[CODE4LIB] Job: Decimal Lab Digital Humanities Archivist at University of Ontario Institute of Technology

2014-12-04 Thread jobs
Decimal Lab Digital Humanities Archivist
University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Oshawa

Decimal Lab at UOIT is seeking a researcher at the PhD candidate level to
contribute to the development of a Digital Humanities archive called The
Fabric of Digital Life, which has met its first phase of development. The
Fabric of Digital Life archive has been established to collect, track, and
archive the emergence of technological invention through multiple discourses
in the area of wearable computers, augmented reality interfaces, and
implantable technology. The researcher will work with lab members, undergrad
researchers, volunteers, and the principal investigator to further develop the
database and the metadata ontology of the archive in keeping with Digital
Humanities as a disciplinary, academic field. The researcher will be willing
and able to contribute to scholarly writing and publications accompanying the
archive project, as well as facilitate public access to the Fabric of Digital
Life in keeping with the discipline.

  
Qualifications:

  
Essential Qualifications:

  * Be enrolled as a PhD candidate or have a PhD
  * Masters degree in Archival Studies or Library & Information Science with a 
specialty in archives or libraries
  * Experience applying the theory and practice of archival science
  * Experience in using database management software, such as digital 
humanities database Dspace, Omeka or Collective Access
  * Interest in some of the relevant content fields such as science fiction 
film and prose, technology emergence journalism, new media invention 
sensationalism and circulation, participatory media culture, film culture, or 
superhero print comics.
  * Excellent oral and written communication skills
  * An ability to work independently in a number of tasks
  * A passion for research;
Desired Qualifications:

  * Interest in visual design for user interfaces in the context of online 
museum databases, libraries or other research collections.
  * Video editing experience
  * Ability to manage continuously changing priorities;
  * Strong organizational skills and an excellent ability to prioritize and 
multitask;
  * Supervisory experience, preferably in a technical or professional office 
setting
  * A commitment to consistency and accuracy.



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[CODE4LIB] Job: Journal Content Specialist - Data Wrangler at European Bioinformatics Institute

2014-12-04 Thread jobs
Journal Content Specialist - Data Wrangler
European Bioinformatics Institute
Cambridge



Location:EMBL-EBI, Hinxton, near Cambridge, UK

Staff Category: Staff Member

Contract Duration: 3 years

Grading: 6

Closing Date: 11 January 2015, at midnight Central European Time

Reference Number: EBI_00460

  
Job Description

  
We are looking to recruit a content specialist - or data wrangler - to join
the Literature Services Team at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-
EBI) located on the Wellcome Trust Genome Campus near Cambridge in the UK.

  
The Literature Services Team leads the development and maintenance of Europe
PMC, an open access repository of over 3 million full text biomedical research
articles, supplemented with around 30 million abstracts. We enrich this
content with citation counts, links to databases, links to publishers and
institutional repositories, ORCIDs, and text mining. The development of Europe
PMC is led by EMBL-EBI, partnered with the British Library, and the University
of Manchester. It is funded by 26 funders of biological and biomedical
research in Europe, led by the Wellcome Trust.

  
We have an opportunity for an experienced content specialist - or data
wrangler - to join our team. You will be responsible for managing the formats
and quality of data from a variety of sources, such as PubMed, PMC, CrossRef,
ORCID, scientists, publishers, life science databases and other content
providers. This will require a combination of technical know-how,
collaboration with content providers both within and outside EMBL-EBI, and an
interest in research communications and e-Scholarship in general. We are
passionate about building an open literature integrated with open data, hence
we need a person with a combination of some technical skills and domain
knowledge. Attention to detail, coupled with a pragmatic approach to the
management to large quantities of data will be essential. The position offers
a unique opportunity to work on a high-profile public resource in an exciting
and growing area in the public domain, and embedded in the life sciences
community.

  
  
PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITIES

  
• Content development and management

• Manage a variety of content input/output streams from e.g. PubMed, PMC full
text, CrossRef, ORCID, life science databases

• Assist content providers with content formatting and uploading

• Provide authoritative advice on content/data to software developers in the
team

• Troubleshoot and help resolve data processing pipelines and content display
issues

• Contribute expertise and ideas to development plans

• Contribute content to the Europe PMC website, as appropriate.

