E-ZBorrow Milestone at Temple Libraries

Today Temple Libraries filled the 400,000th request placed in the E-ZBorrow program administered through the PALCI consortium. The book was requested by a patron at Penn State and the book is: A war of nerves : soldiers and psychiatrists in the twentieth century by Ben Shephard, Harvard University Press, 2001. Temple started participating in E-ZBorrow in the fall of 2000, and since then we have borrowed 17,833 books and lent 30,979 books through this program. If you are currently studying or working at Temple you may request any book through E-ZBorrow that is not available at Temple . You can request books that are available for loan at one of the 49 other participating libraries including Penn, Pitt, Penn State, Rutgers, Lehigh, Bryn Mawr, Haverford, and Swarthmore. — Penelope Myers

Trial Databases Page

In order to encourage input from students, faculty, and staff, the library has just opened up a Trials page. This page will provide links and instructions for accessing databases that librarians are evaluating for possible purchase. Feedback from the Temple community is strongly encouraged. There is such a proliferation of databases and other electronic resources these days that it is important for us to get as many views and opinions as possible when considering purchases. The link to the Database Trials page can be found on the top of any of the database lists.

Trials Link

Once on the Database Trials page, make sure to check whether a special user name and passord is necessary, which you’ll find right under the link to the trial.

Trials Page.jpg

So go to the Database Trials page and take a look at the new electronic resources we’re considering. If you have strong feelings about any of these resources, click on the feedback link at the top of the page and tell us what you think.

–Fred Rowland

Turn the Page

The British Library’s Turning the Pages online collection of 14 rare books has recently added Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures Under Ground. The collection is accessible to any internet user with a broadband connection and the Macromedia Shockwave browser plug-in. The 3D-like experience of actually “turning the pages,” zooming in on a specific area of the page, and listening to the accompanying audio commentary by British actress Miriam Margolyes is not to be missed. According to a BBC News report, “In the original Alice manuscript, Carroll included the first sketch of Alice Liddell who provided the inspiration for Alice in his books. It was drawn in pencil from a photo of Alice aged seven but he was not satisfied with the sketch so replaced it with a photo of Alice instead. In 1977, the pencil drawing was rediscovered hidden under the photo. The 90-page virtual manuscript contains all 37 original illustrations.” Other titles in the collection include the Diamond Sutra, at 868 C.E. the earliest, dated, printed book in the world, Jane Austen’s The History of England, and the Sforza Hours, a Renaissance masterpiece. Every one of the 14 works is a priceless window into another world and time. –David C. Murray

Latest exhibition: Placing Dance in New Communities

Placing Dance in New Communities: Preserving the Talley Beatty/Philadanco Legacy Philadanco-sm.jpgA special dance performance in Paley Library at 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, September 28th, will highlight the opening of the latest exhibition mounted by the University Libraries’ Special Collections Department. The performance and opening will be followed by a small reception. The performance is of the solo, “Mourners Bench” from the 1947 masterwork, “Southern Lanscape,” choreographed by Talley Beatty. The exhibition and performance will be in the Lobby of the Samuel Paley Library with the reception in the Library’s Lecture Hall, Ground Floor. The afternoon program is one day of a week-long schedule of events which is the culmination of the project “Placing Dance in New Communities” produced by Temple Libraries’ Philadelphia Dance Collection, Bryn Mawr College, and Philadanco, with grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and Dance Advance (Pew Charitable Trusts). For more information about the Philadelphia Dance Collection and this grant-funded project, see the September 22nd issue of Temple Times. The exhibition, performance and reception are free and open to the public. For information, call 215-204-8230.

— Tom Whitehead

Citation Searching Article

An interesting article in the online D-Lib Magazine (11.9 (2005)), “An Examination of Citation Counts in a New Scholarly Communication Environment” by Kathleen Bauer and Nisa Bakkalbasi of Yale, this preliminary study examines citation searching in Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar. I quote from their conclusion:

Based on our preliminary examination and discovery of higher citation counts, we recommend that researchers should consult Google Scholar in addition to Web of Science or Scopus, especially for a relatively recent article, author or subject area. A search of Google Scholar will likely reveal both traditional journal articles, some of which will also be covered in Web of Science and Scopus, and additional unique material, but the scholarly value of some of the unique material remains an open question. Consulting Google Scholar may prove most useful for disciplines such as physics, where nontraditional forms of publishing are widely accepted. However, it is important for all researchers to note that until Google Scholar gives a full account of what material it is indexing and how often that index is updated, it cannot be considered a true scholarly resource in the sense that Web of Science and Scopus are. An understanding of the material being covered is central to the validity of any search of scholarly material.

