Submit your story to UnMasking a Pandemic: Stories from UMB during COVID-19

Happy New Year!  Last year brought unimaginable events: a deadly pandemic, civil and racial unrest, a tumultuous election.  As we look forward to 2021 with new goals and a hope for a better year ahead it is a good time to reflect on the last year and the COVID-19 Pandemic that continues to threaten our health and lives.

Print of Coronavirus with embroidered spikesSince June, the Historical Collections Department of the Health Sciences and Human Services Library has been collecting campus reactions to the pandemic as well as personal stories and reflections of the campus community.  The project, UnMasking a Pandemic: Stories from UMB during COVID-19, has received seven submissions since its launch.  Submissions have included diary-like reflections, poetry, photographs, and original artwork.

Historical Collections continues to solicit submissions for this project.  The hope is to capture the personal and professional stories of our campus community.  As we approach almost a year of teleworking, social distancing, wearing masks, and an unusual holiday season the HSHSL would like to encourage new submissions to this project. 

Looking for inspiration? 

  • Check out the existing submissions in the UMB Digital Archive.
  • Reflect on this past holiday season:
    • Perhaps you worked in the hospitals helping care for COVID-19 patients?
    • Maybe you missed visits with family and friends to keep loved ones safe?
    • Did you create new holiday traditions safely at home?
  • Look back on the fall semester:
    • What was it like to learn and teach entirely online?
    • What was it like to graduate virtually?
    • How did midterms and finals differ for you?
  • Look forward to the spring semester:
    • What are your expectations for the spring?
    • How is what you experienced in the fall semester helping you as you move forward?
    • Perhaps you are a new student, what is it like to start a program virtually?

Questions or concerns should be addressed to Tara Wink, Historical Collections Librarian and Archivist.

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Common Holiday Spices, Flavors, and Nuts and their Traditional Medicinal Qualities

Series of botanical plates including water chestnut,  coffee, flax, juniper, and aloe.

The Health Sciences and Human Services Library Historical Collections’ strives to provide broad access to our diverse collections both in person and digitally. Materials in our collections appear as they originally were published or created and may contain offensive or inappropriate language or images and may be offensive to users. The University of Maryland, Baltimore does not endorse the views expressed in these materials. Materials should be viewed in the context in which they were created.

The holiday and winter seasons have common ingredients, usually with bold, warming flavors.  The holiday bread, cookie, and cake recipes call for spices and flavorings like nutmeg, ginger, vanilla, and clove or nuts like walnuts and almonds.  Historically however, these ingredients were prescribed for a variety of ailments in botanicals and herbals.

Like the post highlighting medicinal uses for winter fruits, this post will look at common holiday spices, flavorings, and nuts found in William Woodville’s Medical Botany and Robert Bentley’s Medicinal Plants. Both men were botanists from England and both works are found in the HSHSL’s Historical Collections.  Woodville’s volumes were published in the 1790s, while Bentley’s volumes were published nearly a decade later in 1880 and are digitized in the UMB Digital Archive. Read on to see how these comforting holiday flavors were once used for very different purposes.

Common Holiday Spices

llicium anisatum

Common name: Star-Anise or Skimmi in Japan

Botanical drawing of star anise, has leaves, flowers, short stem and large drawing of star anise fruitIllicium anisatum is a small tree that blossoms from January to April and is native to Japan.  The tree was cultivated in China and introduced in England in 1842.  The fruit, called “star-anise,” has eight or nine points forming a star shape.  The fruit is dried to sell and has a pleasant aromatic odor; the taste is a mixture of fennel and anise or black licorice.  An oil, called oil of anise or oleum badiani, is produced from the tree.

The oil was used as an expectorant, used in lozenges for coughs.  Star-anise was prescribed to help with stomach gases, to promote milk secretion in lactating mothers, to help children with colic, and as a cathartic.  Additionally, star-anise was used in medicine for cattle.  As it is used today, the oil and fruit from Illicium anisatum were also used for flavor to hide other medicines or in spirits.

