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The Appendix, newsletter of the Health Sciences Library is a UC Denver email list. To subscribe, visit

http://hsclibrary.uchsc.edu/newsletter/subscribe.php. Trouble viewing this message? Please visit our online version instead. Unsubscribing? Click here.

Not a subscriber?

SUBSCRIBE

December, 2008

IN THIS ISSUE:

1.

NEW UC DENVER-RELATED SCULPTURE ARRIVES IN THE LIBRARY

2.

RESOURCE UPDATE: EMBASE CAN SUPPLEMENT PUBMED

3.

RESOURCE TIP: HEALTH 2.0 WEB SITES

4.

PUBLISHING TIP: REVIEWING MANUSCRIPTS FOR PUBLICATION

5.

TECHNOLOGY TIP: DOWNLOAD A VIDEO AND ADD IT TO A POWERPOINT

PRESENTATION

6.

JOURNAL CHANGES FOR 2009 - NO JOURNAL CANCELLATIONS ANTICIPATED

7.

NEW LIBRARY EXHIBIT: TIKKUN OLAM

8.

SEASONAL HEALTH RESOURCES: ‘TIS THE SEASON TO OVER-EAT, THEN RESOLVE

TO GET SOME EXERCISE

9.

LIBRARIAN PICKS: Blindness by Jose Saramago

10.

APPLY TO SHOW YOUR ARTWORK IN THE HEALTH SCIENCES LIBRARY GALLERY!

1. NEW UC DENVER-RELATED SCULPTURE ARRIVES IN THE LIBRARY

Starting in late December a floor-to-ceiling sculpture will be installed in the atrium space inside the entrance of the Health Sciences Library. The sculpture was commissioned through the Art in Public Places program of the Colorado Council on the Arts. The art work is titled Humanescence and was created by California artist Rae Douglass. It is based on the US National Library of Medicine's Visible Human Project, a health informatics initiative which debuted in the 90's and continues to be developed by the faculty and staff of the School of Medicine's Center for Human Simulation, led by Dr. Vic

Spitzer.

The Visible Human Project resulted in data sets consisting of MRI, CT and anatomical images used for visualizing in three-dimensions the complete adult human anatomy, both male and female. Douglass' sculpture features hundreds of thin stainless steel tapes suspended from floor to ceiling and set in a

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lighted mounting. Imprinted on the individual strands of tape are sectional images from the Visible Human's male subject such that, when viewed in composite, the entire body is revealed, suspended in mid-air. --See a mockup of this project at the artist's web site

The Health Sciences Library is the happy recipient of this art project resulting from a 1997 "Art in Public Places" Act that requires 1% of funds for publically-funded building construction costs be set aside for public art. An Anschutz Medical Campus Art Committee was established in 2006 to solicit and review competitive proposals for public art projects on the campus, and Douglass' submission was approved for locating in the library.

According to Library Director Jerry Perry, "This specific art work is perfect for the library, referencing a milestone health informatics project. It also comes with a frankly complicated and, for some,

controversial back story. The male used in the NLM Visible Human project was a prisoner executed by lethal injection and who donated his body for medical research. And this body is not traditionally beautiful, in the way we typically think of fine art. The art work is stunning in design and form, and it is also highly engaging, especially when you consider its many contexts and meanings. Libraries are intended to encourage discourse and reflection, and so we are thrilled to be home to this intriguing sculpture."

The library is planning a series of events around the installation, slated to begin after Fall Semester finals, with completion expected in mid-January. While staff members anticipate some minor

disruptions to way-finding through the atrium area, precautions will be put in place to minimize noise and other disruptions to users.

For more information about the sculpture, please contact Jerry at jerry.perry@ucdenver.edu.

top FYI:

New printing options for students are now available in the Health Sciences Library.

CINAHL no longer available in Ovid after Dec. 31st On Dec. 31st the library's access to CINAHL (Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health) will be only through the EBSCO interface. The Ovid interface for CINAHL will no longer be available. This change is being made because the CINAHL Corporation was purchased by EBSCO, who has decided to make the CINAHL database available exclusively through the EBSCO interface. To learn more about the EBSCO interface and how to use it, take the library's class,

Introduction to CINAHL. There is also a step-by-step guide to EBSCO CINAHL on the library's Handouts web page.

