========  The Scout Report                                            ==
========  October 29, 1999                                          ====
========  Volume 6, Number 24                                     ======
======                                   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  ========



====== Subject Specific Reports ====
1.  _Scout Report for Science & Engineering_

====== Research and Education ====
2.  Calendar and Register of Henry James Correspondence
3.  PubSCIENCE
4.  Student Review Articles: Insect Behavior
5.  Two on K-12 Education and Information Technology
6.  Icy Continent Mapped from Space with RADARSAT
7.  Two from the New York Public Library (NYPL)
8.  _The Scientist: The News Journal for the Life Scientist_
9.  history digitisation

====== General Interest ====
10. Ad*Access
11. Bitlaw
12. _icon magazine_
13. LANIC Electoral Observatory
14. The History of Phrenology on the Web
15. The Home Energy Saver
16. Crimeboss

====== Network Tools ====
17. Northern Light Search Alert Service
18. Au2HTML
19. Audio Interview with Tim Berners-Lee

====== In The News ====
20. Team of the Century?


Copyright and subscription information appear at the end of the Scout
Report. For more information on all services of the Internet Scout
Project, please visit our Website: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/

If you'd like to know how the Internet Scout team selects resources
for inclusion in the Scout Report, visit our Selection Criteria page
at: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sr/criteria.html

Feedback is always welcome: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



====== Subject Specific Reports ====

1.  _Scout Report for Science & Engineering_
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sci-eng/1999/se-991027.html

Volume 3, Number 4 of the _Scout Report for Science & Engineering_ is
available. The In the News section annotates ten resources related to
the RADARSAT Satellite's high-resolution radar maps of the Antarctic.
[MD]



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

2.  Calendar and Register of Henry James Correspondence
http://jamescalendar.unl.edu/

Hosted by the University of Nebraska Press and created by Steven H.
Jobe and Susan E. Gunter, this site offers information on all known
letters written by novelist Henry James (more than 10,500) and brief
biographical information on the (more than 1,000) recipients of these
letters. Users can search the database by date, correspondent,
repository, or keyword. Search returns include the date and place of
the letter's composition, the addressee's name and identity, the
publication source, and the repository in which the letter is held.
The site also features comprehensive lists of all published sources
of the letters and the more than 130 repositories and private
collections where they are held, and statistics on the letters and
correspondents. Henry James scholars will quickly find this site to
be an invaluable research tool. [MD]


3.  PubSCIENCE
http://pubsci.osti.gov/

Modelled after the National Institutes of Health's PubMed, this new
database developed by the Department of Energy's (DOE) Office of
Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) allows users to search
across abstracts and citations of multiple publishers in the physical
sciences and other energy-related disciplines for free. Currently,
the database indexes more than 1,000 scientific and technical
journals. Users can search by keyword or publisher, or perform a
multiple option advanced search. Search returns include author,
title, journal title and number, date, and a fair-sized abstract.
Some returns also contain links to the full text, which will come up
immediately if the user or his/her institution has a subscription to
the journal. Otherwise, information on pay-per-view or subscription
access is provided. [MD]


4.  Student Review Articles: Insect Behavior
http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/Entomology/courses/en507/papers_1999/index.htm
Selected Publications and Databases
http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/Entomology/publications.html

Colorado State University entomology professor Dr. Louis Bjostad
provides this interesting resource of review articles on insect
behavior. Each review article was written by a student as part of a
graduate level course held in Spring 1999; review articles consist of
a three to six paragraph summary of research, followed by a dozen or
more recent references. Titles include "Communal Roosting in Insects"
and "Behavioral Aspects of Biological Control of Spider Mites," among
dozens of others. For those interested in reading summaries of (and
finding references to) recent scientific articles on insect behavior,
this is an excellent starting place. Note that there are two
additional review pages (from the same course in previous years)
listed on the Entomology Department's Selected Publications and
Databases page (listed alphabetically). [LXP]


5.  Two on K-12 Education and Information Technology
Acceptable Use Policies: A Handbook
http://www.pen.k12.va.us/go/VDOE/Technology/AUP/home.shtml
CTER White Papers on Technology Issues for Educators
http://lrs.ed.uiuc.edu/wp/

