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Syracuse University Library acquires papers of architect Morris Lapidus

Syracuse University Library has acquired the personal papers of the flamboyant and trend-setting architect Morris Lapidus. Lapidus, who died in 2001, is perhaps best known for hotels like the Fontainebleau, Americana, and Eden Roc in Miami Beach, Fla., buildings which embodied the growth of leisure in American life during the 1950s and 1960s. The Fontainebleau has served as a backdrop for variety of iconic scenes in American film, including the James Bond thriller "Goldfinger" (1964). Most of Lapidus' buildings exhibited a mélange of historical styles--French provincial, Italian and Baroque--and anticipated the post-modernism of later architects.

Lapidus was born in Odessa, Russia, in 1902, but his family immigrated to the United States soon thereafter. As a wide-eyed youth, he marveled at the splendor of Coney Island and he would later impart a similar spirit of excess to his work as an architect. That spirit would place him at odds with his function-minded modernist peers. However, contrary to the editor's choice of title for his 1996 autobiography, "Too Much is Never Enough," Lapidus was interested less in hedonism than he was in a "quest for emotion and motion in architecture."

Frustrated by his sometimes antagonistic relationship with the architectural establishment, Lapidus destroyed many of his firm's records when he retired in 1984. However, he retained a core collection of especially valuable papers that he entrusted to his last collaborator and confidant, architect Deborah Desilets. The archive includes a large collection of photographs dating to the 1920s, conceptual drawings, manuscript drafts of his written works and correspondence with his long-time friend, mystery writer Ellery Queen.

Desilets approached Syracuse, which has held a small Lapidus collection since 1967, and a gift of the material was finalized in December. Speaking on her decision to place the archive with Syracuse, Desilets says, "The archive is an extremely important missing link in the discourse on Lapidus' influence on 20th-century architecture. I am thrilled to place it in such a distinguished research institution where it will be available for use by generations of students and scholars."

In Syracuse's Special Collections Research Center, the Lapidus archive will reside in one of the most important mid-century modern collections in the country. Among the other architects represented are Marcel Breuer, William Lescaze and Richard Neutra, as well as designers like Russel Wright and Walter Dorwin Teague.

Syracuse School of Architecture faculty member Jon Yoder offered this assessment of the Lapidus archive's value for teaching and research: "The recent proliferation of architect-designed boutique hotels, coupled with the pervasive disciplinary focus on architectural effects suggests that Lapidus was indeed one of the most influential architects of the 20th century. This acquisition of his personal archive comes as welcome news to designers and scholars who are finally beginning to reassess the lavish contributions of this much-maligned architect across a surprisingly broad spectrum of design disciplines."

For more information, contact Sean Quimby, senior director of Special Collections, at 315-443-9759 or smquimby@syr.edu.

Take the Knovel University Challenge

Knovel, one of the key engineering resources brought to you Syracuse University Library, has kicked off its 2011 University Challenge.

Solve three problems using Knovel for a chance to win an iPad 2, cash, and lots of other great prizes.

Last year, Andy Quach, a sophomore in the L.C. Smith College of Engineering and Computer Science, won second prize.

How It Works -- Play Two Ways

  1. Go to www.knoveluniversitychallenge.com or the Facebook version of the game.
  2. Choose your difficulty level.
  3. Use the search box* to answer three questions correctly.
  4. Share with Friends -- schools with 100 correct entries or more are guaranteed entry into a contest-within-the-contest, ensuring one student participant with three correct answers will be the winner of an iPod Nano.

*For entries to be valid, and to qualify for prizes, you must use Knovel to answer the questions.

The contest ends midnight on December 1.

Have a question or need help using Knovel? Contact Anne E. Rauh, Engineering and Computer Science Librarian, at aerauh@syr.edu.

World News Connection database now available

Syracuse University Library now hosts a campus-wide subscription to the international news media monitoring database known as World News Connection (formerly known as FBIS). This news database can be accessed by S.U. affiliated students, faculty, staff by entering the title in the Databases search box on library.syr.edu. Alternatively, use this direct URL, which is also suitable for embedding by faculty into course websites, Blackboard, etc.: http://libezproxy.syr.edu/login?url=http://wnc.dialog.com/

About World News Connection®***
New information is entered into WNC hourly within 24-72 hours from the time of original publication or broadcast. World News Connection® (WNC) is an online news service, that offers an extensive array of translated and English-language news and information.

