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Assorted items from Open Access as seen on display on the second floor of Alden Library on Monday, October 21, 2019. (James Year/Ohio University Libraries)

(Left to right) Araba Dawson-Andoh, subject librarian for african studies and the social sciences, Laura O'Neil, services outreach manager for Athens County Public Libraries, Stacey Lavender, special collections librarian, Andrew Stuart, subject librarian for life and physical sciences and assistant head of user services, and John Canter, subject librarian for the physical sciences and mathematics, listen to powerpoint presentations during Open Access on the second floor of Alden Library on Monday, October 21, 2019. (James Year/Ohio University Libraries)

Photography by Craige Barker.

Puddle Theatre Company have rose to the occasion to bring you a romantic comedy that will make your hearts bloom. Come along to Molly's florists as she proves herself once and floral to her family, waters the gardens of love and plants a few bad seeds along the way. Miscommunication and misunderstandings can make for some rather rosey cheeks. Don't sleep on this one, wake up and smell the roses.

Made possible through the generosity of the Liam Byrne Award fund and support of New Adelphi Theatre, University of Salford.

Tickets manchester.ssboxoffice.com/events/smell-the-roses/

Photo credit: Washington University Libraries

National open access experts discussed the future of scholarly publishing at a panel discussion Wednesday, october 26. KU Libraries sponsored events for faculty, graduate students and the public to celebrate Open Access Week, October 24-28, 2011. To learn more about Open Access at KU, visit openaccess.ku.edu.

James Groom grooving to the max with open access presentation

Hundreds of people have gathered at Stonehenge to watch the sunrise on the first official day of autumn.

 

About 250 druids, pagans and visitors were given access to the stones to mark the autumn equinox for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic.

 

Sponsored by Stonehenge Guided Tours. stonehenge-tour.com/

14/01/2017 (Sat) 1221 s Ryhope Grange junction (south of Sunderland) 43 43468 + 43480 1A65 1218 Sunderland - Kings Cross GC GC

 

Photography by Craige Barker.

Puddle Theatre Company have rose to the occasion to bring you a romantic comedy that will make your hearts bloom. Come along to Molly's florists as she proves herself once and floral to her family, waters the gardens of love and plants a few bad seeds along the way. Miscommunication and misunderstandings can make for some rather rosey cheeks. Don't sleep on this one, wake up and smell the roses.

Made possible through the generosity of the Liam Byrne Award fund and support of New Adelphi Theatre, University of Salford.

Tickets manchester.ssboxoffice.com/events/smell-the-roses/

Förberedelserna för konferensen har börjat så smått

National open access experts discussed the future of scholarly publishing at a panel discussion Wednesday, october 26. KU Libraries sponsored events for faculty, graduate students and the public to celebrate Open Access Week, October 24-28, 2011. To learn more about Open Access at KU, visit openaccess.ku.edu.

The Utopia Bus - a vehicle very high on my wish list, as Todd Marriott, CEO of Utopia, discovered! Every region should have one to enable people to understand the myriad benefits of FTTH, open access networks, and next generation access.

Photos from OpenCon 2015 taken by Tom Verbruggen.

With consecutive classmate 468 on the front , Grand Central no. 43467 rolls into London King's Cross, bringing 1A61, the 0842 from Sunderland, into its final terminus.

Open Access sign on Ilkley Moor.

Hundreds of people have gathered at Stonehenge to watch the sunrise on the first official day of autumn.

 

About 250 druids, pagans and visitors were given access to the stones to mark the autumn equinox for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic.

 

Sponsored by Stonehenge Guided Tours. stonehenge-tour.com/

Hundreds of people have gathered at Stonehenge to watch the sunrise on the first official day of autumn.

 

About 250 druids, pagans and visitors were given access to the stones to mark the autumn equinox for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic.

 

Sponsored by Stonehenge Guided Tours. stonehenge-tour.com/

Photo credit: Washington University Libraries

This piece was created during the Joseon dynasty (1392–1910), during 1888 in Korea. The medium is Hanging scroll; ink on paper with the dimensions of: 58 1/16 × 37 3/16 in. (147.5 × 94.5 cm) Overall with knobs: 8 ft. 7 in. × 48 3/4 in. (261.6 × 123.8 cm). This piece is classified as a painting, with a credit line: Purchase, Seymour and Rogers Funds and Bequest of Dorothy Graham Bennett, 1990 and accession number: 1990.230

Metropolitan Museum of Art's Collection of Korean Art

www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/40445?searchField...

OPEN ACCESS opportunities in BOTH JOURNALS

 

ACRM is the home of the Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation & Archives of Rehabilitation Research & Clinical Translation

 

ARCHIVES of PM&R

 

IMPACT FACTOR = 4.6* (JULY 2023)

CITE SCORE TRACKER = 6.0*

Google Scholar h5-INDEX = 63*

LIFETIME CITATIONS = 30,000+

DOWNLOADS >2.9 million articles per year

 

*ALL-TIME HIGH

 

ARCHIVES of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation

www.archives-pmr.org/

 

ACRM is the home of the ARCHIVES of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation ("The ARCHIVES"). The ARCHIVES has the highest Impact Factor of all general Rehabilitation journals that are not discipline- or condition-specific.

 

Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation (Archives) is the acclaimed international journal of ACRM covering the specialty of physical medicine and rehabilitation and allied disciplines.

 

A subscription to The ARCHIVES is included with ACRM membership (Paid membership).

This piece, Gold Ring, is from the Etruscan Late Hellenistic or Classical Period, around late 4th or early 3rd century BC. The ring is made of gold and has a punctured inscription on either side that shows it was once in a tomb as an offering, likely having belonged to the deceased while they were alive. It has a diameter of 3.2 cm. The Met purchased this ring in 1903 with the Rogers Fund and can be seen today in Gallery 170. It's accession number is 03.24.34.

This image is in public domain.

www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/247103?searchFiel...

Andrew Stuart, subject librarian for life and physical sciences and assistant head of user services, gives a presentation titled "Open Resources for the Citizen Scientist: Biodiversity Heritage Libarary and iNaturalist" during Open Access on the second floor of Alden Library on Monday, October 21, 2019. (James Year/Ohio University Libraries)

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