Library News

New Resource: Annual Reviews Online Back Volume Collection (1932-2006)

Need a summary of research in Biomedical, Life, Physical, or Social Sciences? To supplement our ongoing access to the Annual Reviews, Snell Library is pleased to offer the Electronic Back Volume Collection, which has over 70 years of research online — timely collections of critical reviews written by leading scientists and social scientists from 1932-2006. It offers seamless access to a comprehensive collection of all available Annual Reviews Sciences Collection back volumes, with content dating back to the very first volume of the Annual Review of Biochemistry in 1932. Features and Benefits
  • A comprehensive online collection of available Annual Reviews Sciences Collection with content spanning Biomedical, Life, Physical, and Social Sciences, including Economics
  • Immediate access to 1,100+ volumes, comprising over 25,000 critical and authoritative review articles from 1932-2006
  • Color and grayscale figures, charts, tables, and cited literature available via full-text searchable PDFs
You may also wish to look at Annual Reviews‘ audio and video series featuring interviews with foremost scientific scholars. To find Annual Reviews, click here to link directly, or go to the Library home page and click on All Databases and Trials for an A-Z list.

Poet Robert Gibbons, Ed '69 featured in Salem

Maria Carpenter and Poet Robert Gibbons

Northeastern Alumnus and prior Snell Library staff member Robert Gibbons, Ed. ’69 read selections from his works alongside Richard Hoffman at the Gathering, as part of the Massachusetts Poetry Festival. Here is a poem he read. Salem Came Back to Me Before I Came Back to Salem As I said to Bob Silva, who lived there on Rice Street just short of the Beverly Bridge, adjacent to Pilgrim Motel, so that late nights in summer all his brother & he had to do was scale a small fence to swim in the pool, Salem came back to me before I came back to Salem. Also late at night, during a brutal two hour bout with insomnia images arrived, not chronologically, but a montage of streets & workplaces, people & events, transient & permanent. I’ll document it as between 1:45-3:45 a.m., Monday, May 9th, 2011. From the ground up, that’s for sure, where I lived on Proctor Street with Mary & Harold & Aunt Bea, or Cambridge Street with my first wife, or Geneva with Kathleen. Working at Met-Com on Derby, the library on Lafayette, or cataloguing the broadside collection at the museum on Essex. I can’t reorder their non-chronological sequence, but driving down Boston Street one might see, as I did again, those neighborhood toughs Tarqui, or Pelletier, while Snowy & his crew emerged from the woodwork of the Willows’ neon arcades. The image of my father looking through Irish lace curtains to see if anyone bid on the family house on Liberty Hill Ave. during the auction held on the sidewalk outside. It’s not as if the same autobiographical information recently struggled with returned, no, it was geocentric, even if Salem were only a place traversed along the way to Marblehead, or Nahant, or in the opposite direction toward Cape Ann. I was all-eyes for a long time, an empty vessel looking for something to take the place of stark ignorance. I might be conversing with Mr. Roach, the bookseller across from Jerry’s Army & Navy, or eyeing that used copy of Cavafy translations at Murphy’s bookstore behind Old Town Hall, or learning fragment by fragment a bit more about art from the proprietor of Asia House, who also had an association with Weatherhill, then publishers in NYC. One of my labors was to clean out the huge furnace at Salem Hospital. Whenever I burned the trash the older guys warned of amputated limbs, & years before I cut through that myth. Two hours is a long time for images to hover. There’s Grampy Mike shoveling two buckets of coal for his furnace on Winthrop Street, & my other grandfather able to jump in & out of a wooden barrel without using his hands. Those barrels held leather skins for factories across from & at the foot of Proctor, & served as fodder for the annual bonfire atop Gallows Hill, until one year they toppled & rolled down toward spectators running for their lives, me among them. Later, I’d look in awe across from Pattie & David’s condo on Chestnut at Ernest Fenollosa’s former residence, hoping to put principles in his The Chinese Written Character as a Medium for Poetry to use: Poetry only does consciously what primitive races did unconsciously. There’s Bobby Leonard & I walking down Orange Street finding two dollar bills face up in the rain as talismans for the upcoming cross-country trip, & journey down to Mexico… http://www.killingfloorboston.com/2011/05/time-capsule-salem-came-back-to-me-before-i-came-back-to-salem.html