Particularly effective in its coverage of local media sources, WNC provides you with the power to identify what really is happening in a specific country or region. Compiled from thousands of non-U.S. media sources, the information in WNC covers significant socioeconomic, political, scientific, technical, and environmental issues and events.

The material in WNC is provided to the National Technical Information Service (NTIS) by the Open Source Center (OSC), a U.S. government agency. For over 60 years, analysts from OSC's domestic and overseas bureaus have monitored timely and pertinent open-source materials, including gray literature. Uniquely, WNC allows you to take advantage of the intelligence gathering experience of OSC.

The information is obtained from full text and summaries of newspaper articles, websites, conference proceedings, television and radio broadcasts, periodicals, and non-classified technical reports. New information is entered into WNC hourly every day. Generally, this information is available within 24-72 hours from the time of original publication or broadcast.

For more information about World News Connection, or other SU Library news and media databases, contact public communications and political science subject specialist librarian, Michael Pasqualoni at mjpasqua@syr.edu (315) 443-3715

***Source: World News Connection Website

Education Research Complete: a new Library database

Education Research Complete is the most authoritative online resource for education research. It is a bibliographic and full-text database covering scholarly research and information relating to all areas of education. Topics include all levels of education from early childhood to higher education, and all educational specialties, such as multilingual education, health education, and testing.

Education Research Complete also covers areas of curriculum instruction as well as administration, policy, funding, and related social issues. The database covers more than 2,300 journals and includes full text for over 1,400 of them. This database also includes full text for more than 550 books and monographs, as well as numerous education-related conference papers.

To access the database, point your browser to Education Research Complete.

For more information or to provide feedback, please contact Mary DeCarlo.

Syracuse University to receive Ted Koppel Collection

Ted Koppel, original anchor of the ground-breaking ABC News program Nightline, has agreed to make a donation of videotapes and other items he has prepared or received during his career in broadcast journalism to the Syracuse University Library.

Koppel began his broadcasting career at Syracuse University in 1956, ultimately serving as SU radio station WAER's Program Director in 1959-60. Now, 51 years later, the largest body of his work, including programs that ran in the late 1950's on WAER, is finding its home on the Syracuse campus.

"Ted Koppel is one of the world's most decorated journalists because throughout his career he consistently has made a real difference in the world with his work," says SU Chancellor and President Nancy Cantor. "Establishing this new repository where he launched his unprecedented career assures that this treasure trove will continue to make a difference for generations of researchers and students to come."

The donation consists primarily of videotapes and also includes certain correspondence, photographs, cartoons, awards, and notebooks chosen by Koppel, including those from Koppel's time as a Vietnam War correspondent. The principal component of the donation is a complete collection of videotapes of Nightline and The Koppel Report, news programs that were originally broadcast by ABC News. The Koppel Collection will represent a significant addition to the Library's resources on the history of broadcast journalism.

The Koppel Collection will be housed in the Library's Special Collections Research Center (SCRC), where an archivist will commence the task of processing and inventorying the collection being donated. The Nightline program videotapes will first be digitized and then will be preserved in collaboration with the University's Information Technology and Services division.

The Library will work closely with the other components of the University to ensure that the materials in the Koppel Collection are available for use by faculty, scholars, and researchers, especially in the fields of broadcast journalism, history, international relations, and speech. Digital video and other digitized materials will be made available for teaching and research to classes through the University's course management system. Access to Koppel Collection materials will also be provided through the SCRC reading room.

"We are grateful to Ted Koppel for selecting Syracuse University as the recipient of his archive of videotapes and other materials selected by him from his illustrious career. The Koppel Collection will be an extraordinarily rich resource for students and scholars in a variety of disciplines, especially the Newhouse School," said Suzanne Thorin, Dean of Libraries and University Librarian.

