========  The Scout Report                                            ==
========  March 22, 2002                                            ====
========  Volume 8, Number 10                                     ======
======                                   Internet Scout Project ========
====                                    University of Wisconsin ========
==                              Department of Computer Sciences ========


==   I N   T H E   S C O U T   R E P O R T   T H I S   W E E K  ========



====== NSDL Scout Reports ====
1.  NSDL Scout Reports for the Life Sciences and Physical Sciences

====== Research and Education ====
2.  Documenting the American South
3.  George Washington: A National Treasure
4.  National Academy Press: Scientific Inquiry in Education
5.  Ansel Adam's Photographs of Japanese-American Internment at Manzanar
6.  Council on Foreign Relations
7.  Report on the Congressional Campaign Fundraising of 2001
8.  Chemistry.org
9.  McIntyre, Pennsylvania: The Everyday Life Of A Coal Mining Company Town:
1910-1947

====== General Interest ====
10. Misunderstood Minds
11. Record of Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Civil War, 1861-1865
12. TenLinks.com: Ultimate Directories for Technology Professionals
13. Working in the 21st Century
14. US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
15. Mariner's Journal
16. The Currency Gallery

====== Network Tools ====
17. Becoming WebWise
18. Prospero 2.0: An Open Source Internet Document Delivery (IDD) System

====== In The News ====
19. United States Postal Rates Soon to Increase


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====== NSDL Scout Reports ====

1.  NSDL Scout Reports for the Life Sciences and Physical Sciences
The fifth issues of the first volumes of the Life Sciences Report and
Physical Sciences Report are available. The Topic in Depth section of Life
Sciences Report covers the Signs of Spring. The Physical Sciences Report's
Topic in Depth section offers Web sites and annotations on the land,
science, and scientists of Ireland.





====== Research and Education ====

2.  Documenting the American South
http://docsouth.unc.edu/

Sponsored by the Academic Affairs Library at the University of Chapel Hill,
Documenting the American South (last mentioned in the April 18, 1997 _Scout
Report_) is a collection of sources on Southern history, literature, and
culture from the colonial period through the first decades of the 20th
century. This Web site has grown considerably since its inception and
currently contains over 1,000 books and manuscripts that depict slavery,
literature, education, and religion in the South through the words of the
people who experienced them. This digitized collection currently contains
six chapters: First-Person Narratives of the American South; Library of
Southern Literature; North American Slave Narratives; The Southern
Homefront, 1861-1865; The Church in the Southern Black Community; and The
North Carolina Experience, Beginnings to 1940. One of six chapters on the
site is what Joe Hewitt, North Carolina's associate provost for university
libraries, calls "our signature project," which is an expansive collection
of North American slave narratives published in English in books and
pamphlets up to 1920. At present, more than 230 narratives are available
online from persons including Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, and many
others. In short, this phenomenal collection is not just for educators and
researchers, but for anyone interested in Southern slavery and history. [MG]


3.  George Washington: A National Treasure
http://georgewashington.si.edu/

George Washington: A National Treasure is a national exhibit that focuses on
the Lansdowne portrait of George Washington, painted by Gilbert Stuart in
1796 (the last painting of Washington before his death). An historic tour
from the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery, this painting will travel
across the country to eight major cities for the first time. The portrait is
currently at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas, and will remain
there until June 16, 2002. Over the next two years, the painting will travel
to seven other cities: Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Seattle, Minneapolis,
Oklahoma City, Little Rock, and New York City. Currently, Internet users may
explore this historical portrait at the above listed site using three
different filters: symbolic, biographic, and artistic. Each filter
highlights a distinct component of the portrait, provides background
information, and offers an interpretation of each individual element. In
addition, the site contains biographical information on Washington's life,
an exhibition schedule, and a teaching section for kids. [MG]


4.  National Academy Press: Scientific Inquiry in Education
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309082919/html/

