========  The Scout Report                                            ==
========  May 12, 2000                                              ====
========  Volume 6, Number 51                                     ======
======                                   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.  Two from Bartleby
3.  AmphibiaWeb
4.  Oxford University Press (OUP) Reading Room
5.  International Court of Justice Unpublished Pleadings
6.  New Reports on the US Intelligence Community
7.  Daoist Studies
8.  Suicidal Females in Greek and Roman Mythology: A Catalogue -
Diotima HTML Version
9.  National Hospital Discharge and Ambulatory Surgery Data
10. Two from the European Union (EU)

====== General Interest ====
11. Two New Sites from the Chicago Historical Society and
Northwestern University
12. Tate Modern
13. MagPortal
14. National Museum of Women in the Arts
15. _Images of England_
16. Vanishing Pollinators
17. _Chamber's Book of Days_
18. President Clinton - Final Days

====== Network Tools ====
19. _FTC Advisory Committee on Online Access and Security - Final Report_
20. Three on E3 2000
21. Netscape Communicator 4.73

====== In The News ====
22. Chaos in Sierra Leone


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/2000/se-000510.html

Volume 3, Number 17 of the _Scout Report for Science & Engineering_
is available. The In the News section annotates nine resources on the
Genetically Modified (GM) foods debate. [MD]



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

2.  Two from Bartleby
_The Oxford Shakespeare_
http://www.bartleby.com/70/index.html
Bartleby Shakespeare Collection
http://www.bartleby.com/people/Shakespe.html
_Dictionary of Phrase and Fable_
http://www.bartleby.com/81/

Bartleby.com (see the March 24, 2000 _Scout Report_) has recently
placed two new works online. The first, which it describes as "the
most authoritative Shakespeare freely available on the Internet," is
an electronic version of the 1,350-page 1914 Oxford edition of the
_Complete Works of William Shakespeare_. Containing 37 plays and 154
sonnets, _The Oxford Shakespeare_ may be browsed by play, act, and
scene, or sonnet, or searched by keyword. At the Bartleby Shakespeare
Collection page, users will also find over 1,500 Shakespeare
quotations selected by John Bartlett, anthologized verse, and some
essays on Shakespeare, including T.S. Eliot's "Hamlet and His
Problems." The second new offering is E. Cobham Brewer's 1898
_Dictionary of Phrase and Fable_, a collection of more than 18,000
entries "that reveal the etymologies, trace the origins and otherwise
catalog 'words with a tale to tell.'" The entries can be browsed
alphabetically or searched by keyword. [MD]


3.  AmphibiaWeb
http://elib.cs.berkeley.edu/aw/

Dr. David Wake, Curator of the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at the
University of California-Berkeley, and several graduate students have
launched AmphibiaWeb, an online database of amphibian biology and
conservation. The searchable database currently contains 137 species
accounts and eventually will provide information "for every species
of amphibian in the world." Species accounts include species
descriptions, photos, life history information, conservation status
information, and literature references. Although the new resource is
still under development, more than 100 species are already
photo-illustrated, and over 300 species have range maps; the
reference list contains in excess of 500 literature references. In
addition to the database, the site offers a section on worldwide
amphibian declines and information on how to contribute information
to the database. [LXP]


4.  Oxford University Press (OUP) Reading Room [.pdf]
http://www.oup.co.uk/readingroom/

Though of course created to sell OUP books, this site is a useful
resource for university instructors, scholars, or anyone interested
in the latest works from one of the foremost academic publishers. The
site is currently divided into thirteen reading rooms (Politics,
Anthropology, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, History,
Literature, Philosophy, etc.), each of which offers sample chapters
(.pdf format), tables of contents, and other information on the
latest offerings in that field from OUP. In addition, users can
browse each reading room by their particular interest. For instance,
the Literature reading room is subdivided into topics such as
Shakespeare, Romantic Literature, Nineteenth Century Literature,
Twentieth Century Literature, and Criticism and Theory, among others.
An internal search engine is also available. [MD]