Edward James "Ted" Koppel, born February 8, 1940 in Lancashire, England, began his broadcasting career at WMCA Radio in New York. He joined ABC Radio News in 1963 and moved to television in 1966. During his 42 year tenure at ABC News, Koppel served as anchor of The ABC Saturday Night News, chief diplomatic correspondent, Vietnam War correspondent, and Hong Kong bureau chief. As anchor of ABC News Nightline from its debut in 1980 until late 2005, Koppel covered every major news story and presidential campaign for over 25 years. Koppel left Nightline in November 2005 and subsequently worked as managing editor for a series of news and public affairs programs that were cablecast on the Discovery Channel. He is currently a senior news analyst for National Public Radio, an author of newspaper and magazine opinion pieces, and a guest speaker.

Over his 50 year career in broadcasting, Koppel has earned every major industry honor, including 42 Emmy Awards; eight George Foster Peabody Awards; 12 Columbia-duPont Awards, including the gold award created especially to honor the week-long series that Nightline did on and from South Africa in 1985; 11 Overseas Press Club Awards, more than any other journalist; two George Polk Awards; and two Sigma Delta Chi Awards, given by the Society of Professional Journalists. Other awards include the Gabriel Personal Achievement Award from the National Catholic Association of Broadcasters and Communicators and selection as a Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres from the Republic of France.

Koppel holds a Bachelor of Science degree (Speech) from Syracuse University and a master's degree in mass communications research and political science from Stanford University. In addition, Koppel has received more than 20 honorary degrees from universities in the United States.

For more information about this collection, contact Suzanne Thorin, Dean of Libraries and University Librarian, at sethorin@syr.edu or 315 443-5533.

Adforum Creative Library Added to Collection

Explore the world of U.S. and international advertising via the Adforum database. This latest addition to SU Library's collection is an online audiovisual library of more than 120,000 advertisements (1999-present), including:


  • television ads
  • digital/Web ads
  • social media ads
  • print (magazine & newspaper) ads
  • radio ads

and various other forms of "Out of Home" advertising like billboards, posters, and vehicle mounted images. Content originates from over 20,000 advertising agencies in dozens of countries. Award-winning advertising can also be retrieved by award name and year (e.g., Clio, Effie, One Show, etc).

The database offers a variety of other features, including a searchable listing of ad agencies, job postings, a blog, and much more. Additional functionality, such as the ability to maintain a customized playlist of favorite ads, is available to users who register to join the Adforum community.

Adforum's convenient online platform is accessible to faculty, students, and staff from on- and off-campus locations. The Adforum archive may be smaller than the wide variety of content dispersed across the free web, YouTube, and numerous advertising agency websites, however Adforum's aggregated content offers greater stability and far more extensive indexing of content, all within a single, internationally oriented collection.

To access Adforum, visit http://libezproxy.syr.edu/login?url=http://www.adforum.com/syr or simply type "Adforum" into the databases section of the search box on the Library home page.

For more information about Adforum, contact Public Communications Librarian, Michael Pasqualoni at (315) 443-3715 or mjpasqua@syr.edu.

Organize your sources - try the Research Helper

Syracuse University Library is pleased to announce the availability of the Research Helper guide, a student-designed booklet intended to help users organize and record the strategies and resources they use in conducting a research project. A pdf version of the Research Helper can be found at http://tinyurl.com/4lm8vfb. Print copies are available at any library service desk.

Research Helper simplifies the research process and the creation of bibliographies and works cited pages by offering a convenient, central location to record keywords, names of databases and journals, detailed citations, and other relevant research data. Research Helper also includes advice on how to begin conducting research, suggestions on how to create an effective search strategy, and describes a variety of resources available within the Library.

The back cover of the guide features a list of Library contacts for getting help with research, including text, online, instant message, phone, email, or in person options.

The Research Helper was designed by Allie Jennings '10 (VPA) as a project for her Communications Design course. Several Syracuse University librarians also assisted in developing the content.

iPOLL Databank: 75 years of public opinion data now available

The iPOLL Databank is now available to the SU campus and all affiliated students, faculty, and staff as one of Syracuse University Library's newest databases. Published by the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, University of Connecticut, this public opinion repository draws upon academic, media, and commercial polls originating from more than 150 organizations (e.g., Gallup, Harris, CBS/New York Times, Fox News, et al). iPOLL covers over one half million polling questions and responses from 1935 to the present.

iPOLL's features include question level retrieval with links to full results, links from questions to study abstracts and questionnaires, and unlimited download of datasets via RoperExpress (in SPSS or ASCII formats). Once inside the database, users can also register for accounts that enhance their ability to manipulate and save search results.

