Using the Green Bank Telescope, we conducted a ``snapshot'' survey for water
maser emission toward the nuclei of 611 galaxies and detected eight new
sources. The sample consisted of nearby (v < 5000 km/s) and luminous (M_B <
-19.5) galaxies, some with known nuclear activity but most not previously known
to host AGNs. Our detections include both megamasers associated with AGNs and
relatively low luminosity masers probably associated with star formation. The
detection in UGC 3789 is particularly intriguing because the spectrum shows
both systemic and high-velocity lines indicative of emission from an AGN
accretion disk seen edge-on. Based on six months of monitoring, we detected
accelerations among the systemic features ranging from 2 to 8 km/s/yr, the
larger values belonging to the most redshifted systemic components.
High-velocity maser lines in UGC 3789 show no detectable drift over the same
period. Although UGC 3789 was not known to be an AGN prior to this survey, the
presence of a disk maser is strong evidence for nuclear activity, and an
optical spectrum obtained later has confirmed it. With follow up observations,
it may be possible to measure a geometric distance to UGC 3789.Comment: to appear in Astrophysical Journal, 1 May 200