Library Blogs

Showing 11 - 20 of 23 items
Results for Date: April 2015
From left to right: Adam Wills Begley, Noah Horn, Austin Stewart, Glenn Miller, Matthew Abernathy, and Dr. Stefano Mengozzi.
  • Pablo Alvarez
On August 26 2014, led by Dr. Stefano Mengozzi, a group of six singers recorded a selection of Gregorian chant music at the St. Thomas Apostle Catholic Church in Ann Arbor. They sang from a fifteenth-century Antiphonary from the Special Collections Library, an extraordinary manuscript copied in Venice and richly illuminated by the Italian miniaturist, Benedetto Bordon.
Bow and arrow watermark in Isl. Ms. 78 p.38
  • Evyn Kropf
This Wednesday's watermark feature: watermarks in Isl. Ms. 78 (copied in 1401 or 2), one of the earliest manuscripts in our Islamic Manuscripts Collection copied on watermarked paper.
  • Julie Herrada
Take a peak at what a visiting Irish researcher is working on in the Labadie Collection!
Images based on the Copperplate engraving of a flea, Schem. XXXIV, from Robert Hooke's Micrographia: Or Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses with Observations and Inquiries Thereupon. London: John Martin & James Allestry, 1665
  • Pablo Alvarez
We are pleased to announce the opening of a new exhibit on the seventh floor of the Special Collections Library: Through the Magnifying Glass: A Short History of the Microscope.
  • David S Carter
The new book Game Research Methods is available for free download under a creative commons license and features a chapter written by a pair of U-M grad students.
A comparison between a text editor filled with buttons and one with far fewer options.
  • Colin Smith Fulton
If you really love something you might have to let it go.
  • David S Carter
The course Music Performance 300: Video Game Music, returns as an option for undergraduate non-music majors this fall.
  • Val Waldron
Here is our list of most popular games played in the archive during the month of March. This month's list has a good spread of different genres and consoles, and we had four different Nintendo games almost make the list, being in the top 20.
Cover of Stand Up Straight and Sing! by Jessye Norman
  • Vicki J Kondelik
Jessye Norman, one of today’s greatest opera singers, tells the story of her life, from her childhood in the segregated South to her triumphs on the world’s opera stages.
  • Val Waldron
The Computer & Video Game Archive participated in the UMSI Makerfest this afternoon, an effort to "try out the latest technology, engage in creative activities and learn more about the new Bachelor of Science in Information."

We were eager to show a few newly acquired games, including Super Smash Bros. for Wii U and Wind Waker HD.