For those who presume the centrality, if not the supremacy, of the
scientific method as a given in the elaboration of America's educational
objectives, readers of this report will be in for a surprise. This study,
published by the National Academy Press, explores the role and status of the
scientific method in the development of American education. In particular,
the report focuses on attempts to establish a science of education, a formal
method of testing, and proof of what does and doesn't work. Offering great
historical perspective, the study clearly illustrates the difficulty that
education theorists have had in establishing their discipline, to say
nothing of their methods, on the same solid footing as those of the "pure"
sciences. As readers of the report will discover, this difficulty has had
manifold implications on both teaching theory and practice, especially where
financial support of education is involved. [WH]


5.  Ansel Adam's Photographs of Japanese-American Internment at Manzanar
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/aamhtml/aamhome.html

In 1943, Ansel Adams (1902-1984) documented the Manzanar War Relocation
Center in California where Japanese Americans interned during World War II.
Presented by the Library of Congress, Ansel Adams's Photographs of Japanese-
American Internment at Manzanar displays side-by-side digital scans of
Adams's 242 original negatives and 209 photographic prints. Furthermore,
viewers get the opportunity not only to see Adam's darkroom techniques but
also how he cropped his prints. Some of the photographic images include
views of daily life, agricultural scenes, and sports and leisure activities.
Adams offered the collection to the Library of Congress in 1965, stating
that the purpose of his work was to "show how these people, suffering under
a great injustice, and loss of property, businesses and professions, had
overcome the sense of defeat and despair by building for themselves a vital
community in an arid (but magnificent) environment...." Searchable by
keyword and browseable by subject, for the first time, Internet users can
get an illustrative glimpse of what life was like for Japanese Americans
during this time. [MG]


6.  Council on Foreign Relations
http://www.cfr.org/index_public.html

Founded in 1921, the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) is a nonpartisan
membership organization who is dedicated to "increasing America's
understanding of the world and contributing ideas to U.S. foreign policy."
CFR's Web site is an online foreign affairs resource that contains updated
information on terrorism; videos and transcripts of past meetings on
America's response to terrorism; foreign relations articles, publications,
and press releases; and much more. Viewers may search the site's database by
keyword or browse by subject categories, programs, projects, people,
meetings and conferences, or date ranges. In addition, viewers may browse
the site's extensive collection of foreign affairs articles by region or
topic. For updated information on terrorism and other international issues,
this site is definitely the place to go. [MG]


7.  Report on the Congressional Campaign Fundraising of 2001 [.xls]
http://www.fec.gov/press/20020312canstat/20020312canstat.html

Issued by the Federal Election Commission, the annual report on
congressional campaign fundraising for 2001 is both interesting and
informative, noting, for one thing, that fundraising declined by 7.4 percent
overall for the first time since the organization began collecting data on
off-year elections in 1987. With detailed figures on all House and Senate
members who ran for election in 2001, the report lists contributions to
candidates by individuals as well as by political action committees (PACs).
The report also discloses expenditures, cash on hand, and debt for each of
the top fifty listed candidates. Aside from following incumbent campaigns,
the study also makes available figures and statistics on challengers and
their war chests. [WH]


8.  Chemistry.org
http://www.chemistry.org

The American Chemical Society (AMA) is a self-governed organization that
consists of more than 163,000 members at all degree levels and in all fields
of chemistry. The AMA hosts the Chemistry.org Web site, whose professionals
page offers free and continually updated information and resources organized
for easy access. Visitors can read recent articles, find out about upcoming
meetings, search databases and directories, and much more. With free
registration, users can have a personalized mychemistry.org page and, if
interested, receive a monthly email newsletter on chemistry.org information.
Any educator or professional will find the site a great source of up-to-date
chemistry specific information. This site is also reviewed in the March 22,
2002 _NSDL Scout Report for Physical Sciences_. [JAB]


9.  McIntyre, Pennsylvania: The Everyday Life Of A Coal Mining Company Town:
1910-1947
http://www.mcintyrepa.com/frontpage.htm

