The Scout Report
March 6, 2015 -- Volume 21, Number 9
A Publication of Internet Scout
Computer Sciences Department, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research and Education
Commission on the Humanities and Social SciencesPhysics News
Made with Code
Georgia Education
Fire Lab Research
CCRC Responds to Obama's Free Community College Tuition Proposal
Engineer Your Life
The Whitney Plantation
General Interest
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences: CollectionsAmerican Battle Monuments Commission
International Journal of Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences
The Muse
California Mission Postcards
National Center for Transgender Equality
2015 Index of Economic Freedom
The Open Utopia
Network Tools
poetic.ioOneTab
In the News
In Louisiana, a Dangerous Bacteria Escaped the LabCopyright and subscription information appear at the end of the Scout Report. For more information on all services of Internet Scout, please visit our Website: https://scout.wisc.edu
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Research and Education
http://www.humanitiescommission.org
This
site
from
the
Commission
on
the
Humanities
and
Social
Sciences
offers
tremendous
advocacy
resources
for
anyone
who
loves
history,
languages,
the
arts,
and
the
social
sciences.
For
those
less
familiar
with
the
Commission's
work,
the
homepage
offers
a
55-minute
video
of
Karl
Eikenberry's
presentation
at
the
25th
Anniversary
Chicago
Humanities
Festival.
The
film
provides
a
passionate
argument
for
the
humanities,
featuring
luminaries
such
as
George
Lucas,
Yo
Yo
Ma,
and
Sandra
Day
O'Connor
and
is
accompanied
on
the
site
by
a
freely
available
70-page
report
arguing
for
the
place
of
the
humanities
and
social
sciences
in
a
21st
century
democratic
society.
Perhaps
most
useful
to
educators
are
the
Humanities
Indicators.
This
comprehensive
resource
tracks
the
humanities
through
K-12
Education,
Higher
Education,
the
Workforce,
Funding
&
Research,
and
Public
Life.
In
the
K-12
Education
section,
for
example,
readers
will
find
National
Measures
of
Achievement,
such
as
Reading
Performance
of
9-year-Olds
and
SAT
Writing
Scores
by
Race/Ethnicity.
[CNH]
http://phys.org/physics-news/
Launched
in
2004,
Phys.org's
Physics
News
covers
a
staggering
array
of
science
topics,
from
mathematics
to
earth
science
to
nanotechnology
and
beyond.
The
Physics
News
section
publishes
several
original
articles
per
day,
categorized
by
subjects
including
General
Physics,
Optics
&
Photonics,
Quantum
Physics,
and
Condensed
Matter.
In
addition
to
the
news
items
that
appear
in
order
of
publication
date,
readers
may
peruse
the
site
by
Featured
articles,
Last
Comments,
Popular
articles,
and
Most
Shared
articles.
There
is
also
a
Trending
Topics
section
that
lists
15
of
the
topics
people
are
talking
about
in
the
magazine's
comments
sections.
For
readers
who
like
to
keep
up
on
the
latest
developments
in
physics,
Physics
News
will
be
a
welcome
find.
[CNH]
https://www.madewithcode.com/
Google.org,
the
charitable
arm
of
the
tech
giant,
has
committed
over
$100
million
to
investments
and
grants
in
the
last
five
years.
While
Google.org's
initial
projects
concerned
plug-in
vehicles,
solar
energy,
and
emergency
response
systems,
the
foundation
has
recently
expanded
into
computer
science
education
with
its
free
Made
with
Code
program.
This
program
is
designed
to
interest
girls
in
the
art
and
science
of
coding
in
order
to
develop
a
new
generation
of
female
programmers.
Readers
may
like
to
start
by
watching
the
inspiring
short
video.
Perhaps
the
most
engaging
aspect
of
the
site
is
the
Projects
section,
where
beginning
and
intermediate
coders
will
find
engaging
projects
such
as
Music
Mixer
and
Kaleidoscope.
Uplifting
stories
of
young
women
who
have
fallen
in
love
with
coding
round
out
the
site.
[CNH]
http://www.georgiaeducation.org/
For
those
who
believe
a
data-driven,
test-based
educational
system
provides
the
best
measures
for
understanding
and
improving
schools,
the
Georgia
Education
website
offers
a
wealth
of
interesting
information,
from
statistics
on
the
schools
in
the
entire
state,
down
to
data
on
individual
schools.
Readers
may
select
View
the
Reports
to
get
started.
From
there
they
may
select
a
level
(from
all
of
Georgia
to
individual
counties
to
cities).
