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<entry>
    <url>http://ww2.med.jhu.edu/medarchives/ppapers.htm</url>
    <institution>Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Chesney Medical Archives</institution>
    <updated>Date unknown</updated>
    <delivery>
      <p>The findings aids are available in both HTML and SGML. We maintain 2 versions of each
        finding aid (which hasn't been a problem so far).</p>
    </delivery>
    <encoding>
      <p>Rather than converting existing finding aids, our focus has been to get some standard
        information about all of our collections onto our Web site, and EAD seemed the most
        effective way to accomplish this. Thus we are undertaking an "EAD-lite" project, and using
        only a small subset of the codes. Each EAD entry presents brief collection information, a
        biographical note, a scope and content note, some administrative information, and (in most
        cases) a portrait of the individual. In 1997, Scott Leonard, a graduate student from the
        University of Maryland College of Library and Information Services, as part of an
        internship, developed the EAD site. He did the technical groundwork, did the initial coding,
        and worked out most of the "bugs" in the system (of which there were many). He also encoded
        the first batch of finding aids and wrote detailed instructions for encoders who would
        follow him. Since then, students, part-time workers, and one professional have done the
        encoding.</p>
      <p>The project coordinator checks the encoding on each entry; several members of the Archives
        staff edit the entries for content and style. SGML markup was done using SoftQuad's
        Author/Editor program, and the SGML finding guides display in Panorama. (We offer the HTML
        version as the "default" option, as we don't expect most of our users to have Panorama.) The
        next phase will be to add folder listings. For these, we will be working with existing
        finding aids in a variety of formats: printed guides, typed inventories, and WordPerfect
        documents. We contracted with ArchProteus conversion service to convert a very large
        inventory which heretofore only existed as a published volume. They produced both an HTML
        and an SGML/EAD version, both of which will soon be available on our Web site. We plan to
        contract with ArchProteus to convert other inventories.</p>
    </encoding>
    <contact>Lisa A. Mix <a href="mailto:lmix@jhmi.edu">lmix@jhmi.edu</a> telephone: 410-955-3043</contact>
    <rlg>Pending</rlg>
  </entry>