Presented by Susan Ferrandiz, assistant professor in the library department
of Slippery Rock University, McIntyre, Pennsylvania: The Everyday Life of a
Coal Mining Company Town "tells the story of a representative bituminous
coal town in western Pennsylvania" from its founding in 1910 to its fall as
a company town in 1947. Equipped with photos, documents, letters, and the
memories of current and former town residents, the site is divided into a
number of sections that include the coal company, miners and mining, the
union, school and education, family and town life, leisure and recreation,
and church and religion. A product of her master's thesis, Susan Ferrandiz
hopes that "this assemblage of documents, memories, and information will
convey a taste of the everyday life of the town and its residents during the
first half of the 20th century." [MG]



====== General Interest ====

10. Misunderstood Minds
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/misunderstoodminds/

The Misunderstood Minds project consists of three elements: the PBS
documentary, the companion Web site on PBS Online, and the Developing Minds
Multimedia Library. A co-production of the Kirk Documentary Group, Ltd., and
WGBH Boston, the documentary is a 90-minute film that examines several
learning problems and disabilities by following five families who try,
together with experts, to solve the mysteries of their children's learning
difficulties. Produced and directed by renowned "Frontline" filmmaker
Michael Kirk and narrated by ABC's "Nightline" correspondent and guest
anchor Chris Bury, Misunderstood Minds is scheduled to air Wednesday, March
27, 2002 at 9pm on PBS (check local listings). In correspondence with the
documentary, the Misunderstood Minds' Web site contains profiles of the
students in the documentary, as well as sections on attention, reading,
writing, and mathematics. In addition, the site contains an interactive
feature entitled Firsthand that provides a sense of what it may be like for
a student struggling with a learning disability. The multimedia library of
videos and print guides is designed to help parents and teachers of
elementary and middle-school children explore differences in learning
through the approach and conceptual framework of developmental-behavioral
pediatrician, author, and professor Dr. Mel 0. Ordering information may be
obtained by downloading the brochures on the order videos page of the Web
site. [MG]


11. Record of Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Civil War, 1861-1865
http://www.njstatelib.org/cyberdesk/DIGIDOX/Digidox20.htm

A publication of the Adjutant General's Office of New Jersey, the Record of
Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Civil War is a compilation document
arranged by regiments in numerical order. Originally drafted in 1876, each
regiment's chapter gives a brief summary of its actions, followed by a
roster of its members that provides rank, date commissioned or enrolled,
date mustered in, length of enlistment, and date mustered out. Chapters also
provide other information including promotions, transfers, wounds, deaths,
and desertions. Also accessible on this site is the New Jersey 1947
Constitutional Convention Proceedings held at Rutgers University in New
Brunswick. This lengthy document contains five volumes of information, which
can be searched separately or simultaneously. [MG]


12. TenLinks.com: Ultimate Directories for Technology Professionals
http://www.tenlinks.com/

Like the Scout Report, TenLinks.com provides privileged access to Web-based
resources by seeking out, evaluating, and reviewing Web materials for its
target audiences -- professionals in technology-related or driven fields. It
does a very good job of assessing and listing what's out there, presenting
its treasure trove of top picks in a readily accessible short list of key
industry categories, such as computer-aided design (CAD) and global
information systems (GIS), as well as broader classifications like civil
engineering and architecture. For each broad category, TenLinks offers a top
ten list of recommended sites and, then, further suggestions, including
product reviews, general reference sources, and even field-specific job
search information. Beyond this, TenLinks also serves as a primary source
for a broad range of professionals through extensive lists of general
information sources areas like mathematics and computer programming.
Available 24/7 online, TenLinks also makes its top ten lists available via
email. For those who might have missed a listing or two along the way,
TenLinks archives its material. [WH]


13. Working in the 21st Century
http://www.bls.gov/opub/working/home.htm

Published by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Working in the 21st Century
is a thorough portrait of the US workforce that begins with the new
millennium. Covers topics ranging from education levels to retirement plans,
the report can be viewed through an online slide show or accessed by
clicking on a topic that appears in the Web site's table of contents. Some
of the subject headings include: The labor force is growing more slowly;
More women are working today than in the past; Immigrants are found at the
high and low ends of the education scale; Education pays; Workers with
computer skills are in demand; The ten occupations that will generate the
most jobs range widely in their skill requirements; and The workplace is
becoming safer. In short, for anyone looking for a job, interested in
changing occupations, or just curious about the job market, this site is an
excellent place to start. [MG]


