The UC Blue Ash College Library will have special exam hours on Saturday, April 19th and Sunday April 20th, 2014 in observance of the Easter Holiday:
Saturday, April 19th: OPEN 10 am – 4 pm
Sunday, April 20th: CLOSED
Naxos Video Library has added the Broadway Theater Archive. 100 classic plays produced for television including Katharine Hepburn in “A glass menagerie” and James Earl Jones as King Lear.
Join the UCBA Library as we celebrate National Library Week, April 14th-18th by taking part in any of the following activities:
by Lauren Wahman
The NEW Faculty Research guide is now available! It’s a great starting point for faculty conducting discipline-specific or scholarship of teaching & learning research. From setting up research alerts to search tools to evaluating journals for potential publications, the UCBA Library has got you covered!
Cramming for an exam? Need a safe, quiet place to study?
Langsam Library will offer extended hours until 2am from Sunday, April 13 through Wednesday, April 23.
Morning at the Window
by T.S. Eliot
They are rattling breakfast plates in basement kitchens,
And along the trampled edges of the street
I am aware of the damp souls of housemaids
Sprouting despondently at area gates.
The brown waves of fog toss up to me
Twisted faces from the bottom of the street,
And tear from a passer-by with muddy skirts
An aimless smile that hovers in the air
And vanishes along the level of the roofs.
By: Kevin Grace
On the south parapet of Blegen Library are carved these words from John Milton’s Areopagitica written in 1644:
For books are not absolutely dead things
But do contain a potencie of life in them
To be as active as those whose progeny they are.
Milton (1608-1674) is one of the greatest poets and essayists in the English language. The quote, which is part of his work condemning censorship and pleading for free speech, is part of the architectural design in the library, which opened as the University of Cincinnati’s Main Library in 1930. Intended to inspire students and scholars, they are words meant both to establish the primacy of books and the written word in human culture and to draw the reader within the building to explore, to learn, to consider, and to share knowledge.
The Department of English and Comparative Literature sends this information for a lecture this Friday at 1:00 pm in 814 Blegen, the Schott Seminar Room in the Archives & Rare Books Library: Continue reading
By: Kevin Grace
Because April is celebrated as National Poetry Month, over the next few weeks the Archives & Rare Books Library will blog about some of its significant holdings in the Rare Books Collection. Perhaps the best subject with which to begin is ARB’s outstanding collection of 18th century poetical pamphlets. Eighteenth-century literature is one of the hallmarks of the rare books holdings, encompassing drama, poetry, fiction, philosophy, theology, travel, history, and geography. And the core of this area is what we have traditionally called the Anonymous Poetical Pamphlet Collection.
Heather Maloney, Library Director: Getting too many and letting them pile up on my bedside table. I try to answer all of life’s quandaries with a different book.
Michelle McKinney, Reference/Web Services Librarian: Accidentally re-reading books. I’ll borrow a book from the library and realize a few chapters in that I’ve read it before.
Kellie Tilton, Instructional Technologies Librarian: Using the dust jacket flaps as a bookmark. Not as bad as earmarking the page, but still not as good as an actual bookmark.
Lauren Wahman, Instruction Librarian: Finding too many good ones and running out of time to read them all. And, occasionally, picking up one that I’ve already read!
Rachel Lewis, Technical Services Manager: Not at all!
Tammy Manger, Public Services Manager: Falling asleep only after two pages…I hate that!
Chris Marshall, Public Services Assistant: Earmarking the pages. Bad Habit!
The Donald C. Harrison Health Sciences Library was ranked 14th amongst “the 25 most impressive university medical school libraries in the world” according to The Best Master’s Degrees Reviews and Rankings, a public site that explores and ranks the vast world of Master’s degrees in all the disciplines.