5.  International Court of Justice Unpublished Pleadings [.pdf]
http://www.icj-cij.org/icjwww/idecisions/ipleadingsnotavailable.htm
International Court of Justice (ICJ)
http://www.icj-cij.org/

Seated at The Hague, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) is the
principal judicial organ of the United Nations, hearing cases on
international law submitted by various States and offering advisory
opinions on submitted legal questions. Recently, the ICJ began to
place online the (uncorrected) full text of Written and Oral
Pleadings that are currently being prepared for printed publication.
Nineteen Contentious and Advisory Cases from 1986-99 are presently
offered at the site, some in HTML format, others in .pdf. Most
include the Application, Request for Provisional Measures, Written
and Oral Pleadings, Orders, Judgment (when applicable), and Press
Communiques. Additional information on the ICJ, including the current
docket, some basic documents, and publications, is available at the
main site. [MD]


6.  New Reports on the US Intelligence Community
"Annual Report for the United States Intelligence Community" -- CIA
http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/fy99intellrpt/dci_annual_report_99.html
Alternate Version -- FAS
http://www.fas.org/irp/cia/product/report-99.html
Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2001 - Report
http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/2000_rpt/s106-279.html
Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2001 - Bill
http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/2000_rpt/s2507.html

Recently placed on the Central Intelligence Agency's site, this
unclassified report to Congress offers an overview of the
Intelligence Community's (IC) activities in the past year. It
discusses efforts to promote cooperation across the IC, strategic
priorities, regional highlights, transnational issues,
counterintelligence work, and future strategies. An alternative and
easier to read version is available at the Federation of American
Scientists (FAS) site. The FAS has also placed online the full text
of the Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2001, which was reported
out by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on May 4, and the
accompanying report. Both offer insights into the proposed future of
the intelligence community, especially the National Security Agency
(NSA) and its relations with Congress and the American people. [MD]


7.  Daoist Studies
http://www.daoiststudies.org/

Created and maintained by an international group of Daoism scholars,
this new site hopes to offer an electronic space that promotes
scholarly communication, research, teaching, and Daoist studies
generally. Although thin on content at present, the site is
attractive, well-organized, and with enough support from like-minded
users, could become a major online resource for research and teaching
in Daoist studies. The content is in two main sections: Teaching and
Research. The first will feature syllabi (two are offered at time of
review), recommended audiovisual materials, and guides to teaching
Daoism as part of larger survey courses. The second offers a detailed
research guide, event listings, paper abstracts and book notes, and
related links. Other features include a collection of recommended
Daoist Studies books with links to purchase information. [MD]


8.  Suicidal Females in Greek and Roman Mythology: A Catalogue -
Diotima HTML Version
http://www.uky.edu/AS/Classics/suicides.html
HTML Version Optimized for IE5
http://www.uky.edu/AS/Classics/suicides_ie5.htm
.pdf Version
http://www.uky.edu/AS/Classics/suicides.html
Diotima
http://www.uky.edu/AS/Classics/gender.html

Compiled by Dr. Elise P. Garrison of Texas A&M University and hosted
by the Diotima Website, this highly specialized catalog is an
alphabetical list "of the females of mythology who commit suicide
along with a thumbnail sketch of their lives and deaths." These are
accompanied by one or more brief quotes. A bibliography of English
and non-English sources is also included. Hosted by the University of
Kentucky Classics Department, Diotima has long been the premier
online source for research and teaching information on women and
gender in the ancient world. Resources at the site include numerous
links to syllabi, a large and searchable collection of
bibliographies, links to image databases, an anthology of translated
texts, online resources for biblical studies, and more. Though most
scholars in the field are probably well aware of Diotima, students
and other users interested in women and gender in the ancient world
will certainly wish to pay the site repeated visits. [MD]