Consultations are available to those who are unable to make a scheduled class.

From the Open Access News: Oxford Journals to partipate in NIH PubMed Central deposit program

2. RESOURCE UPDATE: EMBASE CAN SUPPLEMENT PUBMED

In 1947 Excerpta Medica Abstract Journals, a compilation of article citations from just seven journals, had its debut. Today its electronic successor EMBASE, includes 19 million citations from over 7,000 health sciences journals. If you're seeking research information in medicine, pharmaceutics, or other topics in the health sciences, EMBASE may supplement your PubMed searches. Here are the main features of EMBASE relative to PubMed.

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EMBASE's strength is in drug information although like PubMed, it includes the range of biomedical information. For drug research, you can take advantage of unique features of the search engine such as limiting by Routes of Administration (e.g., buccal, inhalational, epidural, etc.).

EMBASE is subscription-based while PubMed is an open access, free resource. The Health Sciences Library's subscription to EMBASE extends back to 1974. PubMed reaches as far back as 1949 although

the bulk of its citations range between 1966 and today.

EMBASE has a European focus while PubMed's concentration is North America. Both consist primarily of English-language articles.

EMBASE and MEDLINE (PubMed consists mainly of the MEDLINE database) overlap significantly in content. As of March 2007, 64% of EMBASE journals were also indexed in PubMed. Put it another way: 36% of EMBASE journals are unique relative to PubMed, while 42% of PubMed titles are not found in EMBASE.

PubMed utilizes MeSH (Medical Subject Headings), while EMBASE uses EMTREE to index the articles. Sometimes the MeSH and EMTREE terms are the same (e.g., Coronary Artery Disease) but many are different. For example, search for "heart attack" and it maps to Heart Infarction in EMBASE but

Myocardial Infarction in PubMed.

If you need to conduct a comprehensive search - for example, for a grant proposal, dissertation, or systematic review - and especially if the topic is focused on drugs, a search in EMBASE will uncover articles that a PubMed search alone may miss. Get to EMBASE via the Databases page on the library's web site.

top FYI:

Final Exam Hours, Fall 2008 Mon., Dec. 1st – Thurs., Dec. 18th Mon.-Thurs.: 7:00 AM - Midnight Friday: 7:00 AM – 8:00 PM Saturday: 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM Sunday: 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM Holiday Hours Dec. 22nd - 24th: 7:00 AM – 6:00 PM Dec. 25th – 28th: CLOSED Dec. 29th – 31st: 7:00 AM – 6:00 PM Jan. 1st – 2nd: CLOSED

3. RESOURCE TIP: HEALTH 2.0 WEB SITES

Health 2.0: are you ready for consumer-generated health information? by Special Contributor, Hope Leman, reviewer for altsearchengines.com

Web 2.0 has been a hot topic for several years, focusing on sites that allow users to easily network and share information, creating a long term relationship between the user and the website. Now Health 2.0 has arrived. A search for a health topic on the internet may lead users to pages created by online patient communities, rather than familiar and reliable consumer health sites such as

MedlinePlus. These new sites offer discussions between healthcare consumers which include health information and share the patient's personal experience of disease. Many of these sites are well-funded and cull information from other major health information sites.

Will Google or other search engines start to include patient-provided advice in search results for health topics? These sites have the financial resources to optimize their exposure in Google and increase their visibility to consumers. They want to be "sticky" websites - attracting users over and over again. But they also want to serve as destinations for those in need of quick answers on specific questions. Health 2.0 websites have features useful to patients and health educators in need of patient education

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materials. Here's a sample of the leading Health 2.0 sites gaining popularity with health care consumers:

Healthline

Healthline offers a single point of access to multimedia health information resources, including video, interactive risk assessment tools, news headlines, the Harvard Health publications, and encyclopedia or dictionaries. One especially useful feature of Healthline is its Drugs, Medications & Supplements page, especially the Drug Info tools that feature attractive graphics and clear illustrations: Drug Interaction Checker, Pill Identifier (very useful feature—colorful and edifying—especially helpful for caregivers of the chronically ill and/or elderly), Drug Compare, and Side by Side Comparison. Healthline does not plan to provide patient-generated content, preferring to rely on expert-vetted material, pulled from a variety of reliable sources.