Northeastern Researchers Make the Cover of Nature

Our very own Northeastern researchers have offered a new look towards “merging the tools of network science and control theory” to better control complex systems. Their findings were featured on the cover of the May 12th issue of the journal Nature. Albert-László Barabási, a professor in the Departments of Physics and Biology and in the College of Computer and Information Science, and Yang-Yu Liu, a postdoctoral research associate in Physics, coauthored the paper, along with an MIT colleague. Their focus was to merge control theory with network science research in order to create more efficient methods of gaining control of a complex system, such as cellular networks or social media, by identifying the driving nodes of the system. Read more about their research in this news@Northeastern press release. You can also find more of Professor Barabási’s research publications in IRis, Northeastern’s institutional repository. Congrats to our NU researchers for this inspiring breakthrough!

A Snapshot of Snell's 20th Anniversary

After all the hard work and planning that our library staff put into the 20th Anniversary Celebration, it is good to reflect on such a successful event. Here are some photo memories for your viewing pleasure:

A large crowd showed up for Archivist of the United States David S. Ferriero's talk in Snell's lobby.

The audience was able to ask questions.

As our featured speaker of the afternoon, David Ferriero was presented with a gift by Dean of Libraries Will Wakeling.

After the talk, there was delicious cake available for students who needed a break from studying for their finals.

The VIP guests at the event were invited upstairs to a reception.

President Aoun led everyone in a toast...

...and also cut the celebratory cake with Nancy Caruso (David Ferriero's co-op advisor), Provost Stephen Director, David Ferriero, and Dean Will Wakeling.

A group of Snell Library's major donors in attendance at the event.

Past co-op students Jordan Hellman and Steven Olimpio gave speeches on their experiences working at Snell.

For more information on Snell Library’s 20th Anniversary visit www.lib.neu.edu/20th Photos taken by Mary Knox Merrill

Your Rental Dog Is Now Overdue: The Library as Physical Place

This morning I read two articles that got me thinking about the role of the academic library today, both in terms of its physical space and the services it can/should provide. The first article is written by our own president, Joseph Aoun, and it appeared today in the Chronicle of Higher Education online: “Learning Today: The Lasting Value of Place.” President Aoun posits that despite the increasing role that online learning plays in higher education, the experiences we have on a physical campus cannot be replicated online. I couldn’t agree more — something that has been coming up in the “library literature” for at least a decade is the concept of how libraries can remain at the heart of campus when their physical presence seems to matter less and less. When I look around Snell Library and see every seat at every table filled, students practicing their American Sign Language together, and users getting help at the Research Assistance desk, I think exactly what President Aoun writes, that “the range of human interactions inherent in place-based education [cannot] be fully replicated in a virtual environment.” The second article I read has to do with libraries expanding their services beyond what many would consider traditional and maybe even appropriate. Perhaps you read a couple of months ago that the Yale Law Library was piloting a program in which students could “check out” a therapy dog for a half-hour session of stress relief. Now, Cornell University has started a bike rental program through its library, called Big Red Bikes. What do you think about libraries getting into the business of bike rentals and dog borrowing? Is it too far from the academic mission of a university library, or is it a clever idea to keep libraries centered in the physical campus? Phil Davis, a Ph.D. candidate at Cornell who writes on the blog Scholarly Kitchen, feels that these services “start diluting the brand of the academic library” (“Bike Sharing Comes to the Academic Library“). But we’ve been there before: perhaps you recall when Snell Library opened the Cyber Cafe 10 years ago — at the time, it was kind of an outrageous concept… serving food and drinks, in the library? Quelle horreur! But now it seems like no big deal. Ten years from now, will we happily embrace the concept of an academic library whose services include dogs, bikes, and beyond? Whether or not this catches on as a mainstream trend, one thing I know is that libraries, physical and digital, will still be found at the heart of their campuses.