9.  National Hospital Discharge and Ambulatory Surgery Data [.pdf]
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/major/hdasd/nhds.htm

Provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
this site offers a host of data on inpatients discharged from
non-Federal, short-stay hospitals in the US and the use of ambulatory
surgery services. These data include patient characteristics (age and
sex, patient disposition, expected sources of payment, etc.),
admission and discharge dates, and medical information such as
diagnoses and procedures performed. Like other CDC data sites, this
is not the easiest to navigate, but diligent users will be rewarded
with numerous reports, raw data files, and related documentation. [MD]


10. Two from the European Union (EU)
The ABC of the European Union
http://europa.eu.int/abc-en.htm
The History of the European Union
http://europa.eu.int/abc/history/index_en.htm

These two sites from the EU, one new the other recently made
available in eleven languages, will prove helpful to students or
anyone who wants to find basic information about the European Union's
history, institutions, and activities. The ABC page offers an easy
and quick overview of the EU, citizens rights, the euro,
institutions, symbols, treaties, and links to official documents and
publications. The History page is a simple chronology, from 1946 to
2000, that identifies key events in the development of the EU and its
institutions. [MD]



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

11. Two New Sites from the Chicago Historical Society and
Northwestern University
The Dramas of Haymarket [.pdf]
http://www.chicagohistory.org/dramas/
Wet With Blood [QuickTime, QTVR]
http://www.chicagohistory.org/wetwithblood/

The Chicago Historical Society (CHS) and Northwestern University have
recently unveiled two fine online exhibits. The first highlights
materials from a soon-to-be-completed Haymarket Affair Digital
Collection by the Historical Society. The Haymarket rally, bombing,
and subsequent trials, executions, and pardon, mark one of the most
significant episodes in US labor history. The story of Haymarket is
presented at the site as a five-act drama, accompanied by interviews,
images, excerpts of memoirs and contemporary news reports, and other
primary documents. A guide to navigating the site, a .pdf version of
the five-acts, and suggestions for further reading are also provided.
The second site is an interesting example of how contemporary
scientific research methods (specifically DNA forensics) can be used
to help solve the problem of authentication of historical museum
objects. Conceived and created by the Textile Curator of the CHS, the
site traces ongoing efforts made to authenticate blood stains on a
cloak belonging to Mary Todd Lincoln and other Lincoln assassination
relics held by the CHS. It offers a review of both these relics and
their provenance and the scientific methods used, as well as
QuickTime movies of the experts in action, and a QTVR tour of the
textile conservation lab. In all, an interesting and surprisingly
detailed look at the merger of history and forensic science. [MD]


12. Tate Modern
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern

Yesterday, Queen Elizabeth II officially opened the Tate Modern,
Britain's new national museum of modern art housed in a former power
station on London's Bankside. Those who weren't invited to the gala
opening party last night and can't make it to the official public
opening today can still visit the new museum online. In addition to
the ordinary visiting information, special exhibitions, and so forth,
the site offers a complete overview of the works displayed in each of
its four themed groups. Though modern sounding, the four display
themes (Landscape/ Matter/ Environment; Still Life/ Object/ Real
Life; Nude/ Action/ Body; and History/ Memory/ Society) are actually
based on the major genres of art established by the French Academy in
the seventeenth century: landscape, still life, the nude, and history
painting. Clicking on a section will bring up a list of rooms, each
of which links to a short description and list of works. From this
list, users can access more information on a particular work (and an
image when available) and other pieces by the same artist held at
Tate galleries via the Tate Collections Website (see the June 11,
1999 _Scout Report_). [MD]


