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Service desk hours for February 20

  • Posted by: Joanne Quinn
  • Posted Date: February 20, 2019
  • Filed Under: Library News

Due to inclement weather, the University has cancelled classes for today, February 20. The Library will provide limited service desk hours from 8:00 am through 12:00 noon. 24/7 access to the building remains open with a valid Wildcard. A librarian will be on call from 10am – 5pm, and available via this link or via chat button, which you’ll find in the right hand corner of our home page. Continue to check the blog and the library’s social media for future updates. Stay safe and warm, Wildcats!


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End of Semester New Resource Countdown: Day 11

  • Posted by: Joanne Quinn
  • Posted Date: December 11, 2018
  • Filed Under: Library News

 

Dear students,

There are many ways the library can help you prepare for the stress that accompanies the end of every semester. Whether you have a handful of final exams or one large research paper, we know that it can be a lot to handle. But Falvey Library can be an incredible source of academic help and support. The list of excellent and peer-reviewed primary and secondary scholarly sources accessible to all Villanova students grows everyday. Additionally, no matter what your major, there’s a librarian who specializes in instructing you on how to access articles, books, and information you need to succeed. Stop by and meet your subject librarian soon…you’ll be glad you did!

During December, we’re counting down to the holidays by featuring a new Falvey Library acquisition every day…sort of like those fun Advent calendars you enjoyed as a kid! Have fun discovering the latest choices here at your library!

 

LGBTQ Social Movements by Lisa Stulberg; recommended by Susan Turkel, Sociology & Criminology, Global Interdisciplinary Studies, and Gender & Women’s Studies Librarian

There has been incredible progress in the development and advancement of LGBTQIA+ civil rights in the United States in recent years. However, we’re currently in a time of incredible political uncertainty for queer people. Stulberg’s book gives readers an easy-to-read and informational introduction to mainstream LGBTQ movements in U.S. history.

This book is an important tool for understanding current LGBTQ politics and will be essential reading for students and scholars of sexuality, LGBTQ studies, and social movements, as well as anyone new to thinking about these issues.

Check the blog tomorrow for another resource!

 

 


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End of Semester New Resource Countdown: Day 12

  • Posted by: Joanne Quinn
  • Posted Date: December 10, 2018
  • Filed Under: Library News

 

Dear students,

There are many ways the library can help you prepare for the stress that accompanies the end of every semester. Whether you have a handful of final exams or one large research paper, we know that it can be a lot to handle. But Falvey Library can be an incredible source of academic help and support. The list of excellent and peer-reviewed primary and secondary scholarly sources accessible to all Villanova students grows everyday. Additionally, no matter what your major, there’s a librarian who specializes in instructing you on how to access articles, books, and information you need to succeed. Stop by and meet your subject librarian soon…you’ll be glad you did!

During December, we’re counting down to the holidays by featuring a new Falvey Library acquisition every day…sort of like those fun Advent calendars you enjoyed as a kid! Have fun discovering the latest choices here at your library!

 

Good Neighbor: The Life and Work of Fred Rogers by Maxwell King; recommended by Social Sciences & Instructional Design Librarian, Deborah Bishov.
If remembered only for his advice to “look for the helpers” when viewing scary things on the news, the PBS television personality Fred Rogers would be worth memorializing. This new book delves into the life of the friendly and trustworthy companion to generations of children, who educated and entertained with puppetry, songs and sound advice. This book was written by a former Philadelphia Inquirer editor who knew Fred personally, and provides great background for the Netflix documentary and new movie starring Tom Hanks, according to Variety, due for release next year.

 

Check the blog tomorrow for another new resource!


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PRINT IT OUT! All-in-One Infographic for Your Library Questions

Welcome back, Wildcats!

Whether you’re fresh on the scene or coming back for more, here’s a quick guide for your library essentials. We at the library want everything to be as convenient and helpful for you as possible. Below you’ll find out how to contact the pros; one of our esteemed librarians will always have your back. Our website is on your side, too! Learn where to find your account information to easily renew books or organize your many searches of our many resources. Take a look! Just like that place where your Grandpop used to buy his flip phone, if you have a question, we have an answer! 🙂


Infographic by Joanne Quinn, Director of Communication and Marketing, Falvey Memorial Library. 

