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MEL’s Database of the Week for 10/22/10

MEL’s Database of the Week for 10/22/10

October 22nd, 2010

Welcome to Database of the Week — a feature from the Management & Economics Library (MEL). These database snapshots will give you basic information about our most relevant and beneficial online resources.

This Week’s Featured Database: Hospitality & Tourism Complete, from EBSCOHost, combining the records of databases formerly produced by Cornell, the University of Surrey, and Purdue.

Link: www.lib.purdue.edu/mel, in the pull down Quick Access to Business Databases alpha list right below the Libraries’ search box.

Description/focus: Hospitality & Tourism Complete covers scholarly research and industry news, extending back to 1965 in some areas.

Start with this hint: Hospitality & Tourism Complete has the basic and advanced search features offered by EBSCO in other databases.  Enter a word or short phrase that is your subject and when the list is displayed, you can sort by type of document or limit by date.  For example, enter economic development for a list of more than 2000 hits.  Narrow your results with the tools in the column on the left: move the slider on the year bar, or check Academic Journals and Reports. Stay on the results page for an Advanced Search and you can broaden the results by adding  forecasting in the second search field and changing the limiter from and to or.

Other common tools available in this database: save selected hits online for later retrieval; email selected hits to yourself; citation help; some fulltext; FIND IT at Purdue Libraries; links to cited references; option to sort by date or relevance. For more on use of these tools in this database, contact Mary Dugan

Why you should know this database: Hospitality & Tourism Complete is certainly directed towards those in the hospitality field, but the included research of subjects such as entrepreneurship or international businesses may apply to other areas. For example, the Datamonitor Country Reports include analysis of the political, economic, social, technological, legal, and environmental structure of the subject country.

How this database can be integrated into the curriculum: Searching Hospitality & Tourism Complete is simple and gives students fulltext results they can access immediately.

Cost: Cost: No cost to Purdue University Libraries. Hospitality & Tourism Complete is an Inspire database provided by the state of Indiana.

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Database of the Week comes to you from the Management & Economics Library (MEL). Our intent is to give you a brief introduction to a database that you may not know.  If you would like more information about this database, or if you would like a demonstration of it for a class, contact kranlib@purdue.edu.  Database of the Week is archived  at https://blogs.lib.purdue.edu/news/category/MGMT/.  For more Purdue Libraries news, follow us on Twitter (@PurdueLibraries).

If you would like us to promote your favorite database, send an email to mdugan@purdue.edu.


MEL’s Database of the Week for 10/15/10

October 15th, 2010

Welcome to Database of the Week — a feature from the Management & Economics Library (MEL).  These weekly database snapshots will give you basic information about our most relevant and beneficial online resources.

This Week’s Featured Database: Purdue e-Pubs, from Purdue University Libraries, in recognition of Open Access Week October 18-25.

Link: http://docs.lib.purdue.edu/

Description/focus: Purdue e-Pubs is the Purdue Libraries–sponsored open access database of articles and other scholarly documents produced by members of the Purdue University community.

Start with this hint: Purdue e-Pubs is similar to other article databases with options for a simple keyword search or advanced search.  What makes it different, though, is the link on the left labeled Submit Research.  If you have published an article and have retained your author rights, you can add it to the Purdue Libraries digital collection and make your paper freely available online. Click on Submit Research, select your department from the resulting list, and create your account.  Don’t see your department?  Contact Professor Mark Newton, Purdue’s Digital Collections Librarian, who will help your department or research center establish an e-Pubs collection. Mark is also available to answer any questions you may have about Purdue e-Pubs, support for open access scholarship at Purdue, or tools for retaining publication copyright.

Why you should know this database: All publishing Purdue researchers have the opportunity to contribute research articles to the digital collections of the Purdue University Libraries through Purdue e-Pubs.  When you contribute, you can receive a monthly e-mail telling you how many times your articles have been downloaded. Purdue e-Pubs is also the publication platform for several peer-reviewed, electronic journals published through the Purdue University Press. A recent notable addition to Purdue e-Pubs through the Press is Global Business Languages.

How this database can be integrated into the curriculum: The work of Purdue University undergraduate and graduate students may also be deposited if the appropriate collection has been established. See, for example, the  CFS Honors Program Undergraduate Theses and the College of Technology Directed Projects.  Contact Professor Mark Newton for more information about student work and Purdue e-Pubs.

Cost: Purdue Libraries pays an annual maintenance fee for the Digital Commons repository platform.

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Database of the Week comes to you from the Management & Economics Library (MEL). Our intent is to give you a brief introduction to a database that you may not know.  If you would like more information about this database, or if you would like a demonstration of any database for a class, contact kranlib@purdue.edu.   Database of the Week is archived  at https://blogs.lib.purdue.edu/news/category/MGMT/.  For more Purdue Libraries news, follow us on Twitter (@PurdueLibraries).

If you would like us to promote your favorite database, send an email to mdugan@purdue.edu.


Alumnus Roland Parrish puts Libraries’ project on fast track with $2 million gift

October 14th, 2010

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Roland Parrish has plenty of experience setting the pace, both as a successful Purdue University student-athlete and as an entrepreneur. Now Parrish is sharing his winning ways with a $2 million leadership gift to support the $4.2 million Management and Economics Library renovation project.

