========  The Scout Report                                            ==
========  February 9, 2001                                          ====
========  Volume 7, Number 3                                      ======
======                                   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  ========



====== New From Internet Scout ====
1.  Open Letter to Our Readers

====== Subject Specific Reports ====
2.  Scout Reports for Social Sciences & Humanities and Business & Economics

====== Research and Education ====
3.  Tobacco Control Archives
4.  New Jersey Environmental Digital Library (NJDEL)
5.  Making of America Collection (MOA) Update
6.  War, Chaos, and Business: Modern Business Strategy
7.  "No Child Left Behind": President Bush's Education Initiative to
Congress -- US Department of Education
8.  Foreign Relations of the United States
9.  UNICEF Innocenti Report Card
10. H-Caribbean

====== General Interest ====
11. The Hannah Arendt Papers at the Library of Congress
12. "Sexual Victimization of College Women" -- DOJ
13. The Centennial Exhibition -- Philadelphia 1876
14. "Resource Guide on Racial Profiling Data Collections Systems:
Promising Practices and Lessons Learned" -- DOJ
15. "Road Map for National Security: Imperative for Change"
16. Breakthrough Books -- _Lingua Franca_
17. Louis Armstrong Discography
18. Public Radio Fan

====== Network Tools ====
19. ProFusion - Version 2 Beta
20. AltaVista Tools
21. Google Now Indexes PDF Files

====== In The News ====
22. Peace Summit in Columbia


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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/about/criteria.html

The Scout Report on the Web:
   Current issue: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sr/current/
   This issue: http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/sr/2001/scout-010209.html


Visit the Internet Scout Weblog at:
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/weblog/


Feedback is always welcome: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



====== New From Internet Scout ====

1.  Open Letter to Our Readers
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/about/letter-010202.html

Dear Readers: Here at the Internet Scout Project, we have been
working on securing a new source (or sources) of funding for the
Scout Reports. We are soliciting your ideas in an Open Letter to
Readers that has been sent to the subscriber mailing lists and is
available on our Website. Please read the letter at the address above
and send us your ideas.



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

2.  Scout Reports for Social Sciences & Humanities and Business & Economics
_Scout Report for Social Sciences & Humanities_
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/socsci/2001/ss-010206.html
_Scout Report for Business & Economics_
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/bus-econ/2001/be-010208.html

The eleventh issues of the fourth volumes of the Scout Reports for
Social Sciences & Humanities and Business & Economics are available.
The In the News section of the Social Sciences & Humanities Report
annotates eight resources on disagreements between the US and its
European allies on the issues of a US missile defense system and the
deployment of a "rapid reaction" European Union force. The Business &
Economics Report's In the News section offers seven resources on the
recently proposed patients' bill of rights.



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

3.  Tobacco Control Archives [.pdf]
http://www.library.ucsf.edu/tobacco/

Sponsored and hosted by the University of California-San Francisco
Library & Center for Knowledge Management, Department of Archives &
Special Collections, this site offers a wealth of papers, unpublished
documents, and electronic resources relevant to tobacco control
issues (primarily in California). The final version of the archive
will contain over 40 million pages of documents, but even now users
can access thousands of pages in three collections. These are the
Brown & Williamson Collection, the Joe Camel Campaign: Mangini v. R.
J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Collection, and California Documents from
the State of Minnesota Depository. All three are searchable and
browseable. Also included at the site are a guide to searching
tobacco industry Websites, full-text reports on tobacco industry
activity, and links to related resources. [MD]


4.  New Jersey Environmental Digital Library (NJDEL) [.pdf, RealPlayer]
http://njenv.rutgers.edu/njdlib/

Developed by the Scholarly Communication Center of Rutgers University
Libraries, this site offers access to an impressive array of
materials related to the New Jersey environment. The scope of the
collection is quite broad, including citizen information, technical
reports, photographic tours, and even some full-length videos. In
addition, many of the items in the digital library are ephemeral or
grey literature, typically unavailable through common research tools.
Visitors may search the collection by keyword or phrase, title, or
author, or browse via one of three pull-down menus: theme, place
(county), and document type. As if all this were not enough, the
library will also digitize documents on demand, and environmental
organizations and individual researchers can submit their materials
directly to the collection (select "submit records" for
instructions). An excellent resource and a model for other states.
[MD]


5.  Making of America Collection (MOA) Update
http://moa.umdl.umich.edu/

The Making of America Project (last reviewed in the November 18, 1997
_Scout Report for Social Sciences_) has announced a major update to
its collection of late-nineteenth-century American books and
journals. The University of Michigan Digital Library Initiative has
added over 7,000 volumes (books and journal issues) to the MOA
collection, which now holds more than 8,500 volumes totalling
approximately 2.89 million pages of text. As before, this site is
notable not only for its sheer size and utility, but also for its use
of Optical Character Recognition technology, which presents users
with a searchable scanned image of the actual pages of the
nineteenth-century texts. Instructions are provided for those who
prefer to view the (uncorrected) plain text versions. Both the
journal and book collections may be browsed alphabetically (and
chronologically in the former), searched by keyword, or searched by a
number of advanced options, including boolean, proximity, frequency,
and index searches. [MD]