MedHelp

MedHelp touts itself as "The World's Largest Health Community." Its approach is to play up its cohort of medical experts (e.g., expert forums are overseen by clinicians from prestigious institutions such as the Cleveland Clinic and Mount Sinai) while also placing heavy stress on its sizable array of online patient communities. Answers from MedHelp will start appearing in Google results soon. MedHelp participants find a nice balance of expert information and the support of a community sharing their health concerns. MedHelp's use of expert moderators contrasts with the exclusively consumer-driven focus of health sites such as Trusera ( http://www.trusera.com/health/ ) and the minor role of experts on sites like Wellsphere ( http://www.wellsphere.com/home.s ).

OrganizedWisdom

OrganizedWisdom says of itself, "OrganizedWisdom helps people do health research with our hand-crafted WisdomCards—full of expert-selected online resources— on thousands of popular search terms." OrganizedWisdom is an intriguing effort to be a fairly standard consumer health source like Healthline, and also to engage consumers in the trend towards user-generated health information. Organized Wisdom asks readers “Want to know more about any health topic? Just request a

WisdomCard here. Your request will go to our Guide team and we'll build a WisdomCard on your topic, fast.” Organized Wisdom is working to place “Wisdom Cards” near the top of Google results lists, to increase their visibility to consumers.

RightHealth

RightHealth aggregates consumer health information from many sources and disease advocacy

organizations (such as My Daily Apple, Scribd, DoubleCheckMD and Bodymaps). The Tylenol Overview results page, for instance, features a basic overview (e.g., Why it is Prescribed) and links to standard sources such as the Mayo Clinic and the dosage chart of the American Academy of Pediatrics. Patient forum and blog search results are included, leading readers to patient opinions and online diaries. Results include referral to products from online healthcare product retailers.

Trusera

Trusera differs from the other consumer sites in that almost all of the information on the site is consumer-generated. Trusera prides itself on being a site in which consumers can interact at a patient-to-patient level, coaxing users to "Come experience the Power of Been There.™" This is in sharp contrast to MedHelp, which touts the number of credentialed medical authorities that preside over its pages. Trusera's management team does not include anyone with medical background. Instead, Trusera asks users, "Got a question? Let the Trusera community help you find an answer."

Wellsphere

Wellsphere tries to straddle the two main approaches used by most of the consumer health sites. It has a softer, more New Age, wellness-cool versus the illness oriented feel of MedHelp. But Wellsphere doesn't eschew references to established medical practices either. It features links to weblogs and online columns by MDs. Wellsphere's target audience is the proactive, affluent, generally healthy. One of its most interesting features is a directory of health-related services for those with lots of disposable income. Browse "Resources Near You" for options such as: Gyms & Health clubs, Spas & massage, Personal trainers, Personal coaches, Yoga & Pilates studios, etc. Wellsphere's communities also tend not to be about chronic or terminal conditions. Rather, they emphasize the upbeat, e.g., Happiness, or Skin & Beauty. Wellsphere is a well-funded site and provides services some of the other sites have yet to offer, such as cell-phone based ones ("Make your cell phone your wellphone!").

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Websites are offering new options for health information, using the basic principles of online social networking. Health care providers need to be aware of their growing influence in the consumer health information realm. They are rivals, allies, resources and change makers in the field of consumer health care information and support. It will be interesting to see what Web 2.0 tools these sites employ in the battle for the attention of health consumers.

– Hope Leman is a Library Technical Specialist at Murray Memorial Library, Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center in Corvallis, Oregon and the manager of the Scan Grants web site.

top FYI:

The technology magazine Wired has released its 2008 Smart List. Learn about the 15 smart folks you've never heard of that Wired's editors think our next president should consult.

Vadlo is a new search engine for researchers. As a bonus, check out the "Life in Research" cartoon.

Deadline extended:

submit your work to the Human Touch! Submit your prose or artwork to the University of

Colorado's medical humanities anthology! Send your art, photography, poetry and prose to

thehumantouchjournal@gmail.com by January 1st, 2009. Please follow the guidelines when submitting to the

Human Touch. Submissions will be reviewed by the editors following the submission deadline. Final decisions will be made by January 15th, 2009. Though it is

expected that some aspect of health care will provide the subject for most entries, submissions on all topics are encouraged!