These two sites address a number of issues related to K-12 education
and the use of information technology (IT). The first, provided by
the Virginia Department of Education Technology Division, offers
guidelines for the appropriate use of computer networks. These
guidelines are generally known as Acceptable Internet Use Policy, or
AUP, and are comprised of "a written agreement . . . signed by
students, their parents and their teachers, outlining the terms and
conditions of Internet use-rules of online behavior and access
privileges." Rather than set out a single AUP, this online handbook
features a collection of selected resources to help administrators,
teachers, library media specialists, and parents develop their own
local AUP. The handbook includes links to examples of various
components of an AUP, sample policies from Virginia and other states,
and a selection of templates. The second resource features white
papers written by teams of teachers and other K-12 personnel enrolled
in a Masters program called CTER: Curriculum, Technology, and
Educational Reform at the University of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign in
the spring of 1999. The topics covered include Access Issues;
Credibility and Web Evaluation; Free Speech vs. Censorship; Privacy;
Commercialism; Intellectual Property, Copyright, and Plagiarism; and
Computer Crime and Technology Misuse. The layout and content of each
of the seven white papers varies, but most are presented as easily
navigated Webpages ("An Educator's Guide To...") rather than simple
digitized text. [MD]


6.  Icy Continent Mapped from Space with RADARSAT [QuickTime]
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/imagewall/antarctica.html

Last week, scientists released images from the first high-resolution
radar map of Antarctica. Taken over a period of eighteen days in 1997
by a NASA-launched Canadian satellite called RADARSAT, the images
have revealed a number of amazing features never seen before. The
most important of these is a complex network of ice streams, huge
rivers of ice that move ice and snow from the continent's interior to
the sea, some moving up to 3,000 feet and one system that sends up to
19 cubic miles of ice to the sea each year. Another hidden feature
imaged by RADARSAT was Lake Vostok, a massive fresh water lake laying
two miles beneath the surface of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet. This
site, hosted by NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio, offers a
fascinating and often beautiful virtual tour of Antarctica, divided
into fifteen stops, featuring images of varying resolution and
QuickTime movies. Users can also read the official press release and
learn more about the RADARSAT mission with provided links. For
further resources on RADARSAT and Antarctica, see the October 27,
1999 _Scout Report for Science and Engineering_. [MD]


7.  Two from the New York Public Library (NYPL)
Planning Digital Projects for Historical Collections
http://digital.nypl.org/brochure/index.html
African American Women Writers of the 19th Century
http://digital.nypl.org/schomburg/writers_aa19/toc.html

These two resources from the NYPL consist of an overview of planning
digital projects for historical collections and an example of just
such a project. The first item is aimed primarily at librarians and
administrators who would like to promote the use of often
under-accessed and difficult to classify collections of unique
historical materials. The guide briefly discusses the NYPL's own
digital projects, answers common questions regarding digital
projects, and guides readers through the steps of planning and
creating the project, including selecting, organizing, and presenting
the materials. The conclusion also offers a number of useful links.
The African American Women Writers of the 19th Century site is an
online collection of 52 full-text works. Users can browse the books
by author, title, or literature type (fiction, poetry, biography and
autobiography, and essays). Each work is (unfortunately) presented in
a rather cramped frame, navigated with a table of contents on the
left side. The site also includes a helpful introductory essay,
technical notes, a discussion of editorial methods, a citation list,
and an internal search engine. [MD]


8.  _The Scientist: The News Journal for the Life Scientist_
http://www.the-scientist.library.upenn.edu/

Provided with the cooperation of the Institute for Science
Information (ISI) and the University of Pennsylvania, _The Scientist_
is a free newsletter for life scientists. Each issue features a
variety of science news stories, focusing on recent developments, as
well as commentary, opinion, "Hot Papers," professional information,
commercial products and services, and jobs. Users can browse and
search back issues and also subscribe to a free email notification
service. [MD]


9.  history digitisation
http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/history-digitisation/

This new unmoderated mailing list is "concerned with the
digitisation, of historical material, whether as an image or an OCR'd
[Optical Character Recognition] document. This list aims to bring
together experts in the field of digitising historical material and
academics who have projects in mind." Users will find subscription
information and an archive at the site. The archive can be searched
by keyword or browsed by date, thread, subject, or author. [MD]



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

10. Ad*Access
http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/adaccess/

A collaboration of the John W. Hartman Center for Sales, Advertising
& Marketing History and the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special
Collections Library at Duke University, this database contains images
of more than 7,000 advertisements printed mainly in US newspapers and
magazines between 1911 and 1955. The images are divided into five
major categories: Beauty and Hygiene; Radio; Television;
Transportation; and World War II. Each category can be browsed by a
number of subtopics, listed by year. Users also have several search
options, including keyword, complex, and Boolean searching. In
addition, brief histories of the industries and timelines of world
and national events are provided. While the site has obvious
potential for cultural and business historians, general users may
also enjoy browsing the images, which offer an interesting glimpse
into how Americans conceived of themselves and consumer culture in
the first half of this century. [MD]


