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Jun 16, 2021 Emergency Access to HathiTrust Materials to be Discontinued July 6: Alternative Options Available

Posted at 19:53h in General by Marriott Library 0 Comments
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As we resume full access to the libraries’ print collections on July 6, the ETAS agreement will end and patrons will return to accessing print collection in the usual ways by browsing the stacks or submitting a pull service or delivery request....

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Jun 16, 2021 5 Good Books that Offer Perspective on Drought

Posted at 15:17h in General, Recommendations by Marriott Library 0 Comments
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Droughts have been pervasive throughout history inspiring many to write about this natural disaster. Librarian Allyson Mower has recommended these titles (both fiction and non-fiction) that feature themes and settings of droughts and how they affect us....

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Jun 14, 2021 Starting July 6: Browse the Books Once Again!

Posted at 16:42h in General, Services by Marriott Library 0 Comments
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There are more than three million books to browse in the Marriott Library. Here’s a rough layout of the stacks, which are filed by the Library of Congress (LC) system....

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Jun 14, 2021 Book of the Week — Cannery Row

Posted at 12:30h in Book of the Week, Rare Books by rarebooks 0 Comments
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Cannery Row in Monterey in California is a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit, a nostalgia, a dream. Cannery Row John Steinbeck (1902-1968) New York: The Viking Press, 1945 First edition, second state PS3537 T3234 C3 1945 Cannery Row is a Depression-era...

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Jun 08, 2021 Seven Study Spots in the Library That You Might Not Have Known About

Posted at 04:15h in Services by Marriott Library 2 Comments
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When the booths on level one are taken and there's not a free table in sight on level three, what other study places are there? Give these spots a try!...

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Jun 07, 2021 Book of the Week — Life in the Far West

Posted at 12:30h in Book of the Week, Rare Books by rarebooks 0 Comments
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Apart from the feeling of loneliness which any one in my situation must naturally have experienced, surrounded by stupendous works of nature, which in all their solitary grandeur frowned upon me, and sinking into utter insignificance the miserable mortal who crept beneath their shadow; still...

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May 31, 2021 Book of the Week — Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada

Posted at 12:30h in Book of the Week, Rare Books by rarebooks 1 Comment
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A vivid belt of blue lightning flashed down through the blackness, and for a moment every outline of cliff and forest forms, and the rushing clouds of snow and sleet, were lighted up with a cold, pallid gleam. …In the moment of lightning I saw...

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May 24, 2021 Book of the Week — The American Settler’s Guide: A Brief Exposition of the Public Land System

Posted at 12:30h in Book of the Week, Rare Books by rarebooks 0 Comments
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To the people of Europe, where the high price of real estate confers distinction upon its owner, it seems almost beyond belief that the United States should give away one hundred and sixty acres of land for nothing. Yet such is the fact; a compliance with...

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May 22, 2021 In Memoriam — Marie Christensen Dern (October 17, 1936-May 22, 2020)

Posted at 12:04h in Rare Books by rarebooks 1 Comment
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Last year, on May 22, Rare Books lost our dear friend, Marie Christensen Dern. On that day, like the rest of the world, we were sheltering in place. We were locked out of our office, and more disorientingly, out of the Rare Books Vault. We...

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May 19, 2021 Collaborative Research Project Highlights Earliest Printed Books

Posted at 15:49h in Preservation by Marriott Library 2 Comments
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What is the earliest book printed from cast-metal moveable type? Most Westerners think the earliest printed book is the 42-line Gutenberg Bible. If you are from East Asia, though, you think of Jikji. Johannes Gutenberg’s method of printing books from movable cast-metal type made a...

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