Tuesday, February 27

Warrior Librarian, Am I.

Dear Diary,

Ouch!

I finally went to the doctor and I have a pretty severe case of Strep Tonsillitis. What fun! My co-worker taught our 2 hour RefWorks class yesterday and I just walked around to help students trouble shoot any problems. He was pretty sick as well, but he is a brave soul. So today it was my turn to suffer through and carry on. I said if he can teach while sick, so can I.
Both of my wonderfully considerate managers offered to let me cancel my section, or reschedule but I would not hear of it.

I told them
"I am a "Soldier! ...
I am a Warrior-Librarian!
"

My manager said "Well then Soldier On."
Ha! Ha!


Now this contradicts my previously unconvincing claims to my Law Library manager that
"
I am a Delicate Flower!"

But he refuses to accept that I am a
Delicate Anything
so that's neither here nor there. Ha!


Anyway, I made it through and I'm glad I did.

But now I must heal myself and so I'm off.


T.T.F.N.
Tah Tah For Now

Thursday, February 22

WOW! I Have No Words!

Dear Diary,

WOW!!

I can't think of any other term but WOW!

I have just been overwhelmed by the responses I've gotten from the positions I've applied for. I asked one of our Directors for a listserv that posts international jobs and have honestly been blown away by the extremely positive responses I've gotten.

I have always dreamed of working abroad. I travel abroad as a personal hobby.
But somehow corresponding with hiring professionals in other countries is just too awesome for words, I am amazed; speechless, flabbergasted; stunned; honored; encouraged; taken aback...well okay maybe I am not at a loss for words, but words cannot express how elated; ecstatic, delighted; overjoyed and exhilarated I feel.

Another pretty impressive experience is the emails I receive from people who I have never met in person, who read my Blog and find it rather interesting. I always share with my co-workers how flattered I am when I receive such kind emails. Especially since I disallow comments on my Blog, so they have to go through extra effort to email me. It truly means a lot. My most recent email came from my new e-friend who read my Blog and is at the University of the West Indies. I told her that sounds like Paradise especially since it was 4 degrees and snowing here that day. One of my supervisors said that is quote " Just too cool for school!"

I told her "I know it could only be cool-er if the next email is from a Handsome, Intelligent, Single, Heterosexual, Righteous, Independently-Wealthy Man, (not necessarily in that order)." Ha! Ha!

Hugs to all my viewers out that there in the blogosphere!
Without you...there is no me. :)

I repeat WOW!

Wednesday, February 21

Back Down Memory Lane


Dear Diary,

No one has shown up for the Drop-in Sessions this week on how to search the Catalog. We are trying different topics and different time slots to see if this idea will work. My co-resident is having more luck as the Mobile Librarian. She actually goes to a student hot spot from 3-11pm on Sundays. God Bless Her! So today we took our publicity efforts up a notch. My co-resident was kind enough to offer to distribute bookmarks with my times and dates on them during her interactions with students. I have to create some. I revised my poster and sent it over to Adworks so that they can print and distribute 200 posters on the Student Activity Bulletin Boards around campus. We also got an eye-catching rotation graphic on the library's homepage.

It just doesn't seem like there are enough hours in the day, lately. I have been talking to a few hiring professionals on the telephone. Those I try to schedule before work, at the end of the day or over the lunch hour. So my evenings are packed with preparing for the telephone conversations. I have started making folders and trying to keep them all straight. I keep refining my preferences and my selection criteria. I have a couple of invitations to come for in-person interviews but I have absolutely no time. I printed out my calendar today to try to mentally note when I could reasonable tell potential employers I am available but in the midst of scheduling one interview, based on my electronic calendar, I happened to glance at my wall calendar and noticed a lot more dates and times filled up than was showing on my electronic calendar. Well wouldn't ya know I looked at my email to see that due to Daylight Savings Time, our calendars need to be "patched" and we are being asked to print out our calendar and after the patch go in and manually correct the times. What a hassle! DOH!

I realized I am booked solid through the next 6 weeks with classes and meetings and projects such as my Blog for Electronic Resources. This is way more cumbersome than I initially thought. But I have learned more than just the normal Techy stuff you'd expect to learn about. In our Electronic Resources meeting this week I learned the plural of the noun rhinoceros is rhinoceros or rhi·noc·er·os·es.

During one of my phone interviews I was asked what would I like to improve about myself. I said immediately, "I need to lose weight so when I step on people's toes, it won't be such a painful experience!" The person could relate. I said "I think I can somewhat get by with a slap on the wrist because 'I'm still new' and I didn't know!" I said but that is going to get old, real fast. Luckily, I do that unintentionally so that helps.