Myristica fragrans

Common name: Nutmeg

Botanical drawing of nutmeg, has stem, leaves, fruit, dissection of fruit showing nutmegMyristica fragrans is a small evergreen tree that produces fruit the size of a small pear. The seed of the fruit is known as “nutmeg.”  The tree was native to Moluccas (Maluku Islands) and Indian Islands, Amboyna Island, Bouro (Portugal), New Guinea, the Philippines, Bencoolen (British East India Company), Penang Island, Singapore, Mauirtius, West Indies, and South America.  The tree was introduced to Europe in 1795. The fruit harvest occurred from September to December as well as April to June. 

Nutmeg has a strong, pleasant aroma and a warm, bitter taste.  It was used medicinally as a stimulant and for stomach issues and was used to treat mild cases of diarrhea, flatulent colic, and dyspepsia. In large doses it was found to be a narcotic. It was most used to cover the bad taste of other medicines or as a condiment. 

Caryophyllus aromaticus

Common name: Clove Tree

Botanical drawing of clove branch, showing leaves, flowers and clove spiceCaryophyllus aromaticus is a small tree native of the East Indies, Moluccas (Maluku Islands), and New Guinea.  According to Woodville, Dutch traders were rumored to have clove trees outside of their jurisdiction destroyed to hold a monopoly on the clove trade.  This confined the trees to the Island of Ternate controlled by the Dutch.  The Dutch monopoly ended in 1770 when clove and nutmeg trees were brought to the Isle of France, Bourbon, and Seickelles.

Clove is aromatic with a hot and spicey flavor.  It was traditionally preserved by immersing the clove in boiling water, fumigating it, and then exposing it to the sun to dry out.  Clove is a powerful stimulant for muscular fibres.  It was used in some cases to treat atonic gout.

 

Rosmarinus officinalis

Common name: Rosemary

Botanical drawing of rosemary with twigs, leaves, and flowersRosmarinus officinalis is a small shrub native to the Mediterranean. The shrub was also commonly found near the coast in warm, dry, hilly areas in Spain and Asia Minor and in Northern Africa, reaching to Madeira and the Canary Islands.  It flowers in April and May.  Rosemary is aromatic and has a warm, bitter taste.  The flavor and scent are strongest when the plant is fresh; both are impaired when the plant is dried.

Oleum Rosmarini or “oil of rosemary” was produced from the plant, with similar scents and tastes and was commonly used externally with other substances to stimulate the growth of hair or in lotions for its pleasant scent.  Rosemary has stimulant and carminative properties.  The plant was prescribed to stimulate or increase menstruation.  The leaves could be used as a tea and was prescribed for hypochondriacal people and dyspeptics.   Finally, rosemary was given to help with hysteria and nervous headaches.

Common Holiday Flavors

Zingiber officinale

Common name: Ginger

Botanical drawing of ginger root, with flower, and green shootsZingiber officinale is a perennial herb.  Ginger has a large underground stem, known as a rhizome. It is tough, pale yellow, covered with pale silvery-brown skin, with persistent roundish joints and numerous roots.  Ginger is native to tropical Asia and abundant in the West Indies.  It was exported to Europe sometime in the seventeenth century.

There are varieties of ginger depending on where it is grown: Jamaica, Cochin, Bengal, and Africa.  Ginger is prescribed in two forms in the British Pharmacopoeia and Pharmacopoeia of India: coated or unscraped and uncoated or scraped.  When used internally, ginger was a stimulant and used in the treatment of stomach pain.  Ginger was also prescribed for external use to dilate capillaries and improve circulation, sometimes to relieve headaches and toothaches. Ginger was also prescribed for atonic dyspepsia and as an addition to other medicines to correct stomach pain.

Vanilla planifolia

Common name: Vanilla or Baynilla (in Mexico)

Botanical drawing of vanilla plant with leaves, vanilla pod, flowersVanilla planifolia is a succulent. It is a dark green perennial climber that grows from five to six inches long.  The plant flowers in April and May and is related to orchids.  Vanilla is native to southeast Mexico, Vera Cruz, Mauritius, Bourbon, Madagascar, and Java.  It was introduced to England sometime around 1800.  The plant produces pods, which were traditionally collected before they were fully ripe, dried in the shade, and then covered in a coating of oil.

Vanilla has a strong, aromatic odor and warm, sweet taste.  It was used as an aromatic stimulant and was regarded as an aphrodisiac.  Vanilla was prescribed as a remedy for hysteria, low fevers, and impotency.  More regularly vanilla was used for its flavor in lozenges and medical mixtures. 