4. PUBLISHING TIP: REVIEWING MANUSCRIPTS FOR PUBLICATION

Manuscript review is a common task for many academic professionals and students. But rarely do the uninitiated receive guidance on how to do the job well. Peer review – the evaluation process

conducted by the author's "equals" - is fundamental to scholarly communication. Increasingly, with the growth of publications and manuscript submissions, editors need reviewers to help them make objective decisions about the fate of submitted papers.

At the same time, review of manuscripts can be a time-consuming and thankless task. Why then would you want to become a reviewer? Reasons vary and may include loyalty to a journal or its editor, learning about new findings, or improving one's literature-evaluation skills. Most volunteer because they consider providing their expert opinion an honor and a privilege.

Depending on the publication, the editor may have unique requirements on what he seeks from reviewers but there are a number of characteristics common to almost every review process. Three excellent articles – "How to Review a Manuscript: A ‘Down To Earth' Approach;" "Manuscript Peer Review- A Guide for Health Care Professionals," and, an editorial in The New England Journal of Medicine, "Tracking the Peer-Review Process" have the following suggestions.

As you browse through the paper for the first time, consider these questions:

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may include:

having a conflict of interest that may prevent fair and objective assessment of the work, having time constraints that will not allow you meet the editorial deadline,

insufficient knowledge of the topic to conduct a well-informed review.

Is the submission a good fit for this journal's readership and its mission? Is the subject or the style of writing appropriate?

Is there cause for outright rejection? Is the paper incoherently written, is it confusing, or so flawed in any other way?

With subsequent, more critical readings ask the following questions:

How relevant and important are the findings in this paper? The NEJM editorial summarizes the key qualities as "freshness," "clinical impact," and "timeliness."

If the paper meets the criteria of relevancy and importance, but is still not up to publishable level, how can the author revise and improve it?

While the reviewer provides recommendations, unlike a referee she does not decide on the editorial course of action. In most cases there are two or more reviewers per paper, and at times they reach different conclusions. The final say, therefore, goes to the editor.

The peer-review process is similar, some say to the process clinicians experience: an attending physician requests consultations from colleagues, but she makes the ultimate clinical decision based on the patient's best interest. An editor requests input from reviewers and he makes an editorial decision in the best interest of the publication.

For more information, try reading the cited articles or search the PubMed database using these terms: "Peer Review, Research/methods"[Mesh] or "Peer Review, Research/standards"[Mesh].

top FYI:

Focus on computer security:

Increases in malware, enterprise vulnerabilities, laptop theft expected as a result of the holiday shopping season (via DarkReading.com)

Quick facts about malware, spyware, phishing and identity theft

TMCnet: Bank information of thousands sent to Russian hackers via fake Obama acceptance speech emails

Adobe critical update for the Flash web browser plugin

5. TECHNOLOGY TIP: DOWNLOAD A VIDEO AND ADD IT TO A

POWERPOINT PRESENTATION

Download video from YouTube and any other site:

Get the Firefox browser from http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/

Install the Download Helper extension from https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/3006/ or Video Downloader https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/2390

Capture the video using Download Helper or Video Downloader

The videos are usually in the .flv format. They can be played by many players, but aren't always compatible with Powerpoint. If you want to convert them into another format for use in a Powerpoint presentation (such as .wmf Windows Media Format), use a free program such as Prism Video

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Converter Software http://www.nchsoftware.com/prism/index.html . To add the clip file to your Powerpoint presentation:

Click the Insert menu, point to Movies and Sounds, and then click Movie from File. Select the movie file in the Insert Movie dialog box, and then click the OK button.

Powerpoint will display a message box letting you choose when the movie will play. To have the movie play automatically when the slide is displayed in a slide show, click the Automatically button.

To have the movie play only after you click the movie image, click the When Clicked button. Powerpoint will then add the clip to your slide.

Or link to the file and have it launch in an appropriate player (player must be loaded on the presentation pc or laptop):

Click Insert, then click on Object

Click Create from File, then find the file and click on OK. When you reach the slide, click on the link to the file.