  
  
EMBL-EBI is part of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL). We are a
world-leading bioinformatics centre providing biological data to the
scientific community with expertise in data storage, analysis and
representation. We provide a dynamic, international working environment and
have close ties with both the University of Cambridge and the Wellcome Trust
Sanger Institute. EMBL-EBI staff enjoy many benefits including excellent
sports facilities, a free shuttle bus to Cambridge and other nearby centres,
an active sports and social club and an attractive working environment set in
55 acres of parkland.

  
  
  
Qualifications and Experience

• Knowledge of information of XML mark-up standards such as
JATS

• Experience with some or all of the following: XML, XSLT, DTDs, XML parsing,
HTML, scripting, OAI-PMH, MARC, and related technologies

• Broad familiarity with authoring, editorial and publishing software and
resources such as Microsoft Office, Endnote, manuscript submission platforms

• Broad familiarity with current trends and developments in the area of
research communications

• This position may in particular suit someone with a background in journal
publishing, database curation, or information science, or applicants with a
scientific background wishing to change direction, yet remain close to science

• Team player, good communicator, welcomes working in an international
environment.

  
Application Instructions

Please apply online through www.embl.org/jobs

  
Additional Information

EMBL is an inclusive, equal opportunity employer offering attractive
conditions and benefits appropriate to an international research organisation.

  
Please note that appointments on fixed term contracts can be renewed,
depending on circumstances at the time of the review.



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Re: [CODE4LIB] Whatever Happened to the Northeast Code4Lib?

2014-12-04 Thread Andromeda Yelton
Greater Bostonian here, and I've had the same question myself. I don't have
the bandwidth to take point on organizing a thing but I'd love to do some
minion duty. --ay

On Mon, Dec 1, 2014 at 10:18 AM, Clapp, Sharon B. (Library)  wrote:

> I'm interested in reviving the Northeast C4L, as well.
> Sharon Clapp
> Digital Resources Librarian
> CCSU – Elihu Burritt Library
> 860-832-2059
> scl...@ccsu.edu
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of
> Leah Root
> Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2014 9:02 AM
> To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
> Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Whatever Happened to the Northeast Code4Lib?
>
> Include me as well, please.
>
> Leah M Root, Library Publishing/Web Services Developer SUNY Geneseo
>
> On Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 8:59 AM, Parker O'Mara 
> wrote:
>
> > Include me as interested. --Parker
> >
> > Parker O'Mara, Systems Librarian, SUNY Plattsburgh, (518) 564-5196
> >
> >
> > On 11/25/2014 11:44 AM, Maura Carbone wrote:
> >
> >> Count me in as well!
> >> -Maura
> >>
> >> On Tue, Nov 25, 2014 at 11:39 AM, David Mayo  wrote:
> >>
> >>> I'm also definitely interested - I've been looking with a certain
> >>> amount of jealousy at the various Code4Libs that are out of my
> >>> range.
> >>>
> >>> - Dave Mayo
> >>>Software Engineer
> >>>Harvard University -> HUIT -> Library Technology Services
> >>>
> >>> On Tue, Nov 25, 2014 at 9:03 AM, Joseph Montibello <
> >>> joseph.montibe...@dartmouth.edu> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>  Hi,
> 
>  Yale hosted a C4L New England event a couple of years back (
>  http://wiki.code4lib.org/NECode4lib_2012_Home). I was on the
>  planning committee - it was fun and I know I learned a lot. It was
>  good to have a local event that folks could go to.
> 
>  The nice thing is that for an event like this to happen, we only
>  need a few people willing to work on it, and a little luck in
>  finding an institution to back it. (And of course a two-day event
>  like the one we had at Yale is by no means the right/best/only
>  format - there are lots of other ways that Code4Lib could take
>  shape in New England / the northeast.)
> 
>  Joe Montibello, MLIS
>  Library Systems Manager
>  Dartmouth College
>  603.646.9394
>  joseph.montibe...@dartmouth.edu  edu>
> 
> 
> 
>  On Nov 24, 2014, at 3:39 PM, Abigail   mailto:
>  abigaildiscov...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> 
>  Hi Matt,
> 
>  Thanks for posting - I'm new-ish to Code4Lib, and in Western MA.
>  Would be excited to see more NE activity.
> 
>  Abigail
>  Systems Librarian
>  Hampshire College
> 
> 
>  On Sat, Nov 22, 2014 at 3:03 PM, Christina Marie Harlow <
>  cmh2...@columbia.edu> wrote:
> 
>  Hi Matt-
> 
>  We have stuff going in Code4LibNYC, but I'd be happy to help get
>  something going on in the Northeast.
> 
>  Thanks!
>  Christina
> 
>  On Sat, Nov 22, 2014 at 2:40 PM, Matthew Sherman <
>  matt.r.sher...@gmail.com 
> 
>  wrote:
> 
>  While riffing on an old DC comics title the subject line is my
> question.
>  I've been working in Connecticut for a little over a year now and I
>  have heard of nothing going on with Code4Lib in this part of the
>  US.  I find this sad since I see all sorts of activity in a variety
>  of other spots, particularly in my old beloved midwest stomping
>  grounds.  So I was wondering if anyone knows why the Code4Libbers
>  in the northeast have been so quiet?  Is the communication being
>  done in some back channel or are there not many of us out in this
>  part of the US?  I am just curious as I would love to touch base,
>  collaborate, and learn from other folks in the community.
> 
>  Matt Sherman
> 
> 
> 
> 
>  --
>  Christina Harlow
> 
>  Metadata Specialist
>  Columbia University Libraries
> 
>  cmh2...@columbia.edu
>  http://www.christinaharlow.com/
>  @cm_harlow
>  +1 212 854 8457
>  102 Butler Library, MC 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>  --
> 
>  Abigail Baines
>  Systems & Discovery Librarian
>  Harold F. Johnson Library
>  Hampshire College
> 
>  phone: 413-559-5766
>  email: abai...@hampshire.edu
>    - - abigaildiscov...@gmail.com
>  web: library.hampshire.edu
>  blog: theharold.hampshire.edu
> 
> 
> >>
> >>
> > --
> >
>
>
>
> --
> Leah M Root
> Library Publishing/Web Services Developer Milne Library, SUNY Geneseo <
> http://www.geneseo.edu/>
> 1 College Circle, Geneseo, NY 14454
> 585-245-6061 | cell 585-802-4

[CODE4LIB] Call for Participation: LITA UX IG Meeting at ALA MW 2015

2014-12-04 Thread Kim, Bohyun
Call for Participation: LITA UX IG Meeting at ALA MW 2015

The LITA User Experience IG seeks 2-3 short presentations (10-15 minutes) on UX 
and Web usability for the upcoming 2015 ALA Midwinter Conference. This will be 
a physical meeting, and so the physical attendance for the ALA Midwinter is 
required to present at this meeting.

The LITA UX IG is also seeking the suggestions for discussion topics, things 
you have been working on, plan to work, or want to work on in terms of 
UX/Usability. All suggestions and presentation topics are welcome and will be 
given consideration for presentation and discussion.

Please submit your topic below in the comments section in this CFP post in ALA 
Connect (http://connect.ala.org/node/231586). You may also e-mail us 
off-the-list.

Meeting Details

Title: LITA User Experience IG Meeting
Date & Time: Sunday, February 1, 2015 - 10:30am to 11:30am
Location: McCormick Place West W176b

Thanks!

Bohyun Kim, LITA UX IG chair 
b...@hshsl.umaryland.edu
Rachel Clark, LITA UX IG vice-chair 
rachael.cl...@wayne.edu
- See more at: http://connect.ala.org/node/231586#sthash.l3BnDMTA.dpuf


Re: [CODE4LIB] NEWS RELEASE: The Fedora 4 Production Release is Now Available‹Not Your Dad¹s Fedora

2014-12-04 Thread Notess, Mark
If you want a more readable version of this announcement than at least my
Outlook displays after the ascii-fication perpetrated by this venerable
listserv, see

http://duraspace.org/articles/2394


Congratulations to everyone who contributed!

