Open Letter to Our Readers
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/about/letter-010202.html
Dear Readers: Here at the Internet Scout Project, we have been working on securing a new source (or sources) of funding for the Scout Reports. We are soliciting your ideas in an Open Letter to Readers that has been sent to the subscriber mailing lists and is available on our Website. Please read the letter at the address above and send us your ideas.
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Scout Report for Science & Engineering
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sci-eng/2001/se-010131.html
Volume 4, Number 11 of the Scout Report for Science & Engineering is available. The In the News section annotates ten resources on the recent Harvard light-halting experiment, other light-speed experiments, and the possible application of this breakthrough to black hole studies. [MD]
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Two New Online Catalogs from the British Library
British Library Public Catalogue
http://blpc.bl.uk/
National Sound Archive Catalogue (Cadensa)
http://cadensa.bl.uk/
The British Library has announced the release of two new major online resources. The new Public Catalogue supercedes the OPAC97 service (reviewed in the May 23, 1997 Scout Report) and will be available 24 hours/ 7 days a week. The new catalog indexes "over 10 million books, journals, reports, conferences and music scores covering every aspect of human thought since 1450" and features improved search options. Visitors can order copies of articles and conference papers direct from the library's Document Supply Centre, while members of registered organizations may also request material on loan through the site. The second new resource is a searchable online catalog of almost 2.5 million sound recordings held by the British Library National Sound Archive (NSA), from pop music to Miss Piggy to tree frogs to oral histories. At present, users cannot listen to or download these recordings, but the site does offer information on accessing them at the NSA and placing orders for copies. The catalog is searchable by keyword, name, title, subject, place, or through an advanced search. The full details for each entry vary by recording type; most have notes on the contents and the quality of the recording or the copy when appropriate. [MD]
[Back to Contents]Facility for the Analysis of Chemical Thermodynamics, F*A*C*T-Web
http://www.crct.polymtl.ca/fact/fact.htm
Housed at the Centre for Research in Computational Chemistry at Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal, F*A*C*T is "a fully integrated thermochemical database which couples proven software with self-consistent critically assessed thermodynamic data. F*A*C*T is now employed in many diverse fields of chemical thermodynamics by pyrometallurgists, hydrometallurgists, chemical engineers, corrosion engineers, inorganic chemists, geochemists, ceramists, electrochemists, environmentalists, and so on." The highlight of F*A*C*T-Web is its free, easily searchable databases that include Compound-Web, Reaction-Web, Equilib-Web, and Aqualib-Web. With Compound-Web, users enter up to four elements or one compound and the program gives compounds of the elements or phases of the compound. With Reaction-Web, users enter units, temperature limits, phase, and number of steps and the program calculates changes in extensive thermochemical functions (H, G, V, S, Cp, A) for a species, a group of species, or for a chemical reaction. With Equilib-Web, users enter temperature, mass and pressure, and up to three reactants and five different elements and the program will list the most stable products of that combination. With Aqualib-Web, users enter up to three reactants, including water, with up to five different elements and the program will calculate the chemical equilibrium. All four databases have instructions. Besides these handy databases, F*A*C*T-Web also includes neatly categorized links to sites in inorganic chemical thermodynamics. A section on the FACT-Win database (for purchase), solution database, and links to news and announcements from F*A*C*T round out the site. This is a superb resource for chemists. [HCS]
[Back to Contents]Statistical Accounts of Scotland
http://edina.ac.uk/StatAcc/
Provided by the Edinburgh Data and Information Access (EDINA) on behalf of the Scottish Confederation of University and Research Libraries, this new site is an excellent resource for anyone researching Scotland, Britain, or the social impact of the industrial revolution. The site hosts the two Statistical Accounts of Scotland, which cover 1791-99 and 1834-1845. The information contained in the Accounts was largely provided by each parish church minister and covers topics such as "wealth, class and poverty; climate, agriculture, fishing and wildlife; population, schools, and the moral health of the people." Visitors can browse the Accounts via a table of contents, a general index, or by county or parish lists, or conduct a keyword search. The site provides digitized copies of the original texts which, unlike many similar projects, are easy to read and navigate. Further information about the Accounts and the project is available from the main page. [MD]
