Asad’s Lecture Available at iTunes U

On Wednesday, February 13, 2008, Dr. Talal Asad gave a timely, relevant lecture on violence in contemporary culture at Paley Library’s Lecture Hall. Asad, an influential anthropologist who has impacted anthropology, history, religious. area studies and other disciplines, spoke to a standing room only crowd.

To make this important event available to the widest possible audience, Temple University Libraries, the Center for Humanities and the General Education Program, sponsors of this event, are pleased to make a video recording of Asad’s lecture available on Temple University’s iTunes U (link will open iTunes, you must have iTunes to view the video). If you were unable to attend the event, this is an opportunity to share in the experience. In the image below, Dr. Asad takes questions from the audience.

Thumbnail image for 021308_Paley_Talal_Asad_Lecture_018.jpg (Click on the image to open iTunes and view the video.) Note that you must have iTunes software installed on your computer in order to use iTunes U. Feel free to direct any comments to Nicole Restaino, Library Communications Manager, at . Visit our Library Events Blog to find out about upcoming lectures, programs, and events offered by the Temple University Libraries.

Beyond Google: Spring Semester Workshops

Temple University Libraries offer a number of short workshops to help familiarize you with library resources and the latest time-saving tools for conducting research.

Register by following the link. ——————-

10 Ways to do Scholarly Research in Your Pajamas Temple University Libraries offer thousands of online resources, plus personalized services. From using eBooks, streaming videos, and databases to requesting, receiving, and sharing online resources, learn how to make the library come to you!

  • 1 – 2pm: 2/20/08, 2/21/08, 4/9/08, 4/10/08
  • Location: TECH Center rm. 205A
  • Register Here (Click on “Research” to see all of the library workshops)

Getting Organized Online Forgot about a paper that`s due? Forget to pay your phone bill or to call back that cute classmate? Is your email inbox overflowing? In this session a Temple University Librarian will discuses ideas and demonstrate online applications that help you get organized: “to do” lists, events, email management, and documents. Get text message or IM reminders! Access your calendar from any computer, anywhere!

  • 1-2pm: 2/27/08, 2/28/08
  • Location: TECH Center rm. 205A
  • Register Here (Click on “Research” to see all of the library workshops)

Stuff You Didn’t Know You Could Do With Google How do you use Google? If you’re not going beyond the introductory Search Page, then you’re not experiencing the full potential of Google. Google is the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Universe wanna-a-be; learn how to use it to search Temple’s databases, to search for government information from any locality in the world, to find PowerPoint presentations on any topic, to find full-text books, and much more.

  • 1 -2pm: 3/5/08, 3/6/08, 4/16/08, 4/17/08
  • Location: TECH Center rm. 205A
  • Register Here (Click on “Research” to see all of the library workshops)

To Google or Not to Google Google provides fast but often ineffective results. Will you really impress your professor by citing a Wikipedia article as a source for a research paper? In this session a Temple University Librarian will discuss the pros and cons of using Google for academic research. Discover how to just as quickly access more appropriate sources without over relying on Google. This session will cover a new open source Wiki alternative, as well as some of the more traditional reference tools that have been digitized for easy web access.

  • 1-2pm: 3/19/08, 3/20/08
  • Location: TECH Center rm. 205A
  • Register Here (Click on “Research” to see all of the library workshops)

Citations Without Tears Save time on your papers, and throw out all those long citation guides. Learn to use RefWorks, a web based application (free to Temple students!) that allows you to easily and quickly gather your citations and organize them for the creation of bibliographies and in- text citations in almost any format APA, MLA, Chicago, and more. Note: This session will include hands-on learning in the use of RefWorks.

  • 1-2pm: 3/26/08, 3/27/08, 4/23/08, 4/30/08, 5/1/08
  • Location: TECH Center rm. 109
  • Register Here (Click on “Research” to see all of the library workshops)

Beyond Google: the Ultimate Search Engine Google is so easy to use that it`s tempting to begin and end your Web searching right there. But, the Web is actually much bigger offering more tools and resources than what Google covers. Dare to go beyond Google and discover excellent tools on the Web that you can use to expand your searching. Get tips based on the article “FrankenGoogle: How to mash together the ultimate search engine” by Christopher Beam (Slate.com on August 14, 2007) that describes reasons why you should sometimes dare to go “Beyond Google.”

