Library Blogs

Showing 921 - 930 of 1827 items
Paper wrapper with title of publication and illustration of marijuana plant in black ink
  • Juli McLoone
A quick peek at two cookbooks from the late 1960s, one for Summer of Love hippies and another for their more straight-laced counterparts at home.
document with International Registery of World Citizens letterhead
  • Rebecca Noelle Huffman
One of the great pleasures of spending this summer in the archives as a Mellon Public Humanities Fellow has been stumbling into and out of people’s lives, or the echoes of them left behind in correspondence, records, doodles, drafts, and other materials. There are a lot of recognizable names in the Special Collections Library stacks, but for every person I’ve read or heard about there are so many more who are new to me...
  • Scott David Witmer
Part 2 of the Personal Digital Archiving Guide covers characteristics of digital file formats that you should consider when deciding how to preserve your digital materials.
  • Justin Schell
Here's what the Shapiro Design Lab will be up to in 2017-18!
Cover of In the Name of the Family by Sarah Dunant
  • Vicki J Kondelik
In this complex historical novel, Sarah Dunant tells the story of the infamous Borgia family of Renaissance Italy from several points of view, including the family's patriarch, Pope Alexander VI, and his two illegitimate children, Cesare, the leader of a mercenary army, and Lucrezia, who journeys to the court of Ferrara to marry the duke's heir, while grieving for her previous husband, who was murdered at her brother's orders. A fascinating new point of view is that of Niccolò Machiavelli, a young Florentine diplomat at Cesare's court.
newspaper sheet with columns of text and photo of Holly Fine
  • Annika Joyce Pattenaude
As I thumbed through letters between Danny Kaye and his sweetheart Holly Fine, I couldn’t help but imagine the ginger-haired actor twirling Vera-Ellen in his arms and singing “The Best Things Happen While You're Dancing.” We often think about film as a moving media––people and objects flickering across screens––but film archives, like those of the Special Collections Library, contain the material, tangible objects that accompany the making of films. These materials tell rich stories!
A graph of organization nodes and edges depicting the United States Federal bureaucracy.
  • Joshua Steverman
MARC Authority records can be used to create a map of the Federal Government that will help with collection development and analysis. Unfortunately, MARC is not designed for this purpose, so we have to find ways to work around the MARC format's limitations.
  • Justin Schell
Learn more about and apply to work as a Program Assistant for the Shapiro Design Lab.
  • Justin Schell
Announcing the next cohort of the Shapiro Design Lab Residency.
  • Val Waldron
Still trying to figure out your Fall class schedule? We may not have a fully devoted video games studies program at present, but there are a number of classes available to study video games this Fall. Try one of them to round out your schedule! Use the links below to see a full class description of each class listed here.