Then
they
may
select
a
school
from
the
list
of
individual
schools
that
can
be
found
in
the
drop
down
menu
and,
finally,
select
a
report
from
the
choices
of
profile,
test
scores,
and
similar
demographics.
There's
a
lot
of
information
here,
provided
in
fine
detail.
For
instance,
readers
might
select
Appling
County
(level),
Altamaha
Elementary
(school),
and
test
scores
(report),
to
find
out
that
in
the
third
grade
at
Altamaha
Elementary,
58%
of
the
students
exceeded
the
standard
reading
requirements
for
2013,
a
jump
from
51%
of
students
who
met
the
criteria
in
2012.
[CNH]
http://www.firelab.org/research
The Fire, Fuel, and Smoke Science Program at the Rocky Mountain Research Station boasts a website that is packed with information about fire and related topics. The research on the site is divided into six focus areas: Physical Fire Processes, Fuel Dynamics, Smoke Emissions & Dispersion, Fire Ecology, Fire & Fuel Management Strategies, and Science Synthesis & Delivery. Readers may select any of these topics for further lists of dozens of subtopics. For instance, selecting Physical Fire Processes navigates to topics such as Burning Rate and Clearance Distances, among many others. Clicking any of these topics navigates to full-length articles that can educate any reader who is fascinated by forest fires. [CNH]
http://ccrc.tc.columbia.edu/announcements/thomas-bailey-comments-free-community-college.html
When
President
Obama
announced
his
plan
to
offer
free
community
college
tuition
to
anyone
who
had
performed
well
in
high
school,
numerous
pundits
wrote
on
both
sides
of
the
issue.
This
website
from
the
Community
College
Research
Center
at
Columbia
University
links
to
a
number
of
articles
on
the
issue,
many
of
them
written
by
faculty
at
the
center.
For
instance,
readers
may
navigate
to
the
Time
Magazine
op-ed
by
Judith
Scott-Clayton
and
Thomas
Bailey,
or
Sandy
Baum
and
Judith
Scott-Clayton's
article
in
the
Hamilton
Project's
blog.
Further
links
take
readers
to
articles
on
the
topic
from
Newsweek,
the
New
York
Times,
and
other
media
outlets.
For
readers
who
are
interested
in
the
various
opinions
surrounding
President
Obama's
bold
announcement,
this
site
is
a
good
home
base
from
which
to
start.
[CNH]
http://www.engineeryourlife.org/
Engineer
Your
Life
is
a
website
designed
for
high
school
girls
who
are
curious
about
a
career
in
engineering.
Resources
on
the
site
feature
women
who
have
built
successful
careers
in
engineering.
For
instance,
one
short
video
focuses
on
Tara
Teich,
a
computer
science
engineer
who
designs
Star
Wars
video
games,
while
another
profiles
Erin
Fletcher,
a
civil
engineer
who
manages
large
scale
municipal
projects
in
Seattle.
There's
a
list
of
"Ten
reasons
while
you'll
love
it"
–
engineering
that
is
-
and
profiles
of
over
a
dozen
women
who
love
their
work
as
engineers.
In
addition,
the
Find
Your
Dream
Job
area
lets
readers
search
through
categories
such
as
aerospace,
bioengineering,
chemical,
civil,
and
other
engineering
fields.
In
all,
this
is
a
wonderful
resource
for
teachers,
counselors,
and
other
adults
who
are
helping
guide
girls
in
their
career
choices.
[CNH]
http://whitneyplantation.com/
The
Whitney
Plantation
website
may
be
the
most
informative
-
and
the
most
disturbing
-
website
about
slavery
on
the
Internet.
Opened
to
the
public
in
2014,
the
Whitney
Plantation
is
the
only
plantation
museum
in
the
state
of
Louisiana
dedicated
to
telling
the
story
of
slavery.
Readers
may
wish
to
start
with
the
History
tab,
which
describes
the
founding
and
expansion
of
the
plantation,
from
1721
onward.
The
gorgeous
Photo
Gallery
offers
readers
a
visual
representation
of
the
plantation's
many
buildings,
including
a
Spanish
Creole
mansion,
a
church,
and
various
shacks
and
outbuildings.
The
meat
of
the
site,
however,
lies
in
the
tab
titled
Learn.
Here,
readers
are
confronted
with
the
hard
truth
of
slavery,
told
through
short
articles
sorted
into
three
categories:
the
Slave
Population,
the
Owners,
and
Historic
Buildings
and
Memorials.
From
there,
the
content
covers
such
topics
as
Resistance,
Slavery
in
Louisiana,
the
Atlantic
Slave
Trade,
and
the
Big
House
and
Outbuildings.
