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Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

All are invited to final “noonartsound” presentation: Tuesday, Dec 3 at Noon in O’Shaughnessy Room

“freedom: art and music of the mississippi delta 1910-1950”
The final noonartsound presentation of the semester will take place at Noon on Tuesday, December 3, in the O’Shaughnessy Room of the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library. This time Shelly Nordtorp-Madson and Chris Kachian will feature the look and sounds of the deep south. “Blues, the root of all American popular music from rock & roll to country, serves as the soundtrack to an analysis of the artistic contributions of this poetic and politically vital area of America.” – Chris Kachian 

Shelly Nordtorp-Madson and Chris Kachian

Shelly Nordtorp-Madson and Chris Kachian

Nordtorp-Madson and Kachian have been performing these popular lecture-concerts together for over 10 years. The professors are known their unique style and humor, along with beautiful, satisfying, yet “unstuffy” presentations of their art.

We hope to see many of you at this noon-hour blend of art and music. Bring your lunch – refreshmetns will be provided. Questions? Please call Julie at 962-5014.

Here’s the noonartsound schedule for Spring, 2014

•March 4, 2014: “Argentina: Tango in Images and Sound”
•April 1, 2014: “The Art and Music of the French Baroque Chambre”
•May 6, 2014: “Romantica: Spanish Art and Music of 1880-1910″

Libraries, News & Events

Thanksgiving Holiday Hours reminder

Happy Thanksgiving!  Just a reminder that the Libraries will have shortened hours or be closed over the next several days, so please plan your work accordingly.

O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library
Wednesday Nov. 27:  7:30 AM — 6 PM
Thursday Nov. 28: Closed
Friday Nov. 29: Closed
Saturday Nov. 30: 10 AM — 6 PM
Sunday Dec. 1: 12 noon — 2 AM (normal hours)

Keffer Library (Minneapolis)
Wednesday Nov. 27:  8 AM — 10 PM (normal hours)
Thursday Nov. 28: Closed
Friday Nov. 29: Closed
Saturday Nov. 30: 9 AM — 5 PM
Sunday Dec. 1: Closed

Ireland Library
Wednesday Nov. 27:  8 AM — 5 PM
Thursday Nov. 28: Closed
Friday Nov. 29: Closed
Saturday Nov. 30: 12 noon — 5 PM
Sunday Dec. 1: 12 noon — 10 PM (normal hours)

Schoenecker Law Library
Wednesday Nov. 27:  7:45 AM — 5 PM
Thursday Nov. 28: Closed
Friday Nov. 29: Closed
Saturday Nov. 30: Closed
Sunday Dec. 1: Closed

Full Library Hours calendar

Have a great holiday!

thanksgiving

Database Highlights & Trials, News & Events

Ebsco databases are back!

ebscoThe Ebscohost databases are back working again as of this evening.  If you’ve been trying to access one in the last couple of days and been having problems, you can try again.

Before doing so, you’ll want to clear your browsing history, particularly cookies and cache settings, and then try your searches again.

We apologize for this inconvenience.

Database Highlights & Trials, News & Events

Ebsco databases misbehaving

ebscoEven library databases get the blues, apparently.  We’ve had reports that several of our Ebscohost databases (including Academic Search Premier, Criminal Justice Abstracts, Old Testament Abstracts, among others) are only working intermittently.  We have over 40 Ebsco databases, so it’s not a small problem.  We’ve reported it to the vendor and they’re working on it.  Some folks are able to get in and get search results, so the best advice we have is try switching browsers and keep trying, or take a break and come back to it a little later.

Sorry for the inconvenience, we’ll post updates as we hear back from the vendor.

News & Events

A Piece of Cake (ARTstor and PowerPoint)

 

November 21st, 2013 by Kate Burke.  Adapted from a Radka Ballada blog post.


Creating a PowerPoint slide presentation from ARTstor images is not difficult.
See instructions below:

1. On ARTstor Digital Library block select ENTER HERE and then log into your ARTstor account or register for a new account.

2. Search for images.

3. Select images for your presentation by clicking on them (selected images will have orange borders).

4. Save selected images as a new image group using the following steps:

a. Select “Organize” tab on the top bar.

b. Select “Save selected images to new image group”

c. Select a folder and type your image group name.
d. Select “Save & Open” option.

5. Select “Tools” tab on the top bar.

6.  Select “Export image group to PowerPoint.”

7. Select “Submit” option in the Export/Download Gudelines pop-up box.

8. Select “Accept” option in the Terms and Conditions of Use pop-up box.

9.  When your Power Point file is generated (it takes a few seconds), you can open your new slide presentation.  In my case, it was ” A Piece of Cake”. :-) If you have any questions please contact me.  Kate Burke

Database Highlights & Trials

Gettysburg Address

150 years ago today Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address on the Gettysburg battlefield to consecrate the ground where Americans died. Milestone Documents in American History , a book from the Gale Virtual Reference Library, puts this incredible speech in context.  I’ve blogged about the Gettysburg Address before, but I’m doing it again. I’m an Abraham Lincoln superfan and agree with Ken Burns that all Americans should take two minutes out of their day to read this speech (Actually, Ken Burns believes everyone should learn it and recite it. I’m only asking you to read it today). Its principles are still as important today as they were 150 years ago. (And it never fails to choke me up).

Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.

But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate—we can not consecrate—we can not hallow—this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us—that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion—that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain—that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

Recently Read, Science

A “New” Body Part!

An image of a right knee after a full dissection of the anterolateral ligament (ALL). (Credit: University Hospitals Leuven)

Hey biomechanics students (and anyone else interested in anatomy)!  

Did you hear that a body part never before fully researched has just now been given its first full anatomical description?

Called the anterolateral ligament (ALL), the part is a “previously enigmatic ligament in the human knee. The ligament appears to play an important role in patients with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears.”  Knee surgeons Dr Steven Claes and Professor Dr Johan Bellemans started looking into it while studying several common symptoms knee surgery patients experience, especially after discovering an 1879 article that “postulated the existence of an additional ligament located on the anterior of the human knee.”

Read more in Science Daily; Claes and Bellemans’ research was published in the October issue of  the Journal of Anatomy.*

*Note: UST’s subscription to Journal of Anatomy is embargoed for a year after publication, but until then you can request the article via ILLiad

Latin America, Libraries, Music, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

Dances and Melodies of Spain and Latin America in the Library’s Great Hall Thursday, November 21 at 7pm

 “It’s music like you’ve (almost) never heard it before . . .”     – Chris Kachian

arpeggio

Thomas Schönberg and Chris Kachian

The Arpeggione Duo of guitarist Dr. Christopher Kachian and cellist Dr. Thomas Schönberg will perform a 7 p.m. concert Thursday, November 21, 2013 featuring a variety of pieces from Spain, Ecuador, Brazil, and Argentina.  The concert will be held  at the north end of the Great Hall, located on the second floor of the  O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library, marking the second time this space, noted for its excellent acoustics, stained-glass windows and vaulted ceiling, will be used for a concert. 

Schönberg and Kachian, who are educators as well as performers, formed the Arpeggione Duo after meeting at the Guitar Festival of Sollentuna, Sweden, in 2004. They tour annually and have recorded three albums.  More about the musicians and samples of their music can be found here.  

Schönberg is a native of Sweden and was accepted to the Royal Music Academy of Stockholm at age 13.  He received his doctorate at the University of Hartford, Conn., and is dean of the Lidingo School of Music in Sweden. He performs throughout Europe, Asia and the United States on a Guarnerius cello built in 1711.

Kachian, whose doctorate is from the University of Minnesota, heads the Guitar Studies Program at St. Thomas and in 2011 was inducted into the renowned Sigma Alpha Iota International Music Fraternity.  A champion of new music, he has commissioned and premiered more than 30 works for guitar.  He has given more than 500 performances in Japan, China, Africa, Cuba, Costa Rica, Peru and throughout Europe and North America.  Kachian is a founding member of the Society for the Affectation of Baroque Music and also plays the blues harmonica.

The concert is free and open to all.   Refreshments will be served. If you have any questions, please call (651) 962-5014.

Business & Economics

Harvard Business Review removes full access to selected articles

It has become a depressingly common question this semester at the reference desk. I am asked why a permanent link to an article is coming up with an error message, or a user sees this message on an article she wants for a class.

harvard

 

I look at the citation and sure enough the answer is staring at me right in the face. The Harvard Business Review is a long standing, respected publication, that covers a wide range of business topics and articles are assigned readings in many undergraduate and graduate classes. Business Source Premier is the only database at UST that provides the electronic access to the Harvard Business Review starting from 1922 up until the present issue. I remember very clearly in the early 2000’s when the UST libraries decided to to make the switch from our then full text business article database, ABI INFORM to Business Source Premier from the vendor Ebsco.  The librarians debated the merits of both products, we conducted surveys, and finally one of the main reasons we switched was because of the full text access to HBR that we knew our users wanted.

Fast forward to August 1st 2013 when the publishers of HBR started to block full access to their most popular articles like the one you see above.  Professors can no longer link to these articles from their Blackboard page, and while users can view the articles when they find them in Business Source Premier, they can no longer print or save the articles in front of them.  There is no established list of these 500 articles, users will have to just cross their fingers when they click on an article from HBR that the article they want is not on that mysterious list.

This issue with Harvard goes beyond UST, and it is not going unnoticed.  The Chronicle of Education published a very comprehensive article describing the circumstances and potential impact of this situation, while business and reference library associations issued their own response to Harvard’s policy.   Recently I shared an article with an OCB faculty member who was not able to link to an HBR article and she replied ‘I would not want to be on the wrong side of librarians.’  I was very flattered by her response and gratified that she perceived librarians as facilitating access to information.  So when this access is denied for whatever reason, then yes, you do not want to be on that wrong side.

Database Highlights & Trials

Got 7 Minutes? Got a tablet or smartphone?

Have I got an offer for you! You can download Browzine, an app that gives you tables of contents, as well as actual articles, to some of your favorite academic journals. Need to keep up in your profession? Love to browse journals?  We’ve written about Browzine before but I thought I’d mention it again.  You can watch this 7 minute presentation about what it is and how it works. And in less than 8 minutes, you’ll be browsing some of UST’s academic journals* on your tablet.

http://youtu.be/AUV1HCRPsI0

*Browzine does not include all journals UST libraries subscribe to, but a lot. You can find the entire journal collection here.