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Chillax with our Anything is Popsicle Word Search

There was a time – like back in 2017 – when the animal you’d be most likely to give a high five to during National Ice Cream Month would be the dairy cow. But as you know, Nova Nation, this is 2018 when anything can and will happen. So this year, America’s favorite mammalian mascot for all things frozen delicacy is…the unicorn! Don’t believe us? Search #unicornicecream. Check out Time magazine. Go to Target. We’ll wait.

We also want to recommend a trip to Penn State’s Creamery next time you’re in Happy Valley. We remember our visits there so fondly after a library conference or two! We’ve featured three of their most iconic flavors in our word search.

In the meantime, cool off and relax this afternoon with our new ice cream-flavored word search. Download and print from here, or pick one up at the library’s front desk. Have fun – but don’t get any frosty swirly edible glitter bits stuck in your keyboard!


Craving more sugary goodness? Dig deeper into the history, science, and technology of ice cream with these resources from Falvey’s collection:

Ice Cream

Of Sugar and Snow: A History of Ice Cream Making

Ice Cream: A Global History

Links provided by Deborah Bishov, Falvey’s Social Sciences/Instructional Design Librarian, and ice cream enthusiast.


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Foto Friday: Summer League Basketball…sort of

  • Posted by: Joanne Quinn
  • Posted Date: July 13, 2018
  • Filed Under: Library News

 

This photo is obviously not from Lands’ End, but like our favorite catalog of classic American clothes, it also features fetching summer fashion!  Actually, this photo is from an album of photographs and newspaper clippings covering the act Basketball on Bicycles as performed by The Oxford Trio, which toured in 1914-16.  And it’s included here, because we know that true Villanovans appreciate basketball in any form! By the way, have you been watching our old buddies Josh, Mikal, Ryan, et. al. in the NBA Summer League!? So awesome!!

Anyway… in case your cable is out and you can’t make it to Vegas, you’ll find this item and many dozens more currently on display on the library’s first floor as part of  the Timeless Treasures: Recent Acquisitions in Distinctive Collections exhibit! Curated by Laura Bang, Digital and Special Collections Curatorial Assistant, it’s up for a limited time. But hurry in – just like basketball season, summer flies by!


 


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Foto Friday: Foundations

  • Posted by: Joanne Quinn
  • Posted Date: July 6, 2018
  • Filed Under: Library News

If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be.

Now put the foundations under them.

Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)


Photo of continuing construction of the circular walkway around Mendel Field, which will provide a delightful entrance to Old Falvey Hall. For more on the enhancements to the campus landscape, visit https://www1.villanova.edu/villanova/fmo/engineeringconstr/currentprojects.html  Photo credit: Joanne Quinn


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Foto Friday: Handle a book as a bee does a flower

  • Posted by: Joanne Quinn
  • Posted Date: June 29, 2018
  • Filed Under: Library News

 

“Handle a book as a bee does a flower,

extract its sweetness but do not damage it.”

― John Muir

 

John Muir (1838-1914) was born in Scotland and migrated to the United States where he became a famed environmentalist and co-founder of the Sierra Club. Over his lifetime, he published over 300 articles and wrote twelve books. Known as the “apostle of nature”, Muir is a fascinating figure who according to his autobiography, memorized most of the Bible during his boyhood. Muir has countless flowers, minerals and beautiful places named in his honor.


Photo by Joanne Quinn

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Celebrate Freedom by Exploring Juneteenth

  • Posted by: Joanne Quinn
  • Posted Date: June 19, 2018
  • Filed Under: Library News

 Juneteenth

Today is Juneteenth, the 19th of June, and the day that marks the end of slavery in the United States. Although the Emancipation Proclamation was signed two and a half years earlier in 1863, at that time without mass media, it actually took the physical arrival of Major General Gordon Granger and his Union soldiers in Galveston, Texas, to announce to the last of the slaves held there that the Civil War had ended and that they were free. Hence, the birthing of a new Independence Day.

Juneteenth not only commemorates the abolition of slavery, but also is growing to be a multicultural and global celebration of  freedom in general. Specifically, it is an opportunity to build cultural awareness, and in many communities, to educate young African-American generations about the struggles of their past and how their ancestors prevailed. Gratitude and pride, story and song make up many Juneteenth celebrations.

 

Dig Deeper

Explore further the intriguing times after the Emancipation through the following Falvey resources about Juneteenth , curated by history librarian, Jutta Seibert. Contact Jutta for her guidance through your research needs and also for her help navigating the wealth of books and online library materials.