Common Holiday Nuts

Amygdalus communis

Botanical drawing of almond branch with nuts and pink flowersCommon name: Almond Tree

Amygdalus communis is a tree that grows to about twelve to sixteen feet tall with large pale red flowers. The tree flowers in March and April and is a native of Barbary.  It was cultivated in England in 1570.

The medicinal qualities of the Almond Tree were discussed as far back as antiquity being mentioned by both Theophrastus and Hippocrates. Almond oil was used internally as a laxative, to sooth coughs and horseness, and for kidney pains.  Externally the oil was used to relieve tension and muscle pain.  Almond emulsions were also prescribed for inflammatory disorders.  The London College prescribed the addition of Almond to gum Arabic to make it easier to use to relieve inflammation caused by colds.

Juglans regia

Common name: Common Walnut Tree

Botanical drawing of walnut branch with leaves and flowers, walnut dissected on bottom leftJuglans regia is a large tree that flowers in April and May.  The fruit of the tree ripens at the end of September.  The walnut tree is native to Persia but was cultivated in England during Woodville’s time. 

Unripe walnuts are bitter and in this form were used as a pickle and as a laxative.  The London College prescribed walnuts to kill parasitic worms. Walnuts were also used to treat mouth ulcers and sore throats.

William Woodville’s and Robert Bentley’s volumes are found in the Pharmacy Collection in the HSHSL’s Historical Collections.  This collection contains influential pharmacy and medical texts, as well as dispensatories, pharmacopoeias, botanicals, and herbals from around the world. The volumes in the collection date from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries.  Many, including Robert Bentley’s text are available through the UMB Digital Archive.  Additionally, images from Woodville’s Medical Botany were used in the Library’s 2020 Coloring Book.

Happy Holidays from Historical Collections!

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Update! HSHSL Holiday Hours

HSHSL building

The HSHSL will be closed for the Winter holidays from Thursday, December 24 – Sunday, January 3.

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A Look at Winter Fruits and their Medicinal Qualities from Select Historical Botanicals

Series of handcolored botanicals: mulberry, orange, fig, orange, and plumThe Health Sciences and Human Services Library Historical Collections’ strives to provide broad access to our diverse collections both in person and digitally. Materials in our collections appear as they originally were published or created and may contain offensive or inappropriate language or images and may be offensive to users. The University of Maryland, Baltimore does not endorse the views expressed in these materials. Materials should be viewed in the context in which they were created.

Lemons, oranges, pomegranates, these are all fruits associated with winter and the holiday season.  Today we eat them as desserts or in desserts or in cocktails.  These fruits bring a sense of freshness to the winter months. While today these fruits are important for a balanced and flavorful diet; in the 17th through the early 19th centuries, these fruits were often prescribed in botanicals for a variety of medicinal purposes.  Botanicals are a form of book published to illustrate plant species and their medicinal value. The HSHSL’s Historical Collections Department is home to a large collection of Botanicals as part of our historic Pharmacy Collection. These volumes were used by the early UMB schools to teach pharmacists and doctors the value of plants for medicinal purposes.

This post looks at two botanicals available in Historical Collections. Through William Woodville’s, Medical Botany, and Robert Bentley’s, Medicinal Plants, we can uncover early medicinal uses for winter fruits, such as citrus, pomegranate, and currants.

William Woodville (1752-1805) was a physician and botanist from England.  Medical Botany… is a four-volume set published between 1790 and 1794.  It includes 300 plant illustrations by James Sowerby.  Through the 20th Century these beautiful volumes were heavily used and referenced by physicians. 

Robert Bentley (1821-1893) was a botanist from England.  Medicinal Plants… is a four-volume set published in 1880 with Henry Trimen. Trimen (1843-1896) was also an English botanist. The set includes over three-hundred plates with plant illustrations by David Blair.  A complete set of Bentley and Trimen’s Medicinal Plants have also been digitized in the UMB Digital Archive.

Two limbs from orange trees with orange and blossomsCitrus Aurantium & Citrus Vulgaris

Common names: Orange, Bitter Orange, Seville Orange, Bigarade Orange, Sweet Orange, China Orange, Portugal Orange

Citrus Vulgaris or the bitter orange was originally grown on small trees in the Mediterranean, Spain, Madeira, India, and China. The peel of this variety of orange is aromatic and was used as a tonic or stimulant.  When added to bitters it hid the taste of other medicines.

