Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts

12.17.2015

Intersession hours at the Albertsons Library

"Landscape with Snow and Fog" by Nick Page is licensed under CC BY 2.0
The library and the rest of the Boise State campus will be closed during the Winter Break. The library will be open limited hours during the Winter Intersession:

Friday, Dec. 18: 8:00 am to 5:00 pm
Saturday, Dec. 19 & Sunday, Dec. 20: CLOSED
Monday, Dec. 21: 8:00 am to 5:00 pm
Tuesday, Dec. 22: 8:00 am to 5:00 pm
Wednesday, Dec. 23: 8:00 am to 5:00 pm
Thursday, Dec. 24 through Saturday, Jan. 2/2016: CLOSED

Intersession hours will begin on Sunday, Jan. 3 when we will be open from 10 am to 6 pm. See our calendar page for our complete list of operating hours.

Congratulations to all our graduates, and Happy Holidays to our extended Boise State family!

11.23.2015

Buy Nothing Day

"Walmart on Black Friday 2009" by Laurie is licensed under CC BY 2.0
Where will you be November 27th, the day after Thanksgiving, or as it’s known in the U.S., Black Friday? Waiting outside of a big box store for the perfect gift for yourself or others? Worried about adding to your credit card debt over the holidays, but feeling compelled to shop anyway? You know, you could be relaxing in your jammies at home, celebrating Buy Nothing Day. 

Buy Nothing Day is an international day of protest against over-consumerism, founded in 1992 by Canadian artist Ted Dave, and since promoted by AdBusters magazine

You can find additional resources on the anti-consumerist movement at Albertsons Library:

Shop ‘til you drop: the crisis of consumerism http://boisestate.worldcat.org/oclc/521099791
Affluenza: How overconsumption is killing us --and how we can fight back  [Ebook]   http://boisestate.worldcat.org/oclc/867050543

Or, if you’d like to spend your time relaxing with some fiction, we have a Good Reads guide to all things fresh and fascinating in literature http://guides.boisestate.edu/goodreads. However you choose to celebrate your Thanksgiving holiday, we wish you all the best.

Audrey Williams,
Access Services

11.20.2015

Library hours during the Thanksgiving holiday

"Pie II" by Sarah is licensed under CC BY 2.0
The Albertsons Library will have reduced hours during the Thanksgiving holiday break. The library will be open:

  • Sunday, Nov. 22: 10 am - 6 pm
  • Monday, Nov. 23: 8 am - 5 pm
  • Tuesday, Nov. 24: 8 am - 5 pm
  • Wednesday, Nov. 25: 8 am - 5 pm
  • Thursday Nov. 26 through through Saturday Nov. 28th: CLOSED

Regular hours resume on Sunday, Nov. 29. You can find updated library hours at http://library.boisestate.edu/about/hours.php

Have a safe and happy Thanksgiving Break!

9.04.2015

Library Closed on Labor Day


The university and the Albertsons library will be closed on Monday, September 7th for the Labor Day holiday. Regular library hours resume on Tuesday, September 8th.

Have a safe and happy Labor Day!

7.01.2013

A Look at a Fourth of July Speech Given by Senator Frank Church



Frank Church at a fair during his campaign for reelection as Senator in 1962.

“More Than They Took:” A Look at a Fourth of July Speech Given by Senator Frank Church

Frank Church was a senator from Idaho who served four consecutive terms in Congress from 1956-1980. His collection in Special Collections spans over 800 boxes and is the largest collection in Special Collections as well as the most heavily used. During his 1962 campaign for reelection to the Senate, Church delivered a speech on July 4 in Grangeville, Idaho. The speech titled “More Than They Took” was given as part of the Fourth of July Centennial Program of the Idaho County Historical Society.

The speech covered the historic event of pioneers coming to the Idaho County area in 1862, and Church shared several stories about the pioneers. The early settlers worked in the mining camps and faced many hardships – lack of food and supplies and disease. The village of Florence was hit by a severe snowstorm on July 3, 1862. Trains often could not get to the area until May, and men would often carry packs of provisions weighing 60-75 pounds to the villages in the area. There were also many unique characters in Idaho County in its early days, including a poet called “Pine Tree Johnson” who lived under a pine tree rather than living in a house and ran for the Idaho legislature and won.

Church also shared the legend that it was in Idaho County where the state got its name. Joaquin Miller, the “Poet of the Sierras,” was a pony express rider for the mines of Idaho. According to Miller, “Ee-dah-how” meant the “Gem of the Mountains.” In speaking of the Fourth of July holiday, Church said,
“It is our most truly American holiday. And it is also more lively, joyous, and patriotic than any other holiday.”
To view the full speech and other materials in the Frank Church Collection, visit Special Collections on the second floor of the library or send an email to archives@boisestate.edu. The guide to the collection can be viewed here.

Julia Stringfellow,
Archivist/Librarian and Assistant Professor