Thursday, August 30, 2007

Fundamentally Sound Performance, Steenbock Terrace, September 4

Come listen to the sweet sound of UW-Madison men’s a cappella group, Fundamentally Sound. The group will give a short performance on Steenbock Library’s front terrace, September 4th at 4:30 PM.


As the group will be looking to recruit some additional talent, do plan to nab a brochure and schedule a time with them to audition. For more information and a schedule of future appearances, visit the Fundamentally Sound website.

http://www.fundamentally-sound.com/


Steenbock Library staff thanks Fundamentally Sound for supplying this great Welcome Week entertainment!

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Fall Semester Hours Commence September 4

Steenbock Library will observe the following hours during the fall semester:


Monday – Thursday (8:00 am – 1:00 am)

Friday (8:00 am – 10:00 pm)

Saturday (10:00 am – 10:00 pm)

Sunday (10:00 am – 1:00 am)


Reference librarians are available for consultation at the Information Services Desk, Monday-Thursday (10:00 am – 8:00 pm) and Friday (10:00 am – 5:00 pm).

Other hours are available by appointment or in-house request. Make an appointment with your library liaison or place a request for assistance at the Circulation Desk (if needing to consult with a reference librarian before 10:00 am, for instance).

Monday, August 27, 2007

Bus Route Changes, Effective September 4 (Correction/Update)

Do note that changes to the Bus 80 route will go into effect this coming September and not just for 2008 as accidentally recorded in the title of the original blog post. (I must have been thinking about the 2007-2008 academic year and jumped ahead a semester--my apologies for any confusion).

The original post follows below:

There will be changes in store for riders when regular Bus 80 service resumes Tuesday, September 4. Among these changes will be the elimination of a stop at Union South (and a new stop added at the northwest corner of Charter and West Johnson streets for those heading to Union South) and reduced frequency of trips to Eagle Heights (15 minute intervals between 10:00am and 3:00pm).

During rush times, though, (before 10:00am and after 3:00pm), riders can anticipate the full route running at intervals of seven-eight minutes. According to Transportation Services, these changes are intended to make the Route 80 circuit a shorter journey for some buses and improve frequency.

For more information about these changes and a map of the route, see the current Wisconsin Week (August 22, 2007) story, on page 13.


Additionally, City of Madison bus schedules can be accessed at: http://www.cityofmadison.com/metro/


For those traveling to Steenbock Library, a convenient stop remains at the corner of Babcock and Observatory Drives.

New Digital Collection, Historical County Plat Maps from South Central Wisconsin and Early Madison City Directories

A collaborative effort of the UW Digital Collections Center and the Madison Public Library brings online access to a collection of historic plat books, city directories and atlases of South Central Wisconsin—specifically Columbia, Dane, Portage and Wood counties. The plat books and atlases can help to elucidate the formation of particular communities.

The early Madison city directories provide information on specific people (addresses and occupations) and businesses in the area during the 1800s and early 1900s.

These particular materials were selected for digitization given frequency of use and fragile condition.

Take a look at:

Historical County Plat Maps from South Central Wisconsin and Early Madison City Directories

http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/WI.MadisonLocHist

Friday, August 24, 2007

Campus Bus Route Changes, Effective September 4

There will be changes in store for riders when regular Bus 80 service resumes Tuesday, September 4. Among these changes will be the elimination of a stop at Union South (and a new stop added at the northwest corner of Charter and West Johnson streets for those heading to Union South) and reduced frequency of trips to Eagle Heights (15 minute intervals between 10:00am and 3:00pm).

During rush times, though, (before 10:00am and after 3:00pm), riders can anticipate the full route running at intervals of seven-eight minutes. According to Transportation Services, these changes are intended to make the Route 80 circuit a shorter journey for some buses and improve frequency.

For more information about these changes and a map of the route, see the current Wisconsin Week (August 22, 2007) story, on page 13.


Additionally, City of Madison bus schedules can be accessed at: http://www.cityofmadison.com/metro/


For those traveling to Steenbock Library, a convenient stop remains at the corner of Babcock and Observatory Drives.

Monday, August 20, 2007

Fall Tours and Workshops

Get acquainted with Steenbock Library! Join a free tour or come to a workshop.


Library Tours are scheduled for the following days/times:

Thursday, August 30 at 2:00pm, 3:00pm, or 4:00pm
Friday, August 31 at 3:00pm or 4:00pm
Thursday, September 6 at 4:30pm


Free, drop-in workshops:

Libraries in a Nutshell

Thursday, August 30 (4:00-5:00pm)
Wednesday, September 5 (11:30am-12:30pm)
Friday, September 14 (3:30-4:30pm)

Managing Your Citations with RefWorks

Friday, August 31 (11:00am-12:30pm)
Wednesday, September 12 (12:00-1:30pm)
Tuesday, October 16 (11:30am-1:00pm)

Google for Academic Research

Wednesday, September 12 (3:30-4:30pm)

MadCat: Find Books and More for your Research

Thursday, September 13 (4:00-5:15pm)

PubMed for the Life Sciences

Wednesday, September 19 (4:00-5:00pm)

Managing Your Citations with EndNote and EndNote Web

Friday, September 21 (11:00am-12:30pm)
Tuesday, October 23 (3:00-4:30pm)
Wednesday, November 28 (12:00-1:30pm)

For a list of other workshops and workshop descriptions, see: http://steenbock.library.wisc.edu/instruct/dropin.htm


Check the entrance lobby sign for room location. All workshops incorporate hands-on practice. No registration is required in order to attend.

