In case you were unable to attend the event on Thursday, February 18th, Milne Library hosted a reception to celebrate the publication of Dr. Tom Greenfield’s newly-published work, Broadway: An Encyclopedia of Theater and American Culture. Published in December 2009 by ABC-CLIO, Inc., the two-volume set features contributions from several Geneseo faculty.
The crowd of nearly 50 attendees was comprised of students, faculty from several departments, President Dahl and Provost Long. Milne's Director, Ed Rivenburgh, opened with the promise of this being the first of many future events focusing on and promoting faculty scholarship. He also mentioned the new digital projects being worked on, and that Associate Director Cyril Oberlander and Special Collections Librarian Liz Argentieri were at that very moment attending a Thoreau conference gathering ideas about digitizing SUNY Geneseo's Walter Harding's collection.
Sue Ann Brainard, Instruction Librarian and author of five entries to the encyclopedia then introduced Dr. Greenfield, who graciously and humorously thanked every one who worked on the project. He pointedly thanked Ms. Brainard and another librarian from the Performing Arts Library in New York City Public Library, for their enthusiasm, saying that, "whenever I asked either one of them a research question, they would get back to him with 6 more sources than I needed, and they kept working on a question even after I was done with it."
In his appreciation, he relayed how "he was the envy of all his academic friends from other institutions, who were amazed that the library was doing this." The reception was completed with the cutting of the cake, conversation and many congratulations.
The books are currently available for in-Library use and located in the Author's Hall upstairs in Milne. Stop by the Reference desk and we'll help you find it.
Join us in Milne Library on September 28th, 29th & 30th to celebrate our sleek new cafe! It's been a summer of hard work renovating to make it bigger, better and more beautiful.
Come try out a tasty pannini and chips or grab a healthy salad; there are lots of choices now as well as the standards like baked goods and of course, plenty of coffee. If that's not enough to tempt you, there are prizes to be given out throughout all three days.
Monday kicks off with a Ceremonial Coffee Toast and you can still enter to win a SEMESTER of FREE COFFEE!
Presentation about the citation database Scopus on Wednesday, 2/4
On Wednesday, February 4th at 1:30pm in Room 104, representatives will be here from Elsevier publishers to discuss their citation database Scopus.
Students are welcome to join us to learn about how Scopus can help you find scholarly research in the life sciences, physical sciences and social sciences.
Scopus can also help you expand your research by identifying which other papers cited a source you already found.
Questions about if Scopus may be useful for you? Try a sample search in the box on the right, watch a quick demo about Scopus, or ask a reference librarian via phone (x5595), email, or in person (at the reference desk in Milne).
Stop by and learn about our powerful new resource: Scopus
On Monday, April 14, representatives from Elsevier Publishers will be in the Milne Library Lobby from 10:00am to 12:00pm demonstrating the citation database Scopus, a recent addition to Milne Library's research resources. Scopus covers a wide variety of articles related to the physical sciences, biomedical sciences, and social sciences.
In addition to keyword searching, this database allows users to track down the citation history of a known publication.
For example, if you found a really great article for the term paper you have due next week, you can use Scopus to locate other articles that cited your really great article.
Scopus also provides the ability to easily narrow your search by subject area, publication year, and keyword.
Stop by the library on Monday morning (April 14) to learn more about this powerful new resource.
Following the introduction, each honoree was formally introduced by a faculty colleague. These introductions shed light on the contributions made by the honorees to their departments and the campus as a whole.
The honorees each spent a few minutes discussing their approach to teaching and sharing some strategies that they used in the classroom.
Following the ceremony guests stayed for refreshments and to chat with the honorees.