14. US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
http://www.eeoc.gov/index.html

Established in 1965, the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
is focused on the elimination of illegal discrimination from the workplace.
The Web site presents a plethora of information that includes federal laws
prohibiting job discrimination, how to file a charge against your employer
for discriminatory practices, small business information, data on the
federal sector, and much more. The site also contains information on a wide
variety of fee-based training and technical assistance programs offered by
the EEOC throughout the country. These programs are geared towards
employers, employees, and organizations in the private sector, including
small businesses, as well as federal, state, and local governmental
agencies. Equally important, for newsworthy information regarding the EEOC,
the site provides access to press releases that date back to 1994. [MG]


15. Mariner's Journal
http://www.aims.gov.au/pages/about/communications/journal/mariners-journal-
00.html

This new Web site from the Australian Institute of Marine Science currently
has only one featured cruise, the Northwest Cape and Ningaloo Reef
expedition. The expedition began on March 6 and focuses on water circulation
patterns and food supply for marine fish and crustacean populations. Users
can track the progress of the research vessel and click on each date to read
daily research reports and view photos from the field. This site is also
reviewed in the March 22, 2002 _NSDL Scout Report for the Life
Sciences_.[AL]


16. The Currency Gallery
http://www.currencygallery.org/

Presented by the Currency Gallery and Research Foundation, The Currency
Gallery is an online museum that takes Internet users on a walk through time
with a pictorial, historical, and information tour of US currency. Whether
it's pounds, pence, dollars, or cents, this site features pictures of every
type of currency ever printed by the US government. This site is currently
under construction; therefore, every page is not yet accessible. However,
regardless of whether you are a currency novice or expert, this historical
journey has something to offer for everyone. [MG]



====== Network Tools ====

17. Becoming WebWise
http://www.bbc.co.uk/webwise/learn/index.shtml

Sponsored by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Becoming Webwise is
an online course for the novice Internet user that wants to learn at his/her
own pace. The course consists of eight sections that take users through the
Internet basics in a simple and easy-to-follow format. Becoming WebWise
covers topics such as getting connected, emailing, searching, bookmarking,
creating address books, and the basic fundamentals of building a Web page.
Users will also learn about technological developments like Digital TV, WAP
phones, legal online rights, the history of the Net, as well as other ways
of accessing the Internet. The course is estimated to take up to ten hours
to complete, and users are able to return to any of the sections as often as
they choose. [MG]


18. Prospero 2.0: An Open Source Internet Document Delivery (IDD) System
https://bones.med.ohio-state.edu/prospero/index.html

The John A. Prior Health Sciences Library of Ohio State University has
recently released Prospero 2.0, an open source Internet Document Delivery
(IDD) system that allows libraries to send and receive documents in
electronic format from Prospero or Ariel workstations and patrons to
retrieve these documents using any Web browser. This innovative tool is
separated into two modules (a library staff module and a user interface
module) and is operable on any Windows (NT/2000/XP/98) machine. The tool
takes up 10 MB of disc space and uses a 5-15 MB memory footprint. The
server-side module should run properly on any platform with a Web server and
support for perl scripting. Non-Windows users will need to rely on a program
such as SAMBA to provide SMB shares that the Ariel/Prospero workstation can
map locally. [MG]



====== In The News ====

19. United States Postal Rates Soon to Increase
Postal Commission to Decide on Rates
http://www.abcnews.go.com/wire/Politics/ap20020321_987.html
Postal Rates Set for Summer Increase
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2027-2002Mar22.html
US Postal Financial Outlook Dire
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A57655-2002Mar20.html
Post Office Gives Up on Wireless Service
http://news.cnet.com/investor/news/newsitem/0-9900-1028-9431000-
0.html?tag=ats
Postal Rate Commission
http://www.prc.gov/
The United States Postal Service
http://www.usps.com/

Beginning this summer, it looks like consumers will have to pay an
additional 3 cents to mail a letter. Without the usual opposition, the
Independent Postal Rate Commission gave heavy consideration to the Postal
Service's request for new rates. Under the Unites States Postal Service
(USPS) proposal, which could take effect as early as June 30th of this year,
the cost of a first-class stamp would rise to 37 cents. Other increases
requested by the USPS include a 2 cent increase in postcard mailings, a 35
cent increase in a 1-pound priority mail item, an 84 cent to a $2.18
increase in a 5-pound parcel post item, a $1.20 increase in a half-pound
express mail item, and a 20 cent increase in certified mail items. In
addition, insurance charges would go up for most mail, but would be reduced
for Express Mail.

