Archive for May, 2009

Congratulations Graduates!

May 20th, 2009

On behalf of the Gleeson Library | Geschke Learning Resource Center it is my pleasure to extend an enthusiastic congratulation to the University of San Francisco’s 2009 graduating class. We applaud your achievements, and wish you great opportunities and success in your future endeavors.

2008 USF Graduation :: Photo by Sarainsanfran via Flickr (http://www.flickr.com/photos/sarainsanfran/2498837354/)

2008 USF Graduation :: Photo by Sarainsanfran via Flickr (http://www.flickr.com/photos/sarainsanfran/2498837354/)

Tyrone H. Cannon Ed. D.,
Dean, University Libraries

Did you know you can still use the Gleeson Library as an alumnus? Sign up for an Alumni Special Access ($20) or Borrowing Card ($50) – stop by the Gleeson Library Circulation Desk to request an Alumni Card. Annually renewed Alumni special borrower cards provide you with continued access to the Gleeson Library. To learn more about Library services and resources available to alumni, check out the libraries Alumni information page.

first and last class of digital media production

May 18th, 2009
back in late january, during the first day of class for digital media production, i wrote in chalk all of the tools and platforms we'd be using spring semester. under the names of the tools and platforms, i made two - and sometimes three - columns based on things like use vs don't use, know it vs don't know it, and read vs write. then i asked students to get out of their seats, approach the blackboard, and record, in chalk, their start-of-the-semester levels of knowledge and experience of each of these digital media platforms.


fifteen weeks later, on the last day of class last thursday, i re-wrote in chalk the names of the tools and platforms. i put an X through yelp and video because we ended up not covering them. for about an hour and a half, the students and i discussed each of the tools and shared our likes and dislikes. we collectively brainstormed and agreed upon appropriate questions and statements for each of the tools and platforms. for example, do you plan to keep using twitter? yes or no. each time we agreed upon a question, i asked the students to get out of their seats, approach the blackboard, and record, in chalk, their positions. when we were finished, the blackboard looked like this:


thanks, DMP, for an excellent and prolific semester.

International Museum Day

May 17th, 2009

May 18 is International Museum Day. This is an appropriate occasion to raise the topic of library museums once more. This is a topic I have been bringing up for years. It is discussed on the Library History Buff website here. This is also an occasion to pay tribute to the Bibliotheekmuseum (Library Museum) that is located in the Bibliotheek Amsterdam (Amsterdam Library). It is the oldest and most extensive library museum in the world. It was founded by Hans Krol who established the Library Museum Committee in 1969. The museum opened in 1975 in a small room in The Hague. It moved to the new Amsterdam Public Library in 2000. Krol is shown in the accompaning image. Krol is probably the most agressive collector of librariana and library artifacts in the world today. Norman Stevens could have previously made a claim to this designation. He donated the bulk of his extensive collection to the Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA) in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The Wisconsin Library Association Foundation has created the Wisconsin Library Heritage Center which promotes library history but does not have a physical location. The American Library Association Archives at the University of Illinois in Champaign-Urbana offfers the potential for becoming more museum like. There needs to be more done to preserve and display the artifacts of our library heritage, but who will provide the leadership?

Book Club: King of Shadows

May 13th, 2009

Howdy!
The Book Club June selection is King of Shadows by Aaron Shurin, who is the director of the MFA program (and my professor!) here at USF.

We’re meeting on Tuesday, June 9, 2009 in the Community Garden (just west of the Education Building, weather permitting) to discuss this collection of essays.

To get the book through the library’s free service Link+, click here. It will be delivered to Gleeson in about 4 business days. Or you can purchase it at the USF Bookstore, or at a local book seller like The Booksmith on Haight St. or The Green Apple on Clement St.

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Publishers Weekly says, “This emotionally potent collection of 20 essays by noted Bay Area poet Shurin (Involuntary Lyrics) begins with a meditation on his fear of birds (”of course they’re dinosaurs”) and coming out in radical UC-Berkeley in the late 1960s. The collection progresses through meditations on how the difference between Shakespeare’s Oberon and Puck shaped his identity as a gay man and a poet, and his indebtedness to Robert Duncan, Frank O’Hara and Denise Levertov. The accumulation of biographic and literary details conjures up an apparitional dreamscape of a very specific moment in American history–a new sense of personal and literary freedom, a new period of progressive political and literary ideas. Shurin’s idiosyncratic style can startle with its imagery and captures a complicated, conflicted relationship to several cultural identities. Describing his anxiety about his looks before going to a bar, he writes ‘oh, my wiry, independent, shtetl hair, my Ukrainian ribbons from my mother’s side, folkloric bonnet of curls, was out of the question, way too heavily accented, ruefully unacceptable, untidy, un-Californian….’ The author addresses forthrightly the question of AIDS by the end of this book, one of Shurin’s best.”

Call 415-422-2236 or email reference@usfca.edu for more details or to sign up for the book club mailing list.

Hope to see you there!

Swine Flu (aka H1N1 Flu)

May 13th, 2009

H1N1 virus

H1N1 virus

Is swine flu a whole lotta hype or a big heap of scary? You be the judge! Get the facts about swine flu (aka H1N1 flu) from credible sources using Gleeson Library’s Swine Flu Research Guide.