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Subscriptions
to Microgram
(January 2007 Update)
General Information
Microgram Bulletin is a monthly newsletter published by the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration's Office of Forensic Sciences, and is primarily
intended to assist and serve forensic scientists concerned with the
detection and analyses of suspected controlled substances for forensic/law
enforcement purposes.
Microgram
Journal is a scientific periodical, also published by the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration’s
Office of Forensic Sciences, that presents peer reviewed, full length
Scientific Research Articles
and Technical Notes on the detection and analyses of suspected controlled
substances for forensic/law enforcement purposes.
Access to Microgram Bulletin and Microgram Journal
Microgram Bulletin and Microgram Journal are unclassified (as of the
January 2003 issue), and is published on the DEA public access website
(see the above URL). At this time, both Microgram Bulletin and Microgram
Journal are available only electronically, and require Internet access
to view. Professional scientific and law enforcement personnel may request
email notifications when new issues are posted (such notifications are
not available to private citizens). The publications themselves are never
sent electronically (that is, as attachments).
Requests to be added to the email notification list should preferably
be submitted via email to the Microgram Editor at: microgram-2007
-at- mailsnare.net Requests can also be mailed to: Microgram Editor, Drug
Enforcement Administration, Office of Forensic Sciences, 2401 Jefferson
Davis Highway, Alexandria, VA 22301. All requests to be added to the
Microgram email notification list should include the following Standard
Contact Information:
* The Full Name and Mailing Address of Submitting Laboratory or Office;
* The Full Name, Title (Laboratory Director, Assistant Special Agent
in Charge, Librarian, etc.), Phone Number, FAX Number, and Preferred
email Address of the Submitting Individual (Note that email notifications
are mailed to titles, not names, in order to avoid problems arising from
future personnel changes);
* If available, the generic email address for the Submitting Laboratory
or Office;
* If a generic email
address is not available, one private email address for an individual
who is
likely to be a long-term employee, who has a
stable email address, and who will be responsible for forwarding Microgram information to all of the other employees in the requestor’s Office
(Note that only one email address per Office will be honored).
Requests to be removed from the Microgram email notification list,
or to change an existing email address, should also be sent to the
Microgram Editor. Such requests should include all of the pertinent
Standard Contact Information detailed above, and also should provide
both the previous and the new email addresses.
Email notification requests/changes are usually implemented within six
weeks.
Email Notifications (Additional Comments)
As noted above, the email notification indicates which issue has been
posted, provides the Microgram URL, and additional information as appropriate.
Note that Microgram e-notices will NEVER include any attachments, or
any hyperlink other than the Microgram URL. This is important, because
the Microgram email address is routinely hijacked and used to
send spam, very commonly including malicious attachments. For this reason, all subscribers
are urged to have current anti-viral, anti-spyware, and firewall programs
in operation. However, in order to ensure that the email notifications
are not filtered as spam, the microgram-2007 -at-
mailsnare email address
must be “whitelisted” by the Office’s ISP.
Costs
Access to Microgram Bulletin is free.
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