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No Foolin’! The Wildcats Earn Title Shot in WBIT

By Shawn Proctor

 

On April Fool’s Day, the Women’s Basketball Team was all business in the WBIT, downing the Penn State Lady Lions 58-53 to advance to the championship game against Illinois Wednesday night at 7 p.m. Stand-out Lucy Olsen played all 40 minutes of the game and dropped 21 points en route to a hard fought “dub.”

To celebrate this big run, we’re looking back at this two-page collection of images from Women’s basketball through the years, courtesy of Villanova Athletics and the Falvey Library Collection, designed by Joanne Quinn, 15 MA, ’84 CLAS, Director of Communication and Marketing. The high-energy spread was featured in the Fall 2023 issue of Mosaic. 


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Chat with Librarians and Access Services Staff Via the Library Website

By Shawn Proctor and Migena Rrapushaj

Patrons who access Falvey Library remotely now have the option of connecting with live assistance via the website’s live library chat.

Librarians are available to assist with various reference questions students and faculty may have, such as research help and finding resources in our databases. Begin a chat by clicking the “Ask Us: Live Chat” button on the bottom right and top right of Falvey’s website.

Similarly, Access Services staff can assist with questions about circulation of Library materials, access to the Library, Interlibrary Loans, Library user accounts, and more. Staff can be contacted directly on pages relevant to Access Services (for example, the “Borrow from Falvey Library” page) by typing a message in any of the chat boxes that are visible.

Live chat assistance is available Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., on most weeks during the semester.

This service will be a help to patrons, helping them navigate the Library’s robust resources and databases from on campus or around the world!


Shawn Proctor, MFA, is Communication and Marketing Program Manager, and Migena Rrapushaj is Access and Collections Specialist at Falvey Library.

 

 


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Happy Easter Season!

Easter Cross

 

“We are not alone: Jesus, the Living One, is with us, forever. Let the Church and the world rejoice, for today our hopes no longer come up against the wall of death, for the Lord has built us a bridge to life. Yes, brothers and sisters, at Easter the destiny of the world was changed, and on this day, which also coincides with the most probable date of Christ’s resurrection, we can rejoice to celebrate, by pure grace, the most important and beautiful day of history.”
-Pope Francis


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Cat in the Stax: Easter Break Movie Recs

As Falvey’s Cat in the Stax, Rebecca writes articles covering a broad range of topics, from academics to hobbies to random events. All the while highlighting how Falvey Library can enhance your Villanova experience!

Happy Wednesday, Wildcats! Today marks the beginning of Easter Break at Villanova. Enjoy the long weekend and use these days off to rest, relax, and recharge because once we come back, we’ll be in the final stretch of the semester. Read a book, watch a movie, binge watch that Netflix series you’ve had your eye on, or just catch up on some much-needed sleep. Here’s a list of fun and uplifting movies to watch if you’re looking for a way to pass the time:

Movie Poster from IMDb

 

Mamma Mia!

Meryl Streep and Amanda Seyfried star in this 2008 musical featuring a free-spirited hotelier in Greece and her young daughter Sophie. As she prepares to get married, Sophie invited three of her mom’s past lovers to the island in the hopes of finding her father and having him walk her down the aisle. This film is available at Falvey through their DVD Collection and is also currently streaming on Netflix.

 

 

Movie Poster from IMDb

 

 

A League of Their Own

Based on a true story, this movie tells the story of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, which formed during World War II after all the male baseball players went off to war. Tom Hanks stars as a washed-up baseball player who is enlisted to coach one of the new All-Girls Teams. Falvey has this film on DVD, but you can also watch it on Hulu and Peacock.

 

 

Movie Poster from IMDb

 

Big Fish

This film directed by Tim Burton is based on the 1998 novel about a dying father and his son. Edward Bloom’s fantastical tales have always put distance between him and his son Will, who now wants to make an effort to understand his father better. You can watch this movie through Falvey’s streaming service.

Movie Poster from IMDb

 

 

 

 

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off

This movie follows its titular character and his friends on their many adventures after they skip school one day, available at Falvey on DVD.

 

 

 

 


Rebecca AmrickRebecca Amrick is a first year graduate student in the English Department and a Graduate Assistant at Falvey Library.


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Curious Cat: Early Bird or Night Owl

"Curious Cat Banner"

Happy Thursday, Wildcats! This week, the Curious Cat team asked students, “Are you an early bird or a night owl?”

“Early Bird”
-Jafet A. Beltran ’25 COE

 

“early bird”
-Hannah Slattery ’25 COE

 

“Early Riser”
-Nicholas Grieco ’26 CLAS

 


Rebecca AmrickRebecca Amrick is a first-year graduate student in the English Department and a Graduate Assistant at Falvey Library.

 

 

 

Julia Wagner ’26 CLAS is a second-year Economics major and student worker at Falvey Library.

 

 

 


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TBT: Celebrating the 2019 Falvey Scholars

Upcoming deadline alert, faculty and students!

Each academic year, the Library welcomes nominations from faculty across campus in order to highlight the undergraduate research at Villanova. Here are the 2019 winners, known as Falvey Scholars, who presented their work at a celebration event and were featured in the Library’s publication Mosaic.

Nominations for the 2024 Falvey Scholars Awards deadline Sunday, March 24.

 

 


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Cat in the Stax: Author Spotlight: Jane Austen

As Falvey’s Cat in the Stax, Rebecca writes articles covering a broad range of topics, from academics to hobbies to random events. All the while highlighting how Falvey Library can enhance your Villanova experience!

