Last chance! Computing Reviews trial ends April 27th

The Library is currently conducting a trial of a new online service — Computing Reviews. Using any computer on campus, you can link to the trial via ourComputer and Information Science subject guide page or via the Reviews.comweb site. Send your comments to Kathy Szigeti, Science Librarian, or call her at 1-4725. The trial period will end on April 27, 2005.

Computing Reviews (CR) is the authoritative publication of reviews in computing literature. With new reviews published each day, CR reflects the rapid evolution across all areas of computer science. Through its community of over 1,000 reviewers, CR provides its readers with the timely commentary and overview needed in identifying the most essential books and articles.

It allows readers to explore topics both broadly and in great detail. On the home page, reviews are divided into two sections, Articles and Books, with the most current reviews at the top. Here, readers can browse the beginning of reviews. CR’s powerful navigational tools enable users to find the information most relevant to their work and research. Readers can follow their interests by creating customized searches and use personalized alerts to receive notice of the latest developments.

The database is a collaboration between Reviews.com and the ACM. Since the first online version of Computing Reviews went live in 2001, the coverage has expanded dramatically and the number of books and articles reviewed has more than tripled.

Exhibition Features Photographs and Illustrations from Philadelphia Evening Bulletin Era

May 3, 2005 – June 30, 2005 Paley Library, main floor and ground floor lecture hall

The Phildadelphia Museum of Art

A drawing of a caveman looking into a mirror

Paley Library’s latest pictorial exhibition will feature the works of award-winning photographer Salvatore C. DiMarco, Jr. and illustrator Gilbert J. Tucker, both of whom worked for the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. The exhibition’s photographs, illustrations, and editorial cartoons are all part of the George D. McDowell Philadelphia Evening Bulletin Collection, which the Temple Libraries acquired after the newspaper ceased publication in 1982. Founded in 1847, the Bulletin published a daily afternoon edition for over 125 years. For decades, the newspaper’s signature slogan was “Nearly everybody reads the Bulletin.” The event is sponsored by the Temple University Libraries’ Urban Archives Department and Friends of the Libraries. An online version of the exhibition, featuring highlights, also opens May 3rd.

About the artists:

sal.jpgSalvatore C. DiMarco, Jr. was born in 1947 in Drexel Hill, PA. He learned photography from his father, a portrait painter in Philadelphia. In 1970, he graduated with a B.S. degree from the School of Communications and Theater at Temple University. Mr. DiMarco first joined the staff of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin in 1967 as a summer intern. He eventually became Chief Photographer, overseeing a department of more than 30 photographers, editors, and technicians. After the Bulletin closed in 1982, he became a free lance photographer and divided his time between editorial, corporate and industrial magazine assignments. His photographs have appeared in many of the world’s leading magazines, including Time, and he won more than 150 international, national and regional awards for his work. He passed away on June 11, 2004.

 

gilbert.jpgGilbert J. Tucker was born in Philadelphia in 1930. From an early age, he showed an interest in illustration. Upon graduating from Simon Gratz High School, he was awarded a scholarship to the Philadelphia School of Industrial Art, now called The University of the Arts. In 1951, he graduated from the Philadelphia School of Industrial Art with a diploma in illustration. Later, he continued his education at the Philadelphia Museum College of Art, where he received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1962. After working for a number of years as a technical and commercial illustrator, Mr. Tucker joined the staff of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin‘s Editorial Art Department from 1968 to 1980. There, he was able to exercise the full range of his abilities by providing illustrations to accompany articles and editorials. Since retiring in 1993, he devotes much of his time to watercolor painting, including landscapes and cityscapes around Philadelphia and the New Jersey shore.

Vanderbilt TV News Archive now available

The Libraries have just subscribed to TV NewsSearch, the database of The Vanderbilt University Television News Archive. Through this subscription, Temple users have access to over 705,000 records describing the news content of the Archive’s extensive collection. In addition, you can access online video from the Archive’s collection of CNN material. In order to view the video, you will need to download the free RealOne media player from Real Networks. The Archive’s entire collection holds more than 30,000 individual network evening news broadcasts from the major U.S. national broadcast networks: ABC, CBS, NBC (since 1968), and CNN (since 1995). It also includes more than 9,000 hours of special news-related programming including ABC’s Nightline since 1989, presidential press conferences and political campaign coverage, and significant national and international events.

