Anne Kenney, Interim Carl A. Kroch University Librarian; tel.:
(607) 255-3689
Holdings: 170,400 volumes and 120,100 microforms.
Uris Library opened in 1891 as Cornells first library
building. Designed by Henry W. Miller, a famous Cornellian whose style
of architecture was greatly favored at the time, this library garnered
national acclaim for its combination of beauty and utility.
The University Library, as it was then known, was refurbished
in 1962 with funds from Harold 26 and Percy Uris and was renamed
in recognition of their generous contribution. Uris contains the White
Library, a library within a library specially designed to hold the private
collection of Cornells first president, Andrew Dickson White, which
currently contains holdings in American and world history and the A.D.
White Medallion Collection. In an underground addition is a unique study
lounge where the contemporary design of the 1980s meets the Romanesque
style of the 1890s.
Uris Library also houses two computer labs, located on
the gallery level. One of the labs operates as a shared facility with
Cornell Information Technologies(CIT), and serves as an electronic classroom
for the many library instruction sessions held throughout the academic
year. When it is not being used as a classroom, it serves as a public
lab, similar to the other CIT public labs on campus. The hours of service
for both computer labs are the same as for the library.
While it provides abundant study space, the library is
also heavily used for its core collection of multiple copies of basic
titles in the humanities and social sciences. In addition, the library
stores the microform collection of current college and university catalogs
from educational institutions in the United States and abroad. |