Speaking of interviewing...I was growing weary of the process. Job hunting is mentally draining at times. But luckily, I try to see the glass as Half Full whenever possible. So I was walking across campus to post some of my Drop-in Session fliers, and as I returned to our library, I glanced up in unison with some people on a Campus Tour. We were all admiring the mural of Touchdown Jesus. The sun was out finally after a really foggy start to the day. And I decided to "BE" in the moment. To stop preparing mental reminders and to do lists for next month, etc...and so I sat down on the same bench I sat on when we concluded my Job Interview for this Residency. It was like it was just yesterday!

I could remember the questions being asked by specific people. I can remember thinking what an absolutely amazing campus this is. I recalled how honored I was to be at the University of Notre Dame. I reminded myself that 5 minutes before my phone interview with Notre Dame, I was utterly at my wit's end as a result of a stressful workplace environment. I remembered sitting there with two of my best friends thinking "I should not even do the interview! They'll never hire me! I don't meet all the requirements, they are only being nice because they are Notre Dame." My friends forced me into the conference room and told me, "Just do this last phone interview. We'll leave you alone, if nothing comes of this LAST one!" So I picked up the telephone and there were all the people I've come to know and love. And I remembered Dwight asked, "Can we call you FAY?" And I don't know why to this day, that just TICKLED me! I could not for the life of me imagine why on God's Green Earth would they want to call me FAY? But he seemed so nice and as a general rule I could not care less about what people call me, or how they pronounce my name. So I instantly agreed that they could call me FAY. I am not sure if I explicitly stated or just thought to myself that "You can call me FRANK, as long as you hire me!" Later it hit me that I was ahem...COVERTLY applying for another job, so did not use my work email but rather my personal email which uses the signature "FE" as in Fe-Fe. But I thought perhaps they thought of it as Santa Fe (Fay). OOOHHHHH Ha! Ha!

So that went well, obviously. Because I was invited to campus for an interview. As I arrived at the Morris Inn, I thought "Aww how quaint." I was so amused to drive past "Main Street. In my mind all small towns have a Main Street. I love small towns. When Margaret picked me up for dinner, we drove over payment made of bricks! And I thought of the Wizard of Oz where the Yellow Brick Road was made of gold bricks. All very positive signs. I remember that Margaret and I discussed how low taxes are in Indiana compared to Illinois.

And just when I thought it could not get any more interesting, we approach the restaurant and Margaret said "Oh there is Dwight, now." I look to see a gentleman ride up on a Bicycle. I was completely surprised. At that moment, I knew....okay it can't get any more delightful. So we three enter the restaurant and there is an instant thunder of greetings and screams the kind you'd expect at a Rock Star's entrance. Being the ahem "modest gal" that I am, I naturally assumed all the fuss was over my entrance. But then I heard distinct chants of "Dwight...Dwight!" Laura was already seated and explained that those were some of Dwight's students and "They just love him!" I accompanied Dwight many places during my rotation in the Law Library and I quickly realized that happens everywhere he goes. And it is well-deserved. I am a card-carrying member of the Dwight-is-the-Greatest Fan Club and find myself screaming when he enters a room. But I digress.

As the evening went on, I am not clear how I ended up telling Laura and Andy about the first time I kissed a boy at age 14 I went to Confession to tell my priest that I was pregnant. Because my father, the "Good Reverend" as we call him since his a Baptist Minister, very clearly and in no uncertain terms drilled into me that "If I kiss I boy...I'll get pregnant!" So this first kiss, CLOSED-mouth mind you...convinced me that I was with child and my priest assured me that if I said 10 Hail Mary's and promised not to repeat it, I'd be fine! I thought he was the COOLEST man alive and decided at that point that I wanted to be a Nun when I grew up. Ha!

All that is to say that I was at the end of my "Interviewing Rope" once before and had I given up, instead of persevering I would not be here. I would not have had this amazing experience, in this most sacred location with the best co-workers and supervisors I've ever seen gathered in one place. My friends say I have a cartoon or a song for every moment in my life. So if that is the case, today's song would be one of my all-time favorites by Diana Ross from the movie Mahogany...

There is a video clip available by clicking here for YouTube, naturally.

Do You Know Where You're Going To?

Do you know where you're going to?
Do you like the things that life is showing you
Where are you going to?
Do you know...?