[CNH]
General Interest
http://www.oscars.org/oral-history/collections
For
readers
who
are
interested
in
the
history
of
American
film,
the
various
resources
found
on
the
Academy
Oral
History
Collection
can
provide
hours
of
edification.
Readers
may
like
to
start
by
browsing
the
Completed
Oral
Histories.
There
they
will
find
a
list
of
more
than
70
interviewees
from
all
walks
of
Hollywood
life,
from
costume
designers
to
film
editors
to
screenwriters.
Each
name
is
accompanied
by
a
brief
biography.
From
there,
readers
may
link
to
The
Writer's
Guild
Foundation's
the
Writer
Speaks,
which
features
video
and
audio
interviews
with
writers
who
have
made
their
careers
in
Hollywood.
Lastly,
the
Film
Music
Foundation
link
navigates
to
interviews
with
the
composers
who
have
brought
the
magic
of
music
to
the
screen.
[CNH]
http://www.abmc.gov/
The
American
Battle
Monuments
Commission
(ABMC),
which
was
established
by
congress
in
1923,
honors
the
"service,
achievements,
and
sacrifice"
of
American
soldiers
by
caring
for
overseas
commemorative
cemeteries
and
memorials.
Readers
will
find
much
to
explore
in
the
Cemeteries
&
Memorials
section
of
the
website,
where
the
dozens
of
cemeteries
the
commission
oversees
are
listed
in
alphabetical
order,
from
the
Aisne-Marne
American
Cemetery
in
France
to
the
Western
Naval
Task
Force
Marker
in
Morocco.
Selecting
any
cemetery
or
monument
navigates
readers
to
that
site's
informational
page,
where
readers
can
peruse
a
history
of
the
site,
examine
photographs,
and
often
download
PDFs
of
commemorative
and
visitor
booklets.
In
addition,
the
site
features
an
excellent
search
function
that
allows
readers
to
search
the
site's
224,290
records
for
servicemen
and
women
that
are
commemorated
by
the
ABMC.
[CNH]
http://www.pharmaresearchlibrary.com/ijcps/
The
International
Journal
of
Chemistry
and
Pharmaceutical
Sciences
is
a
peer-reviewed
online
journal
that
concentrates
its
efforts
on
pharmaceutics
and
industrial
pharmacy,
pharmacology
and
toxicology,
phytopharmacy
and
medicine,
and
other
related
fields
within
chemistry
and
pharmaceutical
sciences.
Recent
articles
have
included
empirical
investigations
of
Eclampsia,
a
hypertensive
disorder
that
can
complicate
pregnancy;
the
health
effects
and
benefits
of
chocolate;
and
the
antioxidant
properties
of
extracts
from
the
plant,
Peltophorum
Pterocarpum.
While
some
the
articles
require
a
certain
level
of
background
in
the
field,
it
can
be
interesting
to
scroll
through
breaking
research,
even
for
readers
with
no
depth
of
chemistry
knowledge.
Best
of
all,
as
an
open
access
journal,
everything
can
be
read
online
for
free.
[CNH]
http://themuse.ca/
The Muse is a popular student newspaper that has been published at Memorial University in St. John's, Newfoundland since 1950. In addition to the 10,000 print copies the paper distributes every week, the periodical also hosts an excellent website. Recent stories have covered happenings at the university, an op-ed concerning misconceptions about Muslims, and an article about the supreme court of Canada's recent ruling on euthanasia. The site also features a number of blogs, ("Impressions of a French girl in Newfoundland" is a Scout favorite), reviews of albums, books, movies, and video games, a humor section and a lifestyle section. In all, this is a prime example of the college newspaper at its finest. [CNH]
http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object-groups/california-mission-postcards
When
picture
postcards
became
popular
in
the
late
19th
century,
businesses
sprang
up
to
take
advantage
of
the
new
art
form.
In
fact,
names
like
the
Curt
Teich
Company,
the
Detroit
Publishing
Company,
the
Edward
H.
Mitchell
Company,
and
the
Van
Ornum
Colorprint
Company
were,
for
decades,
nearly
synonymous
with
the
small
photos
and
sketches
that
tourists
sent
home
from
their
travels.
The
dozens
of
postcards
featured
on
this
website
from
the
Smithsonian
Institution's
National
Museum
of
American
History,
are
all
associated
with
the
21
missions
established
in
northern
and
southern
California
by
Spanish
Franciscan
missionaries
between
1769
and
1823.
Readers
may
peruse
the
beautiful
paintings
and
photographs
of
these
iconic
religious
institutions
on
the
site,
as
well
as
read
the
brief
but
fascinating
history
of
postcards
in
the
United
States
and
of
the
Spanish
Missions
that
inspired
this
particular
collection.
