Friday, May 31, 2013

June Magazines of the Month: Men's Health & Men's Journal


We've once again  selected two magazines of the month! June 16th is Father's Day, and so in honor of all the men in our lives, our magazines of the month are Men's Health and Men's Journal. Both of these monthly magazines focus on issues of interest to men from fitness to fashion. Men's Health publishes local editions in over 30 countries worldwide, while Men's Journal has been carried into orbit by NASA astronauts.

You can check both of these magazines out from Carnegie-Stout's collection on the second floor or from our Zinio collection of digital magazine subscriptions. Both publications offer special features and additional content on their websites.

Men's Health: www.menshealth.com
Men's Journal: www.mensjournal.com

If you come into Carnegie-Stout in the next few weeks, be sure to check out our Father's Day themed display on the second floor near the Adult Computers!

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Weird Website Wednesday


From the Bee Dogs homepage.
I hope that you had a chance to read Allison's post about stamp collecting, and the potential for collecting to become hoarding. While I imagine it would take an extreme number of stamps to earn you a spot on the television program Hoarders, you still might want to consider starting an online collection. Such as the fine website Bee Dogs, which is chock full of pictures of dogs wearing bee costumes. Though I suspect this site may've stopped updating years ago, the archives of bee dogs are still there for your enjoyment!

Archived Wind Map of Hurricane Isaac, click through for animation.
For something a bit more educational, you should take a look at the Wind Map created by Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenberg. An animated map of current wind speeds and directions that's both soothing and interesting for amateur metereologists. Be sure to check out the gallery of past Wind Maps, including the landfall of Hurricane Sandy.


The Akinator
Because you're reading a library's blog, it's fairly safe to assume that you're a reader, and you probably enjoy television, movies, and have at least flipped through a graphic novel or comic book. In fact, I'll go out on a limb and guess that you probably have a favorite character. Maybe you wanted to marry Mr. Darcy or live the life of Jack Reacher. Whatever your favorite book is, The Akinator can read your mind. Through a variation on 20 Questions, this website will narrow in to guess whatever character you're thinking of. Although it is possible to stump it.


maHvaD muv pujbe' tay, logh vIq!
These days there are several different free online translation services, but I can still remember how helpful Babelfish was for my French homework when it first appeared years ago (though our teachers warned that it made our sentences into gibberish). These days I tend to rely on Google's Translator, but their rival, Bing, is the place to turn for all your Klingon translation needs. The feature is offered as part of the promotion for the new Star Trek movie, but also serves well as a segue to promoting our upcoming Space Fleet adventure. 
We'll be launching three spaceships on Wednesday, July 17th at 7 p.m. Click through to read more about Artemis, and be sure to let us know if you're interested in signing up

If you missed our first Weird Website Wednesday post, you can check that out here.

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Memorial Day

From the Library of Congress' Flickr account.
Memorial Day has been an occasion to honor the sacrifices of those military personnel who have given their lives in service to our country since the end of the Civil War. Several communities in both the North and the South began Decoration Days shortly after the end of the war, and in fact, the name and date of Memorial Day were not codified until 1967.

Today, it may be more common to think of Memorial Day as the unofficial start to summer and the date on which it is acceptable to break out the summer wardrobe/white shoes. In fact Memorial Day marks the shift to summer hours for Carnegie-Stout Public Library, and we will be closed on Sundays until September.

In honor of the fallen, we've put together a Memorial Day display with books about America's wars and the experiences of our soldiers. You can visit this display on the first floor of the library, or, as the library is closed today and tomorrow, you can check out these previous blog posts:

Friday, May 24, 2013

The Case of the Mysterious Stamp Collection

A medical librarian friend of mine recently began clearing out some of the supply cabinets at her library. Deep in the recesses of a drawer, she came across a plastic note card box, filled with small envelopes. Each had a number written on them: 3.55, 1.97, 15.84. Looking inside one envelope, she found that they were filled with postage stamps, ranging in denominations from 1 cent to several dollars. With the advent of postage meters and the introduction of the "forever" stamp, her library had stopped using postage stamps to mail inter-library loan materials, and the varied collection had been forgotten.

And yet, she certainly didn't want to throw them away. They retained their worth and could still be used, of course, but they also held an intrinsic value, especially the oddball ones; the ones that looked old or unique. Of course, my friend knew she hadn't stumbled upon her retirement fund, but the stamps were far too interesting to just shove back into a drawer.

National Letter
Writing Week
1980
She then contacted me, since medical libraries don't generally carry stamp identification books. At C-SPL, we carry the "Scott Standard Postage Stamp Catalog" and the U.S. Postal Service's "The Postal Service Guide to U.S. Stamps." The bulk of the multi-volume Scott Catalog is devoted to stamps issued by other countries, and is intended for collectors looking to put a retail value on their stamps. The USPS guide gives retail prices as well, along with an index and color photos. Unfortunately, neither catalog was of much help in identification, since I didn't know the year the stamps were issued in.

Fortunately, this isn't the first time we've needed to identify something odd with very few clues. In this case, a reverse Google Image search seemed to be the best method. After scanning and uploading the images, I found the website Arago: People, Postage and The Post, the online database of the Smithsonian National Postal Museum.

Named after French physicist, astronomer and politician, François Arago (1786-1853), the website has information and resources for amateurs and avid collectors (philatelists) alike, and I was able to identify all the stamps in question. The above "ink & quill" stamp was issued in 1977, as part of the Americana Issue series. I found several from the same collection, including a stamp issued in commemoration of the 700th anniversary of the founding of Switzerland and another issued in 1982 on the 100th anniversary of Franklin D. Roosevelt's birth. I - and my medical librarian friend- were thrilled!

Blanche Stuart Scott
1980
While some might raise an eyebrow to our excitement, collecting things - be they stamps, figurines, dolls or bread clips - is something nearly everyone does, though some to a greater degree than others. When interest crosses over to obsession, however, things can get ugly. Many books have been written (and TV show made) about collectors and collecting, from research into why we collect, to the world's most famous collections and to accounts of collecting gone terribly wrong. Click here for a list of books and DVDs on the subject that you can borrow from our collection. (Just please bring them back; we're a little compulsive about that!)

~ Allison, Adult Services