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February 2008 Archives

February 25, 2008

What You Want, You Know We Got It

macdonald'sThe Big Mac® is a handy punching bag, nutrition-wise. It's made of meat, it's fatty and it's often the default bad guy in calorie comparisons. But did you know that a typical MacDonald's meal (Big Mac®, fries and coffee) "contains at least 19 plant species from 12 families" which "originate in all of the eight global centers of cultivated plant diversity?" The current issue of the journal BioScience has an article detailing these attributes, Serban P, Wilson JRU, Vamosi JC, Richardson DM (2008) Plant Diversity in the Human Diet: Weak Phylogenetic Signal Indicates Breadth. BioScience: Vol. 58, No. 2 pp. 151-159, which you can read if you're an LU person. The authors call the Big Mac® a "symbol of globalization." So, please, a little more R-E-S-P-E-C-T.

February 22, 2008

Lawrence Archives awarded an IMLS Connecting to Collections Bookshelf

Treasured objects and artifacts held by the Lawrence Archives will be preserved for future generations with help from the IMLS Connecting to Collections Bookshelf, a core set of conservation books, DVDs, and online resources donated by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), the primary source of federal funding of the nation's museums and libraries. IMLS and its cooperator, the American Association for State and Local History (AASLH), will award a total of 2,000 free sets of the IMLS Bookshelf by the end of 2008.

The Lawrence Archives is among the first to receive this essential set of resources based on an application describing the needs and plans for care of its collections. The IMLS Bookshelf focuses on collections typically found in art or history museums and in libraries' special collections, with an added selection of texts for zoos, aquaria, public gardens, and nature centers. It addresses such topics as the philosophy and ethics of collecting, collections management and planning, emergency preparedness, and culturally specific conservation issues.

February 21, 2008

Reid Scholarship

The Estelle Ray Reid Scholarship in Library Science is meant to assist a female student, past or present, planning to pursue the graduate study of Library Science. To apply, or for more information, please see the Estelle Ray Reid page. The deadline for applications is Friday, March 21, 2008.

February 20, 2008

At Graduation We Play "Also Sprach Zarathustra"

You're lucky. Your space solutions most likely involve a few wicker baskets and a double-rod hanging system. But when NASA gets involved it's a whole-nother kettle of fish.
The International Space University symposium, Space Solutions to Earth's Global Challenges, begins today in Strasbourg, France. Here we're talking SPACE space, as in outer. Some topics are a little out-there ("Why We Need an Elevator to Space!") and some are downright bone-chilling ("The Intersection of Air Law and Space Law.") And who knew there was an International Space University?
Listen to some Strauss while you ponder your future on the final frontier.


February 14, 2008

More CDs

Today's short stack of CDs comprises all string music, if you agree that a piano has strings and vocal cords are somewhat stringy.

Oh, Darling, You REALLY Shouldn't Have

Should you find yourself in Widnes, England today, and if you have forgotten to buy a token of affection for your sugar-pie, you are in luck. You can take your honey-bunch to a lecture on decontamination after an anthrax attack. Say it with antimicrobial pesticides.
The Mudd's got you covered, anthrax-wise.

February 11, 2008

The Streets Are Running Red

beet juiceIt has been said that copious amounts of snow cause a person to, well, not think clearly. See pibloktoq.
Now municipalities in Wisconsin are mixing beet juice in with salt water to de-ice streets. The only catch is, people who wish to have their streets de-iced must run outside and shout, "Beet juice! Beet juice! Beet juice!"
Read about thawing in the Mudd.

February 8, 2008

Appleton in the News!

oaks candy shop Appleton is justly famous for being the childhood home of Houdini and the place where Rocky Bleier honed his gridiron skills. But it is a little known fact that Appleton is a hotbed of confectionaries. In today's New York Times read about Appleton's meccas to cream and butter and follow the Candyland trail throughout northeastern Wisconsin.
Wisconsin: It's Not Just Beer and Bratwurst.

