Reference at Newman Library

Animal Studies

While the topic of “animal studies” might seem unimportant to Baruch readers you might be surprised. The editors of the Chronicle of Higher Education in the section, Chronicle Review, October 23, 2009, put together a special issue on the new multidisciplinary topic “animal studies.”  Crossing every imaginable discipline the editors present articles linking psychology, ethics, history, philosophy, biology, ecology, sociology and literary studies. My favorite part is about how canids, dogs and related creatures such as wolves, signal a wish to play, which is an act of trust. If a member of the pack violates the trust with abusive play the animal ultimately is forced to leave the pack leading to a higher mortality rate. In a moment of wild wonder, I thought, is there any parallel to those–though not playing–who caused economic mayhem? Despite my bias you too might enjoy reading these articles or sharing them as part of your liaison.

WSJ offers discount subscription options for students

While returning from an English 2100 instruction session, I noticed that the Wall Street Journal had a table today on the second floor of the vertical campus.   Because we have students asking about discounts, I will place the material in a folder at the reference desk.  This month they are offering students a special rate for print and online–$24.95 for ten weeks, $59.95 for 26 weeks, and a year for $119. Two year subscriptions are available for $179, a 75% discount.  Sometimes students want their own subscriptions rather than using FACTIVA. (Sometimes they don’t know about access on FACTIVA.)

resources on grommets

While at the reference desk on Friday,  a student asked for help on grommets–the history, origin, how they changed culture and business. We found patents, articles in American Periodical Series, and some news articles about new uses of grommets.  I found some other resources later so if anyone comes with this question, please let me know.  Grommets are used in sails, tents, shower curtains, hats,  shoes, bras, corsets, crack pipes, art works, cars, planes, tubes to help prevent ear aches,  and many other military and industrial uses.  A search of Westlaw Campus and LexisNexis found some cases in which failed grommets caused personal injuries.  Some patent litigation cases have information on the uses of grommets.  The OED was consulted for the origin of the word.   Sometimes, in fashion, they are referred to as “eyelets.”

UNdata Page – Country Data

The UN is a massive organization composed of smaller agencies, organizations, and projects that all produce data. In many cases the data they provide is hosted on individual websites, which makes it difficult to find and sift through stats.

The UNdata page (http://data.un.org/) is a central repository for statistical data about countries that captures many of these datasets in one place. You can search for datasets or a particular variable or drill down through categories that are arranged by agency and topic. Datasets include population, education, labor, crime, health, technology, trade, and environmental issues. Once you select a particular dataset you can filter by country and build comparative country tables that you can download.

In addition to comparative tables, which show you one variable for many countries, you can also access country profiles which show you many of the variables for one country. Getting to the profiles (which are collectively called the World Statistics Pocketbook) is a little tricky as they are buried on the site – here’s the link – http://data.un.org/CountryProfile.aspx

New York Times access

I was teaching a couple of sections of English 2100 yesterday, and the professor wanted the students to search for newspaper articles, among other things. When they find articles in databases like Academic Search Premier, the “Find It” link brings them to a Factiva or Lexis Nexis search page. I was able to help them get what they needed, but they were confused when they came to another search box. Have other people encountered this? I know we can search the Times directly, but it would be helpful for the students if the link brought them to the article.