13. MagPortal
http://MagPortal.com

Created and provided by Hot Neuron LLC, this current awareness
resource helps users stay abreast of recent free magazine articles
available online. Updated each business day, the site organizes the
articles in twelve main categories, including Business, Internet,
Family & Home, Sports, Health, and Science & Technology, among
others. Each of these are further divided into varying numbers of
subcategories. The articles are briefly described, and links are
provided to the full text and the main site of the periodical. In
addition, users can access a list of similar articles via an icon at
the end of most article descriptions. A keyword search engine is
provided at the main page, and registered users can mark and save
articles for future reference. Although a master list of the
periodicals indexed by the site would be a welcome addition, the site
as it stands is quite helpful for users searching for current pieces
on selected topics or simply tracking the latest writing in their
areas of interest. [MD]


14. National Museum of Women in the Arts [QuickTime, Windows Media Player]
http://www.nmwa.org/
Video Tour
http://www.nmwa.org/vtour/vtour1.htm

Created in 1997 in celebration of the Museum's tenth anniversary, the
Website of the National Museum of Women in the Arts currently
features a video tour. Narrated by Wilhelmina Cole Holladay, whose
collection of art by women forms the foundation of the Museum's
permanent collection, the tour is conveniently divided into 21
sections, so that users can select only those they wish to view
(approximate download times are one to five minutes per clip). Ms.
Holladay provides anecdotes about each work. In addition to the
video, the site's table of contents lists resources including artist
biographies, curriculum packets for teachers, and information about
booking tours and events at the Museum in Washington, DC. [DS]


15. _Images of England_
http://www.rchme.gov.uk/ioe/index.htm

Directed by the National Monuments Record, the public archive of
English Heritage, _Images of England_ is a project to construct a
photographic record of England's 360,000 listed buildings to place
online by 2002. In the first three-month photographic survey, which
began last August, approximately 500 volunteer photographers in
England captured over 39,000 images. The second survey, which began
on May 1, will involve over 650 photographers. At the site, users
will find all sorts of information about the project and its
volunteers, regional materials (including press releases), and data
on listed buildings, as well as a number of thumbnail images from the
first survey, sorted by region (note that some images were
unavailable or missing at the time of review). Also included is an
online version of a recent exhibition at the National Monuments
Record Centre in Swindon. The exhibition is arranged by category,
such as Street Furniture, Industrial Architecture, Places of Worship,
Public Buildings, Entertainment, and Bridges. Anyone interested in
architecture or English history will certainly enjoy this site and
check back for future updates. [MD]


16. Vanishing Pollinators
http://www.si.edu/pollinators/

A companion to a new exhibition at the National Zoo, this modest but
worthwhile site features 34 lovely photos of flowering plants and
their threatened insect pollinators. Created to raise awareness of
the worldwide decline in pollinator populations and its potential
effects on the ecosystem, the exhibit includes six galleries of
annotated photos. Information about the physical exhibit and related
resources are also available. [MD]


17. _Chamber's Book of Days_
http://www.library.wisc.edu/etext/BookofDays/

Subtitled _A Miscellany of Popular Antiquities in connection with the
Calendar_, _Chamber's Book of Days_ is essentially a collection of
"On this Day" trivia, short pieces, and other interesting tidbits,
including history, literature, biography, and "oddities of human life
and character." Digitized by the University of Wisconsin-Madison
Libraries, this electronic reprint may be browsed in page order or
via a calendar navigator. The site offers a fun look into
pop-history/ tabloid news of the late nineteenth century. For
instance, I discovered that on the day of my birth in 1626 "a
cod-fish was brought to Cambridge market, which upon being opened,
was found to contain a book in its maw or stomach." An auspicious
date to be born indeed. [MD]


18. President Clinton - Final Days [QuickTime]
http://www.adcritic.com/content/president-clinton-final-days.html

Available at Adcritic.com (see the October 7, 1999 _Scout Report for
Business & Economics_), this six-minute video is a humorous and
clever peek into the twilight days at the Clinton White House. Shot
for the Annual White House Correspondents's Dinner, the "home movie"
depicts a lonely President Clinton taking care of the yard work,
doing the laundry, and other mundane tasks. The movie is an
entertaining diversion and demonstrates that even the "leader of the
free world" can have a (self-deprecating) sense of humor. [MD]