Affected by declining businesses in a slow economy, the USPS lost $1.68
billion last year and has anticipated a $1.35 billion loss this year after
freezing new construction and cutting 12,000 jobs. Furthermore, the terror
attacks, followed by the anthrax-by-mail infections, hit the agency with
millions of dollars in additional costs for cleanup and preventative
measures for future mail contamination. In the end, all but the American
Postal Workers Union signed on to the deal, which avoided months of hearings
and arguments before the agency. For more information on the expected postal
rate increase, viewers may access the first two articles listed above by the
Associated Press and Washington Post respectively. The third article, also
from the Washington Post, delves into the financial outlook of the USPS,
while the fourth article talks about their decision to eliminate wireless
service. The fifth site leads to the Postal Rate Commission's homepage,
where viewers can receive updated information on postal rates. Finally, the
USPS Web site offers information regarding its online services, mailings,
shipments, stamps, postal rates, fees, and more. [MG]




======                        ======
==   Index for March 22, 2002     ==
======                        ======

1.  NSDL Scout Reports for the Life Sciences and Physical Sciences
The fifth issues of the first volumes of the Life Sciences Report and
Physical Sciences Report are available. The Topic in Depth section of Life
Sciences Report covers the Signs of Spring. The Physical Sciences Report's
Topic in Depth section offers Web sites and annotations on the land,
science, and scientists of Ireland.

2.  Documenting the American South
http://docsouth.unc.edu/

3.  George Washington: A National Treasure
http://georgewashington.si.edu/

4.  National Academy Press: Scientific Inquiry in Education
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309082919/html/

5.  Ansel Adam's Photographs of Japanese-American Internment at Manzanar
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/aamhtml/aamhome.html

6.  Council on Foreign Relations
http://www.cfr.org/index_public.html

7.  Report on the Congressional Campaign Fundraising of 2001 [.xls]
http://www.fec.gov/press/20020312canstat/20020312canstat.html

8.  Chemistry.org
http://www.chemistry.org

9.  McIntyre, Pennsylvania: The Everyday Life Of A Coal Mining Company Town:
1910-1947
http://www.mcintyrepa.com/frontpage.htm

10. Misunderstood Minds
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/misunderstoodminds/

11. Record of Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Civil War, 1861-1865
http://www.njstatelib.org/cyberdesk/DIGIDOX/Digidox20.htm

12. TenLinks.com: Ultimate Directories for Technology Professionals
http://www.tenlinks.com/

13. Working in the 21st Century
http://www.bls.gov/opub/working/home.htm

14. US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
http://www.eeoc.gov/index.html

15. Mariner's Journal
http://www.aims.gov.au/pages/about/communications/journal/mariners-journal-
00.html

16. The Currency Gallery
http://www.currencygallery.org/

17. Becoming WebWise
http://www.bbc.co.uk/webwise/learn/index.shtml

18. Prospero 2.0: An Open Source Internet Document Delivery (IDD) System
https://bones.med.ohio-state.edu/prospero/index.html

19. United States Postal Rates Soon to Increase
Postal Commission to Decide on Rates
http://www.abcnews.go.com/wire/Politics/ap20020321_987.html
Postal Rates Set for Summer Increase
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2027-2002Mar22.html
US Postal Financial Outlook Dire
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A57655-2002Mar20.html
Post Office Gives Up on Wireless Service
http://news.cnet.com/investor/news/newsitem/0-9900-1028-9431000-
0.html?tag=ats
Postal Rate Commission
http://www.prc.gov/
The United States Postal Service
http://www.usps.com/



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====== Brought to You by the Internet Scout Project
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