November 19 lecture offers reflections of Kennedy Assassination by 1963 Parkland E.R. doctor

Photo: Garett Fisbeck/The Dallas Morning News

Photo: Garett Fisbeck/The Dallas Morning News

Robert McClelland, M.D., has a unique perspective on the Kennedy assassination from his service in the emergency room at Parkland Hospital on that fateful day 50 years ago. On Tuesday, November 19, 2013, the Library and the Department of Surgery will sponsor a reception in Dr. McClelland’s honor, during which Dr. McClelland will share his reflections on the Kennedy presidency and its tragic end in Dallas.

Dr. McClelland went on to have an outstanding career as an instructor and then full professor in the UT Southwestern Department of Surgery where he held the Alvin W. Baldwin Chair in Surgery from 1977-2007.  Dr. McClelland has been Professor Emeritus in the Department of Surgery since 2007 and Adjunct Professor of Law at the Dedman School of Law, Southern Methodist University, since 2008.

Daniel Podolsky, M.D., President of UT Southwestern, will introduce Dr. McClelland.  Michael Choti, M.D., Chair, Department of Surgery, will host the event, which will be held in the McDermott Lecture Hall, Room D.1.602. The reception will begin at 5:30 p.m., and Dr. McClelland’s presentation will begin at 6 p.m.

Preregistration is not required, but seating is limited; so please come early!  For more information, contact John Fullinwider, by phone at 214-648-3801 or by email at john.fullinwider@utsouthwestern.edu.

Southwestern Watercolor Society art exhibit now in Library

About 40 watercolor art works by members of the Southwestern Watercolor Society (SWS) are now on display in the South Campus (main) Library. Topics include city streetscapes, nature scenes, portraits, animals, and abstracts. The works will remain on display through the end of the year. On Saturday, October 19, 2013, from 3 p.m. – 5 p.m., the Watercolor Society will be hosting a reception on the Main Floor of the South Campus (main) Library to open their art show.

Southwestern Watercolor Society, a non-profit organization celebrating its 50th anniversary, was founded in 1963 to promote fine arts in our community, and to provide artists with opportunities for education, exhibition, and interaction with other artists. SWS meets monthly, offering informational and educational demonstrations by local and nationally recognized artists.

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Featured artworks from artists (L to R) by Pam Wilson, Anne Turner Beletic, and Teta Smith

New SciFinder updates include non-Java structure editor

js_structure_editorSciFinder, a chemical and other sciences research database, now features a new version of the CAS Structure Editor that does not require the use of a Java plugin. The Java version of the editor is still available for your users, who can now easily select their preferred editor.

The new editor queries the same content
researchers have always accessed. There is some missing functionality in the new editor. SciFinder chose to release the limited version due to the pressing need of some users who were experiencing Java-related issues. For more information on the plugin-free, Non-Java CAS Structure Editor, visit http://www.cas.org/products/scifinder/system-requirements-web.

Additionally, the latest SciFinder release features the following updates:

  • Analyze reaction answer sets by reagent to more quickly identify your synthesis of interest.
  • View substance and supplier information simultaneously now that our popular Quick View feature is available from Commercial Sources answer sets. In addition, many top catalog entries now feature direct links to supplier emails from right within SciFinder.
  • Update account information more easily with a new account management link to myCAS® available in Preferences.
  • SciPlannerTM how-to guides are now more easily accessible to help you make use of the full power of the features and functionality available within SciPlanner.

For SciFinder questions, including how to conduct specific searches, please contact the CAS Customer Center at help@cas.org or 800-753-4227.

UTSW Library to end book circulation on August 19

The UT Southwestern Library will stop circulating books permanently on Monday, August 19, in preparation for moving the print collection to the University of Texas System/Texas A&M Joint Library Facility, located in College Station.

The Joint Library Facility (JLF) is an initiative of the UT and A&M library systems. Opened in May 2013 on A&M’s Riverside campus, it is designed to store up to 1 million volumes in secure, climate-controlled conditions. Any library in either system may contribute volumes to the facility; there is no charge to the contributing library for storage. Once in the facility, materials are available to system libraries through interlibrary loan. Journal articles will be scanned and delivered by email; books will be delivered by a statewide courier service.

