Skip to content
Skip to main content

Transitions: Scholarly communication news for the UI community – November 2008

November 2008
Issue 3.08

The Fall issue of Transitions is now online.

The purpose of this irregular electronic newsletter is to bring to readers’ attention some of the many new projects and developments affecting the current system of scholarly communication, with emphasis on new products and programs, the open access movement and other alternative publishing models. Scholarly communication refers to the full range of formal and informal means by which scholars and researchers communicate, from email discussion lists to peer-reviewed publication. In general authors are seeking to document and share new discoveries with their colleagues, while readers–researchers, students, librarians and others–want access to all the literature relevant to their work.

While the system of scholarly communication exists for the benefit of the world’s research and educational community and the public at large, it faces a multitude of challenges and is undergoing rapid change brought on by technology. To help interested members of the UI community keep up on these challenges and changes we plan to put out 4 issues per year of this newsletter.

This newsletter aims to reflect the interests of its readers so please forward comments, suggestions and entries to include to karen-fischer@uiowa.edu. Also, read the health sciences counterpart to Transitions: Hardin Scholarly Communication News.

Looking for the Plum Job in the Obama Administration?

We’ve got just the job listing resource for you that was just released today.

Every four years, just after the Presidential election, the “United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions,” commonly known as the Plum Book, is published.

The Plum Book contains data for over 7,000 Federal civil service leadership and support positions in the legislative and executive branches of the Federal Government. These positions generally open after the election and particularly if there has been a shift in political party strength. The duties of many such positions may involve advocacy of Obama Administration policies and programs and the incumbents usually have a close and confidential working relationship with the agency head or other key officials.

This catalog of federal jobs lists available positions, the incumbent’s name and the salary scale for the position. Whether you’re interested in working in the legislative branch, the executive branch or for an independent agency, you can find a potential position here.

Who knows you could be the next Director of the National Park Service – that job is open.

Digital Libraries and Digital Humanities – Nov 17

With the increasing importance of interdisciplinary research, and the increasing need for academic libraries to assume roles of information originator previously handled by others, new research alliances are forming on many university campuses.

Join us for a presentation by Dr. Richard Furuta from Texas A&M University, “Digital Libraries and Digital Humanities: Experiences with Research Partnerships among the Liberal Arts, the University Libraries, and Computing.”

Monday, November 17, 2008
3:45 – 5:15 p.m.
Second Floor Conference Room (2032), Main Library

In his presentation, Dr. Furuta will discuss experiences at Texas A&M University involving research collaborations with liberal arts, the University Libraries and computing.  The collaborations, to be described from the perspective of the Center for the Study of Digital Libraries, involve applications as broadly separated as textual studies, textual iconography, and nautical archaeology.  Taken together, the projects give insights on issues encountered when satisfying the research needs of disparate academic units and some illustrations on the ways that libraries can help in this.

Dr. Furuta’s current areas of research include digital libraries, digital humanities, hypermedia systems and models, structured documents, and document engineering.  In the area of Digital Libraries, he was one of the founders of the 1994 and 1995 Digital Libraries Conferences, which subsequently evolved to form the ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL).  He will be program chair for JCDL 2009 and was program chair for ACM Digital Libraries 2000.  He currently serves on the Steering Committee for ACM/IEEE-CS JCDL and was its chair from 2001-2005.  He also is an Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Digital Libraries. Dr. Furuta received the B.A. degree from Reed College in 1974, the M.S. degree in Computer Science from the University of Oregon in 1978, and the Ph.D. degree in Computer Science from the University of Washington in 1986.

This colloquium is sponsored by the School of Library and Information Science and the IMLS Funded Digital Librarian Training Program.

Get Research Help NOW!!

Finals are just around the corner and you’re probably thinking about writing research papers, but don’t know where to start. It’s easy, you can start at the Old Capitol Town Center Food Court.

What!?! Go to the mall? Yes. That’s where you’ll find some Info to Go. University librarians are available to help you Monday-Friday from 1-3 p.m.

They can help you do some preliminary searches through InfoHawk; they can point you to the most relevant journal article databases for your topic; they can show you how to organize your sources with RefWorks.

You’re already there studying, so why not take advantage of a little extra help?   Ask a Librarian!

Ishmael Beah Lecture on UITV

Author of A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier Ishmael Beah spoke about his life in Sierra Leone as a child soldier and his activism for the rights of children on Wednesday, October 29 to an estimated crowd of 1,400 people. To see this lecture again or for the first time, tune into UITV on your local channel.

