys are really getting after your assignments.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Learn a new language online

Have you ever wanted to learn a new language?

Check out http://www.livemocha.com/. Livemocha is a free interactive online community that includes lessons, a diverse community, chat and motivational tools to keep you on track in learning a new language. You can connect with native speakers to guide to through the process.

You can also be a guide to others by rating and correcting other members that are learning your native language.

Espero que te diviertas!

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Tarleton Thursdays: Did You Know?

One of the Tarleton former J-TAC staff members being honored at Homecoming this year is Jerry Flemmons. He attended Tarleton from 1954-56, and went on to have a long career in journalism. He worked for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram for thirty years in several different capacities. Jerry was a police reporter, features, writer, columnist, and retired in 1997 as the travel editor. He also authored several books including Amon: The Life of Amon Carter, Sr. of Texas; Plowboys, Cowboys, and Slanted Pigs; and Texas Siftings.
While on the Fort Worth Star Telegram staff, Jerry Flemmons covered the Kennedy assassination, served as one of Lee Harvey Oswald’s pall bearers, and was the first reporter to climb to the top of the University of Texas tower following Charles Whitman’s 1966 shooting rampage.

Born and raised in Erath County, Flemmons was quarterback for Tarleton’s 1954 winning football team. At the time of his death, in September 1999, he was a writer in residence for Tarleton State University.

Come to the Dick Smith Library and take a look at some of his books and articles in the Fort Worth Star Telegram. There was also a nice article in this past Monday's Stephenville Empire Tribune about the former Grassburr and JTAC staff who are being honored at Homecoming, including a photo of Jerry Flemmons when he attended Tarleton.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Top Ten Tuesday - Top 10 useful moves in MS Office

It's top ten Tuesday again!

From Philip Su, principal software engineer at Microsoft. Here are his "10 most useful secret ninja moves to increase your productivity and win friends and lovers." - Be sure and go to http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/help/HA102750211033.aspx . They have text and pictures to help you learn about these features and tips! There are even more helpful hints in the comments!

I really love numbers 6 and 8!!!

1: Format painter (Office)
2: Paragraph in/out/up/down (Office)
3: Increase or decrease font size (Office)
4: Quick Access Toolbar (Office)
5: Fill handle (Excel)
6: Moving and copying cells by dragging selection borders (Excel)
7: Status bar statistics (Excel)
8: Clear formatting (Word and PowerPoint)
9: Advanced field search (Outlook)
10: Presenter view (PowerPoint)

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Information Overload: How to Cope

Instant messages, text messages, phone calls, voice mail, work/school/personal emails, listserv messages, social network messages and status updates, RSS feeds, letters, junk mail, periodical articles, reports, books, book chapters, and the list goes on and on. All contribute to information overload, which is not a new concept. People have been feeling the effects of information overload since the 16th and 17th centuries "as books and written information became more widely produced and disseminated."

With the digital revolution of the 20th century "the amount of information flowing into our lives has increased exponentially." And, we're all feeling the effects, which are sometimes significant:

  • stress,
  • reduced analytical skills,
  • difficulty getting organised, setting priorities, and managing time,
  • decreased productivity, and
  • diminished performance.

In "Being Wired or Being Tired: 10 Ways to Cope with Information Overload" (Ariadne, July 30, 2008), Sarah Houghton-Jan examines the evolution of information overload, presents studies discussing the effects of information overload, and offers ten strategies for managing and coping with various types of informational overload:

  1. General Organisational Techniques
  2. Filtering Information Received
  3. RSS Overload Techniques
  4. Interruptive Technology Overload Techniques
  5. Phone Overload Techniques
  6. Email Overload Techniques
  7. Print Media Overload Techniques
  8. Multimedia Overload Techniques
  9. Social Network Overload Techniques
  10. Time and Stress Management

The strategies in this article (yes, another piece of information to deal with) may be just what's needed as we all try to stay caught up in the Information Age.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Tarleton Thursdays: Did You Know?















The first Grassburr was published in 1916. It included a listing of all the John Tarleton College alums from the first graduating class in 1903 through the 1915 graduates. The editor, F. Paul Williams, stated that “Time has added another year to the history of John Tarleton College. We have endeavored to make this volume of The Grassburr a representative of the year for every student to remember his pleasures and friends by. We have worked faithfully to publish a book that we will be justly proud of. To what extent we have accomplished this, let time and posterity decide.”
In 1901 the male and female literary societies worked together to produce the John Tarleton, a monthly campus literary journal. In 1904 it became a 2 page weekly news sheet called The Tarletonite. The October 12, 1905 issue stated that John Tarleton President “Edgar Bramlette spent Saturday morning on the Bosque looking for snails, craw fish, et cetera.” It also stated that "Tarleton College will open the season in a game with Howard Payne College next Saturday." In 1919 The Tarletonite name was changed to the JTAC.

Homecoming 2008 will feature a reunion of the Grassburr and JTAC staff from 1953-1958. Stuart Chilton has located many of the former staff members and this will be a great homecoming for them. The Dick Smith Library staff organized a display in their honor in the Thompson Student Center lobby next to the post office. Stop by and take a look!

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."