The UT Southwestern Library collection, recognized as the most comprehensive medical collection in Texas, will become the core of a shared resource used by students and faculty throughout the state, including the new UT System Medical Schools in Austin and South Texas.

The Library will retain a small print collection of titles held on reserve – as well as rare, unique, and archival materials – which may be used in the Library. The rest of the collection will be available electronically or through interlibrary loan. There will be no charge to request UT Southwestern Library materials located at the JLF.

The vacated space on the Library’s middle and top floors will be used for new educational activities. The Library’s collection of electronic books and journals will remain available through its website, http://library.utsouthwestern.edu.

“On My Own Time” art now on display. Vote by August 2 for favorite piece.

The 13th annual “On My Own Time” employee and student art show is now on display in the South Campus (main) Library. Photographs, paintings, works on paper, fiber art, jewelry and stained glass are on display through Friday, September 27.

Employees and students can vote for their favorite piece of art during the “People’s Choice” voting through Friday, August 2, at 3 p.m. Ballots are available at the Library Information Desk from 7 a.m.-7 p.m. weekdays. Only one ballot and one vote per person, please. You must visit the Library to vote.

August 22nd Health Policy Forum focuses on community service learning

Photo of Ruth Berggren, M.D.On August 22, 2013, everyone is welcome to attend a special presentation entitled Rethinking Medical Education: Community Service Learning & Community Health, which will be given by Ruth Berggren, M.D., Director, Center for Medical Humanities & Ethics, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. The program will be held from 12 to 1 p.m. in McDermott Plaza Lecture Hall (Room D1.602), and it is co-sponsored by the Library and the Department of Family & Community Medicine. Lynne Kirk, M.D., Toni and Tim P. Hartman Distinguished Teaching Professor Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, will host the event, and lunch will be provided.

Community service learning (CSL) holds great potential for medical education and for community health promotion and research.  At UT Southwestern, the Community Action Research Track (CART) and Community Action Research Experience (CARE) provide students and residents the opportunities to work in underserved communities and to participate in community-based participatory research.

Dr. Berggren will explore current best practices and the future of CSL, which can help students to:

  • Address complex problems in complex settings rather than simplified problems in isolation.
  • Engage in problem-solving by requiring participants to gain knowledge of the specific context of their service learning activity and community challenges, rather than only to draw upon generalized or abstract knowledge.
  • Develop critical thinking: the ability to identify the most important issues within a real-world situation.
  • Experience deeper learning because results are immediate and uncontrived.  There are no “right answers” in the back of the book.

As a consequence of this immediacy of experience, CSL is more likely to:

  • Be personally meaningful to participants
  • Generate emotional consequences
  • Challenge values as well as ideas
  • Support social, emotional, and cognitive learning

Dr. Berggren is also Professor of Internal Medicine and the Marvin Forland, MD, Distinguished Professor in Medical Ethics. Prior to being appointed Director of the Center for Medical Humanities & Ethics, she directed the second-year medical school course on infectious diseases and designed a new elective course — “Poverty, Health, and Disease” — that she continues to direct.  Dr. Berggren’s internal medicine training was at Massachusetts General Hospital, followed by a fellowship in infectious diseases at the University of Colorado, where she was a Division of AIDS Fellow funded by the NIH. She then took a faculty position at UT Southwestern, where she pioneered a program for the treatment of Hepatitis C in persons co-infected with HIV. During Hurricane Katrina, Dr. Berggren was the teaching physician assigned to the Infectious Disease ward of New Orleans’ Charity Hospital. She remained at Charity for six days and nights after Katrina struck, working with medical staff to care for critically ill, abandoned patients. After all patients were evacuated from Charity Hospital, Dr. Berggren and her team were rescued by a private jet from Texas. She has subsequently published two articles in the New England Journal of Medicine about this experience and about the impact of hurricane Katrina on health care infrastructure in New Orleans. Dr. Berggren grew up in the Artibonite Valley of central Haiti, just one hour away from Mirebalais, at the Albert Schweitzer Hospital. Following the January 2010 earthquakes in Port au Prince she led relief efforts along the Dominican Republic/Haiti border.

Dr. Kirk is a general internist and geriatrician and has served on several committees relating to the U.S. Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE). She has served on the council of the Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM). Dr. Kirk was President of the American College of Physicians, the national specialty organization for internists, in 2006-2007. She has published on medical professionalism, faculty development, clinical guidelines, and patient education.  She chairs the Internal Medicine Residency Review Committee of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and is an Associate Program Director in the internal medicine residency training program at UT Southwestern.