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

19. _FTC Advisory Committee on Online Access and Security - Final
Report_ [MS Word]
http://www.ftc.gov/acoas/index.htm

Released on May 8, the final report to the Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) by a 42-member blue-ribbon panel calls for every commercial
Website to devise and make public a personal data security program.
The Advisory Committee on Online Access and Security was formed to
make recommendations to the FTC "regarding implementation of certain
fair information practices by domestic commercial Web sites," with
special attention to the use and security of personal information.
Available in HTML or MS Word formats, the report outlines four
possible approaches for granting users access to the information
collected about them, ranging from total access to all information
from any source to "access for correction," in which users could only
find out what information is being held on them in the event that
"the information is used to grant or deny the consumer a significant
benefit." Users can read the full text of the report and submit
public comments at the FTC site. [MD]


20. Three on E3 2000
E3 Expo
http://www.e3expo.com/
CNET GameCenter E3 2000 Live From the Show
http://www.gamecenter.com/Features/Exclusives/E32k/?tag=st.cn.1.tlpg.e32000
GA Source
http://www.ga-source.com/

Even if you didn't stand in line to buy The Sims or don't often spend
the wee hours of the evening fragging away on Quake III, these three
sites offer an interesting look into the next wave of software and
console games, whose sales topped $6 billion last year and which
provide the main motive force behind new developments in graphics,
sound cards, and other computer components. The Electronic
Entertainment Expo (E3), being held May 11-13 in Los Angeles, is by
far the most important annual event in the computer gaming industry.
At the official E3 site, users can access show updates and news, view
the conference program, and read about show highlights. More
screenshots and coverage can be found at CNET Gamecenter and GA
Source. [MD]


21. Netscape Communicator 4.73
http://home.netscape.com/computing/download/index.html
Release Notes
http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/4.7/relnotes/windows-4.73.html

Users wary of installing the reportedly buggy Netscape 6 PR1 or those
who wish to downgrade can pick up the latest version of Communicator
at the Netscape site. Although it doesn't offer much in the way of
new features (some security fixes, AIM 3.0, Flash 4.0, WinAmp, and
RealPlayer G2 for Windows) this latest release is reportedly more
stable. [MD]



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

22. Chaos in Sierra Leone
Crisis in Sierra Leone -- BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/in_depth/africa/2000/sierra_leone/default.stm
Africa News Online -- Sierra Leone
http://www.africanews.org/west/sierraleone/
Sierra Leone News -- Sierra Leone Web
http://www.sierra-leone.org/slnews.html
Sierra Leone News -- Worldnews.com
http://www.sierraleonenews.com/
_Concord Times_ (Freetown) News Update
http://www.oe-pages.com/BIZ/Homebiz/tod/
"Clinton Offers Military Aid To Help Calm Sierra Leone" -- _New York Times_
http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/africa/051200sierra-leone-aid.html
Online NewsHour -- Sierra Leone
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/africa/sierra_leone/home.html
IRIN Sierra Leone Archive
http://www.reliefweb.int/irin/archive/sierraleone.phtml
United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone -- UNAMISL
http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/unamsil/body_unamsil.htm
"Sierra Leone, and the U.N., at risk" -- _Japan Times_
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion.htm
"Editorial: A painful lesson in Africa" -- _Cincinatti Post_
http://www.cincypost.com/opinion/edita051100.html
"Flawed peace agreement harmful to Sierra Leone" -- _Kansas City Star_
http://www.kcstar.com/item/pages/opinion.pat,opinion/37747524.511,.html
"An African-led military force should halt the fighting" -- _Dallas
Morning News_
http://dallasnews.com/editorial/77772_sierraleone_11.html
"The Trouble With Africa Is. . ." -- _Chicago Tribune_
http://chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/commentary/article/0,2669,SAV-0
005120052,FF.html
"Should We Privatize The Peacekeeping?" -- _Washington Post_
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/2000-05/12/046l-051200-idx.html

