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June 30, 2008

Access to Academic OneFile database discontinued on September 1

On September 1, 2008, the Library will no longer subscribe to the Academic OneFile database. We are sending out this information in advance to enable those in the planning stages for the fall semester to make other arrangements.

The library continues to offer several general and interdisciplinary databases, all of which are available through the Find Articles page and the SUMMIT Catalog (Find Books). If you need assistance selecting a database, please stop by a library service desk or use our online research assistance service.

If you have questions about this change, please contact Tasha Cooper, Social Sciences/Area Studies Bibliographer, nacoop01@syr.edu; 443-9518.

May 1, 2008

Shoah Visual History Archive of Holocaust survivor and witness testimonies now available

Syracuse University Library now offers access to the world’s largest archive of visual histories of the Holocaust. The Shoah Foundation Institute’s Visual History Archive, housed at the University of Southern California, includes nearly 52,000 video testimonies of Holocaust survivors, rescuers and other witnesses gathered by the Shoah Foundation. The interviews, which are in 32 languages, were conducted in 56 countries between 1994–2005. Syracuse University is one of only 10 partner universities worldwide that provide students, faculty, staff and the general public with access to the complete archive.

“Syracuse University Library is honored to become one of the USC Shoah Foundation Institute’s partners. The Visual History Archive is a welcome addition to our collection of multidisciplinary research tools,” says University Librarian and Dean of Libraries Suzanne Thorin. “The firsthand perspective provided by these interviews will be invaluable to students and scholars of history, religion, anthropology and many other disciplines.”

The USC Shoah Foundation Institute grew out of Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation, established by film director Steven Spielberg following the release of “Schindler’s List.” The purpose of the project was to document the experiences of survivors and other witnesses to the Holocaust. The majority of the interviews—about 90 percent—are with Jewish survivors of Nazi persecution; also represented in the archive are political prisoners, Roma and Sinti (Gypsy) survivors, homosexuals and Jehovah’s Witnesses, along with liberators, witnesses, rescuers and aid providers.

Users can search more than 50,000 geographic and experiential keywords, the names of every person mentioned in the testimonies, and biographical information for each interviewee. A selection of testimonies will be immediately available at SU; users can request that other testimonies be delivered to SU’s local server. The Shoah system makes use of Internet2, a relatively new network that is ideally suited to transferring large files like the Shoah videos. Users must be physically present on the SU campus to access the Visual History Archive, which is located at http://vha.usc.edu/.

“The Visual History Archive is an extraordinarily useful tool for addressing the issues of the Holocaust and making it relevant to the theme of being a bystander in today’s world,” says Alan Goldberg, professor emeritus in SU’s School of Education and coordinator of the institute’s “The Holocaust, Lessons for the Classroom,” a collaboration of Syracuse University, the Holocaust Museum, Houston, and the Warren Fellowship for Future Educators.

The mission of the USC Shoah Foundation Institute is to “overcome prejudice, intolerance and bigotry—and the suffering they cause—through the educational use of the institute's visual history testimonies.” The institute relies upon partnerships in the United States and around the world to provide public access to the archive and advance scholarship in many fields of inquiry. The institute and its partners also utilize the archive to develop educational products and programs for use in many countries and languages.

For more information about Shoah or to arrange for a demonstration, contact Lydia Wasylenko at 443-4692 or lwwasyle@syr.edu.

December 7, 2004

Project Muse Access -- Week of December 7

University Router Issues May Result in Access Difficulties

The Johns Hopkins University's network, on which Project MUSE's primary
server resides, is experiencing routing difficulties which may cause
some users to be denied access to our web site at http://muse.jhu.edu.
Users who experience difficulty accessing MUSE at this URL are
encouraged to instead try our mirror site at http://muse.uq.edu.au. The
University has indicated that it may take up to a week to resolve the
router problem. We apologize for any inconvenience. The mirror site at
http://muse.uq.edu.au is always available as an alternative access
point for any authorized user of Project MUSE.

An update will be sent as soon as the University indicates that the
router issue has been resolved. Please contact MUSE Subscriber Services
at muse@muse.jhu.edu with questions regarding this or any other issues
affecting your institution's subscription.

September 27, 2004

ProQuest and ABI/Inform unavailable Sept 27 at 12 Noon

ProQuest Research Library and ABI/Inform are unavailable as of 12 Noon on September 27, due to technical problems with their authentication system.

According to Technical Support, the problem should be resolved within an hour or so.

September 22, 2004

STAT-USA Unavailable September 22, 2004

Access to STAT-USA is limited today due to technical problems with the Internet connection in the New York area. Although users can get to the web site as usual, they will be prompted for a username and passsword.

June 22, 2004

Internet and Personal Computing Abstracts Database Discontinued

The following has announcement has been received from OCLC FirstSearch

NOTICE OF DISCONTINUATION OF THE INTERNET AND
PERSONAL COMPUTING ABSTRACTS
DATABASE

Following its acquisition of the Internet and Personal Computing
Abstracts (InternetPCAbs database), EBSCO has informed OCLC of its
intention to terminate the contract to distribute the database on
FirstSearch. Consequently, per-search access to the database will be
discontinued effective Tuesday, June 15.