Citrus Aurantium or the sweet orange’s original home was in Northern India and Southern China.  It was introduced to Europe by the Portuguese in the 15th century and then grown abundantly in the Mediterranean, as well as Spain, Portugal, Madeira, Azores, and China.  Orange Flower Water and Oil of Neroli were both produced by the tree.  The water was used as a nervous stimulant or flavoring agent, while the oil was used in perfumes and the preparation of liqueur.  The peel also had aromatic stimulant properties and was used for its flavor or in tonic and purgative medicines. 

Botanical drawing of lemon tree limb, with lemon and blossomsCitrus Medica

Common name: Lemon Tree

Citrus Medica flowers in the summer and is native to upper parts of Asia. It was later introduced to Greece and Italy and then to Spain, Portugal and France. Lemons were used in medicine to restrain vomiting, to prevent scurvy, reduce heart palpitations, and remedy jaundice.

Botanical drawing of a quince with limb, leaves, and flowersPyrus Cydonia 

Common name: Common Quince Tree

Pyrus Cydonia produces an apple or pear-like fruit known as a quince. The fruit is divided at the center into five cells, which contains seeds.  The flowers are large, solitary, and either pale red or white. The trees are native to Austria and were known to grow wild on the banks of the Danube River. The quince has a pleasant odor and the juice was used for medicinal purposes.  The juice was cooling, it would restrict blood flow and secretion of fluids, and was useful in cases of nausea and vomiting.   

Botanical Drawing of pomegranate, limbs, leaves, and flowersPunica Granatum

Common name: Pomegranate

Punica Granatum is a bush or small tree producing fruit the size of an orange with numerous edible seeds. Pomegranate was native to North Western India, Southern Persia, and Palestine before it was introduced to the Mediterranean countries in Europe and North Africa as well as China. The root bark and rind of the fruit were used as a remedy for diarrhea and dysentery. The bark was also used to treat tapeworm and the rind and flower was used in dyeing and tanning leather.

Botanical drawings of red and black currants with limbs, blossoms, and leavesRibes Rubrum & Ribes Nigrum

Common names: Red Currant, White Currant, or Black Currant

Ribes Rubrum or the red and white currant is a shrub that grows to five or six feet in height. The fruit was used to cool the body and help thirst. It was also prescribed as an antiseptic and used as a diuretic to relieve constipation.

Ribes Nigrum or the black currant grows on a tree of six to seven feet.  Native to Britain, the fruit was larger than the red or white currant and was used for sore throats and for its diuretic power.

The Pharmacy Collection in the HSHSL’s Historical Collections contains influential pharmacy and medical texts, as well as dispensatories, pharmacopoeias, botanicals, and herbals from around the world. The volumes date from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries.  Many, including Robert Bentley’s text are available through the UMB Digital Archive.  Additionally, images from Woodville’s Medical Botany were used in the Library’s 2020 Coloring Book.

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HSHSL Holiday Closure

HSHSL building

The library building and services will be closed for the winter holidays from Friday, December 25 through Sunday, January 3. On Thursday, December 24, the library building will closed to library users. On December 24, virtual services are available at hshsl@umaryland.edu.

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December Connective Issues Newsletter Now Available!

In this edition:

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1984 HS/HSL Cookbook Looks to Spice up your Thanksgiving and Holidays

The Health Sciences and Human Services Library Historical Collections’ strives to provide broad access to our diverse collections both in person and digitally. Materials in our collections appear as they originally were published or created and may contain offensive or inappropriate language or images and may be offensive to users. The University of Maryland, Baltimore does not endorse the views expressed in these materials. Materials should be viewed in the context in which they were created.

Title page for 1984 Health Sciences Library Cookbook

Still looking for that perfect Thanksgiving dish?  Holiday dessert?  Appetizer to try during a virtual office event?  Or perhaps you are tired of making banana or sourdough bread?  Drop that phone, cancel your GrubHub order!  The HS/HSL is here to help!  In November 1984 the staff of what was then the Health Sciences Library produced their very own Cookbook.

Organized like many professionally published cookbooks, the volume includes appetizers, soups, and salads; main courses; side dishes; and of course, plenty of desserts contributed by library staff members.  If you have in fact tried all of the internet’s sourdough bread recipes maybe it is time to try Systems and Automation Librarian, Gary Freiburger’s, “Dilly Bread.”