If you were unable to attend, UITV has decided to air the program as soon as possible. It will be shown three times this week as follows:

  • Wednesday, November 5 at 4pm
  • Thursday, November 6 at 3am
  • Thursday, November 6 at 5pm

One Bean, One Vote – Nov 4

Is the election becoming a little too intense for you?  Lighten up by casting your Great Northern Bean to vote in the Main Library’s strictly unofficial presidential bean poll on Election Day, Nov. 4th. 

The bean poll will be located at the kiosk near the Information Desk at the Main Library.

Here’s how it works; simply drop a bean in the glass jar marked with your candidate’s name between 8:00 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 4th, Election Day.  Library Poll workers will tally the count and announce the results on Wednesday, Nov. 5th.

The six major presidential candidates according to Project Vote Smart are:

  • Charles O. Baldwin (Constitution Party)
  • Robert L. Barr (Independent, Libertarian Party)
  • John S. McCain, III (Republican Party)
  • Cynthia Ann McKinney (Independent, Green Party)
  • Ralph Nader (No Party Affiliation, Independent)
  • Barack H. Obama, Jr. (Democratic Party)

Display at Main Library Highlights Politically Active Women

Through a display at the Main Library, the Iowa City-Cedar Rapids Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., proudly presents, “Delta Women Who Have Served in the Political Arena,” to honor past and present members of the sorority who have served in public office. Members of the 95-year-old organization have labored in various capacities of local, state and federal government.

Political Awareness and Involvement is one of the organization’s Five Point Thrust, and only months after founding the sorority, young Delta women at Howard University participated in the Suffrage Parade on Washington on March 3, 1913. Although Black women suffragists had few allies and their concerns were not on the agenda, Delta women realized that Black women needed the ballot. Asked to march at the rear of the procession, Delta women were not discouraged and marched on Pennsylvania Avenue alongside women representing states, countries, organizations, and colleges. In 2008, Delta women continue to march for freedom and justice!

Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. is a private, non-profit organization whose purpose is to provide assistance and support through established programs in local communities throughout the world. The Delta Chapter at the University of Iowa will celebrate its 90th anniversary in April 2009. The Iowa City-Cedar Rapids Alumnae chapter is composed of UI alums and current graduate students.

To learn more about Delta Sigma Theta in Iowa, you can check resources like the Catherine Williams Papers in the Iowa Women’s Archives as well as the digital collection of African-American Women in Iowa.

The display will be presented at the south end of the first floor of the Main Library through the end of November.

Managing Through Adversity: Iowa Libraries and Flood of 2008

How did librarians manage the natural disasters throughout Eastern Iowa?  Please join the School of Library and Information Science for this exciting and informative panel as those in the trenches relay their first-hand knowledge of disaster planning, managing volunteers, preservation efforts at area museums and libraries, and ongoing activities by public and academic libraries to rebuild and recover after the flood.

Tuesday, November 4
Main Library, Second Floor Conference Room (2032)
10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

Scheduled to speak

  • Nancy Baker, University Librarian, University of Iowa Libraries
  • Tamara Glise, Interim Director, Cedar Rapids Public Library
  • Nancy Kraft, Head, Preservation, UI Libraries
  • Ruthann McIntyre, Head, UI Music Library
  • Rijn Templeton, Head, UI Art Library

For more information contact, Patricia Katopol, in the School of Library and Information Science.

Raising the Dead? History, Health Reform and the 2008 Election – Oct 28

In this election season, competing proposals for health reform have again taken center stage.  Colin Gordon, the author of Dead on Arrival: The Politics of Health in Twentieth Century America, will place these proposals—and their prospects for success—in historical perspective.

Colin Gordon, Ph.D. is a professor of history at the University of Iowa, specializing in 20th Century U. S. History. For this program, Professor Gordon will provide a brief background on health care policy and its interaction with Presidential politics, prior to facilitating what we hope will be a lively discussion by all those in attendance.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008
5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Hardin Library for the Health Sciences, Information Commons, 2nd floor
 

The University of Iowa History of Medicine Society is an informal group of students, faculty, staff, and members of the community sharing an interest in the history of medicine and the health sciences. We present speakers about once a month and, in the spring, host a banquet with a presentation from a well-known medical historian. We have no membership dues and we welcome participants from the University and the general community.

To become a member, simply send an e-mail to either Ed Holtum or Donna Sabin and ask to be placed on our electronic mailing list. In addition to alerting members of forthcoming presentations, the list is also a vehicle for members to communicate matters of interest relating to the history of medicine and the health sciences.