11. Bitlaw
http://www.bitlaw.com/index.html

Created and maintained by Daniel A. Tysver of Beck & Tysver,
P.L.L.P., an intellectual property law firm, this site is a
comprehensive resource on technology law, with "over 1,800 pages on
patent, copyright, trademark, and Internet legal issues." The site is
divided into eight main sections, five of which (Patent Law,
Trademark Law, Copyright Law, Software Patents, and Internet Legal
Issues) are extended hyperlinked essays prefaced with an executive
summary and a table of contents. The other three sections offer the
full text of selected statutes, regulations, case law, and patent
office documents; a large and well organized collection of annotated
links; and sample forms and contracts, respectively. While there are
any number of online legal resources, this site's clean navigation
and depth set it apart. [MD]


12. _icon magazine_ [Shockwave Flash]
http://www.iconmagazine.com/

Designed and produced by Harvard undergraduates, _icon_ is "part
magazine, part gallery, part forum . . . a participatory space where
the power of stories is given a new freedom and saddled with a new
responsibility." The stories and poems offered in the current issue
(Spring 1999) are wide-ranging: straightforward text, hypertext
poetry, stories interlaced with images and changing backgrounds,
several Shockwave Flash-enhanced stories, and a difficult to classify
but fascinating piece exploring the stories found in a subway system
("Underground"). In addition, this issue includes a special feature,
an eight poem meditation on Greece followed by extensive readers's
comments. With its generally thoughtful writing and innovative
experiments in blending fiction and Web design in ways that
contribute rather than detract from the narrative, _icon_ is well
worth a visit. [MD]


13. LANIC Electoral Observatory
http://www.lanic.utexas.edu/info/newsroom/elections/

The Latin American Network Information Center (LANIC) at the
University of Texas (last mentioned in the November 13, 1998 _Scout
Report_) has added a new feature to provide users with quick
reference guides to online resources for each of the thirteen
presidential or legislative elections in Latin American and Caribbean
countries between this month and the end of 2000. The pages for each
country are divided into five sections: Electoral Coverage, Electoral
Resources, News, Parties and Candidates, and (after the election)
Results. Users should note that the number of links contained in each
of these sections will vary considerably by country, depending on
what is available. Currently, the site has content on four of the
thirteen elections (Argentina, Uruguay, Guatemala, and Chile) as well
as information on three recent referenda or elections in Guatemala,
Venezuela, and Panama. [MD]


14. The History of Phrenology on the Web
http://www.jmvanwyhe.freeserve.co.uk/

Popular in early nineteenth-century Europe (especially in Britain),
and later in America, phrenology was the controversial belief that
one could determine the character and intellectual traits of a person
by examining the shape and contours of the skull ("reading the bumps
on your head"). Created and maintained by John van Wyhe of Cambridge
University, this site claims to be "the largest and most
comprehensive website for the history of phrenology." Contents
include the full text of several phrenological works, phrenology
images, a brief introduction and timeline, some contemporary
criticism, and a critical bibliography. Links to other online texts
and related sites are also provided. Despite some poor choices of
background and text color that make portions of the site difficult to
read, this site is a good resource for historians and general users
interested in what its practitioners called, "the only true science
of mind." [MD]


15. The Home Energy Saver [QuickTime]
http://homeenergysaver.lbl.gov/

Developed by the Environmental Energy Technologies Division at the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, this site is designed to help
homeowners save energy and money. The heart of the site is the Energy
Advisor, which allows users to enter their area code to receive
initial energy use estimates and then receive customized results
after entering more details about their home. The Energy Advisor also
offers recommendations on selected upgrades to help your home become
energy efficient. Several on-site QuickTime movies demonstrate use of
the Home Energy Advisor. Additional resources include the Home Energy
Librarian, which offers a large number of annotated energy
conservation links; a glossary of energy terminology; and the Making
it Happen Module, which contains a collection of tips and links to
help users capitalize on energy savings opportunities. [MD]


16. Crimeboss
http://www.crimeboss.com/

Created by Richard Wolfe to share some of the gems of his collection
of crime comic books from the 1940s and 1950s, this site features a
gallery of more than 100 crime comic covers in all their lurid and
exploitative glory. Comic fans and anyone else who gets a kick out of
trashy titles like "Crimes By Women," "Gangsters and Gun Molls,"
"Crime Does Not Pay," "Murder Incorporated," and "Teen-Age Dope
Slaves" will thoroughly enjoy this site. Although thumbnails are only
available for a few of the titles, all images load quickly and are of
excellent quality. Wolfe also offers commentary on several of his
favorites, the text of some articles on the history of crime comics,
and some related sites. [MD]