Roland Parrish

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When complete in early 2012, the Roland G. Parrish Library of Management and Economics will stand as a prototype state-of-the-art library, laboratory and learning commons. He will be honored with a Pinnacle Award, the highest recognition for philanthropic contributions to the university, during an invitation-only ceremony at 3 p.m. Friday (Oct. 15) at the library that will bear his name.

“My experience at Purdue was very positive, and my success speaks to the quality of education I received at the university,” said Parrish, who graduated from Purdue in 1975 with a bachelor’s degree in industrial management and earned a master’s degree in management in 1976.

Parrish is the president, CEO and owner of Parrish McDonald’s Restaurants Ltd., which owns 25 McDonald’s franchises in North Texas. The average franchisee owns five restaurants. His company consistently makes Black Enterprise magazine’s BE 100 as one of the Top 100 Black Owned Businesses in the United States — another goal he had set and quickly met.

He was elected in September as the 2011-12 chairman and CEO of the National Black McDonald’s Association, a 38-year-old organization that represents 300 franchises and 1,350 restaurants with a combined sales of $2.7 billion. While he was vice chair for OPNAD, the national owner/operator’s advertising fund, from 2003-05, he chaired a team that helped spur 14 percent growth in company sales over the last half of 2003. The group worked with a $500 million marketing budget for 13,000 restaurants and helped increase system-wide sales by more than $20 billion, introducing new marketing ideas and products, and McDonald’s has been on a roll since.

Parrish arrived at Purdue in 1971 on a full athletic scholarship, thanks to his success as a Hammond, Ind., high school All-American in track and field and his 1971 Indiana state title in the 800-meter run. He lettered four years on Purdue’s track and field team, served as team captain in his senior year and was voted MVP twice by his teammates.

He still felt the pull of academics even greater.

“I spent more time in the Libraries than on the track during my time on campus, and a lot of my weekly rituals and routines centered around the library,” said Parrish, an avid reader and life-long learning advocate.

Parrish also performed in the Black Voices of Inspiration singing group at Purdue. Applying his athletic discipline to academics, he made the dean’s list seven out of eight semesters.

“Roland Parrish is truly one of Purdue’s most cherished partners,” Purdue President France A. Córdova said.

Córdova remembers Parrish declaring his passion for libraries and expressing his interest in the library renovation project at Krannert during their first meeting in 2009. That planned 30-minute encounter turned into a two-hour discussion.

“We met in Dallas in January 2009, and Roland acknowledged the central role libraries played in his quest for academic excellence,” she said. “I remember him recounting fondly all the time he spent studying amid the stacks and carrels of the Purdue Libraries in the early 1970s. This gift is a testament to his love of learning and his recognition of the Libraries as an evolving knowledge and information center for present and future students. Roland’s dedication to optimizing the student learning experience at Purdue is only surpassed by his position as an exemplary role model in the Boilermaker tradition. We are humbled and grateful for his many contributions to our university.”

Libraries Dean James L. Mullins said Parrish’s gift embodied his vision of transforming the MEL library into a learning space unique to Purdue and still rare in academia.

“Roland’s gift reflects his love of the library as an institution that is central to the mission of higher education — past, present and future,” Mullins said. “His own experience and subsequent success inspired him to make a transformative learning environment possible to a new generation, in new ways, with new technologies and methods. We are grateful for Roland’s vision, leadership and generosity.”

Parrish’s gift will help complete the Management and Economics Library project. Already, the LearnLab™, a 40-seat interactive learning space on the second-floor of the Krannert Building, has transformed classroom space into a collaborative environment equipped with smart board technologies and group workspaces.

The recently completed second phase of construction includes team collaboration media stations, a multimedia production center, two semiprivate group study rooms and a business information mini-classroom to support the accounting and finance curriculum. The third phase creates a coffee shop and a commons area and will be finished in early 2012.

“Mr. Parrish exemplifies the quality and caliber of students that Krannert – and the Business Opportunity Program – wants to recruit,” said Jerry Lynch, interim dean of the Krannert School of Management. “His success personifies the desired results. He exemplifies the entrepreneurial spirit that a Krannert education encourages, and his generosity is an example we hope our future alumni will emulate.”

Parrish, a recipient of Krannert’s Burton D. Morgan Entrepreneurship Award, credits much of his success to the education he received at Purdue to his mentor, Cornell Bell. Parrish was the first student recruited by Bell to Krannert’s then-fledging Business Opportunity Program.

Bell, who retired in 2006 and died in 2009, devoted more than 37 years to recruiting and mentoring minority students as the program’s director.

“Krannert and the BOP, thanks to Dr. Bell, became the cornerstone of my success,” Parrish said.

In addition to the library, Parrish supports Purdue Athletics and the Krannert School. He also donated funds for the Lambert Fieldhouse scoreboard and a scholarship in memory of Bell. Another scholarship supports students through the Black Cultural Center.

The Roland G. Parrish Library of Management and Economics bears distinction as Purdue’s first major campus facility named in honor of an African-American alumnus.

