Friday, December 18, 2009

Happy Holidays - Library Hours


Happy holidays and best wishes for the new year. We look forward to seeing you in 2010.

Southwestern College Library will reopen for the spring semester on Wednesday January 13, 2010 at 8:00 a.m..

Library hours during Winter break and 2010 Spring semester

This week in CQ Researcher

Housing the Homeless
by Peter Katel,
December 18, 2009


Is the solution more shelters or affordable housing?

The face of homelessness is changing in the United States. In the past, the homeless typically were single men and women who lived on the street or in shelters; many were mentally ill or drug addicts, or both. But today’s homeless may well be a suburban couple with children who lost their home to foreclosure and are staying with relatives or living at a shelter.

As the recession continues to ravage the middle class and the working poor, job losses and medical emergencies add to the number of homeless Americans. Advocates for the homeless also cite a shortage of affordable housing. A 2008 federal government survey showed a one-year 9 percent increase in families relying on homeless shelters. In recent months, local governments and school districts have been reporting homelessness cases more than doubling this year. But funding shortages may force agencies that help the homeless to curtail services.

  • Can government end homelessness?
  • Should the definition of homeless include people in unstable housing situations?
  • Are housing subsidies the best way to help families facing homelessness?
To read this article and others visit our Articles and Databases webpage and click on CQ Researcher. Select the Off Campus Access link for information on how to access this resource from off campus locations.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Extended Library Hours During Finals

Are you looking for a quiet place to study for your final exams?
This week the library will be open longer for you.

Extended Library Hours - Main Campus

Monday December 14: 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Tuesday December 15: 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Wednesday December 16: 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Thursday December 17: 8:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m.
Friday December 18: 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.

Got a Question? Need an Answer


Try our Online Reference Chat Service

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Tuesday, December 08, 2009

Check It Out


The Wall Street Journal. Guide to Starting Your Financial Life
by Karen Blumenthal
Call Number: New Book ShelfHG179 .B56634 2009

The Wall Street Journal Guide to Starting Your Financial Life gets you off on the right financial foot, from tackling everyday choices like cell-phone plans and pet ownership to big decisions such as smart investment strategies and buying a car or a house. You’ll learn:

  • How to open your first checking and savings accounts, get your first credit card, and establish good credit
  • The ins and outs of starting a job, including information about taxes, choosing health insurance options, and saving for retirement
  • How to budget for big purchases and expenses, such as paying off student loans, buying a car, and affording your housing
  • Strategies for buying the little things you want and need without going broke
  • The basics of investing, how to manage an inheritance, and the documents you need to protect your assets


This valuable resource puts you in the driver’s seat, so you will be in control of your money and on your way to achieving lifelong financial independence across any economic terrain.

Check out The Wall Street Journal Guide to Starting Your Financial Life, available on the library's New Book Shelf.

This Week in CQ Researcher


Prisoner Reentry by Peter Katel,
December 4, 2009

Can aid to ex-inmates significantly reduce recidivism?

Nearly three-quarters of a million prisoners will be released from state and federal prisons this year – an unprecedented number – and about half of them will be returned to prison over the next three years after committing new crimes or violating parole. As the recession makes it harder for ex-prisoners to find jobs and limits states’ ability to house rising numbers of inmates, worries about revolving-door incarceration are escalating.

Many experts see an answer to the problem in so-called reentry programs, which are designed to lower recidivism by helping soon-to-be-released or newly released prisoners land on their feet, sometimes assisting them in getting jobs before leaving prison. But even after enactment of former President George W. Bush’s Second Chance Act, which supports reentry programs, they remain relatively scarce. In fact, in many states, funding for prison needs has overtaken proposals to pay for reentry.


  • Are state governments doing enough to help prisoners reenter society?
  • Should government or private organizations provide subsidized jobs for ex-prisoners?
  • Do reentry programs significantly reduce recidivism?