  • 1-2pm: 4/2/08, 4/3/08
  • Location: TECH Center rm. 205A
  • Register Here (Click on “Research” to see all of the library workshops)

 

CBS 3 Donates Video Archives to Libraries

CBS 3 DONATES VAST VIDEO ARCHIVES TO TEMPLE UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Philadelphia, September 26, 2007 – CBS 3 (KYW-TV) will donate its vast Video archives, a virtual diary of the history of the region during the last thirty years, to Temple University’s Paley Library, CBS 3 President and General Manager Michael Colleran and Temple University President Dr. Ann Weaver Hart announced today.

The station’s collection of more than 20,000 videotapes, which includes daily local newscasts and video clips from the last thirty years of Eyewitness News as well as 15 years of the local lifestyle show, Evening Magazine, will be housed in Temple University Libraries Urban Archives and, once catalogued, will be available to students and local residents alike.

Colleran officially presented the videotapes to Dr. Hart in a ceremony held today at Paley Library.

The station’s archival tape contain many of the most memorable moments in Philadelphia history – from the Pope John Paul II’s visit to Philadelphia in 1979 and the Phillies World Series victory in 1980 to the MOVE bombing in 1985 and the Blizzards of 1983 and 1996. Many national and international stories are also included from the Reagan years in the While House to the fall of Communism in Europe.

“The University is honored to be chosen as guardian of what amounts to a historical record of the last three decades of the 20th century in Philadelphia,” Hart says. “We hope that this collection will encourage others to preserve this type of material, so that future generations will have a first-hand account of the times in which we lived.”

“Anyone interested in the history and culture of 20th century Philadelphia must use the incredible resources held in the Urban Archives,” Dean of University Libraries Larry Alford adds. “Those resources are deepest for the first 80 years of the 20th century because of the archives of The Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, which ceased publication in 1982. The KYW footage will fill in the gap of that last 20 years.”

Colleran says that, in addition to chronicling local history, the tapes are also a dynamic example of the evolution of local television since the 1970s. “Not only do we see the evolution of news coverage from the anchor desk to live coverage in the field, but we can witness the birth of a whole new genre in television through Evening Magazine, a program that was imitated across the country and became a precursor to such shows as Entertainment Tonight, Access Hollywood and the celebrity journalism of today.”

The station’s contribution of the tapes to Temple University Libraries corresponds with its relocation earlier this year from its 35 year-home on Independence Mall to its new state-of-the-art High Definition studios in the Spring Garden section of Philadelphia. Coincidentally, this is not the first time astation relocation has benefited the University. When KYW moved from its Walnut Street studios to Independence Mall in 1972, the company donated its building there to the University which used it as a Center City campus for many years.

CBS 3 is part of CBS Television Stations, a division of CBS Corporation.

Watch the CBS 3 (KYW-TV) coverage of this momentous event in Philadelphia history online.

ceLIBration Welcomes New Students To Temple’s Libraries

If you think that libraries are no-fun zones, think again.

On the afternoon of Friday August 24 business was anything but usual at Paley Library. As part of the University’s Welcome Week event, the Temple University Libraries hosted ceLIBration. Offering food, music, and fun, ceLIBration was an opportunity to encourage new students and their parents to visit Paley Library, enjoy the facility, and meet staff members. Several hundred students and their families joined in the festivities.

One of the highlights of ceLIBration was a “Guitar Hero” video game competition. Seven students competed against each other for the title of Paley Guitar Hero Champion and a $100 gift certificate. The winner of the competition was Chris Sekula who amassed a huge score in dominating the competition. Later, a grand finale raffle offered more gift certificates for local restaurants and the Pearl movie theater.

Here are a few pictures of the event, starting with the Guitar Hero competitors:

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Guitar Heroes in action.

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Even some of the library staff got in on the action.
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The DJ and guests at the entrance to Paley Library.

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People and food in the reference stacks of Paley.
Steven Bell, Associate University Librarian

2007 Library Prize Award Recipients Announced!

The Library Prize panel of judges has selected the recipients for the 2007 Library Prize for Undergraduate Research.