On July 7, 1999, Sierra Leone President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah and Foday
Sankoh, leader of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF), signed a
cease-fire agreement that was supposed to end an eight-year civil war
that plagued this former British colony. Signed in Lome, Togo and
brokered by the UN and the Organization of African Unity (OAU), the
agreement committed the RUF to lay down its arms in exchange for
general amnesty and positions in a new government. Despite the
dispatch of about 8,000 UN peacekeeping troops to help enforce the
accord in November/December 1999, gross human rights violations,
especially against civilians in rural areas, have continued. More
recently, the UN forces have come under direct attack, with over 500
troops abducted and their weapons and armored vehicles taken. This
week, tens of thousands of civilians streamed into the capital,
Freetown, ahead of a rebel advance. Yesterday, however,
pro-government forces and veteran Nigerian soldiers checked RUF
movements on Freetown. While fighting in the countryside remains
widespread, support for the UN mission in Sierra Leone, which has
been widely criticized as under-funded and lacking in direction, has
been growing, with President Clinton pledging military assistance
(but not ground troops) and Britain landing paratroops to secure the
capital's airport and facilitate evacuations. At present, the
situation remains chaotic at best, in part due to the disappearance
of RUF leader Foday Sankoh, who was last seen on Monday, before tens
of thousands of protestors surrounded and then looted his house in
Freetown.

As always, the BBC is an excellent starting point for learning more
about the situation, with background information, breaking news, a
timeline, and analysis. Africa News Online offers numerous recent
articles on the crisis, as does Sierra Leone Web, and Worldnews.com,
the last drawing on numerous international sources. Brief news
updates which reflect the tense mood in the capital are available
from the Freetown-based _Concord Times_ site, while a large selection
of recent articles and background materials are available from the
_New York Times_ (free registration required). More analysis can be
found at the PBS NewsHour special on Sierra Leone and a host of
recent news updates are available at the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Integrated Regional Information
Networks (IRIN) site. More information and documents related to the
UN peacekeeping mission are posted at its official Website. Finally,
opinion pieces on the crisis and the future of UN peacekeeping
operations have been posted by the _Japan Times_, _Cincinatti Post_,
_Kansas City Star_, _Dallas Morning News_, _Chicago Tribune_, and the
_Washington Post_. [MD]




======                        ======
==   Index for May 12, 2000       ==
======                        ======

1.  Scout Report for Science & Engineering_
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sci-eng/2000/se-000510.html

2.  Two from Bartleby
_The Oxford Shakespeare_
http://www.bartleby.com/70/index.html
Bartleby Shakespeare Collection
http://www.bartleby.com/people/Shakespe.html
_Dictionary of Phrase and Fable_
http://www.bartleby.com/81/

3.  AmphibiaWeb
http://elib.cs.berkeley.edu/aw/

4.  Oxford University Press (OUP) Reading Room [.pdf]
http://www.oup.co.uk/readingroom/

5.  International Court of Justice Unpublished Pleadings [.pdf]
http://www.icj-cij.org/icjwww/idecisions/ipleadingsnotavailable.htm
International Court of Justice (ICJ)
http://www.icj-cij.org/

6.  New Reports on the US Intelligence Community
"Annual Report for the United States Intelligence Community" -- CIA
http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/fy99intellrpt/dci_annual_report_99.html
Alternate Version -- FAS
http://www.fas.org/irp/cia/product/report-99.html
Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2001 - Report
http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/2000_rpt/s106-279.html
Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2001 - Bill
http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/2000_rpt/s2507.html

