The Fall 2008 issue of The Library Explorer, the newsletter of the LSUSD Library, is now available at
http://www.lsusd.lsuhsc.edu/libr/Newsletters/Fall08_news/Fall08_news_p1.htm
This issue, our first since returning from Baton Rouge, includes an update on library services, information about Embase (an alternative to MEDLINE for searching the biomedical literature), accessing online journals, recent acquisitions, faculty publications, and more.
If you prefer to print the newsletter, a pdf version is available at
http://www.lsusd.lsuhsc.edu/libr/Newsletters/Fall08_news/08_fall.pdf.
Links to both the html and pdf versions can be found on the library home page:
http://www.lsusd.lsuhsc.edu/libr/
NIH has announced the availability of a Web-based tutorial related to the “Responsibility of Applicants for Promoting Objectivity in Research for which PHS Funding is Sought.”
In its release notice, NIH states, “As part of NIH’s continuing educational efforts to improve and enhance compliance with Financial Conflict of Interest (FCOI) requirements, we developed a Web-based tutorial which reviews the requirements of and the responsibilities for compliance with these Federal FCOI regulations. The tutorial is designed for use by Institutional officials responsible for managing NIH funded grants, cooperative agreements and/or contracts and for individuals who are responsible for the design, conduct or reporting of NIH-supported research.
We hope this tutorial proves to be a useful educational tool and strongly encourage all NIH-funded investigators to take it.”
The tutorial may be accessed on the Office of Extramural Research, Conflict of Interest Page.
LINK: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/policy/coi/tutorial/fcoi.htm
Presenting a new event open to all LSUHSC-NO Faculty, Residents, Fellows and Doctoral Students
Developing Educational Scholarship from Everyday Work
Sheila W. Chauvin, M.Ed., Ph.D.
Jack R. Scott, Ed.D., M.P.H.
Office of Medical Education Research and Development, School of Medicine, Louisiana State University Health Science Center
DATE: Thursday, August 28, 2008
TIME: 2:00 p.m. ?óÔé¼ÔÇ£ 5:00 p.m.
LOCATION: ENT Conference Room (Fifth Floor, Clinical Sciences Research Building, 533 Bolivar)
TO REGISTER: Registration is not required, but appreciated to help with planning.
Please call or email the OMERAD (568-2140, omerad@lsuhsc.edu).
WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
Opportunities for educational research arise from everyday teaching and education activities. For example, does one teaching method produce better learning outcomes than another? Is there relationship between teamwork training and effective teamwork practice in the patient care setting? Does replacing lectures with small group teaching alter learner performance on high stakes, standardized knowledge tests? Similarly, many of the creative and original educational programs and materials that faculty members create in their teaching have promise for peer-reviewed publication and contribution to the field. In this workshop, participants will explore various forms of educational research and scholarship and apply these to their own situation. Individuals will participate in activities to identify a potential project and use a systematic approach to design a plan/protocol for pursuing their educational research/scholarship interest. Participants will also explore publication/dissemination venues they might target for contributing the results of their work to the field. Light refreshments will be served.
Please share this flyer with colleagues.
We hope to see you on August 28th and bring a colleague!
An expanded program of faculty development sessions offered through the OMERAD and the Academy will be disseminated shortly. In the meantime, please contact the OMERAD for more information by calling 568-2140 or sending an email to omerad@lsuhsc.edu.
Are you on Facebook? Now so are the LSUHSC Libraries become a Fan of the Isché Library and the Dental Library today!
If EBSCOhost is running slow for you, consider switching from IE to Firefox. Firefox is a free web browser and offers an alternative to Internet Explorer. EBSCOhost has some known issues with IE that are being worked on. These issues do not exist in Firefox.
The LSUHSC New Orleans Libraries have launched a new Links page using the social bookmarking website, Delicious. The new page features a tag cloud for easy access to the items tagged by LSUHSC Librarians.
The Literacy Alliance of New Orleans, along with the Young Leadership Council, has sponsored a community reading program since Spring 2004. They have recently announced this year’s book, City of Refuge by Tom Piazza. The program period begins September 15th and should end mid-November.

One Book One NOLA 2008
New directions on configuring a mobile device with ActiveSync are now available on the LSUHSC Intranet:
https://intranet.lsuhsc.edu/postmaster/supporters/e2k3/ActiveSyncDevice.htm
PayperPrint has been restored campus-wide.
PayperPrint is offline campus wide. Technicians are working to bring it back online.
The internal Isché Library stairwell has reopened. Get a little exercise and take the stairs.
Planning to go to Satchmo Summerfest this weekend? “Satchmo” is one of the nicknames of Louis Armstrong, who is widely recognized as a founding father of jazz. This Friday through Sunday a free festival in the French Quarter celebrates Satchmo’s legacy.
Here’s some interesting health sciences related facts about Louis Armstrong:
A lip muscle injury sometimes seen in brass players is rupture of the orbicularis oris or “satchmo syndrome” (from Maladies in Musicians, Southern Medical Journal)
SATCHMO also stands for “sequence alignment and tree construction using hidden Markov models”, an algorithm used in protein sequencing (see this Bioinformatics article for more)
Armstrong was greatly concerned with his health and bodily functions, frequently using laxatives as a form of weight control. He published a book of diet plans called Lose Weight the Satchmo Way, which you can read in the 1999 anthology The Louis Armstrong Companion: Eight Decades of Commentary (link removed) by Joshua Berrett.
Louis Armstong was also a celebrity endorser of herbal laxatives. Check out HumidCity.com for a pictures of Satchmo shilling for one of his favorites: Swiss Kriss (link removed).
Better luck next time!
The RefWorks class next Wednesday, Aug. 6th from 3-4pm is now full. We will have another class on this awesome bibliographic management solution sometime in late September/early October.
In the meantime, there are online instruction opportunities available.
Remember the John P. Isché Library will be closed this Saturday, July 26th for A/C duct work related to the Library Commons Construction. The Library will reopen at 1:30 on Sunday, July 27th.
Much like the John P. Isché Library which is under renovation for a Library Commons, the Tulane Health Sciences Center Rudolph Matas Library is also under construction. The main entrance to Matas Library is currently closed, but access may still be gained through room M209 on the mezzanine. This entrance is available during the regular hours for the Tulane Library.