For more information about the forum, please contact John Fullinwider by phone at 214-648-3801 or by email at john.fullinwider@utsouthwestern.edu.

Citation organization made easy: enroll in July's Beginning EndNote class

EndNote X6 provides flexible, time-saving tools for searching, organizing, and sharing your research; creating your bibliography; and writing your paper.

Beginning EndNote: Administrative and Research Professionals Tuesday, July 30, 2013 1 – 2:30 p.m. Library Informatics Classroom (Room E2.310A)

This 90-minute hands-on class is designed for administrative assistants and research professionals tasked to collect citations, keep reference lists current, and update article submissions for researchers.

The class covers:

  • Downloading citation information from online database searches
  • Importing, organizing, and inserting references into Microsoft Word
  • Downloading licensed PDFs to the citation automatically
  • Organizing references, images, and PDFs
  • Creating and modifying bibliographies in recommended publication formats without retyping

Register on the Library Class Registration page. For assistance or individualized instruction, contact Therona Ramos by phone at 214-648-5073.

SciVal Funding – Where’s the money?

Need funding for your research? Our new SciVal Funding database provides global access to opportunities and comprehensively covers award/grants from Australia, Canada, the European Commission, India, Ireland, New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

With more than 3,000 international sponsors providing more than 16,000 active awards/grants, SciVal provides researchers with many funding opportunities. Tutorials are available within the database to guide your use.

SciVal Funding features personalized “funding profiles” for researchers who have published and/or been funded.  Check out your personal profile soon.

The Library will offer individual and group training sessions, lunch and learns, and featured tabletop sessions soon.  Call the Library at 214-648-2003 to request assistance or use the Ask Us form on our website to set up a training session.

By JoVE, it’s experiment journal articles on video! Three sections now available online

Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE) is a peer reviewed, PubMed-indexed video journal devoted to the publication of biological, medical, chemical and physical research. UTSW institutional online access is now available for three sections:  General; Neuroscience; Clinical & Translational Medicine.

In addition to the three sections named above,
there are six more sections with limited open access. These sections are Immunology & Infection; Bioengineering; Applied Physics; Chemistry; Behavior; Environment. Limited open access is also available to some videos in the other sections:

  • after a 2 year embargo all videos available thru PubMed
  • if author(s) pay a publishing fees in advance of publication to allow open access to his/her/their video
  • if publisher provides complimentary access to selected videos for limited time periods

Library Toolbar Discontinued

Effective immediately, the Library will no longer maintain and distribute the Library browser toolbar. We recommend that you uninstall it from your browser(s) to eliminate any security vulnerability to your workstation. The instructions to uninstall are below.  Please note that different operating systems or browser versions may utilize varied terminology.

The Library began offering the toolbar via Conduit.com in 2006 to improve access to Library resources. However, the company’s recent policy change to increase promotional advertising through the toolbar has resulted in concerns about potential malware vulnerability.

Internet Explorer users

  1. Click the Start button and then select Control Panel > Programs/Uninstall a program (Win7) or Add/Change Programs.
  2. Find the UT Southwestern Medical Center Library Toolbar. Select it, and click Uninstall/Change (Win7) or Change/Remove.
  3. Click Yes  to “Are you sure you want to uninstall UT Southwestern Medical Center Library Toolbar?” prompt.
  4. Close the confirmation/advertising web page that states “Your software was uninstalled successfully.”

Firefox users

  1. In the Firefox browser menu, select Add-ons > Extensions.
  2. Select the UT Southwestern Medical Center Library Toolbar Community Toolbar.
  3. Click Remove.

Safari users

  1. Open the Finder application and browse to Applications.
  2. Scroll down to Toolbars and click on UT Southwestern Medical Center Library Toolbar.
  3. Double-click on “Uninstall”.
  4. Fill in the “User name & Password” and click the OK button.

Chrome users

  1. In the Google Chrome browser, go to chrome://extensions/.
  2. Find UT Southwestern Medical Center Library Toolbar in the list.
  3. Click Uninstall.

If you would like further assistance on removing the toolbar or bookmarking your favorite Library resources on your browser(s), please contact LibWebmaster@utsouthwestern.edu.