6.  War, Chaos, and Business: Modern Business Strategy
http://www.belisarius.com/

This unique Website, hosted by Kettle Creek Corporation, offers
articles and presentations on the theories of Colonel John R. Boyd, a
US strategist. Boyd wrote extensively on the ideas of agility and
time-based competition. The former refers to the ability "to generate
ambiguity, isolation, and panic in the opposing side." Boyd advocated
combining agility with time-based competition, "to operate in rapid
decision cycle time," in order to win wars. On this Website, these
two theories are applied to business strategy. The articles in the
database may be browsed by author or title, navigating via the left
side of the screen. The site also contains a large collection of case
studies, business applications, and biographies of Boyd. This site
seems to be a little slow to load, but for those interested in
applying military theory to business strategy, it will be well-worth
the wait. [EM]


7.  "No Child Left Behind": President Bush's Education Initiative to
Congress -- US Department of Education
http://ed.gov/inits/nclb/index.html
Executive Summary:
http://ed.gov/inits/nclb/part2.html
.pdf version:
http://ed.gov/inits/proposal.pdf

The US Department of Education has placed online a report outlining
President Bush's new educational policy and recommendations to
Congress. The report sketches Bush's goals for education reform:
testing to assess student performance and the success of individual
schools, less federal regulatory involvement in school policymaking,
targeted spending to "improve schools and enhance teacher quality," a
focus on literacy, and a system of choice for parents whose children
are in failing schools. The 28-page report provides a general summary
of the policy initiatives designed to realize these goals. [DC]


8.  Foreign Relations of the United States
http://libtext.library.wisc.edu/FRUS/

The Foreign Relations of the United States series is "the official
documentary historical record of major US foreign policy decisions
and significant diplomatic activity." The series initially began in
1861 and now comprises over 350 volumes. Volumes published since 1945
have been available online from the State Department (see the January
21, 2000 _Scout Report_), and users can now read the full text of
volumes from 1900-01 and 1903-18 at this site, offered by the
University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries in collaboration with the
University of Illinois at Chicago Libraries. Visitors may browse the
collection by volumes, keyword search by issue or all volumes, or
perform Boolean and proximity searches. The volumes are displayed as
digital page images with links to text versions and printable page
images. [MD]


9.  UNICEF Innocenti Report Card [.pdf]
http://www.unicef-icdc.org/publications/pdf/repcard2e.pdf
Press Release
http://www.unicef.org/newsline/01pr10.htm

This new UNICEF report contains the "most comprehensive estimates so
far of child injury deaths across the member countries of the OECD"
(Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development), the world's
most industrialized countries. The Innocenti Report Card offers the
first league table of child deaths by injury and concludes that
injury has become the number-one killer of children ages one to
fourteen in developed countries and accounts for almost 40 percent of
deaths in that age group. The full text of the 30-page report is
available for download in .pdf format from UNICEF. [MD]


10. H-Caribbean
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~carib/

The latest addition to H-Net's discussion networks is intended to
serve as a forum for debates and discussions on Caribbean Studies for
academics teaching and researching in associated fields. The editors
note that "in keeping with current historiographical trends, it is
intended that this list will help to move the study of the Caribbean
beyond a regional analytical framework and will locate the region
within the broader context of modern world history." Users can
subscribe to the list and read discussion logs at the site. [MD]



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

11. The Hannah Arendt Papers at the Library of Congress
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/arendthtml/arendthome.html

The American Memory Project has released a preview version of the new
Library of Congress's Manuscript Division collection relating to the
life and activities of author and political philosopher Hannah Arendt
(1906-1975). Totalling over 25,000 items (about 75,000 digital
images), the collection contains "correspondence, articles, lectures,
speeches, book manuscripts, transcripts of Adolf Eichmann's trial
proceedings, notes, and printed matter pertaining to Arendt's
writings and academic career," as well as correspondence with a
number of leading literary and political figures of the 20th century.
At present, only a limited number of page images are available online
at the preview site (best accessed via the browse by series option),
though they total over 2,000 images. These include lectures on Kant,
Aristotle, Machiavelli, and Existentialism; the first and final
drafts of _Between Past and Future_; the _New Yorker_ version of
_Eichmann in Jerusalem__; _On Revolution_; and other essays and
lectures. In the summer of 2001 the entire collection will be
available online. Also included at the preview site is an essay on
Arendt by Jerome Kohn, Professor of Philosophy at The New School
University. [MD]


12. "Sexual Victimization of College Women" -- DOJ [.pdf]
http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/182369.pdf
ASCII version:
http://www.ncjrs.org/txtfiles1/nij/182369.txt
Press release:
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/press/svcw.pr