[Back to Contents]Refugee Caselaw Site [.pdf]
http://www.refugeecaselaw.org/Refugee/index.htm
Provided and maintained by the University of Michigan Law School, this site aims to promote "transnational analysis of refugee law by advocates, decision-makers, and policymakers committed to the effective implementation of international standards." To this end, it provides a database of approximately 400 recent cases from highest national courts of Australia, Austria, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Users may search the database by jurisdiction, title, court, date, country, Hathaway number, and by keyword. Initial returns include date decided, court, jurisdiction, country of origin, Hathaway number(s), a one-sentence description, and a link to the full text of the decision in .pdf format. A fast, well-organized, and very useful site for anyone interested in refugee law. [MD]
[Back to Contents]Tibet Information Network (TIN)
http://www.tibetinfo.net/
Based in London, the Tibet Information Network (TIN) has served as an independent news and research agency monitoring and reporting on the political, social, economic, environmental, and human rights situation in Tibet for the past twelve years. The site offers reports, news updates, photos, and other related publications organized by topic. These include culture, women, environment, education, prisoners and protest, and tourism, among others. The currency of the content in each section varies widely. News updates are also available in Tibetan and Chinese (no special software needed). Other offerings include a Tibet File, which contains images, travel information, a chronology, population statistics, a glossary, a bibliography, and a list of counties and prefectures. Users may also subscribe to a free email news update service. [MD]
[Back to Contents]QueerTheory.com
http://www.queertheory.com/
Designed and maintained by Danne Polk in association with Erratic Impact's Philosophy Research Base, this metasite guides users to quality online and print resources in the fields of LGBT studies, gender studies, and queer theory. Resources are indexed in several ways: by topic, names, subjects, authors, and schools. Other offerings include links to the latest news on LGBT issues and purchase information for related books. [MD]
[Back to Contents]EverythingESL.net [.pdf]
http://www.everythingesl.net/
Created by award-winning English as a Second Language (ESL) teacher Judie Haynes and Web designer Chas Haynes, this attractive site is a nice resource for any teacher with second language students. The site offers teaching tips with classroom activities and a select annotated list of books, CD-ROMS, and Websites. EverythingESL.net also hosts two message boards, one for general discussion and the other for questions posted directly to Judie Haynes, both available from the Discussion button at the top of the page. An internal search engine rounds out the site. [MD]
[Back to Contents]"Adding It Up: Helping Children Learn Mathematics" [.pdf]
http://www4.nas.edu/onpi/webextra.nsf/web/proficiency
Released on January 23, this report from the National Research Council finds that too few American children "are leaving elementary and middle school with adequate math skills and understanding." The report strongly recommends major reforms in math instruction, curricula, and assessment from pre-kindergarten through grade 8. The full text of the 444-page report may be read by chapter in .pdf format at the National Academy Press site. [MD]
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Online Classics [Windows Media Player]
http://www.onlineclassics.com/
Here's a nice counterpart to the huge mass of pop music videos offered online -- streaming live and archived videos of the performing arts. At the site, visitors will find over 150 hours of video-on-demand of opera, theatre, concerts, plays, dance, and musicals, and new and live broadcasts are added each week. The video selections are organized by performance type (opera, other vocal, orchestral, plays, dance), and most are offered in multiple connection speeds, though only those with broadband connections are likely to get the most out of the site. Even with a fast connection playback was less than optimal on most of the selections we viewed. The site states that "at the moment" all content is free. If this remains the case and if the site can improve playback quality, it has the potential to become a major resource for teachers and students as well as fans of the performing arts. [MD]