7.  Daoist Studies
http://www.daoiststudies.org/

8.  Suicidal Females in Greek and Roman Mythology: A Catalogue -
Diotima HTML Version
http://www.uky.edu/AS/Classics/suicides.html
HTML Version Optimized for IE5
http://www.uky.edu/AS/Classics/suicides_ie5.htm
.pdf Version
http://www.uky.edu/AS/Classics/suicides.html
Diotima
http://www.uky.edu/AS/Classics/gender.html

9.  National Hospital Discharge and Ambulatory Surgery Data [.pdf]
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/major/hdasd/nhds.htm

10. Two from the European Union (EU)
The ABC of the European Union
http://europa.eu.int/abc-en.htm
The History of the European Union
http://europa.eu.int/abc/history/index_en.htm

11. Two New Sites from the Chicago Historical Society and
Northwestern University
The Dramas of Haymarket [.pdf]
http://www.chicagohistory.org/dramas/
Wet With Blood [QuickTime, QTVR]
http://www.chicagohistory.org/wetwithblood/

12. Tate Modern
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern

13. MagPortal
http://MagPortal.com

14. National Museum of Women in the Arts [QuickTime, Windows Media Player]
http://www.nmwa.org/
Video Tour
http://www.nmwa.org/vtour/vtour1.htm

15. _Images of England_
http://www.rchme.gov.uk/ioe/index.htm

16. Vanishing Pollinators
http://www.si.edu/pollinators/

17. _Chamber's Book of Days_
http://www.library.wisc.edu/etext/BookofDays/

18. President Clinton - Final Days [QuickTime]
http://www.adcritic.com/content/president-clinton-final-days.html

19. _FTC Advisory Committee on Online Access and Security - Final
Report_ [MS Word]
http://www.ftc.gov/acoas/index.htm

20. Three on E3 2000
E3 Expo
http://www.e3expo.com/
CNET GameCenter E3 2000 Live From the Show
http://www.gamecenter.com/Features/Exclusives/E32k/?tag=st.cn.1.tlpg.e32000
GA Source
http://www.ga-source.com/

21. Netscape Communicator 4.73
http://home.netscape.com/computing/download/index.html
Release Notes
http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/4.7/relnotes/windows-4.73.html

22. Chaos in Sierra Leone
Crisis in Sierra Leone -- BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/in_depth/africa/2000/sierra_leone/default.stm
Africa News Online -- Sierra Leone
http://www.africanews.org/west/sierraleone/
Sierra Leone News -- Sierra Leone Web
http://www.sierra-leone.org/slnews.html
Sierra Leone News -- Worldnews.com
http://www.sierraleonenews.com/
_Concord Times_ (Freetown) News Update
http://www.oe-pages.com/BIZ/Homebiz/tod/
"Clinton Offers Military Aid To Help Calm Sierra Leone" -- _New York Times_
http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/africa/051200sierra-leone-aid.html
Online NewsHour -- Sierra Leone
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/africa/sierra_leone/home.html
IRIN Sierra Leone Archive
http://www.reliefweb.int/irin/archive/sierraleone.phtml
United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone -- UNAMISL
http://www.un.org/Depts/dpko/unamsil/body_unamsil.htm
"Sierra Leone, and the U.N., at risk" -- _Japan Times_
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion.htm
"Editorial: A painful lesson in Africa" -- _Cincinatti Post_
http://www.cincypost.com/opinion/edita051100.html
"Flawed peace agreement harmful to Sierra Leone" -- _Kansas City Star_
http://www.kcstar.com/item/pages/opinion.pat,opinion/37747524.511,.html
"An African-led military force should halt the fighting" -- _Dallas
Morning News_
http://dallasnews.com/editorial/77772_sierraleone_11.html
"The Trouble With Africa Is. . ." -- _Chicago Tribune_
http://chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/commentary/article/0,2669,SAV-0
005120052,FF.html
"Should We Privatize The Peacekeeping?" -- _Washington Post_
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/2000-05/12/046l-051200-idx.html



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