Do you get
What you're hoping for
When you look behind you
There's no open door
What are you hoping for?
Do you know...?

Once we were standing still in time
Chasing the fantasies
That filled our minds
You knew how I loved you
But my spirit was free
Laughin' at the questions
That you once asked of me

Do you know where you're going to?
Do you like the things that life is showing you
Where are you going to?
Do you know...?

Now looking back at all we've planned
We let so many dreams
Just slip through our hands
Why must we wait so long
Before we'll see
How sad the answers
To those questions can be

Do you know where you're going to?
Do you like the things that life is showing you
Where are you going to?
Do you know...?

Do you get
What you're hoping for
When you look behind you
There's no open door
What are you hoping for?
Do you know...?

Testing -- Testing

Dear Diary,

I feel like I am doing a Microphone Check, "Testing, Testing." Ha!

Today I am doing another round of Usability Testing for my WPIT Committee. We agreed that this would be the last test for this phase and then we would make a decision to implement our proposed changes once and for all, or we will leave the contact form as is.

We are dedicated to making "User-Driven Decisions" even though we all like it, naturally since we created it. But this has gone on since October or August, either way for a while now. We did our log analysis to ascertain how many times the form was accessed, and it was a little over a hundred compared to Ask A Librarian which was accessed 6 times more often.

Anywho...after this we alternate meeting as a whole group and as a subgroup. I am in the Card Sorting subgroup and our deadline is the end of April. Since March is booked solid for me this should be fun.

I am still working on my presentation for my Information Literacy presentation in Mid-March, and trying to find way to publicize our new Drop-in Sessions. I am also doing instruction, I have 7 RefWorks classes in the next three weeks and 9 drop-in sessions. I am working on blog layout and content and so the hours just seem to disappear. Oh well, I can keep blogging about how hectic my life is or I can get to work and scratch some things off of my To Do List. Ciao.

Sunday, February 18

Thankful!

Dear Diary,

I am extremely thankful and as my coworker used to say "Blessed and Highly Favored!" WoW! I have been working on my JAWS article for literally 16 months. Luckily, I've found an editor who completely understands and values my unconventional comparison of the rising cost of journals with the horror movie Jaws, about the Great White Shark.

I was under the impression that she fully intended to publish the final revised version, but had not been able to reach her for the last few months. So I decided to call her and she was at the airport. I felt as though I may be pestering her was really hoping that did not make her think I was like a psycho. She just said we'd discuss it over email and politely ended the call. I am completion oriented and dedicated to follow through. I was in a state of near panic after making that call, and kept second guessing myself. But I had not received any replies to a few emails which was uncharacteristic of her. So I was unsure if my emails were getting through.

Well today I got her latest revision and it was utterly complimentary. And I agreed with the revisions she suggested so hopefully Jaws is that much closer to being published. This has been an arduous process and I have definitely invested my maximum creative ability into drawing the parallels between the movie script in Jaws and my re-written Jaws which transplants the Great White Shark into the library. Phew!

Saturday, February 17

Happy Accident

Dear Diary,

While revising my Pirate class to include RefWorks I realized that it would be beneficial to demonstrate the tutorials but they are awfully slow-paced. So I recalled that I can make my own recordings on the SMART Board and Viola! I paused and resumed the recordings cutting out the down time. I was able to narrate the tutorials because I narrate them in my dreams. Ha! I happened to mention it to my manager and she sorta shared that with some of our fellow instructors who thought that was a helpful idea and a useful product, especially for a limited amount of time. Yay!

Another bit of (potentially) good news is that our library just posted a job limited to internal candidates. Wow! That is huge because all of the vacant positions have to go into a "pool" and be re-purposed to fit the overall needs of the library, etc... It is a very intense process. The timing it great so I applied for that position along with a few others. I have had a couple of telephone interviews and I have an actual on-campus interview in the next month. My friend warned me to stop discussing my job search so openly because my managers may find out! Ha!

I told her I appreciate her looking out for me, but that most of my managers have written a few Reference Letters for me this month, so if they don't know that I've been talking to other potential employers, I've got big problems. But I do recall the days of sneaking around trying to conduct covert interview operations. I prefer this way.

Everyone encourages me by saying that I want to keep all options open. But I am really impressed by a handful of the jobs I've spoken with hiring professionals about. So that leads to the inevitable...."What happens if/when I get multiple offers?" My manager keeps saying the real fun begins after I get my first offer....do I take it and run? Or do I wait? God-help me!

Monday, February 12

A Star is Born...