Mark
--
Mark Notess
Head, User Experience and Digital Media Services
Library Technologies
Indiana University Bloomington Libraries
+1.812.856.0494
mnot...@iu.edu 





On 12/4/14, 9:40 AM, "Carol Minton Morris" 
wrote:

>NOW AVAILABLE: Fedora 4 Production Release‹Not Your Dad¹s Fedora
>Groundbreaking new capabilities make Fedora 4 the repository platform of
>choice for right now and into the future.Winchester, MA  The
>international Fedora repository community and DuraSpace are very pleased
>to announce the production release of Fedora 4. This significant release
>signals the effectiveness of an international and complex community
>source project in delivering a modern repository platform with features
>that meet or exceed current use cases in the management of institutional
>digital assets. Fedora 4 features include vast improvements in
>scalability, linked data capabilities, research data support, modularity,
>ease of use and more.Fedora 4 features were collaboratively chosen and
>developed by a virtual team of developers and stakeholders from around
>the globe. With DuraSpace support this committed team has ensured that
>Fedora Repository software will meet the emerging needs of the academic
>research community now and for the next decade.€ DOWNLOAD Fedora 4:
>https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/FF/Downloads€ RELEASE NOTES:
>https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/FF/Fedora+4.0.0+Release+Notes€
>DOCUMENTATION: 
>https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/FEDORA40/Fedora+4.0+Documentation€
>VIDEO: http://youtu.be/Mg_QFDAspoE
>Community KudosRobin Ruggaber, Chair of the Fedora Steering Group and
>Library Chief Technology Officer at the University of Virginia commented
>on Fedora¹s achievements: ³The success of the Fedora community today is
>rooted in the way it operates. The community members govern, fund, shape
>and produce the solution to meet global repositories¹ needs and
>performance requirements. The development is based on what product owners
>need and is managed so that everyone in the community can contribute
>without individually exhausting human or financial resources. We are
>maximizing the power of distributed development and ownership and are
>rewarded with a sustainable, low risk, moderate cost solution.²
>Stefano Cossu, Director of Application Services, Collections at The Art
>Institute of Chicago offered his reasons for adopting Fedora 4: ³We have
>searched far and wide for a system that could store our large and diverse
>collection of art objects and their related assets, integrate in a
>complex architecture of legacy applications and data sources, and make
>our digital resources available in a wide variety of ways.
>We have adopted Fedora 4 very early for its scalability and flexibility
>in all its aspects, its adhesion to solid standards, the project's
>long-sighted goals and the extremely talented and motivated community
>around it.²
>Fedora 4 support for linked data‹what it means for youThe broad concept
>of linked data is the idea that the semantic web can connect everything.
>Fedora 4 makes that concept real.
>With built-in linked data support Fedora 4 offers the ability to develop
>discovery tools in compliance with the W3C Linked Data Platform
>specification. The long-held linked data promise of broad and deeply
>faceted discovery on the open web is based on the concept that
>information can be exchanged using the resource description framework
>(RDF) as a standard model. The ability to share data openly and take
>advantage of the semantic web means that content is not ³inside a silo²
>that can only be discovered and re-used if repository software adheres to
>standardization and interoperability. With Fedora 4 the ³Web is a
>repository² providing new kinds of digital collections and data sources
>for services and applications.
>Scalability‹how big is bigAs larger data sets, larger files, research
>data and multimedia use cases have emerged in the community Fedora 4 is
>set to meet the challenge of improved scalability. Fedora 4 repositories
>can manage millions and millions of digital files along with extremely
>large files of any type running on top of back-end storage systems. This
>means that petabytes of storage are available to you because Fedora can
>potentially operate on top of any storage system via a pluggable,
>expandable connector framework.
>Flexibility and extensibility‹plugging into what worksThe strength of
>Fedora repository software lies in it¹s native flexibility and
>extensibility.  Fedora 4 architecture builds on a lightweight core model
>with multiple, pluggable components and a standard set of robust APIs.
>SecurityFedora 4 provides a pluggable, extensible security framework
>capable of supporting a variety of authorization systems

[CODE4LIB] NEWS RELEASE: The Fedora 4 Production Release is Now Available—Not Your Dad’s Fedora

