Peter Gilbert

Author: Peter Gilbert

Welcome back!

Welcome to Winter Term!

A few notes to help you get started:

  • The Mudd returns to regular hours on Monday, January 4.
  • You’ll be pleased to know that the photocopier on the first floor of the library now takes Viking Gold! Bring your card and make your copies…
  • Try the new Finding Music page to locate scores and recordings. It’s easy! It’s fun!
  • When you have a question, ask a reference librarian! They’d really like it if you would….

Mudd Library Closed Dec. 24-Jan. 2

The Mudd Library (and the rest of campus) will be closed from Thursday, December 24 through Saturday, January 2.

The Library will be open on Sunday, January 3, from 11am-5pm and we go back to regular hours on Monday, January 4.

What does this mean for you?

Building Closed

As part of the University’s Winter Shutdown program, the Library will be closed during this period. There won’t be anyone working inside.

Remote Access to Online Resources

Online resources (LUCIA, databases, e-journals) will remain available. You will need to use the proxy server to access these resources.

Research Assistance

Reference librarians will not be available and the email Ask A Librarian service will not be staffed. Questions submitted will be answered when we re-open on January 4th.

All your friends at the Mudd wish you a safe and restful holiday and look forward to seeing you again in the new year!

Thanksgiving week hours for the Mudd

Tuesday, 11/24: 8am-5pm

Wednesday, 11/25: 8am-5pm.

Thanksgiving Day: Closed

Friday, 11/27: Closed.

Saturday, 11/28: Closed

Sunday, 11/29: Closed

For future reference:

Starting Monday, November 30 and continuing through Wednesday, December 23, the Library will be open Monday-Thursday, 8am-5pm. We’re closed Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays during December. We will also be closed Thursday, December 24-Saturday, January 2.

Have a great break!

National Book Awards!

At the 60th annual National Book Awards last night:

The National Book Award for Fiction went to Colum McCann for his novel, Let the Great World Spin

Keith Waldrop won the Poetry award for his book, Transcendental Studies: A Trilogy

T.J. Stiles won the award for Nonfiction with The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt

Good reading for a long break. More good reading on the library’s Good Reading page.

Change your clocks!

0 The magical change from Daylight Savings Time to Standard Time occurs on Sunday, November 1st at 2:00 a.m. local time. Turn your clocks BACK one hour.

Remember: it’s FALL back and SPRING forward.

And don’t forget to search LUCIA for clocks. You’ll find excellent stuff like the prize-winning The Invention of Hugo Cabret and It’s About Time: Understanding Einstein’s Relativity. You could spend your extra hour reading. Or eating Halloween candy. Or sleeping. Whatever.

It’s Open Access Week!

Open Access Week! Open Access Week, October 19-23, is an “opportunity to broaden awareness and understanding of open access issues and express support for free, immediate, online access to the results of scholarly research.” See http://www.openaccessweek.org/ for more information about this event.

For a good introduction to open access issues, watch this Open Access 101 video from SPARC or (for a longer, technical description of OA), read the Bethesda Statement on on Open Access Publishing.

Lawrence is supporting open access in a couple of ways:

  • The Mudd Library subscribes to open access journals like PLoS (Public Library of Science) Medicine and PLoS Biology, links to the Directory of Open Access Journals, and is a member of SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition). SPARC is an international alliance of academic and research libraries working to correct imbalances in the scholarly publishing system.
  • President Beck, along with the presidents of more than 50 other liberal arts colleges, signed an open letter supporting the Federal Research Public Access Act (S. 1373). The FRPAA would be a major step forward in ensuring equitable online access to research literature that is paid for by taxpayers. For example, research supported by the National Institutes of Health, which accounts for approximately one-third of federally funded research, produces an estimated 80,000 peer-reviewed journal articles each year.