Parrish serves on several boards, including the Ronald McDonald House Charities of North Texas and the Owner Operators Reinsurance Co.

Parrish and his wife, Jewel, a Lafayette, Ind., native, and their two children, Rowland and Auluna Jade, reside in DeSoto, Texas. Their daughter is a junior at Purdue.

Writer: Grant Flora, 765-494-3676, gflora@purdue.edu

Sources: James L. Mullins, 765-494-2900, jmullins@purdue.edu

France A. Córdova, president@purdue.edu

Jerry Lynch, 765-494-4388, lynch@purdue.edu

Note to Journalists: Reporters interested in speaking with Roland Parrish should contact Grant Flora at 765-494-3676, gflora@purdue.edu, or Jim Bush at 765-494-2077, jsbush@purdue.edu


MEL’s Database of the Week for 10/8/10

October 8th, 2010

Welcome to Database of the Week — a feature from the Management & Economics Library (MEL). These database snapshots will give you basic information about our most relevant and beneficial online resources.

This Week’s Featured Database: AGRICOLA, from the National Agricultural Library.

Link: www.lib.purdue.edu/mel, in the pull down Quick Access to Business Databases alpha list right below the Libraries’ search box.

Description/focus: AGRICOLA is a record material on agriculture and related topics that are in the National Agricultural Library.

Start with this hint: There are few difference between the AGRICOLA advanced interface and the basic.  Both offer options by clicking Additional Limits which include language, target audience, type of publication, and years of publication.  It also offers a box to check for Full Text, but AGRICOLA has few full text articles.  For example, a keyword search for organic farming has 2040 hits, but the same search for full text results in only 10 titles.  This presents a good opportunity to try out the FIND IT at Purdue Libraries service.  If the title you want is available in another database, FIND IT at Purdue Libraries will do the search and show you where it is.  Perhaps the most useful feature of the AGRICOLA interface is that you can see your search history and combine searches.  For example, the search for organic farming can be combined with specific countries or crops.  AGRICOLA also supplies tools and filters to narrow search results.

Why you should know this database: AGRICOLA topics cover a wide range including agricultural regulations, training, animal science, nutrition, natural resources management, environmental pollution, food science, forestry, energy, and others.  AGRICOLA coverage goes back to 1970.

How this database can be integrated into the curriculum: The AGRICOLA list of results shows an option to Find Similar for each title.  The filters and other tools can simplify  the search process.

Cost:Paid annually by Purdue University Libraries.

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Database of the Week comes to you from the Management & Economics Library (MEL). Our intent is to give you a brief introduction to a database that you may not know.  If you would like more information about this database, or if you would like a demonstration of it for a class, contact kranlib@purdue.edu.  Database of the Week is archived  at https://blogs.lib.purdue.edu/news/category/MGMT/.  For more Purdue Libraries news, follow us on Twitter (@PurdueLibraries).

If you would like us to promote your favorite database, send an email to mdugan@purdue.edu.


MEL’s Database of the Week for 10/1/10

October 1st, 2010

Welcome to this feature from the Management & Economics Library (MEL).  These database snapshots will give you basic information about our most relevant and beneficial online resources.

Database name: LexisNexis Academic Legal, from LexisNexis.

Link: www.lib.purdue.edu/mel, in the pull down Quick Access to Business Databases alpha list right below the Libraries’ search box.

Description/focus: LexisNexis Academic Legal provides the means for legal research.

Start with this hint: The LexisNexis Academic Easy Search page has 2 ways to begin your legal research.  In the top row center panel, called Look up a Legal Case, there are options to get a case By Citation, By Parties, or By Topic.  A Google-type keyword search is not a good choice for legal research.  The best way to find a case is to search by citation number. When you search by citation, it must be in Bluebook format, which includes punctuation… you can see the difference if you search with their example twice, once as U.S. (note the periods) and once with just US.  You could also search by one or more of the names of the parties involved.  A search by Topic will likely result in a huge number of hits.  The second option for legal research is accessed through the panel on the left of Easy Search.  Click on US Legal, select an area from the expanded list, and use the resulting form to select options such as time span and jurisdiction.

Why you should know this tool: LexisNexis Academic includes federal cases and some state cases.  It also includes Statutes, Codes, & Regulations, as well as the full text of many Law Review journals, which provide case background, analysis, and opinions.

How this will help students: The expanded list of US Legal options includes Landmark Cases.  This is a unique opportunity for students to locate and read the actual Supreme Court cases that have been landmarks in the history of the US judicial system.

Cost: LexisNexis Academic is a subscription service paid by the Libraries annually; for more information contact mdugan@purdue.edu.

Database of the Week comes to you from the Management & Economics Library (MEL). Our intent is to give you a brief introduction to a database that you may not know.  If you would like more information about this database, or if you would like a demonstration of it for a class, contact kranlib@purdue.edu.  Database of the Week is archived  at https://blogs.lib.purdue.edu/news/category/MGMT/.  For more Purdue Libraries news, follow us on Twitter (@PurdueLibraries).

If you would like us to promote your favorite database, send an email to mdugan@purdue.edu.