2014-12-04 Thread Carol Minton Morris
NOW AVAILABLE: Fedora 4 Production Release—Not Your Dad’s Fedora Groundbreaking 
new capabilities make Fedora 4 the repository platform of choice for right now 
and into the future.Winchester, MA  The international Fedora repository 
community and DuraSpace are very pleased to announce the production release of 
Fedora 4. This significant release signals the effectiveness of an 
international and complex community source project in delivering a modern 
repository platform with features that meet or exceed current use cases in the 
management of institutional digital assets. Fedora 4 features include vast 
improvements in scalability, linked data capabilities, research data support, 
modularity, ease of use and more.Fedora 4 features were collaboratively chosen 
and developed by a virtual team of developers and stakeholders from around the 
globe. With DuraSpace support this committed team has ensured that Fedora 
Repository software will meet the emerging needs of the academic research 
community now and for the next decade.• DOWNLOAD Fedora 4: 
https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/FF/Downloads• RELEASE NOTES: 
https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/FF/Fedora+4.0.0+Release+Notes• 
DOCUMENTATION: 
https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/FEDORA40/Fedora+4.0+Documentation• VIDEO: 
http://youtu.be/Mg_QFDAspoE
Community KudosRobin Ruggaber, Chair of the Fedora Steering Group and Library 
Chief Technology Officer at the University of Virginia commented on Fedora’s 
achievements: “The success of the Fedora community today is rooted in the way 
it operates. The community members govern, fund, shape and produce the solution 
to meet global repositories’ needs and performance requirements. The 
development is based on what product owners need and is managed so that 
everyone in the community can contribute without individually exhausting human 
or financial resources. We are maximizing the power of distributed development 
and ownership and are rewarded with a sustainable, low risk, moderate cost 
solution.”
Stefano Cossu, Director of Application Services, Collections at The Art 
Institute of Chicago offered his reasons for adopting Fedora 4: “We have 
searched far and wide for a system that could store our large and diverse 
collection of art objects and their related assets, integrate in a complex 
architecture of legacy applications and data sources, and make our digital 
resources available in a wide variety of ways. 
We have adopted Fedora 4 very early for its scalability and flexibility in all 
its aspects, its adhesion to solid standards, the project's long-sighted goals 
and the extremely talented and motivated community around it.”
Fedora 4 support for linked data—what it means for youThe broad concept of 
linked data is the idea that the semantic web can connect everything. Fedora 4 
makes that concept real.
With built-in linked data support Fedora 4 offers the ability to develop 
discovery tools in compliance with the W3C Linked Data Platform specification. 
The long-held linked data promise of broad and deeply faceted discovery on the 
open web is based on the concept that information can be exchanged using the 
resource description framework (RDF) as a standard model. The ability to share 
data openly and take advantage of the semantic web means that content is not 
“inside a silo” that can only be discovered and re-used if repository software 
adheres to standardization and interoperability. With Fedora 4 the “Web is a 
repository” providing new kinds of digital collections and data sources for 
services and applications. 
Scalability—how big is bigAs larger data sets, larger files, research data and 
multimedia use cases have emerged in the community Fedora 4 is set to meet the 
challenge of improved scalability. Fedora 4 repositories can manage millions 
and millions of digital files along with extremely large files of any type 
running on top of back-end storage systems. This means that petabytes of 
storage are available to you because Fedora can potentially operate on top of 
any storage system via a pluggable, expandable connector framework.
Flexibility and extensibility—plugging into what worksThe strength of Fedora 
repository software lies in it’s native flexibility and extensibility.  Fedora 
4 architecture builds on a lightweight core model with multiple, pluggable 
components and a standard set of robust APIs.
SecurityFedora 4 provides a pluggable, extensible security framework capable of 
supporting a variety of authorization systems. Two initial systems have been 
implemented—role-based authorization and XACML. A third, based on the emerging 
W3C Web Access Control standard, is currently being planned. By decoupling 
security from the repository core, Fedora 4 supports existing authorization 
standards rather than maintaining a custom security framework.
ClusteringClustering connects multiple Fedora 4 nodes in a network providing 
horizontal repository scaling for high-availability use cases. By con

