September – 2014 – St. Thomas Libraries Blog
Monthly Archives

September 2014

Archbishop Ireland Library, Circulation

“Not needed after” or “Cancel if not fill by” date or “Why you need to allow time for shipping and handling”

Have you ever bought a gift for someone online, only to have it arrive after the important event? Doesn’t that just ruin your day?

Wouldn’t it really ruin your day if, oh, you had a grade hanging on that package which never came?

When you want an item from another library, make sure you don’t shoot yourself in the foot! As you fill out the request, you will be asked to provide a “CANCEL IF NOT FILLED BY” date.  CLICnetRequestNNA

Be sure you give us enough time! For items currently on the shelf, we need at least a few days to get it to your library of choice. For items currently checked out by another patron, place a date further out, as they have a right to the book until their due date comes.

If your cancel date is too soon, your order will be canceled! Give us time to fill the order, and we’ll get it to you on the double.

~ Mason M.,  Ireland Library Graduate Student Staff

Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

Therapy Dogs and Bunnies at the Library!

Hear ye, hear ye!  The ever-popular Therapy Pets will be in the OSF Library rotunda

6-8pm on Wednesday, September 24th!

We’re nearly a month into the semester, and that back-to-school energy is starting to wane.  But have no fear: the library is here!

Take a break from your paper to give a friendly dog a pat or watch a few hops from a fluffy (and amazingly talented) agility bunny.*

Screen Shot 2013-12-15 at 9.38.16 PM

They are sure to bring to a smile back to your face and bounce back to your own step as you remember a fluffy loved one at home.  Bring your friends, roommates, and cameras and be ready for a fun time!

Tweet at #ustlibpets; we can’t wait to see your pics.

As always, remember that library staff are available to assist you find any help or information you need!

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*Curious about agility bunnies?  These fun rabbits are from a group that is determined to beat out cats in the cute video department. Check this short clip out  to see more about the “Rabbit Revolution” –  it stars several of “our” bunnies!

Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

World War II era Jazz comes to the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library on Oct. 7

Shelly Nordtorp-Madson and Chris Kachian

Shelly Nordtorp-Madson and Chris Kachian

noonartsound” returns to the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library on Tuesday, October 7 – noon to 1pm in the O’Shaughnessy Room, Rm 108.

Free and open to all, noonartsound brings together the talents of Dr. Shelly Nordtorp-Madson, chief curator and a member of the clinical faculty in the Department of Art History, and Dr. Chris Kachian, guitarist and professor of music.   Often the programs are enhanced by students or faculty members who bring their own expertise to the specific programs.

This semester’s first noonartsound on Oct. 7 will focus on jazz from the 1940′s and World War II era.

“From zoot suits and bobby soxers to rationing and victory gardens, to the GI Bill and Rosie the Riveter, the 1940′s was a time of great social upheaval, leaving no part of society untouched,” says Kachian, giving a taste of what will be offered.  “Frank Sinatra was a teenaged star and Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire brought a whisper of a carefree, sophisticated society that was far from armament factories and foxholes.”

Nordtorp-Madson and Kachian have been performing these popular lecture-concerts together for more than 12 years. The professors are known their unique style and humor, along with beautiful, satisfying, yet “unstuffy” presentations of their art.   If you have any questions, please contact Julie Kimlinger at 651-962-5014 or jakimlinger@stthomas.edu

Here is the noonartsound schedule for the rest of the year – we hope you will be able to join us!

  • Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2014:         Ireland
  • Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2014:         Spanish Flamenco with Guest Guitarist Tony Hauser
  • Tuesday, March 3, 2015:      Vienna and Franz Schubert
  • Tuesday, April 7, 2015:        The British Invasion: 1964-1967
  • Tuesday, May 5, 2015:         The 1930’s With Songs of the Early Labor Movement

 

 

Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

The OSF Library White Board Question

more sticky notes2

 

 

For the last couple of years, the staff in O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library have been posting a question on a big white board near the entrance. Sticky notes are provided for anyone to respond to the question.   We’ve asked questions like:

–  What would you tell a prospective student about the library?
–  Books – print or digital, which do you prefer?
–  What’s the best discovery you’ve made in the library?
–  What’s your favorite political movie?
–  What are you thankful for?
–  What helps you get to sleep?
–  What is your best study tip?
–  What are you working on right now?
–  What are you most excited about this semester?
–  How do you get your political news?