[CNH]
http://transequality.org/
There
has
been
increasing
media
coverage
of
transgender
individuals
in
the
past
several
years.
However,
most
people
are
still
relatively
unfamiliar
with
the
issues
that
affect
those
citizens
who
identify
as
a
different
gender
than
the
one
to
which
they
were
assigned
at
birth.
This
site,
hosted
by
the
National
Center
for
Transgender
Equality,
has
a
good
deal
of
information
about
the
trans
community.
Readers
may
like
to
start
with
the
About
Transgender
People
section,
which
provides
an
overview
of
Transgender
Terminology,
some
FAQs
About
Trans
People,
a
section
on
Statistics,
and
Jaan's
Story,
a
moving
essay
about
a
transgender
couple.
Readers
who
would
like
to
be
more
involved
in
the
trans
rights
movement
may
also
view
52
Things
You
Can
Do
for
Trans
Equality.
Published
in
2005,
there
is
still
a
lot
of
useful
information
in
this
downloadable
PDF
poster,
and
is
just
one
of
many
other
opportunities
for
political
action
presented
on
the
page.
[CNH]
http://www.heritage.org/index/ranking
The
Index
of
Economic
Freedom
is
published
annually
by
the
Wall
Street
Journal
and
The
Heritage
Foundation,
a
conservative
think
tank
whose
stated
mission
is
to
"formulate
and
promote...
the
principles
of
free
enterprise,
limited
government,
individual
freedom,
traditional
American
values,
and
a
strong
national
defense."
The
2015
rankings
break
countries
into
five
categories
based
on
a
cumulative
metric.
Countries
like
Hong
Kong,
Singapore,
and
New
Zealand
are
considered
economically
Free.
Other
nations
fall
into
the
categories
of
Mostly
Free,
Moderately
Free,
Mostly
Unfree,
and
Repressed.
While
rankings
and
economics
might
not
be
for
everyone,
readers
may
also
find
much
to
ponder
in
the
dozens
of
profiles
of
individual
nations.
Here,
they
can
read
about
measures
of
Rule
of
Law,
Regulatory
Efficiency,
Limited
Government,
Open
Markets,
and
other
metrics.
The
website
also
allows
readers
to
compare
nations.
For
instance,
a
comparison
of
Hong
Kong
and
the
United
States
shows
Hong
Kong
outperforming
the
U.S.
in
most
categories
of
economic
freedom
every
year
for
the
past
20
years.
[CNH]
http://theopenutopia.org/
"Does
the
world
really
need
another
edition
of
Thomas
More's
Utopia?"
asks
Stephen
Duncombe,
the
editor
of
The
Open
Utopia.
After
all,
Utopia
has
been
in
print
almost
continuously
since
first
published
in
1516
and
available
in
digital
version
since
2012.
The
Open
Utopia
joins
a
community
of
other
freely
available
online
editions,
such
as
the
Gutenberg
Project
version,
Oregon
State
University,
or
the
Literature
Project
to
name
a
few.
Duncombe
argues
that
what
makes
The
Open
Utopia
different
is
its
very
openness
-
"open
to
read,
open
to
copying,
open
to
modification."
This
means
that
The
Open
Utopia
provides
the
total
social
reading
experience
-
Duncombe
has
included
links
to
scholarship
on
Utopia,
various
editions,
analysis,
letters,
translations
and
illustrations.
The
Open
Utopia
makes
the
full
text
available
for
download
in
a
variety
of
formats
for
a
variety
of
devices.
Readers
can
also
add
their
own
annotations
and
comments,
using
Social
Book
-
software
developed
for
social
reading,
piloted
by
The
Open
Utopia.
Social
Book
works
best
with
Google
Chrome
or
Safari
browsers.
[DS]
Network Tools
https://poetic.io/
poetic.io
is
a
simple
and
secure
way
to
transfer
files.
Sign
up
just
requires
an
email
address.
From
there,
users
may
drag
and
drop
files
as
large
as
3GB
to
the
poetic.io
page,
enter
destination
emails,
and
then
send.
(To
put
this
in
perspective:
the
average
full-length
movie
is
about
1GB.)
Besides
speed
and
efficiency
for
large
file
movement,
the
site
also
provides
basic
security,
so
that
readers
know
only
their
recipients
will
receive
the
data.
The
site
is
free
and
accessible
from
any
computer
with
an
Internet
connection,
and
can
be
a
welcome
tool
for
teachers
who
need
to
share
data
with
students
and
each
other,
co-workers
who
are
working
on
data-heavy
projects,
and
others
who
share
large
data
files
(video,
graphics,
photos)
in
their
work
and
play.