We're Goin' Down to Stonham Barns, Gonna Get Us Some Tubers to Eat

potatoes

We're announcing this a day early so you can still catch a last minute super-saver over there. East Anglia Potato Day is tomorrow. Here you can buy your Yorkshire rhubarb crowns (we have no idea,) taste some chips, swap some seeds and hear a talk on "The Commonwealth Potato Collection." Might this include common-taters? See November 8, 2007.
FYI: The Library of Congress Subject Heading for potatoes is "potatoes."

February 7, 2008

Say, That's One Swingin' Pile of Metal

robot trumpetWe're all in favor of world-domination by robots, particularly benevolent, Japanese robots. Get a glimpse of the future at Robotopia Rising beginning today at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D. C. Eleven days of robots and robot-related souvenirs await you. There will also be "robot lectures," which may be lectures by robots or about robots. We aren't sure. But this is our favorite: a robot "with artificial lips that move with the same finesse as human ones, enabling it to play the trumpet."

Today's CDs

Bach, Beethoven, Brahms? Pffft. In our never-ending quest to provide the newest, the oddest, the anti-top-ten-est music, we present in today's CD pile some piano works with a warning label, "Doo-dah" on saxophones, art songs by a German composer in English sung by a German guy and music inspired by paintings. The Mudd collection: not for the faint of heart.

Backs and Forwards Sing This Song: Doo-Dah, Doo-Dah

If we've been asked this question once, we been asked it a thousand times: where can I find sheet music for tunes commonly played in British pubs? We usually answer this query with the reference librarian's shrug. But now a new source has appeared: A Traditional Music Library. This web site out of the U.K. is a "large traditional and folk music library of songbooks, tune-books, sheet-music, lyrics, midis, tablature, plus music theory, chord diagrams, scales and other music educational & academic reference materials." It has handy full-text searching capability, too. Impress/bore/frighten your friends at your next gathering with rugby songs, sea chanties and banjo ballads.

February 5, 2008

You May Be a Pox-Covered Bilge Rat, But Your Pie Crust is Quite Flaky

Sometimes the planets align in such a way that in the space of a couple of short weeks National Pie Day and the release of an online pirate role-playing game come together in perfect fusion:

Pie riots
Used with the kind permission of the artist, Dan Piraro
www.bizarro.com
http://bizarrocomic.blogspot.com

February 4, 2008

Presenting Walter Busterkeys!

liberaceOn this day in 1987 Liberace went to that great diamond-studded, fur lined Cadillac in the sky. You young folk may not hear the word "flamboyant" much these days, but this gentleman was the textbook definition. Wisconsin claims him as its own since he was born in West Allis and, as you can see, he also did a few years in Sheboygan

On January 16, 1940 the Milwaukee Journal reported on his debut with the Chicago Symphony at Milwaukee's Pabst Theater. It appears that it took a while to develop his signature style:

"Walter Liberace, a member of the excellent group of young Milwaukee pianists ... was heard Monday night at the Pabst as soloist with the Chicago Symphony orchestra. . . .
"Mr. Liberace, a strikingly good looking young man with a most engaging personality, had won the honor of an appearance with the orchestra in a local competition . . . The young artist was at no time in difficulty, but it was apparent that he was proceeding with infinite care, and the swaggering approach that goes so well with Liszt (Liberace had chosen to play Liszt's Second Concerto in A) was somewhat missed."

Liberace on LP at the Mudd. And, as you would expect, there is a Liberace Museum in Las Vegas.

February 1, 2008

If That Includes the End Zones, We're Impressed

football guacamoleOrdinarily we wouldn't mention the S-Bowl, since we are still very sad about the outcome of last week's NFC Championship game. But the Hass Avocado Board has come out with a stupefying statistic: they predict a record 53.5 million pounds of avocado will be consumed this Sunday. That's enough avocados to cover a football field waist-deep. We have to say it: Holy guacamole!

About February 2008

This page contains all entries posted to News from the Mudd in February 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

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