Harold B. Lee Library

Archive for the “Library News” Category

  • Can you help me now?
    Posted September 15, 2009 by news

    Media students working in the library have written and produced a great series of videos highlighting library services. You can watch the videos on the large TVs on level 3 of the library or you can see them on the Harold B. Lee Library’s page on Facebook.
    Also, don’t forget that all students are encouraged to [...]

  • From Daguerreotype to Digital: The history of photography
    Posted August 19, 2009 by news

    There are over one million photographs and negatives in the library’s collections. Tom Wells, the curator of photography in the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, has chosen some of the finest examples to illustrate the history of photography. The new exhibition is titled From Daguerreotype to Digital and is located on level 1 of the [...]

  • Learn about the Library’s New Research Tool
    Posted August 18, 2009 by news

    The library has a new research tool called ScholarSearch. You can learn the basics by watching our new tutorial at http://net.lib.byu.edu/tutorial/scholarsearch/
    ScholarSearch is easy to use and it is featured on the library’s new homepage at lib.byu.edu.

  • Video Contest-Sparky Awards
    Posted June 24, 2009 by news

    UPDATE (November 2009): View our top SPARKY entries.
    More Sharing, More People, More Ideas http://moresharingmorepeoplemoreideas.blogspot.com
    Pinned Down by the Dark http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3U85asWtEns
    Buildings http://benjaminvideoproductions.com/sparky.php
    Information Lessons:  Jerk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rm9WaQMtlXw
    Clueless Discovery http://vimeo.com/6223728
    It’s Good to Share www.et.byu.edu/~rezyh/sparky/share.html

    (Provo, Utah, June 16, 2009) – The SPARKY Awards are coming up soon. The short video contest, which promotes the open exchange of information, will be [...]

  • Joseph and Emma Smith’s Family Tree
    Posted June 10, 2009 by news

    A new chart has been placed at Brigham Young University’s Family History Library containing an extensive research of Joseph and Emma Smith’s family tree.
    The chart, which is an updated version of the original in Salt Lake City, was collected by Michael Kennedy and printed with the help of BYU’s Computer Science department.

    Michael Kennedy, who donated [...]

  • Facebook and Research
    Posted May 7, 2009 by news

    Long ago in virtual time (which is a few months in real time) the librarians at the Science Reference Desk on level 2 of the library created the first BYU Facebook page*. Soon after, the library followed up with the Harold B. Lee Library’s Facebook page. Today there are a number of Facebook pages associated [...]

  • 5 Spring Book Ideas
    Posted April 21, 2009 by news

    It’s spring and finals are wrapping up so take a break and read a book. If you only have a few minutes try Tree Tour : Brigham Young University (QK 189 .B745 2007). This great little volume can tell you about your favorite campus trees. Find it in the Science section on level 2 of [...]

  • Provo Founder’s Day
    Posted March 26, 2009 by news

    Wednesday, April 1 Kenneth L. Cannon II will present the annual Provo Founder’s Day Lecture at 3:00 pm in the Special Collections Classroom on level 1 of the Harold B. Lee Library.
    Lecture Description: Provo residents fought for construction of a new union train depot for almost twenty years, from 1891 to 1911.  Controversies ranging from [...]

  • Book Arts: Rosie Kelly to speak in the library
    Posted March 17, 2009 by news

    Rosie Kelly sometimes referred to as “The Amazing Rosie Kelly” will speak in the Harold B. Lee Library Auditorium on the night of March 26th at 7:00 pm. Kelly is a calligrapher and book artist who is changing the art world one lecture and one student at a time. You can see a small selection [...]

  • What are you collecting?
    Posted February 27, 2009 by news

    The L. Tom Perry Special Collections are preparing for this year’s A. Dean Larsen Book Collecting Conference. You can follow their progress through their blog. If you are interested in books, printing, and collecting you are welcome to sign up through their web site.