Finals Time Means Extra Quiet Time

Icon representing the concept of no noise that shows a speaker with an X in front of it to indicate silence.

As the semester ends and everyone is studying for finals and completing major research projects, we need everyone to respect the need for quiet on all floors of the library.

A simple conversation between friends at one table could be utterly distracting to someone nearby trying to manage their stress while they review for an exam. For many of our students, this is the only place that they can count on as quiet refuge for study in a noisy city. The more that students use the library as a hangout and socializing space, the more they diminish it as a space for study and research.

Public Safety will be assisting us as we try to ensure that the library remains a studious space on every floor. If you find others are distracting you, please call Public Safety at (646) 660-6000. Make sure you give them the correct floor number (remember, the main floor of the library where you entered and passed through the turnstiles is actually the 2nd floor and the top floor of the library is the 5th).

“Portrait of the Woman as a Writer, 1870s-2020s” at Newman Library

Please visit the second floor of the Newman Library to see a new display entitled “Portrait of the Woman as a Writer, 1870s-2020s.” Once again, members of our Access Services Division have curated a display that highlights books from the Newman Library collection. Read the curators’ note below and then come visit the Library!

A photograph of a display of books, entitled "Portrait of the Writer as a Woman, 1870s-2020s."

We begin in a fictional world closely resembling our own, among the residents of the English town of Middlemarch in the year 1829. Despite the convention that women should write readers a happy ending, that is not what we get. By the time we’ve made it to the 2020s, in another fictional town called Vacca Vale, we’ve rounded the wheel of fortune many times, following Woman as she writes her story through 19th-century high society, the irrevocable social revolutions of the 1960s, and the dying cities of the contemporary United States. Explore these selections of writing by women authors, spanning the 1870s to the present day, and discover the connections that exist between time, place, and circumstance when a woman’s voice is telling the story. The selections can be found in Newman Library’s Engelman Reading Room and can be checked out at the Circulation Desk on the library’s second floor.

Learn How to Use AI-Enabled Financial Databases

Overlapping screens showing numbers representing financial data

Prof. Michele Costello will be teaching an innovative and new workshop for Baruch students on Monday, May 12, from 12:45 PM – 2:00 PM, on Zoom. This workshop explores how artificial intelligence (“AI”) can be used in financial database research. It covers timely topics such as AI-enabled transcript analysis, which extracts valuable insights from earnings calls and financial reports, and AI-enabled sentiment analysis, which quantifies market sentiment from various information sources.

Register here.