  1. African American Studies Center Online (AASCO)
    http://ezproxy.villanova.edu/login?URL=http://www.oxfordaasc.com/
    AASCO is a great source about African American history in general.  It includes the Encyclopedia of African American History: 1619-1895, Black Women in America, and the African American National Biography project. AASCO also includes primary sources and images.
  2. African American Newspapers: The Nineteenth Century
    Follow the life of Harriet Tubman as chronicled in the African American Press.
  3. Historical New York Times, 1851-2009

A report about the white resistance to emancipation in Texas from July 1865:

“The Negro Question in Texas.” New York Times (1857-1922), Jul 09, 1865.
http://ezproxy.villanova.edu/login?URL=?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/91903644?accountid=14853.

Secondary sources about the tradition of Juneteenth celebrations in the Falvey collection:

Kachun Mitch. “Celebrating Freedom: Juneteenth and the Emancipation Festival Tradition.” InRemixing the Civil War: Meditations on the Sesquicentennial, edited by Thomas J. Brown, 73-91. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011. [E641 .R45 2011]

Links and resources prepared by Jutta Seibert, director of Academic Integration and subject librarian for History. Contact information: Jutta.Seibert@villanova.edu, telephone: 610-519-7876, office:  room 228.



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Foto Friday: The Father of Falvey Memorial Library

  • Posted by: Joanne Quinn
  • Posted Date: June 15, 2018
  • Filed Under: Library News

Though often tucked into the latest print issue of the Delco Daily Times, my father doesn’t read books regularly – though he did recently dip into Jay Wright’s Attitude!  As a woodworking hobbyist, however, he created a home where books were collected and nestled into every corner where he could build a custom shelf or cabinet.

I remember with fondness one particular large cabinet he constructed which we kept in our semi-finished basement. It was the width of two refrigerators and painted a bright kelly green which matched the vintage Philadelphia Eagles memorabilia which hung on the wall. It carefully housed and categorized my mother’s treasured collections of McCall’s and Photoplay magazines. He also made a smaller hutch for our living room, with scored sliding doors and thick with coats of Minwax and polyurethane. With its 12.5” high shelving, it was the perfect height to shimmy in our many albums from the Columbia Record Club and the stacks of fat, curling paperbacks by the likes of Irwin Shaw and Jacqueline Susan that my mom liked to devour on the beach.

These memories recall another Father who’s precious to Villanova’s institutional memory and who also took great care with the care and housing of books and materials: Rev. Daniel Falvey, OSA and the father of Falvey Memorial Library. Library News honors him this Father’s Day weekend.

According to the Falvey Memorial Library dedication program from November, 1968:  Father Falvey was born in 1906 in Holyoke, MA, entered the Augustinian Order in 1928 and received his A.B. from Villanova in 1931.  In 1940, he received his master’s degree in Library Science from Columbia University and in 1958 was named a Doctor of Library Science from St. Francis College, Loretto, Pa. 

In 1935, Father Falvey was appointed Assistant Librarian at Villanova. He served in this capacity for five years and then in 1940 became Librarian. When the new library was erected after the war, Father Falvey devoted himself to the project in order to make the building as modern and as functional as any library in the country. He organized the “Friends of Villanova Library” committee which was made up of friends and alumni of the University. The purpose of the committee was to raise funds for the new structure. Father Falvey, working with the committee, succeeded in raising nearly a million dollars. But Father Falvey did not concern himself solely with the physical aspects of financing, building and maintaining a library. He was also dedicated to creating a scholarly atmosphere for all members of the academic community.

In addition to his qualifications as organizer and innovator, his personal qualities of perseverance and dedication, humility and generosity of spirit endeared him to all who knew him. Until his death in 1962, Father Falvey was planning improvement for the Library and constantly adding new materials, to keep it as complete and up-to-date as possible.”

You’ll still find much of the shelving and wood cabinetry Father Falvey installed here at Falvey Memorial Library. Countless students have given the cubicles a smooth patina borne of thousands of hours of sitting and slouching and reading and study.  Though Falvey Library is evolving and modernizing all the time, Father Falvey might still recognize much of his work were he to revisit the building today.  At any rate, we still think of him and his loving handiwork with much gratitude on this Father’s Day weekend.

 


Photo of the 1961 Belle Air by Joanne Quinn, Director of Communication & Marketing, Falvey Memorial Library

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Last Modified: June 15, 2018

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