Paley rest room renovations begin April 11th

Both the men’s and women’s restrooms on the 2nd floor of Paley Library will be renovated by Temple facilities staff April 11-22, 2005. During initial days of this short project, there will be noise in the immediate vicinity as old, deteriorated tiles are removed. We apologize in advance for any temporary inconvenience this may cause. Public restrooms on the lower level, 1st, and 3rd floors of Paley Library will be available during this time. These other restrooms were renovated in 2004 through the same central facilities renewal funding. These and other renovation or maintenance projects now underway are modest but important steps toward the University Libraries’ goal of providing convenient, comfortable, well-equipped spaces where the University community reads, studies, conducts research, and participates in educational and cultural activities.

Online Tools for Managing Your Research Papers

Temple University offers a number of different tools for the successful online management of research papers. These tools originate in different departments around campus but taken together help cut down on preparation time and improve your final product.

First, there’s My Backpack, accessible through the toolbar of TUportal after logging in. My Backpack allows you to store your paper in one central place so that you can access it from any computer on or off campus. Each time you want to work on your paper, you download it to your computer from My Backpack. When you’re finished working on it, simply upload it until you decide to work on it again. Since TUportal is regularly backed up, you don’t have to worry about forgetting to have a backup copy.

For managing your bibliography and in-text citations, there’s RefWorks to which the university has a site license. Simply go on to RefWorks and set up an account. RefWorks allows you to enter references manually or download them from databases. RefWorks produces bibliographies in any number of styles, including APA, MLA, Chicago Style, and Turabian. If you are writing a group paper, RefWorks can be shared so that you can build and use a bibliography collaboratively. For more information about RefWorks, see the Refworks Tutorial page.

For help on the mechanics of writing, The Writing Center offers “Handouts, Tipsheets, and Writing Guides”. These online guides cover a wide range of topics, including the writing process, argumentation, revising, proofreading, grammar, punctuation, plagiarism, and citing sources.

Finally, the library has access to over two dozen EBSCOhost databases, including Academic Search Premier, ATLA, Business Source Premier, ERIC, Humanities Abstracts, MLA International Bibliography, and PsychInfo. If you set up a personal account with EBSCOhost (it’s free), you can save and store article records to My Folder. This allows you to search and store records until you are ready to print, delete, email, or download them. This functionality works across EBSCOhost databases so that you can save records from, for instance, Academic Search Premier, ERIC, and PsychInfo, and store them all in one place, My Folder.

For more information on any one of these important tools, please contact Derik BadmanDavid Murray, or Fred Rowland.

Temple Harrisburg Librarian featured with Oral History Series Participants in National Association of Social Workers Workshop

On Friday April 1 2005 Dr. Iren Snavely, the librarian for Temple’s Harrisburg campus and archivist for Temple’s Central Pennsylvania Social Work Archives, spoke about the new archives, started in 2003, at a workshop at the annual conference of the Pennsylvania Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers. Temple University-Harrisburg Oral History project is the Human Service Practitioner’s Oral History series, and three of its participants, Lewis Crippen, retired administrator of the Dauphin County Area Agency on Aging, Ann Lyon, Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Social Work at Harrisburg Area Community College, and Theotis Braddy, Executive Director of the Center for Independent Living of Central Pennsylvania, challenged the audience with reflections and stories from their social work practice and experiences.

