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News and events from DePaul University Libraries

May 1st and the Haymarket Affair

by brian 4/30/2009 7:00:00 PM

May 1st or May Day is a recognized workers' holiday or "Labor Day" in many countries around the world, but not in the United States. Few Americans realize that the origins of this international holiday lie in the events that occurred in Chicago in May, 1886.

On May 3, 1886, "...Chicago police fired into a crowd of striking workers at the McCormick Reaper Works, killing and wounding several men. The following evening, anarchist and socialist labor leaders organized a meeting of workingmen near Chicago's Haymarket Square. Speakers at the meeting denounced the police attack of the previous afternoon and urged workers to intensify their struggle for an eight-hour workday and other improvements in labor conditions." Chicago History MuseumHaymarket Riot

"...Then someone hurled a bomb at the police, killing one officer instantly. Police drew guns, firing wildly. Sixty officers were injured, and eight died; an undetermined number of the crowd were killed or wounded. [In the aftermath], police arrested hundreds of people, but never determined the identity of the bomb thrower." Encyclopedia of Chicago

"...Amidst public clamor for revenge, however, eight anarchists, including prominent speakers and writers, were tried for murder. Lacking credible evidence that the defendants threw the bomb or organized the bomb throwing, prosecutors focused on their writings and speeches. The jury, instructed to adopt a conspiracy theory without legal precedent, convicted all eight." Four men were hanged.  Famous American Trials

In the years that followed, international labor leaders used the Haymarket Affair as a rallying cry to achieve the eventual adoption of the eight-hour workday. May 1st became a day to remember the Haymarket "martyrs" and to celebrate the subsequent achievements of organized labor.

Selected books available to borrow from the Lincoln Park Campus Library include:

Student Poetry Reading: Wednesday

by beth 4/28/2009 12:06:00 PM

In celebration of National Poetry Month, please join us for a showcase of DePaul undergraduate poets! The University Libraries is proud to host our first student poetry reading, and refreshments will be provided. We will also be announcing the winner of our magnetic poetry contest at the beginning of this event.

Poetry Reading:

Wednesday, April 29th

Richardson Library, room 300

6:00pm

Magnetic Poetry Contest ends Wednesday, April 29th

by heather 4/28/2009 9:46:00 AM

There's still time to participate!

We've set a up a magnet board with plenty of words to create your poems on the first floor of Richardson Library on DePaul's Lincoln Park campus.    One lucky poet will win a new ipod shuffle!  The winner will be selected at random from all eligible entries at our first showcase of undergraduate student poets on Wednesday, April 29th at 6pm, in room 300, Richardson Library. 

Refreshments will be provided. 

See the magnetic poetry entries at http://www.flickr.com/photos/dpulibrary/

 

 

How Do I Renew Books?

by alexis 4/24/2009 9:28:00 AM

lego boy with backpackNo more lugging books back and forth from the library to renew them.  Do it online!  From the library's home page, click on the "Renew Books (My Account)" link.  Then, enter your last name and library borrower i.d., which is on the back of your DePaul i.d. card and starts with 20511. Check the boxes next to the books you want to renew and click "renew."  It's that simple! 

 

*Jeltovski. "mf264." Morguefile.<http://tinyurl.com/d5ahx6>.

Forsooth! It's Talk Like Shakespeare Day

by courtney 4/23/2009 7:00:00 AM

You may have heard or read about Mayor Daley (DePaul alumnus, Law '68) proclaiming Thursday, April 23rd Talk Like Shakespeare Day. The Website, compiled by the Chicago Shakespeare Theater, honors the Bard's 445th birthday with a variety of entertaining audio and video clips along with tips on how to introduce a little Elizabethan banter into your speech at work, school and home. Here's your chance to bust out all those pent up expressions you wish you could use everyday: thou, thee, Sirrah, Mistress, and [any verb]-eth, e.g. runneth, drinketh, speaketh. However, the Libraries do not condoneth calling anyone a jack-a-napes or a canker-blossom. 

Did you know that these seemingly mundane, work-a-day words were also coined by the Bard? aerial, circumstantial, employment, moonbeam, uneducated (not one we use often around here!) 

[see a list of more everyday words from Shakespeare's plays]

Message any modern phrase to "ShakespeareSays" on Twitter, and discover how it would have sounded four hundred years ago.

And there's more! Check out the Libraries' most recent acquisitions on the topic of Shakespeare or his works, or watch one of 47 performances of Shakespearean plays via streaming video through our resource, Theatre in Video

Happy birthday, William Shakespeare!

[image credit: Folger Library]

 

Pirates and St Vincent de Paul? Who Knew!

by michelle 4/22/2009 11:11:00 AM

In the seventeenth century, Barbary pirates were at the height of their plundering power. Whether loosely organized or state-directed by the sultan or other pashas, North African pirates engaged in raiding the Mediterranean and its neighboring seas for goods and for captives that could be sold into slavery or ransomed.

