Original URL: ftp://ftp.lib.ncsu.edu/pub/stacks/libres/libres-v4n04-muns-generic
LIBRES: Library and Information Science Research Electronic Journal ISSN 1058-6768 December 31, 1994 Volume 4 Issue 4 Quarterly LIBRE4N4 MUNS _____________________________________________________________ Generic Network Resource Reviews by Raleigh C. Muns, MLS LC MARVEL - Library of Congress Machine Assisted Realization of the Virtual Electronic Library Access LC MARVEL by pointing your gopher client software at Internet address MARVEL.LOC.GOV, or telnet to MARVEL.LOC.GOV and log in as user MARVEL. From the beginning I must state that the Library of Congress MACHINE ASSISTED RE ALIZATION OF THE VIRTUAL ELECTRONIC LIBRARY (LC MARVEL) gopher is one of the mos t useful and useable Internet resources extant. I apologize in advance for unintentional sarcasm which may creep into this review caused by my personal attitudes toward LC's primary sponsor, the United States Congress. In summary, LC MARVEL is a gopher site which maintains information about the Library of Congress itself, as well as pointers to a huge array of wider Internet resources. The opening menu will allow searchers to: search by keyword all MARVEL menus via the MARVEL Jughead software; traverse subject organized hierarchies of menus via its "Global Electronic Library"; explore state, federal, and international information resources via the "Government Information" link. LC has explicitly chosen to focus on using ASCII text files as a lowest common denominator for presenting information. Of practical importance is that this site is one of the most robust I have ever encountered. Ignoring whatever hardware and software is being used, I have never failed to connect to LC's gopher server. For those without access to gopher client software, LC does allow connections via the Internet TELNET command. Since only 15 users throughout the world are allowed in simultaneously, such access is practically useless. Gopher menu option number one, "About LC MARVEL," found on the opening MARVEL menu, will probably be ignored by most users. It must be pointed out, however, that this is one of the best organized and presented behind-the-scenes looks on the networks of a network information server. Not only can one read about how MARVEL was developed, how it is being maintained, what's in store for the future, and who is doing what, one will also be able to look at daily reports of MARVEL gopher activity. For example, on October 31, 1994, Library of Congress Internet sites accessed MARVEL 1,365 times. Not even close behind were the University of Maryland (102 accesses), a United States Air Force node (96 times), George Washington University (93 times), and Wright State (92 times). Hourly useage reports for each day are also available indicating to no one's surprise that 2 pm is the hour in which MARVEL got used the most (617 accesses on October 31, 1994), and 4 am was the hour in which MARVEL saw the least activity (61 accesses). It is not unusual to see gopher and World Wide Web sites making their activities transparent, but MARVEL's textbook approach makes this a good site for marketers, developers, students, and the anal retentive to get a feel for how "it" is done. Information seekers simply looking for answers should select the last item on the opening menu, "Search LC MARVEL Menus." By entering simple keywords, such as "AIDS" or "Congress," MARVEL's extensive, and extensively maintained, links to other sites and resources will be immediately arrayed. I find that using MARVEL as a jumping off point for searching the rest of the Internet has been an extremely productive technique for harnessing Internet resources. Note that the vast majority of MARVEL information is actually contained elsewhere. Information about the Library of Congress itself, including events, services, employee information (including job openings), copyright resources, etc., appear to be the bulk of the files actually maintained on LC's machines. By selecting "Global Electronic Library," MARVEL users will enter a subject tree similar to many of the best such subject organization menu structures on the Internet. MARVEL's is comparable to my other favorites such as the University of Southern California's "Gopher Jewels," the University of North Carolina's "Library Without Walls," and the University of California, Santa Cruz's "Infoslug." (See Table 1 below for access information.) Browsing LC's "Global Electronic Library" is pleasant, useful, and effectively works with the limitations of gopher menu hierarchies. = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = Table 1 = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ACCESS: Gopher Jewels Gopher to CWIS.USC.EDU choose "Other gophers..." then "Gopher Jewels" ACCESS: Infoslug Gopher to SCILIBX.UCSC.EDU choose "The Library" ACCESS: NCSU's "Library Without Walls" Gopher to DEWEY.LIB.NCSU.EDU Choose "NCSU's Library Without Walls" = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = By selecting "Government Information," MARVEL users will embark in an area of gopher space better handled by government information specialists, specifically, those who commonly work with federal documents collections. LC has chosen to mirror the provenance-based Superintendent of Documents (SuDoc) scheme used by most depository libraries. What this means is that information is organized by disseminating agency, and NOT by subject. Though there is a relationship in many cases between subject and disseminating agency, it probably isn't intuitive that a coloring book about dolphins would be produced by, and thus organized under, its gopher menu tree at the Department of Justice. In fact, most naive searchers would look for the Department of Justice under the link for the Judicial Branch of government, instead of the appropriate Legislative Branch. When in doubt, use LC MARVEL's "Search LC MARVEL Menus" option and enter the specific department or agency. Be aware, however, that experts who understand the organization of government can effectively use the menu structures under "Government Information" and are likely to uncover resources that the MARVEL Jughead software will miss. LC states that the MARVEL gopher's goal "is to serve the staff of LC, as well as the U.S. Congress and constituents throughout the world." By maintaining links to resources held at other institutions, such as my own University of Missouri-St. Louis "The Library" gopher site, LC is becoming inextricably connected to outside providers of information. North American libraries, as well as others throughout the world, have become dependent on the kinds of information provided by the vast resources provided by LC. It seems a healthy development that LC should continue to become more dependent on the rest of the world. When an entity, such as LC, maintains a physical archive of United Nations documents, we must depend on its ability to organize, maintain, and allow physical access. The organization, the Library of Congress in this case, is a physical gatekeeper, and possible barrier, to obtaining information. When LC, via MARVEL, points to a United Nations information archive maintained by the UN itself, the dependency is reversed. LC in this case is a facilitator for accessing information. It is LC's librarian expertise that will be of primary importance as MARVEL, and future LC information servers, evolve. Rather than maintaining a monolith's ability to house huge numbers of tomes (too many of which are deteriorating due to acid content in the paper), LC becomes a competitor among a growing number of other facilitating agencies, such as the University of Southern California, North Carolina State, and those fascinating fighting Banana Slugs at the University of California, Santa Cruz.