Dear Diary,

One of my former supervisors from the Law Library emailed me and said "A Star Is Born." He saw my RefWorks Commercial and wanted to remind me not to forget the "Little People" once I make it big! Ha! Ha!

My co-star in the commercial said his young nephew was amazed quote "I didn't know my uncle was such a Great Actor at Notre Dame!"

And the fact that the Subject Line was "A Star is Born" reminded me of the very first poem I ever wrote! I think I was 5 years old. It was titled you guessed it, "A Star is Born!" and it goes:
*
"A star is born
Near by some corn.
Near by some a corn
A star is born!"
*
BRILLIANT I know! Please hold your applause!
My dad was the proudest father ever! He kept it on the refrigerator for an entire year! See the talent is limitless!!! But that did inspire me to submit a poem to the Spectrum Scholar 10th anniversary Zine.

My former supervisor also helped me remember a silly conversation we all had during the Law Library Conference in 2005. We were discussing silly old TV shows, such as Soap. They were talking about one exceptionally funny episode, but I had forgot it. Luckily he remembered.

He thinks it was Billy Crystal telling his mother that there were a lot of famous gay people in history.
His character says"Plato was gay."
His mom's character says, "Mickey Mouse's dog was gay?!"
Ha!

This is the type of interaction that helps me relax and makes me love this place.

"My Precious"

Dear Diary,

I am working on my Blog for Electronic Resources creating the content and learning a lot about the numerous resources we offer. Additionally, I am glad that I was able to join the WPIT (Web Presence Improvement Team) subgroup "Card Sorting" that I had hoped to work on. I did Usability Testing last week and am excited by the prospect of making our library website better and more user-focused.

I joined the Communication Task Force for my ACRL committee at Midwinter and that involves the website and archives, etc. I am looking forward to that. I am working with my Emerging Leaders team on our Intellectual Freedom project that we will present during a poster session at ALA Annual.

I am working on my Information Literacy: Beyond Google speech for the Trio Day sponsored by Notre Dame's Project Upward Bound next month.

I am working on my Pirate Teacher instruction sessions this week. I added RefWorks to my session and I created a video of the Tutorials highlighting only those sections I wanted to show quickly. Their tutorials move at a painfully slow pace so with my video recording made using the Smart Board, I sped it up.

I also submitted another review to be published. I verified with the publisher that my other 2 are going to be published in the next two months. I only have 2 more scheduled to write.

I am preparing for my Drop-in Sessions (WorldCat, ND Catalog, Online Journal Articles and RefWorks). I am finalizing my RefWorks instruction sessions. I am attending meetings in the mean time. For example today I am attending a meeting on Quick Search and then a meeting discussing Indiana's Light Archives. Tomorrow I have an 8:30 meeting for the Reference Department, and then I'll leave to attend Electronic Resources 10:00 meeting and then I'll get out at 11:30 and attend an 11:30 Midwinter Recap meeting and then it will be afternoon. So I stay plenty busy. It makes me laugh to recall what a patron told me once, "I wish I had your job and got paid to just sit and read all day!" Ha!

I don't get stressed because I amuse myself with toys that people have given me, such as the Librarian Action Figure my friend's mom gave me. Her mom works in the Math Library and is a huge part of the reason I love Notre Dame. My manager has helped me develop selection criteria for my post-Notre Dame career search.

I reflected on the aspects of my Residency that have brought me the most joy. Top on that list is the people! I told my friend that the people I have worked with are all so PRECIOUS! I said it in the voice of Smeagol from Lord of the Rings. The employees at Notre Dame are MY PRECIOUS!

I had to make a very very difficult decision to decline an offer to go to a Campus interview. It sounded like a great position, but it was not keeping with my newly created criteria. I have never been much of a gambler. I am convinced a Bird in the Hand, etc... But my counsel encourages me to be more fastidiously selective. UGH!! But this experience is helping to clearly identify what I want to do long-term. Phew!

Friday, February 9

Busy Little Bee

Dear Diary,

Well today has been sort of hectic but in a good way. I have been working with my Emerging Leaders team on our project and I volunteered to head the Poster Session we need to present at ALA's Annual Conference in June.

We are in the research phase and reviewing a few blogs in addition to conducting Lit Reviews, such as the Office for Intellectual Freedom Blog as well as the Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters blog.

I proctored a two-hour workshop on RefWorks today and have a lot more of those in the next few weeks. But the participants really see the value in RefWorks and that is fantastic.

I finally posted our RefWorks commercial on YouTube.