To access the iPOLL Databank from on or off campus, point your browser to http://libezproxy.syr.edu/login?url=http://www.ropercenter.uconn.edu/iPOLL/login/ipoll_login.html or, alternatively, type ipoll (all lowercase) into the Databases section of the search box on the Library home page.

For more information on the iPOLL Databank, contact Michael Pasqualoni, Political Science Subject Specialist Librarian, at mjpasqua@syr.edu or 443-3715.

Announcing SU's Mobile Library: Anytime, Anywhere Access

Thumbnail image for spotlight-sm_mobile.JPGSyracuse University Library is pleased to announce the launch of its mobile web site. Optimized for iPhone, Android, and Blackberry smart phones, the site can be accessed at http://m.library.syr.edu. Also, users who visit the regular Library homepage from a mobile device will be redirected automatically to the mobile version.

The new mobile site offers quick, convenient access to core library information sources, including library hours, contact info, and locations. Via the mobile Library site, users will be able to:
• Search the Library catalog, WorldCat, and mobile versions of a number of Library databases
• Check Library hours for all locations
• Find the locations of all SU libraries and collections
• View floor maps of Bird Library
• Browse the Library staff directory and automatically email or place a call to each individual.
• Get research assistance via text message, instant message, email, or phone
• View Library events

Full functionality of the mobile services will depend on the data plan, connectivity, and capabilities of the phone used.

The mobile site will continue to grow and develop based on feedback from users. Please use the "Give us your feedback" link on the site to send us your ideas for enhancements.

Library offers new large format printing option

Those needing poster-size printing on campus have a new option available in Bird Library's Learning Commons. A new color plotter (HP DesignJet Z6100PS) unveiled this week prints documents up to 36" wide. Printing to the plotter is available from all Windows-based public workstations in the Learning Commons (lower level, 1st and 2nd floors of Bird Library) from 9:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m., Monday - Friday and from 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday during the regular semester. Cost is $2.00 per linear foot.

After sending a print job to the plotter, users will need to visit the Technology Support and Loan desk on the 1st floor and request that their print job be released from the queue and sent to the plotter. For more information about the new plotter, including configuration assistance, sample prints jobs and other documentation, see http://tinyurl.com/37aud4z or visit the Technology Support and Loan desk.

Library secures site license for Chronicle of Higher Education

chronicle_logo.gifSyracuse University Library has obtained a campus-wide site license for online access to the Chronicle of Higher Education and the Chronicle of Philanthropy.

The Chronicle of Higher Education offers news, information, and employment opportunities for college and university faculty and administrators, along with a variety of newsletters. Its digital publications are updated every weekday; back issues are available from 1995.

The Chronicle of Philanthropy offers content for nonprofit organizations, grant makers, and other philanthropic enterprises. Digital copies of the publication are updated every other Monday and back issues are available from October 1997. The Chronicle of Philanthropy's free e-newsletter, Philanthropy Today, is available daily.

To be recognized as an authorized user of the Library subscription, including premium content, access either publication from the Library homepage. Enter the title on the E-Journals search tab and choose the entry labeled Miscellaneous Ejournals on the search results page to connect directly to the Chronicle web site. When connecting from off campus and prompted to login, use your SU NetID and password. The Chronicle of Higher Education and The Chronicle of Philanthropy may also be found at http://chronicle.com/ and http://philanthropy.com/, respectively, however premium content may not be available.

The Library's license does not include an obligation to maintain a print subscription. Any pre-existing individual or departmental subscriptions will be unaffected by this new access.

For more information about this subscription, contact Robert Cleary at 443-2989 or email rmcleary@syr.edu. For assistance accessing these titles, contact Kelley Lasher at 443-6179 or email kllasher@syr.edu.

New Virtual Tour of the Library available

flickr_slideshow_sm.jpgThe Library has created a brand new virtual tour, with web, video, and slide show versions available.

The Virtual Tour provides an overview of library places, services, and collections for new and returning students. Please send questions and comments to Learning Commons Librarian Pamela Thomas, chair of the Virtual Tour Team at 443-5526.

