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RE: Science Online

AAAS is actually the American Association for the Advancement of
Science.

Just think we should be correct in how we refer to this organization in
our discussion.

Cathy Harbert, Manager of Library Services
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Chevy Chase MD 20815
harbertc@hhmi.org


> -----Original Message-----
> From:	Tom Williams [SMTP:twilliam@jaguar1.usouthal.edu]
> Sent:	Tuesday, March 31, 1998 2:31 AM
> To:	liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
> Subject:	Re: Science Online
> 
> Again, the ONLY recourse we, as librarians, have is not to purchase the 
> product.  If enough of us "boycott" products with excessive restrictions 
> then the publishers at some point will have to take notice.  Perhaps
> the American Academy for the Advancement of Science should change its name
> to  American Academy for the Restriction of Information Dissemination.

> 
> Thomas Williams, Director			(334) 460-6885
> Biomedical Library and Media 			(334) 460-7638(fax)
>    Production Services
> University of South Alabama
> twilliam@jaguar1.usouthal.edu
> College of Medicine
> http://southmed.usouthal.edu
> BML 326B
> Mobile, Alabama 36688-0002
> 
> On Mon, 30 Mar 1998, Jane Holmquist wrote:
> 
> > What puzzles me about the restrictive nature of access to
> > Science Online in libraries is that the journal is published
> > by the American Academy for the Advancement of Science, and
> > just when there was a chance for us librarians to make it
> > available to our users as soon as it was available (not
> > waiting that extra week or two until our paper copy arrived),
> > that window of opportunity closed!
> > 
> > Their model (requiring the IP address of each workstation)
> > may work smoothly in a one-journal, one-workstation
> > environment but it doesn't work smoothly in libraries.
> > 
> > It is an administrative nightmare to first, order and pay
> > the additional price (which is reasonable enough, I might add),	
> > and then catalog and communicate to our users which library has
> > Science Online (not to mention the hundreds or thousands of 
> > other titles), and specifically, which workstation in that library!
> > 
> > We librarians were given a very long and generous free trial
> > period for Science when it began to publish some full-text
> > articles online in 1995.  We were also encouraged to offer
> > comments, advice, and criticism via the SCIENCE feedback
> > mechanism.  Did we not do that when we had the opportunity?
> > 
> > Is it too late?
> > 
> > Jane Holmquist * Astrophysics Librarian * Princeton University
> > 
> > 
> > 



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