[CODE4LIB] Job: Metadata Librarian at College of Charleston

2014-12-04 Thread jobs
Metadata Librarian
College of Charleston
Charleston

**Metadata Librarian**  
  
The College of Charleston Libraries seek a metadata librarian, a faculty
member in the Technical Services Department, to work in a team based
environment to coordinate the creation, maintenance, and enrichment of
metadata representing the college's physical and digital
collections. The Metadata Librarian will be responsible for
original cataloging of materials in multiple formats (textual, media, and
digital). Reporting to the Head of Cataloging, the Metadata
Librarian will work with colleagues in the Technical Services Department,
subject specialists, and digital library developers to define departmental
strategies for MARC and non-MARC metadata creation. He/She
will play a critical role in harmonizing the College's descriptive metadata
practices to maximize discovery.

  
This is a full time faculty position starting July 1, 2015.
As members of the College's tenure track faculty, librarians are expected to
contribute significantly to the profession.

  
Required qualifications:

  

  *  Master's degree from an ALA accredited MLIS or MLS program
  *  Experience in professional metadata creation in an academic or research 
library or equivalent professional venue (e.g. museum, grant project, 
historical society).
  *  Knowledge of current standards, such as AACR2, RDA, LC classifications, 
LCSH, DACS, etc.
  *  Knowledge of XML-based standards (e.g. Dublin Core, EAD, MODS, etc.)
  *  Knowledge of semantic web, RDF, and linked data
  *  Original cataloging experience in multiple formats using OCLC Connexion
  *  Ability to design and/or adapt XML schemas, XSLT stylesheets, and RDF 
ontologies for digital projects
  *  Demonstrated experience solving complex cataloging/technical services 
problems
  *  Demonstrated day-to-day technical services, cataloging and metadata 
creation/management operations experience
  *  Proven ability to work collaboratively in a dynamic, complex and rapidly 
evolving environment and to learn new technologies and adapt to changes in the 
profession
  *  Knowledge of trends and issues in academic libraries, scholarly 
communications, higher education, and publishing
  *  Self-motivated and detail-oriented with outstanding written, verbal and 
interpersonal communication skills

  
Preferred qualifications:

  *  Expertise in developing architecture for managing and integrating 
heterogeneous metadata, including MARC and non-MARC formats to facilitate 
interoperable discovery across systems
  *  Experience in cataloging media
  *  Experience with scripting languages, especially related to metadata 
manipulation
  *  Experience developing metadata crosswalks
  *  Demonstrated project management and successful supervisory experience
  *  Experience with Innovative Interfaces software

  
About the College of Charleston and the Libraries

  
Founded in 1770, the College of Charleston is a public liberal arts and
sciences university located in the heart of Charleston, South Carolina. The
College of Charleston serves approximately 10,000 undergraduates and 1,500
graduate/certificate seeking students with more than 100 majors and minors. In
2012, Charleston was ranked #1 City in the World by Conde Nast Traveler and
5th among U.S. mid-sized cities for jobs by Forbes Magazine.

  
The College of Charleston Libraries are comprised of the Marlene and Nathan
Addlestone Library, the Avery Research Center for African American History and
Culture, the John Rivers Communications Museum, the Marine Resources Library,
and the North Campus Library. The combined annual budgets exceed $5.6 million
with a staff of 25 librarians and archivists, 28 full time employees, and 35
student and temporary employees.

  
The College of Charleston is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity employer
and does not discriminate against any individual or group on the basis of
gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, age, race, color,
religion, national origin, veteran status, genetic information, or disability.

  
To Apply

  
Applications must include cover letter, vita, unofficial graduate transcripts,
and contact information for three professional references.
Please apply online at Jobs.cofc.edu. Review of
applications will commence on Jan. 5, 2015 and continue until the position is
filled. Questions regarding this position may be directed to Martha Stackel,
Head of Cataloging and search committee chair at stack...@cofc.edu. Official
transcripts and background checks will be required for
hiring.

  
Complete job posting available here: [http://www.cofc.edu/library/jobs/Metadat
a/index.php](http://www.cofc.edu/library/jobs/Metadata/index.php)



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