THe Fire Service and Facilties Management advise that from 1.00pm to 2.30 pm tommorrow (Friday 13th) the the manual call point system for the Fire alarms will be deactivated in order to test the extraction fans in the Tower. In the event of an emergency call 111.
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Comments on the fate of the Mitchel Library
THe following is from an article by Peter Coleman in Quadrant (April 2008) “The obssession of David Scott Mitchell”
Hopefully it is not an elegy for the traditional library…
“Over the past twenty years the Library has become, in Fletcher’s summary, “more corporate, managerial, technological and outward-looking”. An MBA and a background in business have become compelling qualifications for appointment. Readers and staff have been rebranded (clients, stakeholders, human resources). A more relaxed dress code now prevails, along with the use of first names. But there has been a price for the abandonment of the old library spirit of collegiality—and the Mitchell paid it in full. The idea was banished that Mitchell Librarians be scholars who would read and assess their collection and be able to advise the public on it in some detail. They are now to be “players in the information industry”. The Library has become part of a corporate body, to be judged at least as much by its popular appeal as by its contribution to learning. Some of its collection has been sold off. It has lost control of the content and format of exhibitions. In one advertisement for the position of head librarian the very words “Mitchell Librarian” were dropped…In this new businesslike age, young recruits in libraries, universities, galleries or museums are unwilling to make that old-fashioned, lifelong commitment to an institution of culture. They expect to move several times in a career. Yet the Mitchell requires many years of immersion in its collections if a librarian is to master them. When the senior members retire and younger members move on, who will be left to keep the faith?”