About the Silverfish
The Silverfish is the official newsletter of the Association
of Library & Information Science Students (ALISS) at the University
of Washington. It is published monthly by the
Silverfish Editorial Board, which is made up of student volunteers
from the Information School. The Silverfish strives to be the
mouthpiece for all students in the iSchool; students, staff and alumni
from the MLIS program as well as the PhD program, the MSIM program and
the Informatics program are encouraged to become involved. The Silverfish
is actively seeking contributions including articles, artwork, poetry
and short stories. If you are interested in contributing or have an
idea for a piece, please contact silverfish_aliss@yahoo.com.
The purpose of the Silverfish is to publish material relevant
to the experience of being a student at the iSchool—which could
include anything from book reviews to bar reviews, and from interviews
with faculty to reports on new technological gadgets. The Silverfish is
not meant to be a scholarly publication, although we do publish
student papers from time to time. We strive to keep this publication
informal and fun—and hopefully to provide a welcome break from
homework and classes.
Silverfish content is protected by copyright law, and may
not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, or otherwise
utilized without the prior written consent of the author. Copyright
is retained by the author. All rights reserved. Editorial positions
on the Silverfish staff are considered leadership positions.
Authors are responsible for their own content and should be contacted
directly with any questions or concerns.
The name of the newsletter is derived from an insect. Silverfish
(Lepisma saccharina) have inhabited the earth for over 300 million
years. They are pests of paper products and prefer food containing
starch such as the glue found in book bindings and photographs. Silverfish
are found throughout the United States and the world. They are the
traditional nemesis of librarians. |