[CNH]
http://www.one-tab.com
Here
at
Scout
we
work
with
a
lot
of
open
tabs
-
sites
to
annotate,
reviews
of
those
sites,
various
searches,
historical
references,
all
while
answering
emails,
updating
social
media,
and
looking
for
the
latest
news
stories.
So
sometimes
the
proliferation
of
open
tabs
can
be
a
little
overwhelming.
OneTab
is
designed
to
address
this
problem
with
an
elegant
trick.
When
the
reader
finds
too
many
tabs
are
open,
she
can
click
the
OneTab
icon
to
convert
all
open
tabs
to
a
simple
savable
list.
In
addition
to
simplifying
screen
clutter,
this
saves
up
to
95%
of
memory
by
reducing
the
number
of
open
tabs,
which
can
speed
up
a
computer
that
has
been
bogged
down.
The
OneTab
add-on
is
available
for
both
Google
Chrome
and
Firefox,
and
can
be
installed
within
a
matter
of
seconds.
For
readers
who
constantly
multitask
on
the
Internet,
the
service
offers
a
welcome
respite
from
the
glut
of
information
through
which
most
of
us
swim.
[CNH]
In the News
Escape of dangerous bacterium leads to halt of risky studies at Tulane
http://news.sciencemag.org/biology/2015/03/escape-dangerous-bacterium-leads-halt-risky-studies-tulane
Deadly bacterium 'released from US high-security lab'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/11443881/Deadly-bacteria-released-from-US-high-security-lab.html
Dangerous Bacteria Mysteriously Escapes From Louisiana Monkey Lab
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/dangerous-bacteria-mysteriously-escapes-louisiana-monkey-lab/story?id=29327907
The little-known Tulane Primate Center: What sort of research is done there, why; what's it's future?
http://www.theneworleansadvocate.com/news/11577906-172/the-little-known-tulane-primate-center
How secure are labs handling the world's deadliest pathogens?
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/02/15/us-health-biosecurity-idUSTRE81E0R420120215
Tulane National Primate Research Center
http://tulane.edu/tnprc/
The
bacterium
Burkholderia
pseudomallei
usually
thrives
in
the
soil
of
such
far
off
places
as
Southeast
Asia
and
northern
Australia.
But
35
miles
north
of
New
Orleans,
scientists
at
the
Tulane
National
Primate
Research
Center
have
been
working
with
the
deadly
pathogen
for
several
years,
attempting
to
manufacture
an
effective
vaccine.
Federally
mandated
safety
precautions
were
the
norm
in
the
lab:
multiple
layers
of
safety
equipment,
sealed
refrigerators,
careful
disposal
of
infected
rodents.
But
somehow
the
Burkholderia
pseudomallei,
which
is
spread
through
direct
contact
across
species
and
boasts
a
50
percent
human
death
toll,
escaped.
The
federal
response
has
been
swift
and
all
research
into
deadly
pathogens
at
Tulane
has
been
halted.
Several
studies
of
the
surrounding
campus
have
been
conducted,
though
no
additional
samples
of
the
bacteria
have
been
found.
The
incident,
however,
has
experts
worried,
especially
as
it
arrives
on
the
tails
of
several
other
high-profile
pathogen
leaks
in
the
past
year.
As
noted
by
Richard
Ebright,
a
biosafety
expert
at
Rutgers
University:
"The
fact
that
they
can't
identify
how
this
release
occurred
is
very
concerning."
[CNH]
The
first
two
links,
from
Science
Insider
and
the
Telegraph,
respectively,
provide
brief
but
excellent
coverage
of
the
incident
at
Tulane
and
its
impact
on
health
and
public
policy.
Next,
the
ABC
News
website
hosts
a
short
video
news
segment
about
the
bacterium's
release,
as
well
as
an
informative
article
and
several
helpful
links
concerning
the
control
of
pathogens
worldwide.
For
readers
who
would
like
more
in-depth
coverage
of
the
Tulane
National
Primate
Research
Center,
the
fourth
link
navigates
to
an
article
from
the
New
Orleans
Advocate
that
provides
backstory
on
the
lab,
its
history,
and
its
5,000
primates.
Finally,
in
the
next
link
Sharon
Begley
and
Julie
Steenhuysen
examine
the
question
of
how
secure
our
nation's
pathogen
labs
really
are,
while
the
last
link
navigates
to
the
website
of
Tulane's
National
Primate
Research
Center,
where
the
outbreak
took
place.
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Internet Scout Team | ||
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