Archive for January, 2006

Check out our Database Trials

January 31st, 2006

The University Libraries is always evaluating new resources to offer to the GVSU community. If you’d like to check out some of the databases we’re currently looking at, visit our Database Trials page. Currently, we’re looking at databases from Ebsco, including GLBT Life, SocINDEX, CINHAL, along with a number of other resources. Take them for a test drive, kick the tires and then let us know what you think.

You can find the link to our Database Trials page at the top-right of the Database Table. The list changes regularly so you’re going to want to come back often.

Help Phones Now Located Throughout Zumberge

January 27th, 2006

Can’t figure out where the heck we moved the Juvenile Collection? Is the microfilm reader on the frizt? Need help translating a call number? Well, help is now just a phone call away! The University Libraries recently installed help phones throughout the Zumberge Library in Allendale to allow users to easily contact to library staff for assistance. There are phones on the 2nd and 3rd floors by the elevators and on the 4th floors near the elevators and also by the microfilm readers. Simply pick up the phone and you will be automatically connected to the circulation desk.

FREE Printing at Zumberge and Steelcase!!!

January 18th, 2006

We are thrilled to announce that the University Libraries has partnered with IT to provide free printing from the computers in the Zumberge and Steelcase Libraries. Before you toss out that copy card, remember that it will save you three cents per page when you are using the copiers or microfilm printers (10 cents per page with the cash vs. 7 cents per page with the card).

New Book Review Resource!

January 17th, 2006

Looking for the elusive book review, beyond what Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble offer? We now have a new Subject Resource page dedicated to Book Review sources! Here you can find what databases contain book reviews, a list of the best reference books for finding reviews, as well as links to websites that contain book reviews.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

January 16th, 2006

If you are interested in finding resources in the library about Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., do a subject search in the online catalog for King, Martin Luther, Jr.
If you want to read the books by today’s speaker, Benjamin Carson, search for Ben Carson in the online catalog or by the title of the book. The library owns all three of Dr. Carson’s books, Gifted Hands, Big Picture and Thinking Big.

Presidential Signing Statements

January 16th, 2006

There has been a great deal of coverage in the news lately regarding President Bush’s use of signing statements. For a couple of examples, check out this Boston Globe article on the signing statement that was added to the bill banning torture that he signed a couple of weeks ago or listen to this NPR story that provides some general information on his use of signing statements.

Don’t just take what the media has to say face value, though. All the signing statements that presidents issue end up in the Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents. It is fairly easy to find signing statements issued by President Bush and by former President Clinton. The Government Printing Office has the Weekly compilation online back to 1993. From the main page you can search the Weekly Compilations that have been issued since the start of the year or you can click on the Search link to search any combination of years from 1993 to the present.

When you search you can just type in “statement on signing,” but that will return every statement on signing, which many times just includes a statement that says “I think this is a great law…” To find those statements that include interpretations of the law, try adding the term construe to your search string (so you search would be: “statement on signing” construe).

Now you can make your own decisions on the signing statements issued by Bush and you can compare them to those issued by Clinton. You can also look for signing statements issued by H.W. Bush, Reagan and other presidents, but to do that you will have to use the old fashion Weekly Compilation, which is located at the Steelcase Library, and look for the statements by hand.

Supreme Court Nomination Hearings Begin

January 9th, 2006

The Senate Judiciary Committee began holding hearings on the nomination of Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court today. Check out the library’s Government Resources website for links to the transcripts of the hearings as they are made available. For background information on Alito, go to the library’s Supreme Court Nomination Resources webpage. Here you’ll find a wide variety of resources on Alito and Bush’s previous nominees. Two of the best sources of information are provided by the New York Times (requires free registration) and the Library of Congress, but there are a number of other sources on Alito, the nomination process and past nominees.

JSTOR Holdings Update

January 9th, 2006

JSTOR is a cooperative program dedicated to providing a trusted full-text electronic archive of scholarly journals. GVSU participates in JSTOR and provides access to all JSTOR titles via the “Databases” link on the library homepage, via the “ejournals” link on the library homepage, and by individual records for each title in the online library catalog, including links to full-text content.

JSTOR does not include coverage of current issues, but, by definition, archives of past issues. The full run of each issue is included, up to three or five years ago, depending on the wishes of the publisher of each journal. As the new year rolled around to 2006, another year of coverage for most journals was added (this is called the moving wall, because each year another retrospective year is added).

Please contact Bob Schoofs (331-2636) if you have any questions.

Cambridge UP joins History E-book Project

January 6th, 2006

The History E-Book Project is one of our newest resources for the humanities. Additions are already being made as Cambridge University Press announced they will produce new XML titles.

The History E-Book Project of the American Council of Learned Societies is pleased to announce that Cambridge University Press, long an important publisher in the Project’s title list, has joined its partnership to produce new XML titles, becoming the ACLS’s tenth participating university press for XML development. According to HEB Project directors Eileen Gardiner and Ron Musto, “Cambridge’s participation comes at an important time, as the ACLS project has achieved self-sustainability and is focused on completing R&D on its suite of XML features and capabilities. These have allowed electronic publishing in History to move from experimental
and individual efforts toward replicable and scalable workflows and publication standards. Cambridge’s excellent History list will help us achieve these goals.”

Tax Season

January 3rd, 2006

The new year brings with it tax season and some changes for this year. The IRS has dropped GVSU from its tax form program. This means we will not receive any federal tax forms or publications from the IRS. This was a decision made by the IRS and is beyond the control of the University Libraries. In a cost-cutting move the IRS eliminated multiple distribution points within ZIP Codes and essentially passed the cost of printing forms and publications on to users and institutions like GVSU. This is something that is impacting libraries around the country and is, again, beyond our control.

We WILL be receiving Michigan tax forms and publications. Those should be sent out by the state in late January.

The easiest and fastest way to access tax forms and publications is through the library’s Tax Resources page. From this page you can access federal, state and local tax resources.