The judges were impressed with the variety of topics, the reflective essays on the library research process and the quality of research submitted.

$1000 Award Recipients in alphabetical order:

Joseph Basile
“Ending the ‘Inhuman Traffic;’ The Role of Humanitarianism in the British Abolition Movement.”
History W387
Dr. Travis Glasson, History

Clay Boggs
“The Jews and the Pharisees in Early Quaker Polemic”
History 399
Professor David Watt, History

Matthew M. Rodrigue
“Rethinking Academia: A Gramscian Analysis of Samuel Huntington”
History H385
Professor Kathy Le Mons Walker, History

In addition, the following students were selected to receive Honorable Mention (in alphabetical order):

Michael Gieda
“The Civilian Conservation Corps; Conserving Discrimination”
History W386
Professor Sharon Ann Musher, History

Cherice D. Gordon
“Cervical Cancer: A Silent Threat in African-American Women”
Public Health W3321
Professor Sarah Bauerle Bass, Public Health

Stephanie L.S. Sikora
“The Great Escape: 21st Century American Politics and the Kyoto Protocol”
History W397 and H385
James Rogers, Political Science

Penelope Waite
“The Struggle for an Inclusive Vision of America: Lorin W. Brown, the Federal Writers’ Project, and the Definition of American Identity”
American Studies 393
Professor Lisa Rhodes, American Studies
Please join us to celebrate at the Awards Ceremony and Reception this Friday! Come Meet the 2007 Winners and their sponsoring professors!

Date/Time: Friday, April 27th: 4:00 p.m. Awards Ceremony, 5:00 p.m. Reception

Location: Paley Lecture Hall

Refreshments and hors d’oeuvres will be served.

Gretchen Sneff

Citations Without Tears (RefWorks)

April 24th, 25th, 26th at 1pm in the Tech Center Green Room 205A Save time on your papers, and throw out all those long citation guides. Learn to use Refworks, a web based application (free to Temple students, staff, and faculty!) that allows you to easily and quickly gather your citations and organize them for the creation of bibliographies and in-text citations in almost any format– APA, MLA, Chicago, and more. Questions? Contact Derik Badman.

To Google or Not to Google

April 10th, 11th, 12th at 1pm
Tech Center – Green Room 205A

Google provides fast but often ineffective results. Will you really impress your professor by citing a Wikipedia article as a source for a research paper? In this session a Temple University Librarian will discuss the pros and cons of using Google for academic research. Discover how to just as quickly access more appropriate sources without over relying on Google. This session will cover a new open source Wiki alternative, as well as some of the more traditional reference tools that have been digitized for easy web access.

Questions? Contact David Murray.

Paulos Author Reading Canceled

We regret to announce that the reading by Temple mathematics professor and bestselling author John Allen Paulos, originally scheduled for April 11th, has been canceled. The event will be rescheduled for Fall 2007, with a specific data and time to be announced at a later date.

Stuff You Didn’t Know You Could Do With Google

March 27th, 28th, and 29th at 1pm Tech Center – Green Room 205A “Google gave me 8,956,441 hits. This stinks.” Decrease your frustration with Google by learning how to use it like any other library database. In other words, like a pro! In this session a Temple University Librarian will cover how to find books, journal articles, news, maps, and more through Google. Learn how to use Google’s advanced options to focus a search and get the most relevant results. Questions? Contact David Murray.

Author Reading: Tommie Smith

Tommie Smith raising his fist upon receiving the gold medal. On Friday, March 23, 2007 the Temple University Libraries, in collaboration with Temple University Press, will host an author appearance by Tommie Smith, one of the most celebrated track and field athletes of all time. He will discuss his book “Silent Gesture: The autobiography of Tommie Smith” written by Tommie Smith and David Steele.

The author appearance is accompanied by an exhibit which reflects on Tommie Smith and his Black Power display at the 1968 Olympics, held in Mexico City. The exhibit includes originals or replicas of historical documents from the Charles Blockson Collection, Special Collections, and Urban Archives about Philadelphia’s response to the civil rights movement of the 1960s and the history of Temple University. A reception follows the discussion and book signing.

The event will be held in the Paley Library, Lecture Hall, Ground Floor beginning at 2:30 p.m.

For more information, please contact the Urban Archives at 215-204-5750.