Users of the Internet and Personal Computing Abstracts database might
consider Article First, Applied Science & Technology Abstracts,
Consumers Index, Wilson Select Plus and Periodicals Abstracts as
possible alternatives to indexed and full text articles on Information
Technology issues and products.

June 1, 2004

Softline Databases Migrated to ProQuest

The Softline databases are now accessible via the more robust ProQuest platform as of June 1, 2004. These include:

Alt-Press Watch
A full text database comprised of the newspapers, magazines and journals of the alternative and independent press.

Ethnic Newswatch
A comprehensive full text database of the newspapers, magazines and journals of the ethnic, minority and native press.

GenderWatch
A full text database of unique and diverse publications that focus on how gender impacts a broad spectrum of subject areas. With its archival material, dating back to 1970 in some cases, GenderWatch is a repository of an important historical perspective on the evolution of the women's movement and the changes in gender roles. Publications include scholarly journals, magazines, newspapers, newsletters, regional publications, books, booklets and NGO, government and special reports.


May 3, 2004

LegalTrac Unavailable

As of Friday, April 30 the Gale database LegalTrac is unavailable. Customer support has been contacted.

March 25, 2004

Lexis Nexis Unavailable March 25 9:00 am through 2:00 pm

Lexis Nexis databases are currently unavailable due to a campus router problem. Lexis Technical Support has been contacted and they will follow-up with the appropriate technical support here at the University.

March 12, 2004

CIAO Down March 14, 2004

Columbia International Affairs Online has alerted the Library that CIAO [Columbia International Affairs Online] will be unavailable Sunday, March 14th from 1PM to 5PM EST [Eastern Standard Time in the USA]. At this time, Columbia webfile servers will be undergoing scheduled maintenance.

Meagan Cooke
Production Editor
Columbia International Affairs Online

February 26, 2004

LexisNexis Service Restored

LexisNexis Academic, Congressional and Statistical were unavailable due to technical problems from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Thursday, February 26

February 13, 2004

Kluwer Journals unavailable February 15

All Kluwer Online Journals sites, including the gateway pages at
http://journals.kluweronline.com and http://www.kluweronline.com, will be
down on Sunday, Feb 15 2004 from 3-4PM EST for hardware maintenance.


Other Kluwer Academic Publishers web sites, including www.wkap.nl,
http://ebooks.kluweronline.com, http://reference.kluweronline.com will be
unaffected.

Kluwer apologizes for this inconvenience and will make this technical
change as quickly as possible.

January 30, 2004

FirstSearch Outage Announcement

EXTENDED OCLC SYSTEM MAINTENANCE ON
SUNDAY FEBRUARY 1, 2004 AND SUNDAY FEBRUARY 8, 2004

To allow for hardware and system maintenance, the OCLC FirstSearch service
will be unavailable for approximately 6 hours, beginning at 02:00 a.m. US Eastern Standard Time Sunday, February 1, 2004 and again on Sunday, February 8, 2004. This will also affect any libraries that use OCLC group catalog services or link into WorldCat and FirstSearch from partner information services. Temporary disruptions to the QuestionPoint service are also likely to occur on February 8, 2004.

Barring any unexpected problems, we anticipate that these services will be available for use again beginning at approximately 08:00 a.m. US Eastern Standard Time Sunday, February 1, 2004 and February 8, 2004 respectively.

OCLC sincerely regrets the inconvenience to its users.

January 15, 2004

Kluwer Journals Maintenance

A notification of hardware maintenance at Kluwer's electronic journal site has been sent to users at SU Library:

All Kluwer Online Journals sites, including the gateway pages at:
http://journals.kluweronline.com
http://journals.kluweronline.com
http://www.kluweronline.com
http://www.kluweronline.com

will be down on Sunday 25 January 2004 from 3:00 - 3:30 PM EST for hardware maintenance. Other Kluwer Academic Publishers web sites will be unaffected.

Kluwer apologizes for this inconvenience and will make this technical change as quickly as possible.


December 17, 2003

Wilson Database Changes

Wilson Business Periodicals Index and the Index to Legal Periodicals will no longer be available to SU Library users as of Wednesday, December 17, 2003. Applied Science & Technology, Biological & Agricultural Index and Essay & General Literature Index will be unavailable on Wednesday, December 17 but will be re-instated by OCLC/FirstSearch on Thursday, December 18.

For additional information on this change, please feel free to contact Nancy Turner, Electronic Resources Librarian, at 443-2237 or nbturner@syr.edu.

December 11, 2003

Lexis Nexis Print & E-mail

Problem Solved!

The printing and e-mail functions are now working properly on Lexis Nexis' Academic -- for some time this has been a problem for our remote users.

Thanks to the upgrade of our Ezproxy software for authentication of remote users by Michael DeSalvo, these two systems are now compatible and we can take full advantage of this important database and all its features.


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