Among those negotiating the release of the captives was Pierre Dan, a French priest of the Order of the Holy Trinity and Redemption of Captives. In 1634, Dan visited North Africa where he described the despair of the slave auctions and estimated that 25,000 Christian slaves were held in Algiers alone. Wearing the cross of the Redemptionist order, Rev. Dan is featured on the frontispiece of his book, Histoire de Barbarie (1649) conversing with a turbaned Turk or Berber and pointing to the ransom coins while ragged captives are brought out in chains.

So why is a book on Barbary pirates part of the St Vincent de Paul Reading List titles being collected by Rev. Edward Udovic, C.M.? Legend has it that from 1605 to 1607 when St Vincent de Paul was a young priest he was captured by Algerian corsairs and sold to different masters before making a daring escape with one of his captors, a French renegade who wished to be reconciled with the Church. Although the account of Vincent’s captivity came from letters he wrote at the time to explain his two year disappearance, most historians today doubt the veracity of the account and speculate that the young Vincent had dropped out of sight because of his heavy debts, and the failure of his attempts to gain an ecclesiastical benefice. Nonetheless, the Vincentian (Lazarist) order also had missions in Algiers and Tunis to bring relief or freedom to captured Christians.

Fast fact: Between 1575 and 1869, there were 82 redemption missions where friars bought the freedom of an estimated 15,500 captives.

Dan, Pierre. Histoire de Barbarie, et de ses corsairs... 2nd ed. Paris : Chez Pierre Rocolet, 1649. SPC 961.023D167h1649

The entire St Vincent de Paul Reading List of books contemporary with St Vincent can be found at: http://library.depaul.edu/Collections/spcaPDF/vdp_readingList.pdf

For more information contact Special Collections & Archives, Room 314, or archives@depaul.edu

DePaul Student Poetry Reading! April 29

by beth 4/20/2009 4:53:00 PM

In celebration of National Poetry Month, please join us for a showcase of DePaul undergraduate poets! The University Libraries is proud to host our first student poetry reading, and refreshments will be provided. We will also be announcing the winner of our magnetic poetry contest at the beginning of this event.

Poetry Reading:

Wednesday, April 29th

Richardson Library, room 300

6:00pm

One Book, One Chicago Event: Tuesday (4/21)

by beth 4/19/2009 10:12:00 PM

This Tuesday, One Book One Chicago at DePaul invites you to join them for a lecture by Juan Mora-Torres, Associate Professor in the Department of History. In the spring of 2006, over a million people, including large numbers of young people, marched in Chicago to demand civil rights for the undocumented population. This lecture/presentation revisits key themes in Sandra Cisneros’ novel, The House on Mango Street – the meaning of community, the politics of the youth and issues of immigration in the making of contemporary Mexican Chicago.

Tuesday, April 21st, 6:00 p.m.
McGowan South Building
1110 W. Belden, Room 108 

Scheduled Downtime for IS Systems on Sunday

by beth 4/17/2009 11:57:00 AM

This Sunday (4/19), Information Services wil be performing a system upgrade to improve Outlook email services at DePaul, and it will start at 12:01am and end at 10:00am. The following services will be affected: 

  • Campus Connection 

  • Systems requiring your Campus Connection credentials

  • DePaul e-mail systems

  • DePaul websites

  • Network file and print services

  • Peoplesoft 
This downtime may affect the Library's website and remote access to our electronic resources, as well as printing in computer labs in both the Richardson Library and the Loop Library.  We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.

Congratulations DePaul Student-Athletes!

by brent 4/15/2009 9:00:00 AM

Anna and Selma

Maintaining a high GPA while dividing time between the demands of Division I athletics and academics is no easy task. The library would like to recognize and congratulate DePaul’s student-athletes for their impressive achievements!

Honor Roll student-athlete Selma Salkovic and her women’s tennis team doubles partner Anna Redecsi were recognized this season as back-to-back BIG EAST Conference award winners. Teammate and Honor Roll student-athlete Dunja Antunovic received the BIG EAST Scholar-Athlete Sport Excellence Award for her commitment to academics, athletic achievement and community service.

Last season the BIG EAST recognized four of DePaul’s teams (women’s basketball, women’s cross country, men’s soccer and women’s tennis) for Team Academic Excellence Awards for the highest collective grade-point averages in each conference sport. Additionally, DePaul’s women’s basketball, women’s tennis and softball programs all earned honors from the NCAA for having multiyear Academic Performance Rate scores in the top 10 percent of all teams in their respective sports. All three programs were nationally ranked in their respective sports during the 2007-08 athletic year.

Congratulations to DePaul’s student-athletes!

BIG EAST All-Academic Selections

BIG EAST Conference Player of the Week


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