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

17. Northern Light Search Alert Service
http://standard.northernlight.com/cgi-bin/cl_alert.pl?cb=200

Northern Light has recently announced the beta release of a new free
service that will notify users via email whenever new information
meeting their search criteria is found in Northern Light's daily
updates to its database of 150 million Webpages and 8 million Special
Collection articles. After setting up a free Northern Light account,
users can enter their own topic for Search Alerts or choose from a
number of topics listed on the advanced search forms (Power Search,
Industry Search, Current News, Investext, and WEFA - Wharton
Econometric Forecasting Associates Report). Users can also preview
sample results before registering their alert. From the email
notification, users can launch a results list with the new
information, although Special Collections articles may only be read
after paying a fee. [MD]


18. Au2HTML [Windows 95/98/NT]
http://www.filehouse.com/au2html/

Au2HTML is a tool aimed at Webmasters and others who are interested
in developing Webpage galleries. Its most useful feature allows the
creation of thumbnails from images of varying file formats.
Customizable thumbnail options include image size and the border
style. Au2HTML also comes with an HTML editor and can be integrated
with your FTP client to ease file transfers. The registration fee is
$99. A demo version is available for no charge. [JB]


19. Audio Interview with Tim Berners-Lee [QuickTime, MP3]
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,32073,00.html

_Wired News_ has posted an audio recording and the text of its recent
interview with World Wide Web creator Tim Berners-Lee. In the
interview, Berners-Lee talks about "the Web's development, his
thoughts about its current state, and his predictions for the
future." Users can hear the 31-minute interview in its entirety in
QuickTime audio or MP3 format or listen to selected highlights. [MD]



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

20. Team of the Century?
The Yankees, A Century of Champions -- _The Sporting News_
http://www.sportingnews.com/features/yankees/
"The Team of the 90's Plays Coy at the Mere Mention of Dynasty" --
_The New York Times_ [RealPlayer]
http://www.nytimes.com/library/sports/baseball/102999bba-yanks.html
"No Team Finer In This Century" -- _New York Daily News_
http://www.nydailynews.com/1999-10-28/Metro_Sports/Baseball/a-45426.asp
"A Decade Ahead of the Rest" -- _Washington Post_
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/sports/baseball/longterm/1999/pla
yoffs/worldseries/articles/boz28.htm
ESPN World Series [RealPlayer]
http://espn.go.com/mlb/playoffs99/index.html
majorleaguebaseball.com [RealPlayer]
http://www.majorleaguebaseball.com/

On Wednesday, the New York Yankees completed their second consecutive
four-game sweep of the World Series, winning the title for the third
time in four years and for the 25th time this century. The game,
incidentally, was also the team's twelfth Series win in a row (tying
the record set by the "Murderers' Row" Yankees of the late 1920s) and
future Hall of Famer Roger Clemens's 250th career win. Sports writers
have, of course, commented extensively on this impressive
performance, many stating that it is only fitting that a century of
baseball should draw to a close "in pinstripes." Love them or hate
them, no team has been so successful and so dominating as the New
York Yankees. In New York, at least, they certainly do love their
Bronx Bombers, and a ticket tape parade will be held today in their
honor.

_The Sporting News_ special feature on the Yankees provides a nice
review of the Yankees's teams and players throughout the century,
with stats, history, quotes, photos, numerous articles on selected
legendary players, and analysis of the team under George
Steinbrenner. _The New York Times_ examines the Yankees's place in
history and whether they truly are a baseball dynasty in an extended
article. The site also offers links to related articles, a slide
show, and audio selections. _The New York Daily News_ and the
_Washington Post_ sports columnists also offer some comments on the
team and its place in baseball history. ESPN's World Series site
includes a number of articles and features, analysis of the Yankee
and Braves rosters, and some video excerpts. Finally, the official
site of Major League Baseball currently contains a number of items on
the World Series and the Yankees, including game summaries, analysis,
photo galleries, and audio and video selections. Additional resources
on professional baseball can be found in Signpost), the _Scout
Report_'s database. These include Total Baseball Online, Baseball
Weekly, and By Popular Demand: Jackie Robinson and Other Baseball
Highlights, 1860s-1960s. [MD]

Signpost
http://www.signpost.org/signpost/
Total Baseball Online
http://scout7.cs.wisc.edu/pages/00000617.html
Baseball Weekly
http://scout7.cs.wisc.edu/pages/00000829.html
By Popular Demand: Jackie Robinson and Other Baseball Highlights, 1860s-1960s
http://scout7.cs.wisc.edu/pages/00005745.html





