Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Brown Bag Lunch: Copyright, 4.2.2015

Copyright Brown Bag Lunch

Thursday, April 2, 2015 at Noon in Lehman Library 106

Brown Bag Lunch topics will include brief overviews of copyright, library and IDWT services, and obtaining public performance rights; followed by a question and answer session building on attendee interests. Hope to see you there!

The library has revised its Copyright page: http://library.ship.edu/copyright. If you are planning to use something in class and aren’t sure how Copyright comes into play, we’ve included some “common scenarios” that might provide answers for you. Check out the LibGuide and the scenarios under the Fair Use tab. If you still have questions, please call the library at ext. 1474.

Win a Starbucks Gift Card!

Are you running low on flex? Burning through cash to fuel your Starbucks habit? We've been there. We understand. Enter the library design contest to win a Starbucks gift card!

The library is looking for creative students to design an image to represent one of our newest search tools: Ebsco Discovery Search (ED). You may have seen this figure around the library this semester:


Right now that's our stand in for ED. We don't know what ED should look like. We need your help! Submit a .jpg or .png image file to librarian@ship.edu by Monday, April 6th for your chance to win a Starbucks gift card! Contest rules can be found on the contest webpage.

Want more information? Stop by the library for cookies on Wednesday April 1st from 3:00-5:00pm to learn more about ED from library staff.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Financial Literacy Program & Money Smart Week @ Lehman Library

April 19-25 is Money Smart Week!
Want to retire early? You can if you plan early!

Celebrate Money Smart Week with our Financial Literacy Program during the month of April. Lehman Library will present “Become Money Smart” an exhibit in the Library Gallery. Visit us in the library main gallery and learn how to become money smart and learn about basic financial planning.  Dr. James Benton, Associate Professor, Accounting/MIS department, will give a special talk and workshop on financial planning on Wednesday April 22nd Noon- 1:00 pm in Lehman Library room 205. 

#TBT in the Archives 3/26/15

Women's basketball team, 1910
In honor of March Madness, and the last week of Women's History Month, we thought it would be appropriate to discuss the history of women's basketball here at Ship for this installment of Throwback Thursday. The origin of basketball in the United States goes back to 1891 when James Naismith developed a game to hold the attention of a rowdy gym class at the Springfield, Massachusetts YMCA. Senda Berenson is credited with introducing the sport to women, believing that there was no reason women could not play the game. Basketball quickly spread across the country in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, making its way to Shippensburg (then the Cumberland Valley State Normal School [CVSNS]) in 1903.

According to the Normal School Herald from January of that year, "the game teems with excitement and sport, and great enthusiasm has been shown by both boys and girls." A basketball section highlighting players, scores, and schedules began to regularly appear in January and April issues thereafter, the Herald proclaiming that "basketball is the game at Normal during the winter months." Although the Herald primarily concentrated on men's basketball, recaps of women's games do appear such as in the April 1903 issue when CVSNS played their first game against the Girls' Varsity at Dickinson College, losing 6-4. A week later CVSNS made up for their loss, defeating Dickinson 6-2.

The emergence of women's involvement in basketball at CVSNS and across the country reflects a larger theme about women's roles that began to shift in the late nineteenth century. The mid-nineteenth century Victorian ideals that placed women in the roles of mother and wife began to dissipate as women entered professions such as teaching and social work. Athletics became an integral part of the new model of American womanhood. At CVSNS, the Herald noted that "the girls were by no means inferior to the boys in their love of the sport." The image above is the earliest photographic record of a women's basketball team at CVSNS. The young man in the photo was the team's leader. Note that the uniforms reflect the era's ideals of modesty, as women had  to "cover up" on the court. While athletics did offer new opportunities for women, athleticism had to be balanced with the social norms of the era.

Want to learn more about Ship's history? No need to wait for the next Throwback Thursday! Visit Archives & Special Collections during our open research hours, or contact us via e-mail: specialcollections@ship.edu or phone: 717-477-1516.


Sources:
Grundy, Pamela and Susan Shackelford. Shattering the Glass: The Remarkable History of Women's Basketball. New York: The New Press, 2005. 

Normal School Herald 7, no. 2, January 1903, University Archives & Special Collections, Ezra Lehman Memorial Library, Shippensburg, PA.

Normal School Herald 7, no. 3, April 1903, University Archives & Special Collections, Ezra Lehman Memorial Library, Shippensburg, PA.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Library Research Award--Win $$


Apply for the Library Student Research Award!

Ezra Lehman Memorial Library will present the 2015 Library Research Award to the undergraduate student researcher who writes the best literature review as a part of her or his research with a faculty mentor. The Library will present a $500 first prize award and a $300 honorable mention award.

Undergraduate students conducting research under the guidance of a faculty mentor are eligible to apply. All literature reviews must be a minimum of 3 pages long and should be prepared with proper citation and style format appropriate to the discipline. Completed literature reviews must be submitted to Dr. Kirk Moll (kamoll@ship.edu) by April 17th at noon. Awards will be presented at the Kirkland/Spizuoco Memorial Science Lecture on April 22 at 7:30pm in the Luhrs Performing Arts Center.

For more information regarding application procedures, please visit http://library.ship.edu/lra.

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Did You Know: Streaming Music from Library's Databases

Did you know: You can listen to many genres from classical to jazz to pop-rock and more from one of the library’s databases: “Naxos MusicLibrary

Naxos Music Library


The world´s largest online classical music library. Currently, Naxos offers streaming access to more than 86,240 CDs with more than 1,256,900 tracks, standard and rare repertoire. Over 800 new CDs are added to the library every month.