Archive for November, 2009

BHI and ASSIA – problem? What problem?

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Our apologies to any library users who have been unable to access the BHI (British Humanities Index) and ASSIA bibliographic databases this week.

Access to both databases has now been restored.

However, you may find that you’re still unable to access the associated PILOTS database on the same platform as the BHI and ASSIA – we’ll let you know when this last bug is resolved.

ASSIA provides abstracts and index of academic and trade publications in the social sciences from 1987 onwards. The BHI contains abstracts and index of academic and trade publications, including over 400 daily newspapers, weekly magazines and academic journals from 1962 onwards. Both are available on the CSA Illumina platform.

When are we open over Christmas and the New Year?

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Our opening hours for the Christmas and New Year vacation, for all four of our centres, are now available online, in PDF format:

These documents cover the whole of the vacation period between Saturday, 19th December, 2009 – Monday, 4th January, 2010. Normal opening hours resume on Monday, 4th January.

Also…

GCW/24!Don’t forget! The GCW University Library will be staying open 24 hours a day on weekdays for the two weeks before the Christmas break…

DVD of the Week: The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

Forgive me for writing a review about a Christmas film in November but since The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) has become such a cult film and merchandise is sold year-round I think you can let me off.

When Tim Burton wrote The Nightmare Before Christmas little did he know what a hit it would be. It tells the story of Jack Skeleton, the pumpkin king of Halloween who becomes disillusioned with the revelry of Halloween and, whilst out walking, stumbles upon Christmas Town. So enamoured with the festivities and bright lights of Christmas, he decides to take it over and make Christmas his own.

Tim Burton brings the story alive with stop-motion animation at a time when CGI was taking off with the release of Jurassic Park (Spielberg, 1993) and the ballroom scene in Disney’s Beauty and the Beast (1991). It may have failed but it didn’t. The story is cleverly written and the use of catchy, moving songs (thanks to Danny Elfman) brings it to life. Each character is well developed and it’s quite surprising to discover that Jack is actually a kind-hearted man who just wants to enjoy Christmas and make children happy. Sally, the ragdoll; Zero, Jack’s faithful dog along with trick-or-treaters Lock, Shock and Barrell and the dastardly Oogie Boogie bring depth and the storylines surrounding all these characters are packed into a relatively short film (76 minutes).

The great thing about The Nightmare Before Christmas is that it has aged well. Sixteen years after its release it still looks as good as it did in the early nineties and is really quite appealing. In 2006 the film was digitally altered so it could be broadcast in 3D illustrating its timeless qualities.

You can borrow the original 2D version from the University Library. You’ll find it in the DVD collection on the ground floor at 791.4372 nig.

Q. What is Tim Burton’s trademark opener to the beginning credits and name a film that he does this in?

More workshops (Brayford Pool)

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

All students and staff are welcome to attend the workshops scheduled for weeks 9-12:

Judge for yourself: developing critical reading skills
Introduction to Harvard referencing
Introduction to RefWorks
Overcoming your fear of presenting
Finding journal articles
Using the internt for academic research
Effective use of grammar and punctuation in your assignment
Assistive software – how to use the Inspiration software (for mind-mapping )and TextHelp (a text-to-speech application)
Encoding your essay – advice on how to structure an essay

You can book your place from the Library’s workshop page  or by texting the relevant code to 07972 455457.

Click here for a list of workshops and dates.

Health and Social Care off-air recordings listed on Blackboard

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

An area has been created on Blackboard which lists recent  television and radio programmes, added to the library catalogue, of interest to Health and Social Care students.  Each entry shows the programme title and a brief summary of the content, with the title acting as a hyperlink to the library catalogue entry.  The collection includes both DVDs of television programmes  and audio CDs of radio transmissions.

To access this list go to Social Work Subject Site and look at Library Info.  The off-air collection is growing all the time and now numbers more than 450 items, all searchable through the library catalogue.

Inter-library loans are changing

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Attention Inter-library loan users! Our new system will go live Monday 7th December 2009. There will be some changes which you will be guided through when you access the LLR portal page. 

In the meantime if you want to keep your past inter-library loan history please ensure you have printed it off/saved it by the 7th December 2009!  It will be unavailable after this date.  Any Inter-library loan applications on the new system will be retained.

Watch out for further blogs and information in the LLR centres.

Email problem now resolved

Friday, November 20th, 2009

A message from University of Lincoln ICT services:

The email service that has been causing a problem for the last few days has now been resolved. We do not anticipate any further issues but if you have local concerns resulting from this problem please contact the IT Service Desk on 6500
 
ICT apologise for the inconvenience caused by the partial failure of the email system

DVD of the week: Art School (2005)

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

This enthralling documentary profiles the history of Britain’s art schools, which were undoubtedly the most exciting educational establishments in Britain for over two decades.  As the powerhouses of 1960s counter culture, they produced a generation of radicals who revolutionised the establishment and created the new industries of fashion, graphic design and pop music.  As tertiary education for the working classes, they taught luminaries such as John Lennon (Liverpool Art School) and Pete Townsend (Ealing Art College) among many others and spawned the pop art phenomenon that transformed contemporary culture.  The MP Kim Howells, who was one of the leaders of the Hornsey sit-in in 1968 when students ousted the Principal from his office and took over direct control of the college for two months, remembers the time fondly: “It was somewhere you just spent all your time: painting, arguing about why you liked David Hockney, learning how to weld. Looking back on it, it was a perfect time, a perfect place, and a perfect education”. Contributors include the enigmatic Brian Eno (Winchester School of Art), Mary Quant (Goldsmith’s College of Art), Kim Howells MP (Hornsey College of Art) the late great Ian Dury (Walthamstow Art College) and Brian Rice (Goldsmith’s College of Art).

Directed by Sebastian Barfield

The DVD is available at 707 art in the DVD collection on the ground floor of the University Library.

Q. Who was John Lennon’s best friend and original Beatles member, who attended Liverpool Art School and died in 1962 shortly after enrolling in the Hamburg College of Art as a promising artist?

 

 

Problem with access to University email

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

An urgent message from University of Lincoln ICT services:

Would all users please be aware that there is still a problem with one of our mail servers. We are presently waiting on external support to help rectify the issue. At the moment we have no estimate of the time this will take but there will be a further update around midday
 

Level 2 Reading List for Agriculture Modules

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Online reading lists for the following level 2 modules in the  Agriculture & Environment (Riseholme campuses) are all available online:

 

Cropping Systems (FDS2026)

Livestock Production Techniques (FDS2303)

New Cropping Opportunities (FDS2031)

 

You can also access these reading lists through each individual module’s site in Blackboard. If there is any problem regarding the online reading list  please drop me an emailclick here to email me or contact John Chen on (01406) 49 3007. Thank you!