Would you like to know more about EndNote Web and how it will help your citation management? Email cumbo@roanoke.edu to reserve your spot in the EndNote Workshop at Fintel Library on Tuesday, November 10 at 12 pm.
See you at the Library!
Roanoke College Fintel Libary's Blog
by cumbo
Would you like to know more about EndNote Web and how it will help your citation management? Email cumbo@roanoke.edu to reserve your spot in the EndNote Workshop at Fintel Library on Tuesday, November 10 at 12 pm.
See you at the Library!
by cumbo
Join Carole Porter and Piper Cumbo in room 300 in Fintel Library on Tuesday, October 6 from 10:30-11:30 and Wednesday, October 7 from 2-3 pm for the beginner’s Word workshop. Carole Porter from IT will help you learn how to leverage Word’s functions and additional features to produce a polished paper. She’ll demonstrate how to insert page numbers, headers, & footers, set margins, change font type, size, and style. Piper Cumbo from Fintel Library will help you use the EndNote plug-in to create bibliographies and reference pages.
The Word workshops will pick back up on November 17 & 18 for more advanced techniques.
by cumbo
The Salem Public Library has helped many a Roanoke College student out of a research quandary by providing books that Fintel Library may not own. Trouble is, in order to get that Salem Public Library book, RC students have to get a Salem Public Library card. This requires some filling out of paperwork and a few steps that take time, which is very valuable to our students.
Lucky for you all, the Salem Public Library is willing to come here, to Fintel Library, and issue you a free library card. On Wednesday, September 30 from 1 to 3pm, some local librarians from Salem Public will be setting up a table near the Reference Desk at Fintel that will help you get that library card out of the way and get you one step closer to the wonderful resources Salem Public provides.
They will also have some great giveaways just for stopping by and saying hello.
See you at Fintel Library on Wednesday, September 30 from 1-3pm.
by cumbo
It was Friday the 13th, 1962, but for a group of dedicated volunteers at Roanoke College, it had nothing to do with luck—good or bad. It was all about the planning. For many months, the campus and its neighbors had watched the much longed-for new Roanoke College Library progress. And, finally, the building was finished!
Since 1878, Bittle Memorial Hall, the fourth building across the Front Quad, had served the campus as its library. (No, it never was a chapel.) Now, eighty-four years later, the task at hand was to move 30,000 books across campus to their new home. The tricky part? The books had to be IN ORDER! Operation Bookswitch was born.
Donald M. Sutton, Director of Student Activities, had worked very hard to devise a system whereby volunteers would pick up small groups of books to be carried across campus to the correct location. It was absolutely necessary that the volunteers stay in line in order.
The College officials called upon volunteers to carry out the plan. Students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends eagerly arrived that afternoon. At precisely 1:45P.M., Sutton sounded the bullhorn, the fraternity cannon boomed, and the lines began to move—into Bittle from the Back Quad, out the front door, across campus and into the new library, where Librarians directed everyone from President H. Sherman Oberly and Dean Perry F. Kendig to freshmen “rats” to the proper location. Coca Cola was supplied to the hot and thirsty movers. Two hours and thirteen minutes later—exactly 3:58P.M.—the bullhorn sounded and the cannon boomed. The task was finished. And, so were many of the volunteers– hot and tired, with aching arms and sore, blistered feet. The last book in the door was Banned Books: A Study in Censorship.
Over the weekend, the Librarians checked for errors. The plan had been well devised and executed; 94% of the books were in their proper place.
Monday morning, the Roanoke College Library was open for business, with its bold colors of blue and orange to its sturdy study tables and chairs, some of which are still in use today. The original Library extended as far into Fintel Library as the middle of the pillars in front of the center stairwell, and was only three floors. But, for those who had worked and studied in Bittle Memorial Hall, it was huge and fresh and new.
The photo above appears in The Roanoke Collegian. Students are shown moving books out of Bittle Memorial Hall and taking them across campus to the new library. For the full article from The Roanoke Collegian on “Operation Bookswitch” contact Piper Cumbo or Linda Miller.
by cumbo
CUPS will be back on campus and ready to take care of your caffeine needs on Wednesday, September 2 at 8 am. Here are the NEW CUPS hours for Fall Semester 2015:
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday 8am-8pm
Wednesday and Friday 8am-5pm
Saturday closed
Sunday 12-7
Better hours. Same delicious coffee and treats. See you at the Library!
by cumbo
Tell us your JSTORy!
We have some JSTOR swag that we would like to share with you if you can share your best JSTOR experience with us. In 100 words or less, tell us what JSTOR did for you, helped you find, why you love it, etc. Submit your entries to cumbo@roanoke.edu and get some JSTOR swag, such as a sticker, notepad, or pen.
Get your entries in before April 17.
We hope the end of the semester is going well and let us know if we can help.