3. God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; the courage to change the things I can; and the wisdom to know the difference. Reinhold Niebuhr
9. In Gov Docs Stacks: CR 1.2: R 27/4 In Reserves: CR 1.2: R 27/4/CD Online: http://purl.access.gpo.gov/GPO/LPS107906 http://www.usccr.gov/pubs/STAT2008ERFIP.pdf
10.
11. Chucho salva el dia An environmentally friendly dog that speaks Spanish (Not available online)
BRING TO CLASS Multiple formats of same title â You may hear me using both government documents and government information. Iâm really in transition, just like the collection. I think of them as government documents, but government information better captures the multiple formats.â Hearing â fiche â serial set volume â cd-rom â dvd â And I will be sure to include plenty of gratuitous cat pictures as I make a pointâŠ
Marc records â Serial Set complete? Hearings to be next LNC â Cong. Rec. Serial Set, 1970-2003 Hein: Taxation archive, updates to interface PURL workaround Iâm going to include some big picture âtipsâ along the way that I hope you find helpfulâŠ
Change is an integral part of our job. So, what kind of changes are we talking about?
Home âș Services & Space âș Government Documents at Lauinger Library âș show how to get there > Go to actual page In 2009 we changed to a different way of presenting government information on our web site. The transition in 2007 from being a separate department and service point to an integrated service point wasnât reflected on our web page, but it is now. The government information resources became integrated with the subject guides, but there is still a âgov docsâ page that describes our participation in the Federal Depository Library program. I like the fact that government information is now integrated into LibData and can be included in any number of subject guides, where relevant. This page is a living document and Iâd like to include RSS feeds or other dynamic features. I invite comments or suggestions about including additional content.
Speaking of integrating content into subject guides, I want to point out some of the places where you are most likely to find government information resources. From the libraryâs home page, click on âResources by Subjectâ, then Govt Law Politics and Intl Affairs. The link is really long so Iâd rather just give you the path, if you donât know it. There is no one single guide that is âall about government documents or government informationâ. When we migrated the guides from the previous HTML pages and the gov docs departmental web pages, I worked with staff here to include government information as a content type in LibData to more easily integrate government information into all relevant subject areas. Although the Government, Law, Politics & International Affairs section has a number of guides that will include U.S. government information, the ones Iâve listed here include resources for finding the types of government documents that come up in reference questions. The Legislation guide in particular is a new one that I would recommend when you get questions on finding bills, laws, reports, or any other general congressional publications.
GPO, the Government Printing Office, instituted some changes as far as the distribution of its documents. For congressional documents, they split up the items into different formats so that libraries that wanted to select Electronic only items could do so. Example: Enforcing Religious Freedom in Prison
If there was a location limit, the internet resources would not appearâŠ
In some sense this has already been happeningâŠif you limit to LAU Gov Docs Dept you would miss 2 of these 3 formats of this publication.
Discuss PURL workaround here! Look at MARC record for non-PURL link, if available or if GPO PURL is not working.
Back in the old days, things used to be so simpleâŠwe handed a CD-rom to a patron, they used it in a machine that would allow for installation of whatever programs was needed, they would use it, then hand it back to usâŠnot ideal but those were simpler times⊠Once the reference desks merged, however, this created problems. We had no statistics on usage, no accountability for the items, no security tape, no circulation, and with the public terminals having administrative restrictions, we no longer had the ability to download special software that was often needed to use the disks. The transition was a big project. I worked with Susan Leister, Deb Cook and Steven Jackson to find a new physical location for the cabinets, a new loan rule, a new location code, and a new Item type in Millennium. The collection, numbering over 2000 cds, dvds, and yes even floppies, needed to be reviewed and either kept or weeded, with discards added to a Needs and Offers List, and all remaining CDâs needed to have security strips applied. Lourdes Valle, Vivian Christian and Tom Oertel were key players in this process. Once they were finished, I took these remaining items to the cabinets to shelve in SuDoc order. This change increases access to the collection, adds a measure of accountability to the individual items, and now gives us some measures for circulation that have never existed before for this collection. When I created a list on Tuesday I saw that out of a total of 2,224 items, 1,397 CDâs were processed and in the new location and 827 have been added to the Needs and Offers list. Now, all incoming depository CDâs and DVDâs will be processed and housed in this way. Please let me know if you encounter any issues or considerations! HAND OUT CD ROMS
End result: folks can now check out Chucho salva el dia! Ah, sweet success.
Last year at this time I was telling you about an upcoming load of MARC records in GEORGE. That load is almost complete. What is the significance of this? Well, that means that when itâs complete we will have added over 280,000 links to full text historical publications.
Sometime over the summer one or more of you may have noticed a tiny change in LexisNexis Congressional. It was in the date range of the availability of the electronic serial set. Where it used to say 1789-1969, it now says 1789-2003. It was such a small change that I didnât see it at first. Nothing to tell me that the collection had been significantly expanded. So whatâs now available in the Serial Set that we didnât have before? SHOW EXAMPLES. What things are of interest here? Vietnam, Jonestown, Watergate, womenâs rights ANOTHER TIP: think of this collection when researchers want primary documents on the 1970s, 1980s, and forward.
795 pages, one of the most complete accounts of the events at Jonestown and includes government documents, newspaper articles, transcripts, and illustrations.
Congressional Record â last year at this time I was so excited about HeinOnline digitizing the Congressional Record, because we still had people requesting volumes from Riggs Library! Now, we have 2 choices for the Congressional Record: Hein and LexisNexis Congressional. The CR can be searched separately, in the âCongressional Record Onlyâ tab. But the key component here is the Recordâs integration into other sources. So, if you find a Legislative History that has CR citations, those are now links to the text in the Record. LN Congressional Record now an additional tab. Also, Iâve pulled down this menu to point out the various options for searching. The default is âall fields except full textâ. If you donât get any results using this, choose âall fields including full textâ.
So, once the MARC records are available for the Digital Hearings collection, we will be able to load those into the catalog as well. http://catalog.library.georgetown.edu/record=b3789620 http://catalog.library.georgetown.edu/record=b3790619 http://catalog.library.georgetown.edu/record=b3790763 http://catalog.library.georgetown.edu/record=b3791763 Click on full record, show full cataloging, subject headings, Surplus Lands, Blackfeet Indian Reservation â shows microform and e-books formats
Once this is complete, it will be much easier to find historical hearings in GEORGE. Right now we still have the Greenwood fiche of historical hearingsâŠ
Review what it already hasâŠDescribe each one a little bit? CFR FR ASP FRUS U.S. Presidential Library U.S. Statutes at Large â Public Laws
Demonstrate bookmarks and MyHein â allows for RefWorks citations
This will be of most interest to researchers who are studying legislation on taxation, economic reform, but itâs kind of mind-boggling. There is a 31 volume legislative history of President Clintonâs Healthcare reform of 1993-1994. I encourage you to browse the various titles and get an idea of the types of coverage.
FBIS info here
One thing that
1993 forward, full text of a number of congressional documents and the collection keeps growing.