We look forward to seeing you there.


Encourage new staff and students to attend. Post a Workshop and Tour Flyer.

Friday, August 17, 2007

University Archives Consolidation at Steenbock

Offices for the University Archives and Records Management Services have consolidated into renovated space on the fourth floor of Steenbock Library. Archives Director David Null and remaining staff have arrived with collections from Memorial Library to join forces with those already at Steenbock. The Archives has also recently hired Troy Reeves as head of its Oral History Program.


Please join Steenbock Library in welcoming the archivists to their new space, and we invite you to visit the next time you enter our building! The Archives is open from 8:00am until 4:30pm, Monday through Friday. More information about the University Archives and the Oral History Program can be found on the Archives web site.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Interface Changes to Biological Abstracts and Zoological Record

Biological Abstracts and Zoological Record have now moved from the former SilverPlatter WebSPIRS to the ISI Thomson Scientific/Web of Knowledge platform. (Frequent users of the Web of Knowledge/Web of Science databases will recognize the look and feel). The content of these databases remains unchanged. Biological Abstracts indexes 4000 biology journals each year and covers 1969 to the present. Zoological Record indexes about 5000 zoology journals and covers 1978 to the present.

Two additional changes are coming soon. Come August 19 or so, there will be a new look to all three databases. You will still be able to run the searches you do now, but additional features will be available, too. When the new interface comes online, the library will post more information about these new features. At about that same time, the coverage of Zoological Record will expand back to 1864!

If you have any questions regarding how to search these databases effectively, please contact your Steenbock Liaison Librarian.

Take a Video Tour of the New Look
Search Biological Abstracts
Search Zoological Record
Search Web of Science

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Do you know your Library Liaison?!

August is a good time to get acquainted. Steenbock liaisons work as principal contacts for each department and program the library serves.


Library liaisons can provide the following services:

Assist with library services and policies (e.g., Library Express, faculty runner cards, UW System search and retrieval…)

Customize email alerts to keep you informed about new articles matching your topic criteria and tables of contents of your favorite journals

Provide in-depth reference consultations—our office or yours (e.g., help with strategy and database choices, customize your email alerts…)

Supply customized instructional sessions and course web pages for students (e.g, hands-on training in using specific databases in your subject area, cited reference searching, website evaluation)

Verify citations

Assist with purchase requests or recommendations

Consult on questions related to publishing your research (e.g., identifying target journals, managing copyright, measuring research impact, open access publishing)

Provide in-depth orientation for new faculty, staff, graduate students, and project and research assistants

Find Your Steenbock Liaison

Other campus library liaisons

Monday, August 06, 2007

Course Reserves Deadline, August 10, 2007

Steenbock Library requests that faculty and staff submit course reserve materials by August 10, 2007. Submission by this date will enable these materials to be ready by the first day of class.

Follow the links below for additional information:

Steenbock Course Reserves Information page

Online Request Form

Contact Reserves staff by email or phone, 263-8331

Course Reserve pages can also include customized, tabbed links to useful library resources and library staff support. To request this course support content, contact your Steenbock library liaison.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Keeping Current using RSS Feed-Readers (or News Aggregators)

RSS or "Really Simple Syndication," is an XML format for sharing syndicated information—generally, frequently-changing information—on the Web. RSS enables you to monitor Websites for new information without needing to visit each site or database.

Some RSS readers are freely-available to Web users; these include Bloglines or My Yahoo.

Many news sites and publication Websites supply RSS feeds of new/current information and/or research. Using a feed-reader enables you to view all of these feeds of news and research information in one place. Within a feed-reader, the feed will show a short description with a link to the full content.

Subscribe to a feed by entering the feed's link (URL in browser address bar) into the reader or by clicking an RSS icon to initiate a subscription process.

A subscription maps a feed to the user’s reader. Look for feed links on a feed service page or from a site’s main/home page or look for icons on the page or from within the browser’s URL address bar.

While feeds are commonly found at many news sites (BBC, CNN, Guardian, among many others), feeds are also available from the following research news sites:

Biology News Net

EurekAlert

PLOS (Public Library of Science)


Using the Bloglines Feed-Reader

Visit: http://www.bloglines.com/

Create an account: http://www.bloglines.com/register/

The Bloglines login is your email address; the password you create must be six characters in length (and ideally, not easily guessed).

Once you are logged in, you will be able to subscribe to feeds and to organize them into folders or categories of feed information.


For additional information about RSS readers, see:

http://www.library.wisc.edu/alerts/more-about-rss.html


On Steenbock Shelves…Flower Confidential

Years ago, I worked in the floral industry. As I unwrapped shipments of roses and Peruvian lilies and marveled at their provenance, I knew a great story was there for the telling—and that story has finally made it to Steenbock’s shelves. Amy Stewart, author of Flower Confidential examines the ins and outs of the cut-flower industry from plant breeders who craft a flower for its color and longevity as a cut specimen and the laborers who plant, harvest and process that commodity (sometimes at great peril) to the consumer whose appetite for the ‘perfect sentiment’ drives the market.

A rose is a rose…or is it just that? While I may wince at any reference to Valentine’s Day, the reader will be fascinated by this event and other critical dates on the industry calendar. A thoroughly engaging read.

Find Flower Confidential at: SB443.3 S74 2007 (book stacks, first floor)