Oh and I was invited for an interview! Yippee!
That is exciting and scary at the same time. I am flattered that the interviewing process has been rather fast paced, but at the same time it reminds me of the reality that my Residency is coming to an end. So it is bittersweet. On the bright side, the weather where my interview will be held is currently 56 degrees compared to Notre Dame's 5 degrees and snowing...Just trying to look on the bright side of everything :)
*
After further communication, I learned that the maximum I could be reimbursed by the proposed interview personnel was well below the amount of expenses I would incur. So I will be unable to interview for that position.
*
But in the mean time, I scheduled another phone interview with another hiring professional at a 3rd institution.

Thursday, February 8

Fun Experience at Midwinter

Dear Diary,

You have to click on the link and watch this funny clip March of the Librarians.

It is inspired by March of the Penguins and shows my Robot friend that I kept telling people about but no-one believed me. In this clip he is shaking someone's hand. It is during the Vendor shots of LexisNexis and ProQuest.

This was a Robot that is what I believe was Artificially Intelligent. Either that or there was a man behind a curtain that I could not spot. The vendor was Emery Pratt.

Wednesday, February 7

Way to go RefWorkers!

Dear Diary,

Great News! First I received another complimentary email from a position I applied to. The email said that I have an outstanding resume. WOW! I've been smiling all day long. It is so wonderful when people realize how hard you work.

And speaking of working hard, our statistics show that before our big Roll out there, our library had 31 RefWorks users. After the Roll out, a whopping 465 (increased by 165 in the last week) that is HUGE! It also serves as encouragement when we have classes. Knowing that people are really learning about one of our latest acquisitions is very rewarding.

Way to go RefWorkers!

Baghdad Day to Day: Librarian’s Journal

Dear Diary,
A friend sent me this interesting NY Times article:

Baghdad Day to Day: Librarian’s Journal

Saad Eskander, the director of Iraq’s National Library and Archive in Baghdad, finally had some time to catch up on his diary after a couple of very busy weeks. As he wrote in his latest entry, he was having trouble repairing the Internet system; the Restoration Laboratory “was hit by 5 bullets”; and “another librarian, who works at the Periodical Department, received a death threat. He has to leave his house and look for another one, as soon as he can; otherwise, he will be murdered.”

For a month now, Dr. Eskander’s intermittent diary entries have been appearing on the Web site of the British Library (bl.uk/iraqdiary.html), and they detail the daily hurdles of keeping Iraq’s central library open, preserving the surviving archives and books and, oh yes, staying alive.

“We thought it would be a good opportunity to highlight the conditions Dr. Eskander and his staff are really facing and that they are risking their lives to provide this service,” said Catriona Finlayson, a spokeswoman for the British Library.

Written in a flat, unemotional style, the entries relate the bombings, blockades, shootings, threats, shortages and petty frustrations that make up everyday life for the cadre of civil servants working at Iraq’s main cultural and literary storehouse. A complaint that heating fuel prices are 40 times higher than in the fall is followed by a report on the assassination of one of the library’s bright young Web designers and the need to ask the government to keep the electricity on.

Dr. Eskander said that a friend who works at the National Archives in Britain suggested he write a diary for an archivists’ Web site. “I was hesitant,” he wrote in an e-mail exchange yesterday. “I feared that people would not believe what I would say about our daily life and the state of total chaos and destruction prevailing in Baghdad.”

Finally, he agreed, because “I was in debt to my librarians and archivists, who have been working very hard and making all sorts of sacrifices to serve the cultural needs of the educated class of the country.”

The British Library started publishing his journal on Dec. 30, the day of Saddam Hussein’s execution. It includes material beginning in mid-November, right before Dr. Eskander decided to close his library for three weeks after a frightening series of bombings, shootings and death threats. The mostly unedited entries retain their typos, missing words and mistakes in English, contributing to a sense of immediacy and intimacy.

Tuesday, Jan. 23, began well enough, Dr. Eskander wrote: “The staff received their monthly salaries after two days delay.” But by 11:30 a.m., “One window was smashed as a result of the explosions. I was informed on the same day that two of our technicians were kidnapped by unknown armed men.” Both were later released unharmed, but then Dr. Eskander learned that “Mr. C, the head of the Restoration Laboratory, received a death threat. He and his family left their house.” After visiting the laboratory, Dr. Eskander wrote: “One of the restorers told me that her brother was murdered ten days a go for sectarian reasons. Another restorer told me that he cousin, who lived in Mosul, in northern Iraq, was also murdered for sectarian reasons. I did not know about these two incidents. I discovered that a number of my staff do not inform the administration about their ordeals for fear of reprisals.”

