Meet Peggy!
March is Women’s History Month. So introduce yourself to Peggy, the Women and the Law database available on HeinOnline. It brings together books, biographies and periodicals dedicated to the role of women in society and the law. You can access it from the HeinOnline home page. In addition, the Library of Congress has a dedicated web page for Women’s History Month, including information about events, ceremonies, and celebrations.
The Green Book
The Green Book: Travel is Fatal to Prejudice
Green Book, this year’s Oscar winner for Best Picture, was loosely based on the true story of a friendship between an African-American concert pianist, Dr. Don Shirley, and his Italian-American driver and bodyguard, Tony “Lip” Vallelonga—a friendship that developed on the road during a concert tour through the “Deep South” in the 1960s.
While the story is moving and the acting superb, the movie and its audiences might have been better served if its eponymous inspiration had been given a more prominent role. Few people recognize the film’s title as a cinematic nod to the Negro Motorist Green Book—an indispensable ready reference source that many African-American travelers and motorists relied upon during the Jim Crow era.
The film is set in 1962—more than a quarter of a century after the “Green Book” was first published by Victor Hugo Green, a New Jersey mail carrier living in Harlem. The Green Book, which was updated annually, contained travel tips, articles, and listings of hotels and other lodging, restaurants, nightclubs, gas stations, garages, salons, barbershops, and other businesses and establishments where African-Americans were known to be welcomed and served.
The Green Book provided a measure of protective reassurance and was designed to avoid or mitigate “embarrassing situations,” as Green himself put it, while also affording subtle commentary on the racial and social injustices of the time. For example, the same 1949 cover that cautions its readers to “Carry your Green Book with you—You may need it” also displays “Travel is Fatal to Prejudice,” a quote from Mark Twain’s Innocents Abroad.
You can access digital versions of one of the largest collections of Green Books here, courtesy of the New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
Congratulations to our Valentine’s Day Info Hunt Winners!
Thanks to everyone who participated in this year’s Valentine’s Day Info Hunt!
We want to thank ALL of you for putting your research skills to work and joining us in what we hope you all found to be a great learning experience. Here are the 18 winners drawn from our renowned Raffle Drum:
Find Love in the Library!
Find Love in the Library!!
The Valentine’s Day Info Hunt is back! Can you find love in the Library?
With Valentine’s Day right around the corner, here’s a sweet treat for you: an opportunity to WIN study aids, Lexis points, NYLS swag, and other swell stuff. Just answer the easy (and fun) Valentine’s Day Info Hunt questions. Your answers don’t need to be perfect—just close!
Click here to access the questions. Each slide includes just one question, along with step-by-step instructions to get you to the answer. Print the PDF answer sheet (or pick up a copy at the Reference Desk) and drop it in our Reference Desk Raffle Drum by 3:00 pm on Thursday February 14, and then join us outside the library at 5:30 for some sweets and the prize drawing at 5:45pm.
xoxo
Black History Month: Moses Leonard Frazier, NYLS First African American Graduate
Moses Leonard Frazier, Class of 1899, is believed to have been NYLS First African American Graduate. In the early days of NYLS, students enrolled by signing a student registration ledger and writing certain basic information about themselves, e.g., their age (in years, months and days!), the college or graduate school they had attended (although a college degree was not a requirement for admission to NYLS until the 1960s), their address and the names and addresses of their parents or guardians. Moses Leonard Frazier’s signature appears on the Student Ledger Book 7, page 13, line 9.
A collection of all student ledgers can be found on the NYLS Digital Commons Page.
Martin Luther King Day
Martin Luther King Day
Legislation signed in 1983 marked the birthday of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as a federal holiday, celebrated on the third Monday of each January. In 1994, Congress designated the Martin Luther King Jr. Federal Holiday as a national day of service, now led by the Corporation for National and Community Service.
This year, the NYLS community is honoring Dr. King’s legacy by expanding its traditional day of service to a week of volunteering, trainings, and discussions. The “Week of Action” is being organized by NYLS’s Impact Center for Public Interest Law, one of its six academic centers. Click here for more information.
Spring 2019 RSW Registration is Open
Registration is open for this semester’s Research Skills Workshops (RSW):
- EELR II (1/15 – 2/7)
- Introduction to Administrative & Regulatory Research (2/11 – 2/24)
- Citators: Is All your Research Up to Date? (2/25 – 3/7)
Please Note:
- Legal Practice Students must attend all three RSW.
- Other members of the community are welcome to attend the Introduction to Administrative & Regulatory Research and the Citators: Is All your Research Up to Date? RSW.
- Advance Registration is required for all three RSW.
- To register please go to the library homepage or click on link: https://libguides.nyls.edu/rsw
IMPORTANT CHANGES TO NYLS LIBRARY LABS
Important changes have been made to the Library lab PCs. Most students use these labs, and so should pay careful attention to the following:
Network Login: All lab PCs have been reconfigured to login automatically to a generic account named “Lab User”. You will no longer login with your personal username and password. Rather, the PC you’re using will have a desktop that gives you access to internet browsers and applications – Microsoft Office and Adobe Acrobat – logged in as Lab User.
Password? Your lab PC shouldn’t be asking you for a password, but if it does, just restart the PC.
My Network Account? You won’t be able to login to your own network account when you’re working at a lab PC. If you want to save a file you have several choices: 1) Save it to your OneDrive; 2) Email it to yourself; 3) Save it to a thumb drive.
Name Your Documents before Printing!!! When you send a document to print, it will appear in the queue as coming from “Lab User”, a generic name. To make sure you can identify your own document in the queue, you must give it a name you can recognize! If your document is named “Document1” you won’t be able to distinguish it from other users’ documents. Save it with a unique name before you send it to the printer!
The Library staff stands ready to help you adjust to these changes. Just visit the Reference Desk, or call us at ext. 2332.
Welcome Back!
Welcome Back!
We hope you all had a relaxing and rejuvenating winter break!
All of us at the Mendik Library wish for you a rewarding and fulfilling semester. We’d love to be a part of your success and hope you will let us help you with all your research and information needs.
Good luck and best wishes for a great semester! We’re looking forward to strengthening our partnership.
The Mendik Library Staff