======                        ======
==   Index for October 29, 1999   ==
======                        ======

1.  _Scout Report for Science & Engineering_
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sci-eng/1999/se-991027.html

2.  Calendar and Register of Henry James Correspondence
http://jamescalendar.unl.edu/

3.  PubSCIENCE
http://pubsci.osti.gov/

4.  Student Review Articles: Insect Behavior
http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/Entomology/courses/en507/papers_1999/index.htm
Selected Publications and Databases
http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/Entomology/publications.html

5.  Two on K-12 Education and Information Technology
Acceptable Use Policies: A Handbook
http://www.pen.k12.va.us/go/VDOE/Technology/AUP/home.shtml
CTER White Papers on Technology Issues for Educators
http://lrs.ed.uiuc.edu/wp/

6.  Icy Continent Mapped from Space with RADARSAT [QuickTime]
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/imagewall/antarctica.html

7.  Two from the New York Public Library (NYPL)
Planning Digital Projects for Historical Collections
http://digital.nypl.org/brochure/index.html
African American Women Writers of the 19th Century
http://digital.nypl.org/schomburg/writers_aa19/toc.html

8.  _The Scientist: The News Journal for the Life Scientist_
http://www.the-scientist.library.upenn.edu/

9.  history digitisation
http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/history-digitisation/

10. Ad*Access
http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/adaccess/

11. Bitlaw
http://www.bitlaw.com/index.html

12. _icon magazine_ [Shockwave Flash]
http://www.iconmagazine.com/

13. LANIC Electoral Observatory
http://www.lanic.utexas.edu/info/newsroom/elections/

14. The History of Phrenology on the Web
http://www.jmvanwyhe.freeserve.co.uk/

15. The Home Energy Saver [QuickTime]
http://homeenergysaver.lbl.gov/

16. Crimeboss
http://www.crimeboss.com/

17. Northern Light Search Alert Service
http://standard.northernlight.com/cgi-bin/cl_alert.pl?cb=200

18. Au2HTML [Windows 95/98/NT]
http://www.filehouse.com/au2html/

19. Audio Interview with Tim Berners-Lee [QuickTime, MP3]
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,32073,00.html

20. Team of the Century?
The Yankees, A Century of Champions -- _The Sporting News_
http://www.sportingnews.com/features/yankees/
"The Team of the 90's Plays Coy at the Mere Mention of Dynasty" --
_The New York Times_ [RealPlayer]
http://www.nytimes.com/library/sports/baseball/102999bba-yanks.html
"No Team Finer In This Century" -- _New York Daily News_
http://www.nydailynews.com/1999-10-28/Metro_Sports/Baseball/a-45426.asp
"A Decade Ahead of the Rest" -- _Washington Post_
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/sports/baseball/longterm/1999/pla
yoffs/worldseries/articles/boz28.htm
ESPN World Series [RealPlayer]
http://espn.go.com/mlb/playoffs99/index.html
majorleaguebaseball.com [RealPlayer]
http://www.majorleaguebaseball.com/



======                                ====
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====== The Scout Report
====== Brought to You by the Internet Scout Project
====
==
The Scout Report (ISSN 1092-3861) is published every Friday of the
year except the last Friday of December by the Internet Scout
Project, located in the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Department
of Computer Sciences.

             Director   Susan Calcari
      Managing Editor   Rachael E. Bower    [REB]
               Editor   Michael de Nie      [MD]
    Production Editor   Travis Koplow       [TK]
         Contributors   David Charbonneau   [DC]
                        Pat Coulthard       [PC]
                        Aimee D. Glassel    [AG]
                        Emily Missner       [EM]
                        Laura X. Payne      [LXP]
                        Krishna Ramanujan   [KR]
                        Michael Roszkowski  [MR]
                        Debra Shapiro       [DS]
                        Amy Tracy Wells     [ATW]
                       Joseph Bockhorst    [JB]

Internet Scout team member information:
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/addserv/team.html

Below are the copyright statements to be included when reproducing
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The single phrase below is the copyright notice to be used when
reproducing any portion of this report, in any format.

 From The Scout Report, Copyright Internet Scout Project 1994-1999.
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/

The paragraph below is the copyright notice to be used when
reproducing the entire report, in any format:

Copyright Susan Calcari and the University of Wisconsin Board of
Regents, 1994-1999. The Internet Scout Project
(http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/), located in the Computer Sciences
Department of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, provides
information about the Internet to the U.S. research and education
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Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of the
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Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed
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