In mid-January, he published a chart on the impact of sectarian violence on his staff for just the month of December. It included 4 assassinations of employees and 2 kidnappings, 66 murders of staff members’ relatives, 58 death threats and 51 displacements.

The newest entries, posted on Thursday, take readers through Wednesday, Jan. 31. Dr. Eskander writes that the week started off quietly: Most of the staff couldn’t get to work because of blockades and military checkpoints. “On Wednesday, 31 Jan., a huge explosion shock our building. I hurriedly went to the second floor and saw a thick black smockrising from a car in al-Bab al-Mudham round-about (200 meters away from the NLA). I asked the security to prevent all members of staff from going outside the building, fearing that there might be another car-bomb.”

Working to replace rare books and documents that have been destroyed, Dr. Eskander has been in touch with the British Library ever since the Iraq Library and Archive was burned and looted in 2003 when Mr. Hussein’s regime fell. The British Library is trying to send another shipment of microfilm and books, Ms. Finlayson said, although, she added: “Our contact is quite sporadic — it’s difficult to get material there. It’s hard for him to keep in touch.”

The response to the diary has been very moving, said Andy Stephens, secretary to the British Library Board. “To me, why it’s so powerful is these are people doing exactly the same job we are here, and we can relate to them.” He said there has been some interest in dramatizing the excerpts on the radio.

Two weeks ago the library gave people an opportunity to send in comments. Most offered support and prayers, and expressed frustration about being unable to help. “I just want to say how important I think it is both that the BL supports its colleagues in crisis in the ways it is doing,” Andrew King of Canterbury Christ Church University wrote in an e-mail message to the British Library, “and that the Web site allows BL users like me to reflect on the consequences of war for an educated elite who in other, less troubled, countries might not think it possible that they might be subject to terror such as Saad Eskander is going through.”

In the e-mail exchange, Dr. Eskander wrote: “I used to be very optimistic. But, the security situation is getting worse daily.”

Although all available resources have been directed to keeping the collections safe, “terrorists attacks, especially mortars shelling represent a considerable threat,” he wrote. “It is extremely difficult for my staff, including me, to work in a normal way. Many roads and bridges are often blocked. Hundreds of checkpoints are responsible for the daily heavy traffic. There is always the possibility of daily car-bomb attacks, assassinations, kidnapping and so on. Sometimes our drivers refuse to go to dangerous districts. All these ‘tiny things’ affect our works on daily basis.”

Tuesday, February 6

Even Better Sign

Dear Diary,

I got a call requesting Letters of Reference pursuant to my phone interview yesterday. That is step 2 of 3 in this particular library's interview process. The 3rd step is a campus visit for an interview.
So far so good.

I met with my Chemistry supervisor to correct some historical facts for my article that will be published either next month or the following month. Good thing he proofed it prior to publication. The main goal is to make sure to present my Active Learning Games in a positive light without casting any unpropitious insinuations.

I did Usability testing in the lobby today to ascertain how users would "Contact Us" to report a problem or make a suggestion. We have spent a great deal of time and energy making the Contact forms easier to use. Now we are trying to position them where users would look for them. Surprisingly, most equate "Contact Us" with "Ask a Librarian." Very interesting.

Flood in the Library

Dear Diary,

WSBT) The extreme cold has been causing problems for people inside as well as outside. At Notre Dame's Hesburgh Library, a pipe burst Monday -- creating a big mess.

It all started at about 9:00am when a pipe on the third floor burst, sending water through the ceilings of the floors below. The second floor had the most damage, library staff worked through the afternoon to dry off the books and mop up the water.

The library reopened at about 3:30pm, except for the second floor where water is still dripping through the ceiling. University officials say they won't reopen it until they're sure the dripping has stopped.

There's no monetary estimate of damage yet. Library officials say they will look at what happened and make sure it doesn't happen again.

Friday, February 2

Good Sign : )

Dear Diary,

I sent out my first handful of resumes yesterday and today I got a very encouraging call for a phone interview. I was flattered and it helped ease some of the angst of the unknown. It helped that he said they had already begun phone interviews but when my application arrive all five members on the search committee decided to squeeze me into the interview schedule. YAY!

And last night I got a similar reply from a library I applied to. They said if I can get my letters of reference to them by Thursday they would consider my application even though the deadline had passed a few weeks ago. Phew! So all in all I'd say I'm off to a good start.