In light of the frequent requests for citation counts on publications (particularly on faculty’s own publications), it may behoove one to search Google Scholar as a supplement to Web of Science. -Derik A Badman

Digital Dissertations is back!

Writing a dissertation or a thesis? Need to find out who has published what in your area of interest? Got a brilliant idea and wondering whether someone has already stolen your thunder? Want to know a faculty member’s history as a dissertation advisor? You need Digital Dissertations! The Temple University Libraries has switched from Dissertation Abstracts to Digital Dissertations, a change in databases that will make your searching of the dissertation literature much faster and more efficient. Most importantly, in Digital Dissertations Temple dissertations from 1997 to present are available in full-text!! Here are some other important features:

  • 24-page previews of thousands of recent non-Temple dissertations
  • indexing back to 1861
  • you can search for the faculty advisor to each dissertation
  • lengthy, detailed abstracts that are searchable
  • Temple full-text dissertations are a great source for current bibliographies.

Check it out. You might be one step closer to that vaunted PhD. Digital Dissertations is accessible from any of the database lists on the library homepage. By the way, you can borrow non-Temple dissertations using the Thesis Request Form. Also be aware that Digital Dissertations is soon changing its name to Digital Dissertations and Theses. –Fred Rowland

Paley Elevator Renovations Completed

Much-needed renovations to Paley Library’s elevators have been completed well ahead of schedule.

Elevators # 2, # 3, and # 4 are all back in service after extensive renovations and inspections. Restoration work began on February 21st and officially ended on September 6th, more than six months later.

The work schedule was as follows:

February 21 – May 11:
Elevator #2 out of service.
During this time, elevators #3 and #4 were available.

May 15 – June 30, 2005:
Elevator #2 restored to service.
Elevator #3 out of service.
Elevator # 4 taken out of service June 10.
During this time, only elevator #2 was available.

July – August, 2005:
Elevator #3 restored to full operation August 12.
Elevator #4 work continued, with expectation of returning to service on or about September 16.

September 2005
Elevator #4 returned to service September 6, 2005.

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

— Jonathan LeBreton

Paley Library Extends Hours Starting September 11

Starting September 11 Paley Library will stay open until 2 am Sunday -Thursday. The circulation/reserve desk will also remain open so that you can check out books and reserve materials. This schedule will remain in effect until December 5th, when Paley Library will remain open 24/7 until finals are over. Questions? Call 215 204-0744. See http://library.temple.edu/about/hours for more information on library hours. –Penelope Myers

E-ZBorrow Even Easier Now

To login and use PALCI E-ZBORROW now all you have to do is use your new TempleID number (TUid). Until July 1 you had to type in your social security number as that was your Temple ID, and many of you were reluctant to do that for security reasons. That problem has disappeared with Temple’s switchover to a random number ID. E-ZBorrow is a program that the Libraries offer for you to search and request books unavailable at Temple. You can request books that are available for loan at one of the 46 other libraries in the PALCI consortium. These libraries include Penn, Pitt, Penn State, Rutgers, Lehigh, and the Tri-College Consortium. When the book arrives for you you’ll receive an email asking you to pick it up. Questions? Call Penelope Myers at 215 204-0749. –Penelope Myers

Easier Database Access Now @ Your Library

You can now start your web-based research directly from all of the Libraries’ web services even if you’re off-campus. All you need is your browser and your AccessNet ID. Access to the Libraries’ restricted resources has never been easier! When you click on a link to a restricted resource in the Diamond catalog or anywhere on the Libraries’ web site, you’ll see the LibProxy login page. Simply enter your AccessNet username and password, — the same username and password you use for email or TUportal — click the “login” button, and search. Beginning August 29, JournalFinder will also be accessible this way. Your login will be valid until you end your session and close your browser. That means you only have to login once to search our entire selection of databases and ebooks. Off-campus users can still gain access to the restricted resources via TUportal or previous methods. If you use those, or are anywhere on campus, you won’t notice anything different. We hope you’ll find LibProxy makes your off-campus research much easier. If you have any questions, just contact Brian Schoolar, our Electronic Resources Librarian, at 215-204-3258 or jbrian@temple.edu. –Byron C. Mayes