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Full-Text Articles in Library and Information Science

The Kipling Collection At Syracuse, Thomas Pinney Oct 1992

The Kipling Collection At Syracuse, Thomas Pinney

The Courier

The following is an edited transcript of the talk given by Professor Pinney to the Syracuse University Library Associates on 25 September 1992. Professor Pinney is the editor of The Letters of Rudyard Kipling.

Though Kipling is known to have visited New York State, it is unlikely that he ever saw the streets of Syracuse. However, he is notably present in the city now through the large, important, and growing collection of his letters and printed works assembled here in the George Arents Research Library for Special Collections. There are other important Kipling collections in the United States. Kipling's great …


News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxvi, No. 2, Fall 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1992

News Of The Library And The Library Associates, From Courier, Vol. Xxvi, No. 2, Fall 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

71125: Fifty Years of Silence and B 11226: Fifty Years of Silence, Artists' Books on the Holocaust. Purchased with funds from the Jerome and Arlene Gerber Endowment Fund.

The Library recently acquired two limited-edition artists' books in which Holocaust survivors Eva and Eugene Kellner recall their experiences in Nazi concentration camps. The books were designed and printed by their daughter Tatana, who is artistic director ofthe Women's Studio Workshop in Rosendale, New York.


Courier, Volume Xxvii, Number 2, Fall 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates Oct 1992

Courier, Volume Xxvii, Number 2, Fall 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

A Dominican Gradual ofSaints, circa 1500 / George Catalano, p. 3 -- Stephen Crane at Claverack College: A New Reading / Thomas A. Gullason, p. 33 -- Fenimore Cooper's Libel Suits / Constantine Evans, p. 47 -- The Kipling Collection at Syracuse / Thomas Pinney, p. 75 -- Fore-edge Paintings at Syracuse University / Jeff Weber, p. 89 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 115.


A Descriptive Study Of The Functional Components Of Browsing., Barbara H. Kwasnik Aug 1992

A Descriptive Study Of The Functional Components Of Browsing., Barbara H. Kwasnik

School of Information Studies - Faculty Scholarship

The paper describes a descriptive study of the functional components of browsing, which is viewed as the strategic and adaptive technique that people use to search, scan, navigate through, skim, sample, and explore information systems. Data on browsing is collected from thirty participants -- ten each in three browsing formats: print, command-driven computer version, and hypertext window-environment version. Data collection is by means of several techniques: the collection of thinking-out-loud, task-concurrent protocols; open-question interviews during the task; observation; and video and sound recording. The aim of analysis is to describe functions of browsing such as: orientation, place-marking, transition, comparison, identification, …


Courier, Volume Xxvii, Number 1, Spring 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates Apr 1992

Courier, Volume Xxvii, Number 1, Spring 1992, Syracuse University Library Associates

The Courier

Modernism from Right to Left: Wallace Stevens, the Thirties, and Radicalism / Alan Filreis, p. 3 -- Adam Badeau's "The Story ofthe Merrimac and the Monitor" / Robert J. Schneller, Jr., p. 25 -- A Marcel Breuer House Proj ect of 1938-1939 / Isabelle Hyman, p. 55 -- Traveler to Arcadia: Margaret Bourke-White in Italy, 1943-1944 / Randall I. Bond, p. 85 -- The Punctator's World: A Discursion (Part Seven) / Gwen G. Robinson, p. 111 -- News of the Syracuse University Library and the Library Associates, p. 159.


The Exploration By Means Of Repertory Grids Of Semantic Differences Among Names For Office Documents., Barbara H. Kwasnik, Corinne Jorgensen, Jan 1992

The Exploration By Means Of Repertory Grids Of Semantic Differences Among Names For Office Documents., Barbara H. Kwasnik, Corinne Jorgensen,

School of Information Studies - Faculty Scholarship

We used repertory grids to investigate the differences in names assigned to a selected list of 11 frequently mentioned office documents. The assumption is that naming reflects a classificatory decision and is based on a complex set of perceived aspects (which we call constructs) of the documents being named. We describe repertory grids as used in this application and summarize the resulting analysis.