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East Asia Library Blog

东亚图书馆博客


July 9, 2009

EAL Trial Databases

Filed under: Chinese collection, Electronic resources — Charles Fosselman @ 10:25 am

East Asia Library has access to trial use of the following databases from Airiti:

1. Taiwan Electronic Periodical Services (TEPS) : http://www.airiti.com/teps
2. Chinese Electronic Periodical Services (CEPS) http://www.airiti.com/ceps
3. National Palace Museum Online (NPM Online) http://www.airiti.com/npmoln

Airiti’s Taiwan Electronic Periodical Services (TEPS) and Chinese Electronic Periodical Services (CEPS) databases provide direct access to more than 2,500 full-text Chinese-language journals.  The Taiwan Electronic Periodical Services covers 81,000 articles published in leading Taiwanese academic journals, and the Chinese Electronic Periodical Services includes 338,000 full-text articles from journals published in China and in Taiwan.  Spanning subject areas including medicine and life sciences, humanities, social sciences, natural sciences and applied sciences, each service is updated daily with new academic journal content and includes archived issues dating to 1991. National Palace Museum (NPM) Online contains descriptions of painting, calligraphy, ceramics, jade, bronze, Buddhist antiques, and other rarities, as well as their relevance to Chinese art history.

Currently these links will only work on Stanford IP address computers. Please give them a try and send feedback to Charles Fosselman (cfosselm [at] stanford.edu)

July 2, 2009

EAL mezzanine shift

Filed under: Chinese collection, Collections, Japanese collection — Charles Fosselman @ 10:14 am

In order to relieve the congestion of the collections in the EAL
mezzanine stacks, a project to shift the Chinese and Japanese LC
collections within the mezzanine will begin on July 9, 2009 and is
expected to last for one month. During this time, all access to the
collections and circulation will be as normal, but patrons may be
inconvenienced if the particular materials they are searching for are
being moved at that time. In case of problems accessing materials,
please contact EAL staff for assistance.