This infographic came out earlier this month, but I thought it had some interesting statistics on the coexistence of ebooks and print books:
From the Swiss Army Librarian blog: http://www.swissarmylibrarian.net/.
This infographic came out earlier this month, but I thought it had some interesting statistics on the coexistence of ebooks and print books:
From the Swiss Army Librarian blog: http://www.swissarmylibrarian.net/.
Introducing: noonartsound
The O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library and UST faculty members Shelly Nordtorp-Madson (art history) and Chris Kachian (music) invite you to a series of noontime talks on a variety of periods in art, sculpture, painting, costume history along with guitar music of the corresponding time periods. Shelley and Chris have been performing full-length concerts together for 10 years.
The Library is happy to announce this new series and extends an invitation to all. Shelley and Chris share a unique style, humor, academic breadth of knowledge, along with beautiful yet “unstuffy” presentations of their art. Bring your lunch, light refreshments will be provided.
The noonartsound schedule:
i Tuesday, March 5 “parlor 1590-1890” Noon to 1pm
features the design and art and music of what we call the living room – Shelley will give a presentation about art of the period; Chris will play music of the times with compositions from Dowland, Corbetta, Devisee, Vivaldi, Wiener, and Tarrega.
O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library, O’Shaughnessy Room, 108
ii Tuesday, April 2 “queens prefer…” Noon to 1pm
highlights the sights and sounds of England in the late 16th Century
O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library
iii Tuesday, May 7 “invierno” Noon to 1pm
spotlights the look, feel and touch of the Latin American world
O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library
iv Tuesday, October 1 – “…don’t mean a thing…” Noon to 1pm
brings you the art and music of the Jazz Era
O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library
Christopher Kachian, guitarist, and professor of Music at the University of St. Thomas, has performed throughout Europe, the Americas, South and Central America and the Far East, as recitalist, chamber musician and concerto soloist. His American performances have included a significant number of works written in the last twenty-five years, many of them commissions. These include over thirty works for guitar including 20 concerti. He has written Composer’s Desk Reference for the Classic Guitar in consultation with over 25 composers, published by Mel Bay Publications. He has been heard on Minnesota Public Radio, National Public Radio and American Public Media (including several appearances on A Prairie Home Companion).
Notable premiere recordings include Conrad Susa’s Carols and Lullabies (RCA 1995), David Baker’s Images, Shadows and Dreams (Collins Classics 1996 and Clarion as Dance Like the Wind, Music of Today’s Black Composers), Woodwind Music (Innova 1997), phoenix ensemble#1 (Valve-Hearts [Germany] 1998), Falls Flyer (10,000 Lakes 2002), Cyprus, First Impressions (Innova 2006), The J.S. Bach Sonatas for Gamba and Harpsichord for Guitar and Harpsichord by Chris Kachian and David Jenkins (2007), A Night in Vienna, (10, 000 Lakes 2011). With the Arpeggione Duo he has recorded Wanderer Sonata and Folklore (Ars Nova [Stockholm] 2006, 2009). Numerous other recordings of music ranging from blues to Christmas music are in his discography.
Since 1984, Dr. Kachian has directed one of the largest guitar programs in the USA at the University of St Thomas. He has lectured in music of Europe, the Americas, the Twentieth-Century, the World, the United States, Film, Protest, Mathematics, and Guitar Pedagogy and Guitar Literature. He is the founder of the UST Music Business, Recording Arts, and the Popular Music degrees. 2001 – 2005, he served as Director of Guitar Studies for MMTA for whom he lead – authored and edited the nation’s first comprehensive, multi-genre guitar pedagogy syllabus. In 2011, he wrote the film score for Per Bianca, which won Best Film at the Minnesota 48-Hour Film Festival and won a screening at the Cannes Film Festival.
Recent notable USA premiere performances are Astor Piazzolla’s Double Concerto and Franz Schubert’s Arpeggione Sonata. The ongoing series of Baroque concerts, with keyboardist, David Jenkins, with the Society for the Doctrinal Affectation of Baroque Music, an early music ensemble and the Arpeggione Duo, a Stockholm-based cello and guitar duo specializing in new folk music, round out his concert career.
To round out his biography, in 2012 Dr. Kachian received national recognition by the Sigma Alpha Iota International Music Fraternity as a National Arts Associate and Distinguished Member.
Shelly Nordtorp-Madson is the chief curator and clinical faculty in the Department of Art History.
She holds an MA in Medieval Art History, a PhD in Design History, and a technical diploma in dress design and draping. At UST she designs and mounts exhibits in OEC and teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in medieval art and dress history.
After spending four years on a nine-month language immersion program in Denmark, she moved to Minnesota, where she wandered around accumulating degrees and returning to Scandinavia whenever possible. Having worked at UST in a possibly record-setting number of positions, she now, as well as curatorial work and teaching, presents papers annually on medieval dress and her most recent obsession: shape-shifting in the medieval period, particularly relating to otters.
We invite you to join us!
The Harlem Shake is now being done in libraries across the world. Here is one of the better ones:
Thursday, March 14, Dr. Jill Manske of the Biology Department will be presenting in the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library, Room 309, over Convo hour, from 12-1pm.
Dr. Manske received her Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota.
Professional Interests:
Her broad research interest centers on the intersection between immunology, infectious disease, and community health. Currently, Dr. Manske is collaborating with the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP) on projects related to influenza, influenza vaccine and science policy.
In addition, she has an ongoing (three year) project performing surveillance of Borrelia burgdorfei, the Lyme disease agent, in small mammals at Macalester College’s Katherine Ordway Natural History Study. This project involves a field component (animal trapping) followed by PCR analysis of tissue samples for presence of the specific disease-causing agent.
Please note the room change from our typical location. We will be meeting in Room 309 instead of the O’Shaughnessy Room, Rm 108.
All students are invited to participate in discussion this Thursday, and every Thursday, at noon, in the library, Rm 108. For more information and weekly updates, visit The Telos Project Facebook group, follow us on Twitter, email TheTelosProjectUST@gmail.com, or visit our website:
We’ve been given the “all clear” signal from the consortium. You should no longer be seeing malware warnings when attempting to use CLICnet. If you do, try refreshing your browser, or refreshing and restarting.
We at UST Libraries are excited to welcome our President-Elect and share with her our tradition as “the intellectual and technological crossroads of information resources, teaching, and learning at UST.”
To get started, here are some highlights we hope Dr. Sullivan will find helpful and interesting as she transitions into her new position (and that we thought you library-lovers out there might like to check out, too!):
Our Newly-Designed Website and Online Resources
Providing easy-to-use mini research portals to through our Google-like Summon search engine, catalog, research Subject Guides, and more. Read more about it here.
Great Scholarship