To read this article and others visit our Articles and Databases webpage and click on CQ Researcher. Select the Off Campus Access link for information on how to access this resource from off campus locations.

Monday, December 07, 2009

ARTstor: African art and field photography

ARTstor has collaborated with Christopher D. Roy to share approximately 3,500 images of African art and culture, now available in the Digital Library. The collection features images of West African art and culture, including ceremonial objects as well as documentation of their social context, use, and manufacture, such as performances employing masks, or techniques used in producing pottery, iron, leather, and weaving.

Roy is Professor of Art History and Elizabeth M. Stanley Faculty Fellow of African Art History at the University of Iowa. Since 1970, he has been photographing the rural villages and towns of the Bobo, Bwa, Fulani, Lobi, Mossi, and Nuna peoples in West Africa—primarily in Burkina Faso, but also in Ghana, Nigeria, and Niger.

To view the Christopher Roy: African Art and Field Photography collection: go to the ARTstor Digital Library, select the orange Go button in the upper right hand corner, then browse by collection, and click "Christopher Roy: African Art and Field Photography." Or search by the keyword: "christopher roy".

To view ARTstor from off campus locations you need to create an ARTstor account at http://www.artstor.org/index.shtml from any computer on the Southwestern College campuses.

Friday, December 04, 2009

Got a Question? Need an Answer


Try our Online Reference Chat Service

Real People - Real Help - Real Fast

24 hours a day, 7 days a week



http://www.swccd.edu/~library/ask.htm

Library Open Longer Hours


Do you need to finish that last term paper, or are you looking for a quiet place to study for your final exams, or a place where your study group can meet and study quietly together?

Beginning Monday December 7 the library will be open longer for you.

Extended Library Hours - Main Campus
December 7 - December 16, 2009
Monday - Thursday: 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Friday: 8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Saturday: 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
Closed: Sunday
Thursday December 17: 8:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m.
Friday December 18: 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.


Closed: Saturday December 19 - Tuesday January 12

Happy Holidays

Internet Resource: Biology Encyclopedia of Life Project

The Encyclopedia of Life Project is an ambitious effort to build an online reference source and database for the world’s 1.8 million named and known species, and to facilitate the discovery of those yet unknown.

Concieved by Edward O. Wilson, the project is backed by a robust amalgam of organizations, including The MacArthur Foundation, The Field Museum, Harvard University, The Marine Biological Laboratory, The Smithsonian, and The Biodiversity Heritage Library.


Watch the videos below. The first is a an entertaining montage explaining and demonstrating the concept, the second is a link to Edward O. Wilson’s TED Prize acceptance speech where he shares his wish for this project.







Edward O. Wilson acceptance speech.

Tuesday, December 01, 2009

December e-book of the Month


The Modern Baker: Time-Saving Techniques for Breads, Tarts, Pies, Cakes and Cookies
By Nick Malgieri
DK Publishing, 2008

With the right teacher, simplified techniques, and step-by-step photo tutorials to guide the way, everyone can make freshly baked loaves, crisp flatbreads, savory tarts, and rich desserts – in record time.

Written by baking Hall of Famer Nick Malgieri, this collection of 150 straightforward recipes with gourmet appeal, strives to bring success to even the busiest of bakers, with the bulk of the preparation taking under one hour. Malgieri distills years of teaching and experience into these detailed recipes for baking everything from bread to biscotti to puff pastry to old-fashioned layer cakes. Recipes are thorough and include descriptions of how batters and doughs are supposed to appear at each stage of preparation.

The Modern Baker will be provided with free, unlimited access December 1-31, 2009.

If you have already established a NetLibrary account through Southwestern College Library, visit http://www.netlibrary.com/and log in to read "The Modern Baker" or any of our other 20,000 electronic book titles from your home, work or any other off campus location.

If you do not have a NetLibrary account, you can create your own account from any computer on the Southwestern College campuses. Visit our NetLibrary information page .