If you choose to link to the file from your Power Point presentation, be sure to save the clip file on a thumb drive for easy access during your presentation.

top FYI:

Get the 4-1-1 from Google:

Google has launched a new phone based information service,

GOOG-411 (1-800-466-4411). Here’s how it works: 1. Dial 1-800-GOOG-411 from any phone

2. State the location and business type 3. Connect to the business for free

How do you decide whether to read a book? The creator of 43 Folders, a website devoted to enhancing efficiency and productivity in work and personal life, has some quirky recommendations, including the "Page 69 Test" invented by 20th century media theorist and critic Marshall McLuhan.

6. JOURNAL CHANGES FOR 2009

Are you wondering why you did not hear of journal cancellations for 2009? The good news for the UC Denver Anschutz Medical Campus is that the Health Sciences Library does not anticipate making any cancellations for the coming calendar year. However, we are presently not adding new journal titles either in light of present economic conditions.

Each year, many titles change publishers. We are endeavoring to track these migrations and plan to maintain our subscriptions to these journals with their new publishers.

We have no immediate plans to add new electronic resources for 2009, though some changes may occur through collaborative journal purchases with other University of Colorado campuses. Any

additions to our journal subscriptions through these shared packages will be announced in subsequent issues of The Appendix.

Our thanks go out to those members of the University community who have suggested new journal titles for the library's subscriptions. All of these recommendations will be kept on file for our new Head of Collection Management to review. We deeply appreciate your concerns and support for enhancing the library's e-resource collection.

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top FYI:

Seasonal Affective Disorder

According to the Mayo Clinic as many as a half million people in the US have some type of winter-onset depression. Many websites offer information for patients and professionals.

7. NEW LIBRARY EXHIBIT: TIKKUN OLAM

The Health Sciences Library is very happy to be hosting an exhibit from the Mizel Museum entitled "Tikkun Olam: Repairing the World". Tikkun Olam is a Hebrew phrase that means "to heal the world" and it embodies the concepts of social justice, compassion, freedom, equality and peace.

In this exhibit, artist Christy Honigman composes the personal articulations of 54 participants from 27 different countries on the topic of repairing the world into a series of columns. Many of the participants are survivors of torture and exile.

The participants offer pictures, poems, songs and personal prose to represent their interpretations of Tikkun Olam. The exhibit consists of 14 columns arranged in the library entrance. The columns can be viewed in any order and brochures identifying each column and are available. The exhibit will be on display until mid-January, although it will be relocated to the Library's Gallery in mid-December. A docent from the Mizel Museum will lead a tour and give a program on the exhibit on Wednesday, Dec. 10, from Noon – 1 pm. The group will meet in the library’s lobby, tour the columns, and then go to one of the library’s classrooms for the rest of the program. RSVPs are not required but would be appreciated as we need a minimum number of attendees for the docent to make the trip to the

library. RSVPs can be sent to Rhonda Altonen at rhonda.altonen@ucdenver.edu or 303-724-2112. Be sure to stop by and view the columns when you are in the Health Sciences Library. If you have questions about the exhibit, please contact Melissa DeSantis (melissa.desantis@ucdenver.edu or 303-724-1748).

top FYI:

Disconnected from the Internet? You may suffer from "discomgoogolation"!

"E-smoking" to kick a nicotine addiction

8. SEASONAL HEALTH RESOURCES

'Tis the season to over-eat, then resolve to get some exercise.

As Colorado's days grow shorter and colder it becomes harder to get out and move around. As our national tendency is to over-eat between Thanksgiving and New Year's, there is a looming risk of gaining a few extra pounds this winter. Here are some resources that focus on nutrition and exercise:

America on the Move Campus Walking Tour Maps feature a campus history tour, employee tour, and a first timer's tour, complete with mileage and step counts. Visit the America on the Move web site for advice, tools, and ideas on how to stay active and avoid becoming sedentary in the winter months.

Food Processor: Nutrition Analysis Software (Available to HSL primary users only, in-library use only) The Food Processor enables nutrition professionals to evaluate client dietary and fitness needs, calculate nutrient recommendations, analyze nutrient intake, plan meals, develop exercise programs

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and present the data in a variety of formats.

Gmaps Pedometer uses Google's mapping application to help record distances traveled and calories burned during a running or walking workout.

Nutrition in Medicine (from University of North Carolina, open to everyone) NIM provides nutrition courses spanning the scope of nutritional science, from physiological and molecular foundations to prevention strategies and disease treatment. Resources are appropriate for both students and professionals.