Recipe card for Dill Bread

Got a craving for cheesecake? The HSL’s Cookbook has that covered!  There are five cheesecake recipes available to try.  Which one will be your favorite?  Perhaps it will be Patty Hinegardner’s no-bake “Cheese Cake.”  If you try it make sure you let the current Associate Director of Resources know what you thought of her creation – that’s right Patty is still a big part of the HS/HSL team!

Recipe card for No Bake Cheese Cake

Perhaps you want to bring a bit of the tropics to your holiday table.  Again, this cookbook saves the day with two Pina Colada recipes – a pie by School of Medicine Liaison Librarian, Paula Raimondo and a cake—complete with dark rum—by Access Services staff member, Loie Heimbach!

Recipe Card for Pina Colada Cake

As the weather turns colder and the winter months arrive, maybe it’s time for a new soup recipe?  Try Mary Ann Williams’ Cream of Crab Soup.  Mary Ann, the current Research, Education & Outreach Librarian for the School of Dentistry would be thrilled to see her recipe’s used by today’s UMB campus members! 

Recipe card for Cream of Crab Soup

The HS/HSL looks forward to seeing your photographs on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter so be sure to tag us @umbhshsl.  We look forward to hearing how our recipes inspire your creativity and build new socially distanced holiday traditions with your loved ones.  Happy Thanksgiving from the HS/HSL!

Check out the complete cookbook here: http://hdl.handle.net/10713/5952.  

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HS/HSL Closed for Thanksgiving Holiday: Nov 26 – 29

Happy Thanksgiving

The HS/HSL will be closed for the Thanksgiving holiday from Thursday, November 26 – Sunday, December 29. During this time, the library building and all virtual services will be closed. We wish you a peaceful, happy, and healthy holiday.

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Remembering Dr. Burt Jacob Asper, School of Medicine Class of 1911 on Veteran’s Day

The Health Sciences and Human Services Library Historical Collections’ strives to provide broad access to our diverse collections both in person and digitally. Materials in our collections appear as they originally were published or created and may contain offensive or inappropriate language or images and may be offensive to users. The University of Maryland, Baltimore does not endorse the views expressed in these materials. Materials should be viewed in the context in which they were created.

Yearbook photograph of man in graduate cap and gown.

Photograph and superlatives for Dr. Burt J. Asper, University of Maryland, School of Medicine, Class of 1911. Image from the 1911 Terra Mariae Yearbook.

Burt Jacob Asper was born to Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Asper of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania on August 30, 1888. He graduated from University of Maryland, School of Medicine in 1911, earning the Gold Medal, given to the student with the highest grade. His brother, Dr. Guy Asper, was also a graduate of the School of Medicine in 1903. 

Newspaper statistics for Sheppard-Pratt Baeball Game

Scorecard for Sheppard-Pratt vs. Belair Club Baseball Game in June 1913. The Baseball games were partially used as entertainment for the patients at the Sheppard-Pratt Hospital.

Dr. Asper began his professional career as an assistant physician at the City Detention Hospital of Baltimore, where he remained for a year before accepting a position at Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital. While at Sheppard-Pratt Hospital, Dr. Asper, earned some local fame as an outfielder for the hospital baseball team. On June 1, 1916, He was appointed as Assistant Physician and Pathologist at Springfield State Hospital in Sykesville, Maryland, where he also lectured on general medicine and contagious diseases at the Hospital’s Training School for Nurses. Dr. Asper married Miss Lee Christey of Baltimore, Maryland in October 1917.

Soon after the United States joined World War I in 1917, Dr. Asper enlisted into the United States Navy. He served as First Lieutenant and Assistant Surgeon on the USS Cyclops, which was commissioned May 1, 1917 as a collier (a ship that carries coal to fuel other ships). At the time, the Cyclops was one of the largest fuel ships in the world and spent most of the war along the Eastern Coast of the United States.