Our goal with the white board is to create a conversation with the people who come into the library, and to, we hope, learn more about them. We will ask a mix of lighthearted, social questions as well as more serious questions about your use of the library and our resources.
The answers to our latest question ‘What was the high point of your summer?’ demonstrates how interesting our users are. All the answers (necessarily brief, since the sticky note is small) suggested stories behind our users’ lives:

–  People travelled to Peru, Chile, England, Spain, Italy, Vietnam, Brazil, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and South Africa as well as many points in the U.S.
–  The Iowa State Fair!
–  More than one attended the Bonnarroo Music Festival in Manchester, Tennessee
–  People worked at a number of jobs, volunteered, coached, and took classes
–  The usual Minnesota summer activities were represented – boating, camping, laying in the sun, hanging with the family, hiking up north
–  And one person won a lot of money in Las Vegas!

We’ll keep putting up questions throughout the year – and hope to continue to learn more about you!

Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library, Special Collections and Archives

Happy 129th Birthday St. Thomas!

 

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The Administration Building and Lake Mennith, ca 1886

On September 8, 1885, the St. Thomas Aquinas Seminary (now known as the University of St. Thomas) celebrated its opening day.   The five faculty and sixty-two students lived, studied and attended classes in the only building on campus, the Administration Building.  This building sat on what is now the upper quad of the Saint Paul campus. Board and tuition for the year was $180.00 with an addition $20.00 for the washing and mending of clothes.

John Quinlan studying in his room in the Administration Building

John Quinlan studying in the Administration Building, 1906

Unlike the many majors students have to choose from in 2014, the first students of St. Thomas followed a strictly regimented course of study.  Courses in Latin, Greek, German, Mathematics, Natural Science, English and Christian Doctrine were required for all students.  Classes in Drawing, Instrumental Music and French were offered as optional courses.

 For more information on the history of the University of St. Thomas, browse through the Timeline of UST History.

 

 

 

Art, Business & Economics, English, Latin America, Libraries, Modern Languages, News & Events, Science

Welcome Back!

Welcome back to campus, everyone! It was so fun to cheer on the class of 2018 as they marched through the arches yesterday, and today it’s great to see the Quad filled with smiling faces as we all reconnect and get geared up for a wonderful academic year.

We hope you had a fun summer! Things were busy around here at the library and, as usual, we have some fun news to share.

As you gear up for your fall research projects, remember to check out our handy Subject Guides – what I like to call handy “mini library websites” geared specifically towards your course and subject content (and I’m not making that up – we  work with your professors to make sure we have what you need to do your assignments!).

We’re also happy to report that Summon, our popular library search engine, has received an upgrade that we hope will make it easy to use.  Some highlights we’ve heard students liking already include: recommendations of subject specialists based on what you’re searching, automatic breakdown of content by type (like Google does), and more.  Check it out and let us know what you think! 

We’ve also added many more online resources, including these favorites of mine:

  • ASTM Standards and Engineering Digital Library – a collection of industry-leading standards and technical engineering information
  • Digitalia Hispánica – database of e-books and e-journals in Spanish and English, with access to some of the most renowned publishers in Spain and Latin America
  • Early English Books Online – primary source collection featuring English-language books, pamphlets, tracts and ephemera printed between 1473 – 1700
  • Literature Online (“LION”) – criticism and reference resources as well as full text of poetry, drama, and prose fiction from the 8th century to the present day
  • Nature – we have expanded our subscription to the journal “Nature” to include archives going back to 1987

And, of course, we have much more!

As I like to joke, you can stick a quarter in me and I’d go on and on about all of the wonderful resources we have here at the UST Libraries, but I know we’re all busy so I’ll stop here.  Instead, make an appointment with your favorite librarian today find out more about what we have to help you with your research today!