Thursday, January 27, 2011

International Holocaust Remembrance Day

January 27 marks the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi death camp. In 2005, the United Nations General Assembly designated this day as International Holocaust Remembrance Day (IHRD), an annual day of commemoration to honor the victims of the Nazi era. This year's theme is “Women and the Holocaust: Courage and Compassion”


“The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. ‘Holocaust’ is a word of Greek origin meaning ‘sacrifice by fire.’ The Nazis, who came to power in Germany in January 1933,  believed that Germans were ‘racially superior’ and that Jews, were deemed ‘life unworthy of life.’ During the Holocaust, the Nazis also targeted other groups because of their perceived ‘racial inferiority’: Roma/Sinti (Gypsies), the handicapped, and some of the Slavic peoples (Poles, Russians, and others). Other groups were persecuted on political and behavioral grounds, among them Communists, Socialists, Jehovah's  Witnesses, and homosexuals.” (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum)
If you would like to know more about the events of the Holocaust we, at Shake Library, recommend you take a look at this guide provided by Yad Vashem, the world center for documentation, research, education and commemoration of the Holocaust. This guide will help answer questions like:

  • Is the Holocaust a singular event in history?
  • How many Jews were murdered in each country?
  • Who were other victims of Nazism?  
  • Why didn't more Jews leave Europe before the war began?
  • When and how did the Nazis decide to murder the Jews under their control?
  • What were the extermination camps?  When did they start to function?
  • How did the Nazis try to hide their atrocities?
  • What did the Jews of America do to help European Jewry during the war?
  • Why didn't the allies bomb Auschwitz? 
  • What is Holocaust Denial?

You can view women's testimonies of the Holocaust by Clicking here.

Participate in the 2011 International Holocaust Remembrance Day

- Add your name to the list of people showing their support at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

More Resources
You can find more information about the Holocaust at Shake Library by searching our library catalog, VU Webcat


Saturday, January 22, 2011

A New Look for an Old Favorite


The New ProQuest Platform is here!


One of our most popular databases just got a face-lift. ProQuest is one of our biggest journal databases. In fact, chances are you provided one or two of the quarter of a million hits this database received last year! 

With the all-new ProQuest platform you can:

  • Research topics for papers
  • Browse within and across databases that Shake Library subscribes to from ProQuest
  • Select specific databases or cross-search databases across subject areas for comparative studies 
  • Find full-text-articles and scholarly resources with links to similar materials
  • Search specific document types—including primary sources, peer-reviewed journals, dissertations, images, graphs, and tables
  • Get formatted citations for a paper
  • Cite, customize, manage, and share results via email and social networking links
  • Set up alerts and RSS feeds to stay up to date with developments in the field
The New ProQuest can be found on the VU Libraries homepage: http://www.vinu.edu/libraries by clicking on the "Find Articles" link.

Don't forget to login to MyVU first if you are using our databases from off campus. You will need to authenticate yourself first in order to get access to the resources. 

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Early closing 1/20/2011


Due to the inclement weather the library will be closing at 10pm today

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

ARTstor: 1000 uses and counting



What is ARTstor?
ARTstor is a nonprofit digital library of more than one million images in the arts, architecture, humanities, and social sciences with a suite of software tools to view, present, and manage images for research and teaching purposes. The collections comprise contributions from outstanding museums, photographers, libraries, scholars, photo archives, and artists and artists' estates.


What can I use it for?
When you need to put together any kind of quality presentation nothing makes your ideas hit home like a strong and relevant image that ties your points together. Using ARTstor will impress not only your classmates but also your professors. 


How can I find images? 
You can Search by:
  • Keyword- So you can begin by finding images about the French Revolution by entering those two key words. 
  • Advanced Search - This allows you to filter your search by date, collection, geography and more.
You can also Browse. This allows you to navigate through many categories at once to find images of interest. There are three way to browse:
  • Browsing by Collection: Useful for when you want to browse existing groups of images. (example: Latin American Art, or Illuminated Manuscripts)
  • Browsing by Classification: This database option divides the image library into sixteen broad classifications, including "Architecture and city planning", "Decorative arts", "Drawings and watercolors", "Maps, charts and graphs", and "Graphic design and illustration." Each classification can be sorted further by geography.
  • Browsing by Geography: Allows you to focus on works created by an artist from a specific country or, in the case of architecture, the location of the work. Each county or region is further subdivided types of materials. So you can find images of Italian sculptures quickly without having to look through Italian paintings or tapestries.

How do I get images into my presentation?


Where can I find it?
ARTstor can be found via the VU libraries website: http://www.vinu.edu/libraries  under the Find Media link. 
(If you are connecting from off campus don't forget to sign in to MyVU first in order to authenticate yourself as a student at VU.)


What if I don't have time to search the collections?
Checkout the Subject Guides: African American to Women's Studies  and jump to the subject area you want to look at!


What if I have more questions?
Ask Ariela, your Lending Services Librarian, for help.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Coming Soon!

Welcome back everyone. We are excited to be starting the semester up again and hope you are too. This semester we are looking forward to a number of new exciting changes in the library. Read all about them here!

New Multimedia Computer Cluster (MCC)

The MCC will be made up of four computers, a dedicated color printer, and Adobe Design Premium Software (CS5). We hope students can create competitive, eye catching, and creative projects while gaining skills and exposure to programs that are transferable to many jobs in the private and public sectors. We hope this project will extend and expand learning for students, faculty and staff by providing them with a dedicated productivity center in the library to maximize their efforts in producing print media and web projects.  


CREDO Reference: Topic Pages

One of our most popular databases is getting a makeover. CREDO reference is a go to database that will get you reference articles from all kinds of materials such as encyclopedias. Well now it's getting even better with the addition of over 9000 Topic pages which will provide you not only with the encyclopedia entries, but also with articles from our databases like EbscoHost, along with images and also books from our catalog.  Think about it... a one stop shop for all your research needs! Take a look at the picture to the right: Those categories will work for almost any class you have (business, history, literature, law enforcement, geography, nutrition, health and more). You can find Credo under "Find Articles" on our webpage.

We hope to see lots of you around this semester checking out our materials or just enjoying the comfy couches.

Don't forget our hours change for MLK weekend:
Jan 15 Sat   OPEN 12Noon-4 PM
Jan 16  Sun  OPEN   2-8 PM
Jan 17 Mon  OPEN  6pm -Midnight. Martin Luther King Day. No Classes.