[Back to Contents]LSU Digital Library -- Ogden Museum of Southern Art and Louisiana State Museum Photographs
http://www.lsu.edu/diglib/
Lousiana State University's Digital Library, in partnership with the Ogden Museum of Southern Art and the Louisiana State Museum, makes two image databases available: The Preservation of Louisiana's Treasures Program, about 200 images of Southern fine art, primarily 20th-century paintings and photographs from the Roger Houston Ogden collection; and the Rowles Stereograph Collection, 386 stereographs, "vintage albumen prints of New Orleans and Louisiana . . . from mid 1860s to the early 20th century." There are some surprisingly modern images in the stereograph collection, such as a 1978 Karem Abdul Jabbar slam dunk, and a 1930 stereograph portrait of Huey Long. The search interface for both databases is the same, allowing keyword searches or browsing by titles, creators, or subjects. In the browse mode, images are presented as pages of five thumbnails. This simple arrangement is missing some navigational tools; when browsing, there is no way to get back to the beginning without hitting the back button repeatedly; after search results are displayed, it is difficult to do a new search without going all the way back to the LSU Digital Library homepage. [DS]
[Back to Contents]"A Report Card on the Department of Energy's Non-Proliferation Programs with Russia" -- CEIP [.pdf]
http://www.ceip.org/files/projects/npp/pdf/DOERussiaTaskForceReport011001.pdf
Appendices [.pdf]
http://www.ceip.org/files/projects/npp/pdf/doetaskforceappendices.pdf
Issued on January 10, this bipartisan study from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (CEIP) concludes that the "most urgent unmet national security threat" to the US today is weak protection of nuclear weapons and materials. The authors propose that the new administration develop a plan to address this problem and increase the budgets of related programs. Readers can download the full text and Appendices of the 49-page report, which reviews "Department of Energy programs on nuclear material protection, control and accounting; the disposal of excess plutonium and highly enriched uranium; programs to address the 'brain drain' of former Soviet weapons scientists (Initiatives for Proliferation Prevention and the Nuclear Cities Initiative); and nuclear safety." [MD]
[Back to Contents]European Commission Online Press Room [.pdf]
http://europa.eu.int/comm/press_room/index.htm
Available in both English and French, the European Commission's (EC) new online press room is an excellent resource for any users interested in the latest news and press releases from the EC and the European Union. At the site, visitors will find links to the latest headlines and releases (many available in multiple languages), a weekly archive, a searchable database of press releases since 1985, and links to video news, photos, and other resources. Registered users may also sign up to receive free electronic press releases on designated areas of interest. [MD]
[Back to Contents]The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz -- xrefer
http://www.xrefer.com/books/grojazz/about.jsp
xrefer.com
http://www.xrefer.com/
Since it was originally reviewed in the June 2, 2000 Scout Report, reference engine xrefer has expanded to include fifty texts. The most recent addition is the The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, self-described as "the largest, most comprehensive and most accurate reference work on jazz ever published." The dictionary contains over 4,500 articles on a wide variety of jazz-related topics, including detailed biographies, jazz groups, musical instruments, terms and styles, record companies and labels, and more. The dictionary also offers 1,800 discographies and numerous reading lists. Visitors can not search the New Grove Dictionary exclusively, but they can limit their search to the music reference works, which also include the Oxford Dictionary of Music,Penguin Dictionary of Music, and the Grove Concise Dictionary of Music.[MD]
[Back to Contents]WorldWideWeb Tax [.pdf]
http://www.wwwebtax.com/
Relaunched on December 1 for the new tax season, this site aims to serve as the most comprehensive online source for a broad range of tax information. While the site does offer a for-fee e-file service, it also features a wealth of free information, including IRS forms, IRS instructions, IRS publications, IRS tables, IRS rate schedules, IRS charts, and IRS worksheets. Also included are FAQs, tips and strategies, state tax information, and a glossary of tax terms. This site certainly won't make filing your tax returns fun, but it could make it easier. [MD]
[Back to Contents]Families and Students Living in a College Town
http://www.users.muohio.edu/karrowrs/College/index.html
