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  • Worldbook is now available
    from by jryan1
    You can find it on our webpage under indexes and databases. Check out these World Book Resources! http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbkids.html - World Book Kids http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbspanish.html - World Book Spanish Student Discovery Encyclopedia http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbadvanced.html - World Book Advanced http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbreference.html - World Book Online Reference Center http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbdecouverte.html - L’Encyclopédie Découverte http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbdiscover.html - World Book Discover ... Read More >
  • Worldbook is now available
    from by jryan1
    You can find it on our webpage under indexes and databases. Check out these World Book Resources! http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbkids.html - World Book Kids http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbspanish.html - World Book Spanish Student Discovery Encyclopedia http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbadvanced.html - World Book Advanced http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbreference.html - World Book Online Reference Center http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbdecouverte.html - L’Encyclopédie Découverte http://www.lib.lsu.edu/databases/descriptions/wbdiscover.html - World Book Discover ... Read More >
  • New Databases Available
    from LSU Libraries by skelsey
    The LSU Libraries has recently started subscriptions to the following databases: Caribbean Literature: This database offers the full text of many 19th and 20th century literary works from every Caribbean country. Furture plans for the database include author interviews and dictionaries of various Creole languages. The American Civil War Research Database: This database is an online resource for researching the soldiers, regiments, and battles of the American Civil War. Learning Express Library This resource provides interactive online practice tests and tutorials for many standardized tests like the GRE, Praxis, ACT, and others. Visit the Indexes and Databases web page for access to over four hundred databases.... Read More >
  • Hooke's Books
    from by jryan1
    There is a new site from the National Library of Medicine called "Hooke's Books: Books that influenced or were influenced by Robert Hooke's Micrographia"... Read More >
  • Why Oral History?
    from Have You Heard? by oralhistory
    Why should we care about oral history? It basically boils down to three words: "primary source creation." If done well, an oral history interview is as valid as other primary sources--maps, photos, manuscripts, newspapers, artifacts, architecture, diaries, ledgers--the list goes on. Of course there are potential flaws, but that's another post for another day. Overall, the benefits of oral history greatly outweigh the potential challenges. I suppose my own passion for the discipline can be summed up in (again) three words: "democratization of history." Or, as an anthropologist might say--oral history is a leveling mechanism for recorded history. This field is a powerful way to balance out the written account of history with multiple perspectives. I'm saying nothing new here. One great thing associated with working for an oral history repository like the center is that we have opportunity to collaborate with individuals and groups to create their own oral history projects. We are able to witness and participate in research that contributes to the present and future understanding of a historical and/or cultural phenomena. It is fantastic to see how interviews aid the pursuit of a project: whether because oral histories helped a student with a thesis, or documented a heretofore unrecorded event, or added an interactive element to a teacher's classroom project, or provided a way for community members to get to know their history (and their neighbors), oral history is fulfilling project for anyone who tries it. So my questions for you today are: Have you done any oral histories? If so, what were some of your rewarding experiences? Challenges? Disappointments? What do you want to know more about regarding this process? What oral history experiments are you considering in the future? - Jennifer Abraham... Read More >
  • PAWS and Moodle Downtime this Sunday
    from by jryan1
    To accommodate LSU ID project work, PAWS will not be available on Sunday, August 10, from 7:00 am until 11:00 am. In addition, all applications linked through PAWS will not be accessible during this time. These include the following database systems: Accounts Payable Advance Billing Employee Time Human Resources Personal Access Web Services (PAWS) Procurement Registration Security Access Maintenance Sponsored Programs Student Records Treasurer's Database Also, the Moodle Learning System will not be available through PAWS, but users may access it directly by going to http://moodle.lsu.edu. Expected Resolution Date/Time: Sunday, 8/10/2008, 11:00am. If you have any questions concerning this change or its effects, please contact the UIS Database Administration group at 578-3700. ... Read More >