On February 16, 1918, the ship left the East Coast for Brazil to help fuel British ships. After completing this mission, the Cyclops began sailing with a load of manganese from Rio de Janeiro. The ship stopped at Salvador before leaving for its final port of Baltimore on February 20, 1918. Due to a cracked cylinder in the engine, an unexpected stop was made in Barbados, where the already overloaded ship took on more coal and water. Nothing could be done to fix the damaged engine in Barbados, so the Cyclops set sail for Baltimore on March 4, 1918. Sometime after leaving Barbados, the Cyclops sank in the Bermuda Triangle leaving no trace of the ship or the 309 passengers on board. 

Black and White photograph of a ship on the water

The USS Cyclops in October 1911. Image from Naval History and Heritage Command National Museum of the U.S. Navy.

To this day, the ship’s final resting spot has not been found and the cause of the Cyclops disappearance remains a mystery. Throughout history there have been several theories (some realistic others fanciful) about the sinking of the ship.  These theories include: 1) an enemy boat (presumably a German U-Boat) sank the ship; 2) a storm capsized the vulnerable boat, which was overloaded with Manganese, water, and coal and weakened by a damaged engine; 3) a bomb was planted on board the boat during the unexpected stop in Barbados; 4) a mutiny occurred on board due to unrest with the ship’s tempestuous commander, George Worley; or 5) Worley, who was born in Germany, was a traitor and colluded with the Germans, to steal the ship for his homeland.

Description of the Burt J. Asper Memorial Fund

The Burt J. Asper Memorial Fund was created by the Alumni Association of the School of Medicine in October 1922. Ads appeared for several years in the Bulletin of the University of Maryland School of Medicine asking alumni to donate to the fund.

The U.S. Navy looked for the Cyclops for 100 days after it failed to reach Baltimore on March 13, 1918.  It was officially deemed lost on June 1, 1918 by Assistant Secretary of Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt. At that time, all 309 passengers, including Dr. Burt J. Asper, were pronounced dead. Dr. Asper became the first man from Chambersburg, Pennsylvania to die during World War I; he was only 28 years old.

Dr. Asper’s legacy continues to live on in the HS/HSL. In October 1922, a memorial fund was set up by his classmates and colleagues to support the library.  The fund was created to purchase books and periodicals to help the library grow its collection.  Today the fund is used to support the Historical Collections and continues to honor an American and UMB hero.

The HS/HSL today and always thanks our UMB Veterans for their service.

Historical Collections References:

Newspaper References:

  • Associated Press. (15 Apr. 1918). “Big U.S. Naval Collier Cyclops is Lost at Sea: No Trace Found of 293 Souls on Board Vessel Long Overdue.” Harrisburg Telegraph. Harrisburg, PA: 3. Retrieved from: https://newscomwc.newspapers.com/image/171939585 Downloaded.
  • “Keeps up Winning Streak.” (20 Jun 1913). The Sun. Baltimore:8. Retrieved from ProQuest Historical Newspapers.
  • “Men from Section on Lost U.S. Navy Collier.” (15 Apr. 1918). Carlisle Evening Herald. Carlisle, PA:1. Retrieved from: https://newscomwc.newspapers.com/image/269925425.
  • “Mystery Envelops the Disappearance of a U.S. Collier and 283 Men: A Chambersburg Boy, Lieutenant Asper, on the Missing Steamer – Various Reasons Assigned by Experts to Determine its Fate.” (18 Apr. 1918). People’s Register. Chambersburg, PA: 1, 5. Retrieved from: https://newscomwc.newspapers.com/image/551832197.
  • “No Diplomas at Nurses’ School.” (02 Jul. 1919). The Sun. Baltimore:14. Retrieved from: ProQuest Historical Newspapers.

Web References:

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Tell Us About Your Data and Bioinformation Needs!

researchers working with data

The newly formed Center for Data and Bioinformation Services (CDABS) at the Health Sciences & Human Services Library (HS/HSL) wants to hear from you!

Take our survey to help us understand more about your needs for data and bioinformation related resources and services. The responses from this survey will be carefully reviewed to help CDABS prioritize our programming for the coming year.

We are looking for feedback from the entire UMB community (faculty, students, and staff in all schools and departments). If you work with research data in any capacity, as a novice or as an expert and everything in between, we hope to hear from you!

The survey will remain open until November 6, 2020.  You may access the survey at: https://is.gd/dataneeds.

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Amy Yarnell, Data Services Librarian, and Jean-Paul Courneya, Bioinformationist at data@hshsl.umaryland.edu.

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