Created and maintained by Bob Karrow of Miami University (Ohio), this site brings together a number of resources on a very interesting topic: community relations and town planning in neighborhoods adjacent to college and university campuses. As Karrow notes, many older neighborhoods in college towns find it difficult to "achieve the type of balanced diversity that creates an optimal environment for all residents." This site features news articles, zoning rules, reports, and other resources that illustrate how some communities have addressed the issue. These are organized by topic, such as College Town Plans, Student Housing, Quality of Life, Campus Expansion, Economics of Student Rentals, and Court Cases, among others. The site also sponsors a discussion list, CTPlan, for issues related to college towns. [MD]
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Axie
http://axie.com/
Axie is a neat tool for tracking additions to the Open Directory Project (ODP) (reviewed in the November 20, 1998 Scout Report). After free registration, users can register searches they want Axie to monitor. Each week, Axie will email notifications (HTML or plain text) of newly added sites in the specified categories. While weekly additions to the ODP are not necessarily new sites, Axie offers users the opportunity to monitor only those additions that interest them. [MD]
[Back to Contents]Aboriginal Connections
http://www.aboriginalconnections.com/
Created and maintained by Rob Wesley, this Web directory indexes sites related to Canadian aboriginal, Native American, and international indigenous peoples and cultures. The annotated links (currently over 1,900) are organized by topic, including First Nations, Education, Government, History, and Organizations, among others. What's new, a top 100 listing, and an internal search engine are also provided. Visitors are welcome to submit additional sites for inclusion. [MD]
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One Convicted for Lockerbie Bombing
Lockerbie Verdict [.pdf, Word]
http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/html/lockerbie.htm
Lockerbie Trial Briefing Site
http://www.law.gla.ac.uk/lockerbie/
The Lockerbie Verdict -- BBC [RealPlayer]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/in_depth/scotland/2000/lockerbie_trial/
"News Analysis: Courts Are a Limited Anti-Terror Weapon" -- New York Times [RealPlayer]
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/02/01/world/01ASSE.html
Lockerbie Bombing Trial - CNN
http://www.cnn.com/LAW/trials.and.cases/case.files/0010/lockerbie/index.html
Arabic News
http://www.arabicnews.com
Middle East News Online
http://www.middleeastwire.com/
ArabNet
http://www.arab.net/
On Wednesday a special Scottish court convened in the Netherlands convicted Abdel Basset al-Megrahi for the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 in December 1988 over Lockerbie, Scotland and sentenced him to life in prison, with the possibility of parole after twenty years. Megrahi's co-defendant, Al Amin Khalifa Fhimah, was found not guilty and has since returned to Libya. Both men are or were allegedly members of Libya's intelligence service, and some, especially among family members of the victims, have expressed the belief that responsibility for the act ultimately rests with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. Gaddafi has decalred that Libya would never accept responsibility for the bombing and demanded compensation for the 1986 US bombing raid on Libya. The United Nations suspended sanctions against Libya after it surrendered the two suspects, and Gaddafi has demanded that they should now be removed entirely. The United States has indicated that it will push for keeping the sanctions at least until the relatives of the victims have been compensated, makingit unlikely that the sanctions will be removed any time in the near future. A lawyer for the American families has also announced that they will sue Libya for $10 billion in damages.
Readers can begin with the full text of the verdict itself, available from the official Scottish Courts Website. In-depth analysis, background information, a dramatis personae, a FAQ/Glossary, and multiple other resources are available at the Lockerbie Trial Briefing Site, maintained by the University of Glasgow School of Law. The BBC's special on the verdict includes the latest news, a great deal of analysis and background, photos, audio and video selections, a timeline, and related links. The New York Times report (free registration required) contains links to previous articles, an interactive feature, and some video clips. CNN's site on the trial offers new and archived stories, background, images, and a number of other resources. Additional coverage can be found at Arabic News, Middle East News Online, and ArabNet. [MD]
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