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Author: Tom Peters

Lindsey Taggart is Our New Director of Resource Management and Discovery

Lindsey Taggart is Our New Director of Resource Management and Discovery

On Monday, July 9, 2018, Lindsey Taggart will begin working for the MSU Libraries and the entire university community as our Director of Resource Management and Discovery, a new position. Lindsey will begin as a tenure-track, 12-month, full-time Assistant Professor. For the past two years, Lindsey has served as the Assessment and Collection Development Librarian and Assistant Professor at Pittsburg State University in Pittsburg, Kansas. She has worked previously at Crowder College in Neosho, Missouri, at the Forest Institute of Professional Psychology…

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Search for a Library Associate III Will Begin Soon

Search for a Library Associate III Will Begin Soon

A search committee has been formed (Brooks Travis (Chair), Marilyn McCroskey, Raegan Wiechert, Nathan Neuschwander, and Jir Shin Boey) to undertake a search for a Library Associate III, a new position. Principal responsibilities will include: Assists the Cataloging and Metadata Unit (50%) Assists the Library Information Technologies Unit (25%) Assists the Libraries’ Graphic Designer (25%) Duties will include cataloging and withdrawing library materials, video editing, maintenance of the Library’s online catalog and other metadata services, and loading new database files…

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Libraries Scores High on University Exit Exam

Libraries Scores High on University Exit Exam

The University Exit Exam (UEE) is a graduation requirement for all undergraduate students at Missouri State University. Beginning in August 2017 and continuing through the academic year, the University Exit Exam has been expanded to add two items gauging student attitudes toward MSU Libraries’ overall value and services. The responses of all students who completed the Fall 2017 administration of the UEE are presented below. The first question asked: The MSU Libraries provides books, media, databases, services, and study spaces to help…

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Birthday of Route 66 Celebration Next Monday Afternoon

Birthday of Route 66 Celebration Next Monday Afternoon

On the afternoon of Friday, April 30, 1926, while a large Rotary convention was in town, Cyrus Avery and John Page from Oklahoma, along with B. H. Piepmeier and probably John T. Woodruff from Missouri, met in the Colonial Hotel, located in the southwest quadrant of the corner of East St. Louis Street and Jefferson Avenue near the central square in Springfield, Missouri, to try to resolve a months-long disagreement with the federal government and other states concerning what number should be assigned to a proposed federal…

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Dead Day Party

Dead Day Party

The end-of-semester “Dead Day” party will be held on Friday, May 11, 2018 from 11:30 a.m. CDT to 1:00 p.m. CDT in LIBR 301 (“Club 301” — newly re-carpeted and refurnished) on the Third Level of Duane G. Meyer Library. Hot pizza and cool, refreshing beverages (non-alcoholic) will be provided by the Libraries using private funds. Attendees are encouraged to bring a side dish and/or dessert to share. Attendees also are encouraged to bring their own non-disposable plates, cups, and…

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Spotlight on Special Collections: The Robert Wallace Collection

Spotlight on Special Collections: The Robert Wallace Collection

The Robert Wallace Collection (M 1) in Meyer Library’s Special Collections and Archives features a large amount of material about author Robert Wallace and his publishing company Bits Press. Robert Wallace (1932-1999) was a Springfield native who started writing poems around the age of ten.  When he was sixteen his humorous poem “Tee Hee,” about his experiences as a golf caddy, was published in The Rotarian magazine.  He graduated from Springfield High (now Central High School) and went on to Harvard (A.B. in English, 1953)…

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Reptile Day at the Fairbanks Another Huge Success

Reptile Day at the Fairbanks Another Huge Success

A total of 524 people attended Reptile Day at the Fairbanks School last Saturday. Amy Hankins from the MSU Libraries, who coordinated this great event, made 600 buttons to distribute, and she almost ran out! Several media representatives were in attendance. A media student from Drury made a film for a class project. KY3 showed up and interviewed Christopher Scioli who brings his 9.5 foot python, Enoch, every time we host a Reptile Day. Everyone had so much fun. Several…

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E-Resource Spotlight: Encyclopedia of Pollution

E-Resource Spotlight: Encyclopedia of Pollution

As the online version of a two-volume, 2011 edition, the Encyclopedia of Pollution is designed to address all aspects of pollution and the global impact on the environment in a single source. Containing more than 300 entries and essays, it uses the most current scientific data to explain the different types of pollutants, including properties, production, uses, environmental release and fate, adverse health response to exposure, and environmental regulations on human exposure. It provides the scientific background on the water,…

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Second Printing of Living Ozarks Anthology Already in Preparation

Second Printing of Living Ozarks Anthology Already in Preparation

Even though the Living Ozarks anthology has been out less than two weeks, a second printing already is being planned and prepared. The professors of several courses to be taught later this year have expressed interest in adopting the anthology as a text. Beginning this fall the University of Arkansas Press will handle distribution, sales (including online sales), fulfillment, and related services for the publication of the Ozarks Studies Institute, an initiative of the MSU Libraries. To help prepared for…

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Spotlight on Special Collections: The Marshall Gordon Papers

Spotlight on Special Collections: The Marshall Gordon Papers

The Marshall Gordon Papers (RG 1/7) in Meyer Library’s Special Collections and Archives come from Dr. Marshall Gordon, who served as the president of Southwest Missouri State University (now Missouri State University) from 1983 to 1992. His presidency resulted in numerous achievements, such as the recruitment of National Merit Scholars, new residence halls, and the AACSB accreditation of the College of Business Administration; but it was also marked with controversies such as the production of The Normal Heart in 1989 and the Juanita K. Hammons Hall for the…

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