Nutrition Series on CD-ROM (Available to HSL primary users only, in-library use only) Includes 7 titles: Diabetes & Weight Management, Lifecycle I, Nutrition and Cancer, Nutrition and Cardiovascular Disease, Nutrition and Stress, Nutritional Anemias .

USDA Nutrient Database for Standard Reference This is an excellent source of information for those following diet regimens that require careful monitoring of intake of salt, fat, carbohydrates, or other nutrients. Users may need a grams-to-ounces conversion table, since portions are measured in grams. Palm PDA version also available.

Visit the Health Sciences Library for more resources for nutrition and exercise. You might follow the lead of some of our library staff, and get in some extra steps on the library's stairs! It's a warm, dry spot and a great place for winter exercise.

top FYI:

Can a popular television series be used to educate viewers about important health issues? A Kaiser Family Foundation study teamed health educators and Grey's Anatomy script writers to create a storyline that educated viewers about HIV-positive mothers bearing HIV-free babies following proper treatment.

PC Magazine offers its 2008 list of top undiscovered websites.

9. LIBRARIAN PICKS

Blindness by José Saramago, Translated from the Portuguese by Giovanni Pontiero, New

York: Harcourt, Inc. 1998.

Library call number PQ 9281 .A66 S243e 1998t

Located in the Medical Humanities Collection, in Special Collections on the 3rd floor of the Health Sciences Library.

Blindness is a harrowing fable of what could happen when a "white blindness" suddenly befalls an entire community. The first individuals to be stricken are shunted off to a defunct mental asylum by a government afraid of the inexplicable contagion. There they are at first meagerly provided for but soon are left to fend for themselves. Without adequate food, water, or sanitation, these newly blinded individuals must organize themselves into some semblance of civilized life. The narrator of this

descent into chaos, filth, and violence is the one individual who has feigned blindness to stay by her husband's side.

Not for the faint-hearted – or the weak-stomached – this grim tale challenges the reader to consider the value of our senses, the impact of the loss of just one of them, and the very basis of our

humanity. The writing itself is at first disorienting with its minimal punctuation and change of narrative personhood. However, just as the book's characters must adapt to their new situations, the reader also adapts to this unconventional writing style and soon finds that this freedom from typical language constraints heightens the pace and intensity of the story. Not all is depressing in Blindness; there are grace notes of compassion and humor and passages of lyrical beauty. In the end the reader is left

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with, not an explanation, but wonderment at the imaginative power of the tale.

Blindness has been made into a movie, with a cast featuring Julianne Moore and Mark Ruffalo. The DVD will be purchased for the Medical Humanities Collection once it becomes available.

top FYI:

Pollyanna was right! A recent review of 35 studies on positive pychological well-being and health found that a good attitude does translate into better health.

Librarian as action hero? Well, not quite: The third installment of the TNT series "The Librarian: Curse of the Judas Chalice", starring Noah Wyle, airs beginning December 7th.

10. Do you have an artistic talent?

APPLY TO SHOW YOUR ARTWORK IN THE HEALTH SCIENCES LIBRARY GALLERY!

Do you paint? Create sculpture? Take photographs? Have you ever thought of displaying your art? The Health Sciences Library has multiple exhibit display locations and would love to showcase work done by members of the UCD community. Starting in January the Library will be showing artwork by a UCD graduate and local artist.

Check out the Exhibit Policy on the Health Sciences Library website for more information. The policy lists the various display locations and includes a form to be used to request dates and space in the library. Questions can be directed to Debra Silva (303-724-2138). We hope to see your art soon!

top

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"As a rule we disbelieve all the facts and theories for which we have no use." -William James

Sparky the Info-Dog is the mascot for the Health Sciences Library Newsletter. He doesn't usually eat the newspaper.

Except where otherwise noted, this content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

The Appendix is a publication of the Health Sciences Library, University of Colorado Denver. Comments or questions? Email us at: library.web@uchsc.edu.

Contributors include: Melissa DeSantis, Lynne Fox, Gene Gardner, Lilian Hoffecker, Jeff Kuntzman, Sally MacGowan, and Jerry Perry.

Thanks to NIDDK Image Library for the image of the appendix. Copy Editor: Lynne Fox

Design and Layout: Jeff Kuntzman

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http://hsclibrary.uchsc.edu/newsletter/archives/.

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