  • PAWS and Moodle Downtime this Sunday
    from by jryan1
    To accommodate LSU ID project work, PAWS will not be available on Sunday, August 10, from 7:00 am until 11:00 am. In addition, all applications linked through PAWS will not be accessible during this time. These include the following database systems: Accounts Payable Advance Billing Employee Time Human Resources Personal Access Web Services (PAWS) Procurement Registration Security Access Maintenance Sponsored Programs Student Records Treasurer's Database Also, the Moodle Learning System will not be available through PAWS, but users may access it directly by going to http://moodle.lsu.edu. Expected Resolution Date/Time: Sunday, 8/10/2008, 11:00am. If you have any questions concerning this change or its effects, please contact the UIS Database Administration group at 578-3700. ... Read More >
  • Documenting Louisiana Sugar 1845-1917
    from LSU Libraries Special Collections Blog by Gabe
    Richard Follett of the University of Sussex announced completion of Documenting Louisiana Sugar 1845-1917. Sources housed in the LSU Libraries' Special Collections were amongst those consulted for the project. For additional sugar resources in Special Collections, please consult our online catalog and our "Sugar" subject guide. Documenting Louisiana Sugar 1845-1917 Documenting Louisiana Sugar provides historians and social scientists with an innovative tool for examining plantation economy and agrarian society in the American South. Utilizing exceptionally detailed annual crop returns and additional census records, Documenting Louisiana Sugar makes available two fully searchable databases that allow users to examine in micro and macro detail the evolution of one of America's definitive plantation crops, namely cane sugar. These can be freely accessed at www.sussex.ac.uk/louisianasugar For over seventy years, agrarian economists in Louisiana diligently recorded economic and production data on each sugar producing estate. These remarkable records provide an unbroken time series of data; indeed, no other plantation crop in the American South was so meticulously recorded for such a long period of time as was Louisiana sugar. This project makes these sources available for rigorous analysis and provides users with the query functions capable of tracing people and plantations through time. It enables users to study the economic performance of an entire industry, to consider business consolidation, capital acquisition, technology transfer, and the shifting dynamics of plantation land use. The built in search functions enable researchers to limit or expand their enquiries by year, parish, crop output, technology, and even gender. Users can track persistence and change among the plantation elite, trace landholding and economic performance among both large and small cane farmers, examine the effect of the American Civil War, and assess the transition from slave to free labor on Louisiana's plantation economy. And for those interested in the late nineteenth century, the databases track the rise and fall of American sugar during U.S. imperial expansion. No other public database detailing plantation life in such detail exists and we hope that scholars find this resource to be a valuable research tool. Former slave and abolitionist Frederick Douglass described Louisiana's sugar country as a "life of living death." These databases do not tell the story of the hundreds of thousands of men and women who labored in the cane fields through the nineteenth century, but they tell the story of an industry where the exploitation of land, capital, and labor was central to business success. Funding for this project was made available by research project grants awarded by The Arts and Humanities Research Council of the United Kingdom, The Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and by the University of Sussex and the University of Toronto. The image used above is from the LSU Photograph Collection.... Read More >
  • MAC / SAFARI USERS CANNOT ACCESS SCIENCE DIRECT ARTICLES
    from by jryan1
    A problem with the current version of Adobe Acrobat Reader prevents Macs users with Safari from ScienceDirect PDF articles. ScienceDirect has reported this problem to Adobe and Safari. Until it is fixed: * Hold the control button, click on the PDF link and select "download link to disk." Save the file to the hard drive and view it from there. OR * Use Mozilla Firefox instead of Safari, which does not seem to have this problem.... Read More >
  • MAC / SAFARI USERS CANNOT ACCESS SCIENCE DIRECT ARTICLES
    from by jryan1
    A problem with the current version of Adobe Acrobat Reader prevents Macs users with Safari from ScienceDirect PDF articles. ScienceDirect has reported this problem to Adobe and Safari. Until it is fixed: * Hold the control button, click on the PDF link and select "download link to disk." Save the file to the hard drive and view it from there. OR * Use Mozilla Firefox instead of Safari, which does not seem to have this problem.... Read More >

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