Web of Science access now available back to 1974

Our Web of Science coverage has been expanded! With the use of one-time funds, the library has just purchased 15 more years of access to this premier database. Indexing is now available from 1974 to the present. The Web of Science database covers over 8700 scholarly peer-reviewed journals from three major indexes: Science Citation Index covers 5900 journals Social Sciences Citation Index covers 1725 journals Arts & Humanities Citation Index covers 1144 journals It also provides access to current and retrospective bibliographical information, abstracts, our online catalog, and cited references in all the above subject areas. You may search by author, keywords, journal title, and institutional affiliation. Researchers may also track a known relevant author or paper and find more recent papers that cite it, thus discovering who is doing current research on the topic of the older article. Expanded search options include the ability to: locate all cited authors (not just first authors), track times cited information, and follow hot links to cited references. Entries are linked to the library’s holdings in our online catalog, Diamond. The index is updated weekly. Note: This database is licensed for 10 concurrent users, so please hit the “Logout” button when finished to free up access for other Temple colleagues.

Temple’s Book Club

The Temple Book Club was created in February of 2003 when the “One Book, One Philadelphia” program began. Since then, the Book Club has met once a month to discuss books recommended by the Club members. EVERYONE is invited to come to the discussion: students, staff, faculty, administration, and the community at large. The group meets on the fourth Thursday, during the lunch hour, from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. The Book Club is coordinated and sponsored by the Urban Archives, Paley Library and notices are sent out announcing the books that the club has decided to read. A Temple Book Club listserv has been established and if you wish to be included on the list, please send your information to Margaret Jerrido at mj@temple.edu or call 215-204-6639.

During its January meeting, a list was collected of books to read for the coming months. The club is trying different ways to encourage a larger audience to participate and it is hoped that this will be one way. Please share this list with colleagues, friends, and family.

April 2005: “The Shadow of the Wind” by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
Paley Library Lecture Hall, April 28th, 1 p.m. – 2 p.m.

May 2005: “The Night Inspector” by Frederick Busch
Paley Library Lecture Hall, May 26th, 1 p.m. – 2 p.m.

June 2005: “Hell at the Breech” by Tom Franklin
Paley Library Lecture Hall, June 23rd, 1 p.m. – 2 p.m.

Library Opening for Early Birds

Starting March 17, Paley Library began experimenting with a “soft opening” Monday through Friday in response to students and researchers who eagerly await entrance before the official 8:00am opening time. Now students will be allowed entrance weekdays as soon as the security guards take up their positions in Paley and Tuttleman, up to an hour before opening. Patrons will be able to study, return books, check out books (using the self-check terminals), and search library databases using the Paley Reference Area computers. If you need help from Paley Library staff, however, you’ll have to wait until they start arriving at 8:00am. This is part of an overall attempt at Paley to make the library more available to Temple’s growing number of highly motivated undergraduates, graduates, and researchers.

Other important Paley and Tuttleman hours to keep in mind:
* In fall and spring semesters, the Tuttleman Scholars Information Center (SIC) is open 24 hours between Monday, 8:00am, and Friday, 7:30pm.
* For final examinations, Paley will be open 24 hours between Thursday, April 28 at 8:00am and Wednesday, May 11 at 10:00pm.
* Service Desks close at regular times during extended hours.

Paley Library Elevator Renovation Project

Paley library includes three passenger elevators. They are original building equipment dating from 40 years ago, and have proven quite difficult to keep in full, proper operation due to their advanced age and heavy traffic.

On February 21, 2005, Temple’s Facilities Management Division began a major project to renovate all three passenger elevators. In addition to replacing controlling equipment, the hydraulic drive systems including cylinders and pistons, will be fully replaced.

The approximate schedule of work is:

February 21 – May:
Elevator #2 out of service.
During this time, use elevators #3 and #4.

May – July, 2005:
Elevators #3 and #4 our of service.
During this time, use elevator #2.

During this project we strongly encourage library users to:
1) take the stairs when possible to avoid delays and queuing
2) report promptly any malfunction or failure of elevators that should be in service.

Should you need further information or wish to report an immediately occuring elevator problem, please call Facilities at 1-1818 (Monday-Friday 8-4) or 1-1234 (evening/weekends or in case of emergency).

[Comments or suggestions concerning this project update should be directed to Jonathan LeBreton lebreton@temple.edu
Content last reviewed: 3/22/05.]