The Productive Research tutorial wins recognition

The Productive Researcher, the Library's online tutorial series, has been accepted into the Peer-Reviewed Instructional Materials Online (PRIMO) project and added to the PRIMO database. It will also be featured as a PRIMO "Site of the Month." PRIMO is a project of the Association of the Instruction Section of the Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association.

The project team consisted of Patrick Williams, Abby Kasowitz-Scheer, Pam Thomas, and Lisa Moeckel. Several library staff also assisted in this project, providing voice talent as well as technical and graphic design assistance (see the full list of credits here).

The Productive Researcher was created in collaboration with the Writing Program to provide 24X7 access to instructional content previously delivered through classroom presentations, primarily for Writing 105 classes.

For more information about the Productive Researcher, contact Lisa Moeckel at 443-9790 or lemoecke@syr.edu


Haiti earthquake resources available

Librarians Bonnie Ryan and John Olson have compiled a resource guide related to the recent earthquake in Haiti. The guide provides resources on Haiti, the January 12th earthquake and its aftermath, as well as information on how to help and the SU campus response. John compiled the Haiti Maps and Atlases page, which includes links to information from ReliefWeb, World Health Organization, WikiProject - Haiti, the Army Geospatial Center, Google Earth and Geologic Earthquake maps from the US Geological Survey.

Bonnie is working in collaboration with faculty members Paula Johnson, Law; Arthur Paris and Cecilia Green, Sociology; and Linda Carty, African American Studies, to coordinate dissemination of information about the disaster.

The SU resource guide is based on a similar one created by UMass Amherst's W.E.B. DuBois Library, located http://guides.library.umass.edu/haiti.

Video Tutorials

The Library now offers a series of three-minute video tutorials that provide an overview of some commonly used research tools. Developed by Learning Commons Librarian Pam Thomas, the series includes:

For more information, see the Three Minute Video Tutorials subject guide.

SU Press Digital Books

In a new partnership with Syracuse University Press, the Library now offers a collection of digital versions of recent SU Press books. Incorporated with the Library's other digital collections, the SU Press Collection now includes 54 titles, with plans to add 40 more books in the coming year.

Among the important goals of this project are to enable SU faculty and students to use SU Press scholarship in their teaching and research and to promote the Press on campus. The project has also provided the Press with experience in distributing its content online. These books are accessible from on-campus locations and through VPN, however they cannot be printed or downloaded.

Titles include Besa, Muslims who saved the Jews in WWII by Norman H. Gershman; The Virgin of Solitude: a novel by Taghi Modarressi; and 41 Shots--and counting: what Amadou Diallo's story teaches us about policing, race, and justice by Beth Roy.

To view the full list of titles available, visit http://digilib.syr.edu/

Mandarin Chinese Books

Thumbnail image for Hui.JPGNowadays, students from China feel right at home in Bird Library. That's because the Library has partnered with SU's Chinese Students and Scholars Association (CSSA) to build a collection of books in Mandarin Chinese.

CSSA members asked the Library to help make Mandarin-language books available. Doing so required identifying Mandarin-speaking Library staff and assigning them to the project, as well as programming the Library's computers to be able to search in Chinese characters. While most of the titles are academic and scholarly texts, the collection also includes leisure reading and reference materials such as dictionaries, writing guides, and preparation books for standardized tests. This collection is used by students and faculty from China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Malaysia.

CSSA collects and delivers donated books, while the Library catalogs and maintains the collection. CSSA President Ronghong Lin says "Our goal is to collect 500 books each year. This is a great opportunity to have our language represented in the Syracuse University Library." CSSA member Hui Zhao (in photo) agreed: "Having these materials available to us is so important. Being able to read in Chinese allows us to be transported back home without leaving Syracuse University."

The CSSA built the collection by purchasing books with money raised from their annual fundraiser and by collecting donated books from families and friends. They send a wish list to incoming freshman from China each year, asking students to bring one book from the list with them to donate to the Library when they come to campus in the fall. Books are also donated by authors and academics in China who want to have their work included in the collection of Syracuse University Library.


New video tutorials available

Thumbnail image for tutorials.bmpLearning Commons Librarian Pam Thomas has developed a series of video tutorials to introduce commonly used research tools and techniques. The videos are available as a subject guide and also on the Learning Commons' YouTube channel.

Contact Pam for more information on this project.

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