Happy Wednesday, Wildcats! Spring is officially here! Yesterday, March 19, was the first day of spring. We’ve already had some warmer weather, and flowers are starting to bloom. Take some time to sit outside this week and enjoy the spring weather.

There’s nothing I love more than sitting outside reading a good book. Villanova’s campus is great because there are so many benches and chairs to sit on as well as large green spaces perfect for pulling out a blanket to lie down on. If you don’t have any books to read, might I suggest any novel written by Jane Austen?

This month’s Author Spotlight features renowned English novelist Jane Austen. Born on Dec. 16th, 1775, Austen wrote six complete novels during her lifetime before her death in 1817 at age 41. Her literary works are distinctly modern in their creation and exploration of ordinary characters and daily life in 18th and 19th century England.

Image from Archive Photos/Getty Images

Austen was the seventh out of eight children and only one of two daughters. Her father was a reverend who fostered an environment of learning. Although her family was large, they were close and affectionate with one another. Creating and acting out plays together was a favorite pastime for the family. By the time she was 12, Austen began writing her own stories. This collection of writings filled three whole notebooks and became known as her Juvenilia.

The first of her works to be published was Sense and Sensibility which was published in October 1811 and received immediate success and praise as the first edition completely sold out by 1813. This book tells the story of the Dashwood sisters, Elinor and Marianne, who move into a relative’s country estate after their father’s death.

Perhaps Austen’s most popular novel, Pride and Prejudice (1813) was another instant success. This story follows Elizabeth Bennet, the daughter of a country gentleman, and the hate-to-love relationship she has with wealthy landowner Mr. Darcy.

Mansfield Park was the next book to be introduced to readers. Published in 1814, this novel was not received as well by critics as Austen’s earlier novels, but it was still incredibly popular with the public and actually became one of Austen’s best-selling books at the time. Mansfield Park is the most serious of her novels as it incorporates a discussion of religion and religious duty through the moral strength of its heroine, Fanny Price.

Austen’s Emma (1815) was the last novel to be published during her lifetime. A more comedic tale, Emma tells the story of its namesake, Emma Woodhouse, and the successes and failures she experiences in her attempts at matchmaking.

Fun Fact: Did you know that the 1995 film Clueless was actually inspired by Emma and is a contemporary take on the novel?

Image by Leah Newhouse from Pexels.com

Jane Austen’s final two finished novels, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, were both published posthumously in 1817. Northanger Abbey satirizes Gothic novels through its heroine Catherine Moreland, whose love of Gothic thrillers influences her interpretations and clouds her rational judgement. Persuasion is about reawakened love and second chances when Anne Elliot meets her old love Captain Wentworth after rejecting his marriage proposal seven years prior.

Jane Austen’s literary masterpieces are still incredibly popular today, inspiring numerous movie adaptations and television shows and cementing their place in the English literary canon among the classics. Her stories all feature strong women engaging in journeys of self-discovery and finding enduring love in the process. Witty, light, realistic, and written in elegant prose, these novels have entertained readers for centuries. If you’re looking for something fun to read this spring, I definitely recommend a novel by this much beloved author.


Rebecca Amrick

Rebecca Amrick is a first year graduate student in the English Department and a Graduate Assistant at Falvey Library.


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Foto Friday: Spring Blooms at Falvey

A Light exists in Spring
Not present on the Year
At any other period –
When March is scarcely here

A Color stands abroad
On Solitary Fields
That Science cannot overtake
But Human Nature feels.

 “A Light Exists in Spring” by Emily Dickinson

 

Everywhere you look around campus, the first signs of spring have taken root. Tree branches bud with leaves, and new flowers splash color at the edges of Falvey Library. So, drink in these long, warm, days, students!


Shawn ProctorShawn Proctor is Communication and Marketing Manager at Falvey Library.

 

 


 


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Curious Cat: Favorite Study Snack

"Curious Cat Banner"

Happy Thursday, Wildcats! This week, the Curious Cat team wanted to know what students liked to munch on while doing schoolwork. We asked library patrons, “What’s your go-to study snack?”

“Peanut M&M’s + Popcorn”
-Liah Osborne ’25 COE

 

“Smart Food”
-Maris Lindley ’27 VSB

 

“Holy Grounds Muffin”
-Lily Matranga ’25 COE

 


Rebecca AmrickRebecca Amrick is a first-year graduate student in the English Department and a Graduate Assistant at Falvey Library.

 

 

 

Julia Wagner ’26 CLAS is a second-year Economics major and student worker at Falvey Library.

 

 

 


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Flashback to BIG EAST Tournament 1968-69

By Abby Stinson

 

Get ready to rally behind our Wildcats this week as the men’s basketball team gears up for the BIG EAST Tournament! As a flashback in the spirit of the season, above is the front cover of the media guide for the 1968-1969 basketball season. These guides, utilized by various media outlets, provided valuable insights into the team and the upcoming season. This historical team was ranked 10th in the final AP poll of the season, boasting an impressive 21-5 record. (They lost in the First Round of the NCAA tournament versus Davidson.)

In this year’s tournament, Villanova, seeded 6th, plays against 11th seed DePaul on Wednesday, March 13 at 9 p.m. Sporting a 17-14 record, our Wildcats promise to make this March Madness season an interesting one.

Tune in to support our team during the most thrilling time of the year for college basketball! 

 


Abby Stinson ’26 VSB, is a Marketing and Business Analytics major and a student worker at Falvey Library.

 

 

 


 


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Last Modified: March 13, 2024

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