The Boss in Cameron

I was recently told by someone that Bruce Springsteen played a concert in Cameron at one time. Is there any information about this concert: set list, student impressions, etc.? Also, related to the Springsteen question, can students access archived issues of the chronicle?

ANSWER PERSON RESPONDS: March 28, 1976, seven months after the release of *Born to Run*. He was 26 years old. He’s now 57. See: http://www.brucebase.org.uk/gig1976.htm for a setlist, although it says there were some other unknown songs also played. It credits Rolling Stone and The Chronicle for information (no dates given). Here’s another version: http://db.etree.org/lookup_show.php?shows_key=7292

The Chronicle is electronically archived and searchable from their website at http://www.dukechronicle.com back to 1993. There’s an electronic subject index covering 1989 to June 1996 (six months at a time) at the University Archives website: http://www.lib.duke.edu/archives/pubs/chronndx.html
Earlier printed indexes to The Chronicle are available if you visit the Archives, on the third floor of Perkins Library: http://www.lib.duke.edu/archives/pubs/ Many years, however, aren’t indexed.
The Archives keeps all the old issues of The Chronicle in paper, so you can look in those just after March 28, 1976.

In the Archives you can also see if they have other records of musical events at Duke besides what’s in The Chronicle.

You can get the microfilm of Rolling Stone for March 1976 from the Microforms Dept. in Bostock Library at call number S71, or request the paper issues from the Library Service Center using the library catalog.

group study room usage

I have tried in vain over the course of the last week to find space for my group to study in Perkins’s new group study rooms. On each occasion every room was occupied and at least a few of the rooms were occupied by individuals studying (not in a group).

Could the library put up some sort of policy guidlines stating that groups have priority in the group rooms? It would only make sense.

Also, I tend to scan a lot of documents and the scanning computers in Perkins are seemingly always in use by people that DONT need the scanners. Could you put up signs stating that people wanting to scan documents have priority??

thanks.

ANSWER PERSON RESPONDS: Right now, there is no official written policy on this, but there is a de facto policy that groups have priority in these rooms. (Actually, there’s a clearly worded statement on the door of Bostock 312, but not on other group study rooms, nor, it seems, on our website.) If you contact a librarian, they will ask a single person to leave so that a group can use the room. We do need to advertise and post this policy more, so thanks for the reminder.

There are priority statements on the scanners in Bostock, so thanks for reminding us about the need for such statements in Perkins. (Once again, you can ask a librarian to intervene on your behalf.)

a book

Can you suggest a book for me? I’m looking for a coffee table book with photos of Britain. I’d appreciate a few recommendations as I wouldn’t know how to search for one in a library.

Cheers!

ANSWER PERSON RESPONDS: Well, I don’t have any specific recommendations, but you can do this search in the library catalog. Look for “Title Keywords” of:
britain illustrated

You get lots of books with those two words in the title. Some of these relate to history, and probably have a lot of photos of castles, megaliths, etc. Play around with other such words.

You can do a similar search at amazon.com if you’re looking for something to purchase. You can also throw in words like “landscape” or “history.” The “narrow by category” choices in the left margin might also help.

There isn’t an easy way to limit only to large-format books either in the catalog or at Amazon. In the catalog’s Advanced Search interface, you can search for keywords in the title like I said, and then in “All Fields” search for “32 cm.” (use quotes) to look for specific large sizes. This works. Anything over 30 cm. tall is pretty big. You’ll have to do a search for each size one at a time.

lower case

There’s that way of formating microsoft word words so they are all capitals. But if you have a bunch of words that are all capitals, can you make them all lowercase without having to retype everything?

Thank you!

ANSWER PERSON RESPONDS: Sure. Under the Format menu, choose “Change Case.” There are options for all lowercase and all uppercase, as well as Sentence Case (only the first word begins with a capital) and Title Case (all words start with capitals). A flaw in the latter choice is that even prepositions, articles, conjunctions, etc. will be capitalized.

crust

They say it’s good to eat the crusts of bread, right? But is the crust any healthier than the middle since it’s all the same bread?

ANSWER PERSON RESPONDS: I had always thought this old saying was to keep kids from wasting precious foodstuffs, back when food was a scarcer commodity. But there have been studies showing that there are more antioxidants in the crust, probably developing due to the chemical changes affected by the “intensity of the thermal treatment.” See: Lindenmeier & Hofmann, “Influence of baking conditions and precursor supplementation on the amounts of the antioxidant pronyl-L-lysine in bakery products,” in the Journal of Agricultural Food and Chemistry, 2004 Jan 28;52(2):350-4, as well as other articles of theirs (references in MedLine).

Access to Duke's alumni to on-line resources

I would like you to think on the possibility of granting access to the on-line resources currently available to students through Duke library system. It could be granted for an annual fee to access a limited number of e-magazines and e-resources chosen and needed by subscribers.
This initiative (if ever implanted) could be specially useful to foreign alumnus like me living in developing countries who lacks access to such resources on an affordable way.
Thanks a lot,
Ricardo Flores G.
MA PIDP 98
rflores@alumni.duke.edu

ANSWER PERSON RESPONDS: Alumni have asked for this for years, but the access that we can grant is spelled out in our legally-binding licensing agreements with the database vendors. The mechanics of a solution seem daunting. The standard licenses don’t allow access off-campus for persons who aren’t current Duke students, faculty, or staff. I don’t think the vendors like the idea of their databases being used broadly by persons no longer affiliated with Duke, for instance being used for the benefit of private employers who would then not need pay the high subscription costs themselves. A lot of licenses with a lot of different companies would have to be specially negotiated, which is unlikely to happen. It’s also unlikely that Duke’s OIT would allow alumni to purchase a NetID (which would allow use of the databases off-campus). Also, anything involving passwords is dangerous from the point of view of the vendor, since anyone who gets hold of the password would then have access.

I’ll pass on your request. Perhaps someone can figure out a solution that will only apply to a manageable number of vendors or only apply to alumni in specific countries. Your suggestion of paying a modest annual fee seems like a reasonable offer.