UST Research Online, our online reseach repository, is a wonderful place to familiarize yourself with the work being done by faculty and students
Virtual Tours and Histories of St Thomas
University Archives Photograph Collection contains a fascinating array of images related to the school’s history
Historic Walking Tour of the Saint Paul campus is a great way to get oriented with the history of the campus – can you find the pictures of Lake Mennith?
Written Histories of St. Thomas and the Saint Paul Seminary:
More can be found in the University Archives.
*For more information about our President-Elect, Dr Julie Sullivan, please visit the St Thomas Newsroom.
Tired of the Same Old Relationships?
Need Something New and Exciting?
How about a blind date with a book?
It’s that time of year when many of us are looking to add a bit of adventure and fun to our lives. As Valentine’s Day approaches, a bit of romance would be fun, too, wouldn’t it?
Well have no fear – UST Libraries have you covered! If you haven’t stopped by yet, come by the OSF Library to have a blind date with a “Mystery Book” we’ve wrapped up just for you! Take it home, unwrap it, read it, and enjoy! If you don’t like the book, simply return it to the library – its feelings won’t be hurt.
Sure you might be disappointed; but then again … you may end up having a great read with something you wouldn’t have chosen for yourself.
It’s exciting. It’s fun.
And who knows? It could be romantic! (or fascinating, or about zombies, or a mystery, or….!)
Join the conversation over the noon hour, Thursday, February 14 in the O’Shaughnessy Room of the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library.
This week, all are invited to hear from Dr. Amy Muse of the English Department. She will answer your questions and tell you why she loves her work in the English Department.
Refreshments will be provided.
If you have questions, please visit the Telos Project site for more details.
Taylor & Francis, a journal publisher, is giving away free journal content for the rest of the month. Here’s their press release:
Click here to start browsing all Routledge Behavioral Science journals!
We are delighted to offer free online access to our complete range of Routledge Behavioral Science Journals throughout February 2013. We publish over 200 journals covering a range of subject areas including: Mental Health; Social Psychology; Neuropsychology Cognitive Psychology; Psychotherapy and Counseling; Developmental Psychology; Gerontology; Work and Organisational Psychology; Marriage and Family Therapy; Psychoanalysis; Creative Arts and Expressive Therapies; Behavioral Medicine and much more, so make the most of this unique opportunity and start browsing now.
Free journal content is great and I’m not trying to distract from it, but Free your Mind reminds me of one thing and one thing only:
None of you may remember this, but your parents will. Good stuff.

It’s Sunday night.
You have a project due tomorrow and you still need one more article.
Who ya gonna call?
That’s right – the library!
Specifically, you can now chat with me, since I’ll be the UST Librarian on call from 7pm-10pm on Sunday evenings.
Due to high demand, we have decided that starting Spring 2013 we at UST Libraries will add three more hours of reference services to our normal schedule. I, Laura Hansen, will be available every Sunday evening to help you with anything you might need.
Think you can stump me?!
To reach me, feel free to use any of the standard methods on the “Ask a Librarian” section of our new library website. Although I won’t be physically at the library, I’ll be available via phone, email, IM chat, Skype, text, and even tweet (you can reach any UST Librarian these ways during our other reference hours, too!)

*Note: Even when UST Librarians aren’t on duty, you can always get help through our 24/7 AskMN Service.