Last week, the Department of Justice released the report "Sexual
Victimization of College Women," which offers "a comprehensive look
into the prevalence and nature of sexual assault occurring at
American colleges." The report provides data on the frequency, types,
related injuries, and victim perceptions of sexual assault on campus.
It finds that "about three percent of college women experience a
completed and/or attempted rape during a typical college year" and
that about thirteen percent of college women had been stalked since
the beginning of the school year. The report can be downloaded in
.pdf format or ASCII, and an online press release presents key
findings. [DC]


13. The Centennial Exhibition -- Philadelphia 1876
http://libwww.library.phila.gov/CenCol/index.htm

The Free Library of Philadelphia presents this online look at one of
the great nineteenth-century World's Fairs: the Centennial Exhibition
of 1876, celebrating America's 100th birthday. The Website is
organized into a variety of sections to help modern visitors recreate
the experience of visiting the fair, but which may obscure the site's
structure. The Tours section is a good starting point, featuring an
interactive color panorama that's a jumping off place to major fair
buildings such as the Women's Pavilion, the Horticultural Hall, or
the Main Exhibition Building. Other highlights include the Centennial
Schoolhouse with children's activities: a timeline, and paper model
of the fair that can be printed and built. Types of historical
materials presented include postcards, trade cards, wood engravings,
albumen photographs, manuscripts, and children's books. In addition
to the digitized historical images, the online exhibition makes heavy
use of specially designed graphics, and loading these image-intensive
pages may result in some long waits. For impatient types, there is a
quick search box, and an advanced search for searches by subjects,
captions, material types, and a link to search bibliographic records
for the collection in the Free Library of Philadelphia catalog. [DS]


14. "Resource Guide on Racial Profiling Data Collections Systems:
Promising Practices and Lessons Learned" -- DOJ [.pdf]
http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/bja/184768.pdf
Text Version
http://www.ncjrs.org/txtfiles1/bja/184768.txt

Prepared by staff at Northeastern University for the US Department of
Justice, this report is a resource guide on racial profiling. The
report offers an overview of the nature of racial profiling; gives
information on data collection and its purpose; describes current
activities in California, New Jersey, North Carolina, and Great
Britain; and offers some recommendations for the future.
Non-specialists may not be interested in the particulars of data
collection, but the report still contains much of interest to anyone
concerned with racial profiling and efforts to stop the practice. [MD]


15. "Road Map for National Security: Imperative for Change" [.pdf]
http://www.nssg.gov/phaseIII.pdf
US Commission on National Security/21st Century
http://www.nssg.gov/

The US Commission on National Security/21st Century has been tasked
with conducting the "most comprehensive government-sponsored review
of US national security in more than 50 years." The commission has
recently posted the report from its third and final phase: "Road Map
for National Security: Imperative for Change." The 131-page report
covers topics such as institutional redesign, human requirements for
national security, and the role of science and education. Users may
download the full text of this and the previous two reports in .pdf
format at the site. [MD]


16. Breakthrough Books -- _Lingua Franca_
http://www.linguafranca.com/bookworm/breakthrough/

In each issue, _Lingua Franca_ asks noted scholars and experts in a
select field to recommend recent breakthrough books in their field.
The magazine has begun to place the entire archive online, which
currently includes over 60 topics. Each book listing includes the
recommender's comments and links to purchase information. A very nice
resource, especially for those new to a subject or from a different
discipline. [MD]


17. Louis Armstrong Discography
http://www.satchography.com/

Satchography! Whether or not you agree with Ken Burns (and many
others) that Louis Armstrong is the font of jazz and modern American
music, you have to appreciate the effort and care that have gone into
this site. Fans, researchers, and casual listeners can use the site
to access comprehensive information on Armstrong's recordings,
sessions, and the composers. These are collected in seven sections
which chart the course of Armstrong's career. Each section begins
with an introduction and lists recording dates and song titles with a
link to session details, which include composer, record label, and
release number of first issue, the musicians featured, and CDs (or,
in some cases, vinyl LP) where the song can be found. Pops's
appearances on television, radio, and film are also noted, but
detailed information is not yet available. The site is intended to
serve as a working compendium, and suggestions, new discoveries, and
comments are welcome. [MD]


18. Public Radio Fan
http://www.Publicradiofan.com/

Created and maintained by Kevin Kelly, this is a great site for
public radio listeners. The site serves as a directory to public
radio stations in the US and around the world, linking to both the
Websites and audio feeds as well as programming schedules. It also
offers program listings by station, time (including what's on now),
or program (the list is huge). There are many, many possibilities for
this site. Visitors can look up when their favorite programs air on
their local station, find an Internet broadcast of the show at an
alternative time, discover new programs and stations, and so on. The
site is especially useful for finding new programs from non-US
stations. This is one of those sites that earned an immediate spot in
this Scout's personal bookmarks. [MD]



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

19. ProFusion - Version 2 Beta
http://beta.profusion.com

Originally developed by the University of Kansas Information
Telecommunication and Technology Center, and School of Engineering
DesignLab (see the July 25, 1997 _Scout Report_), ProFusion is a
meta-search and "deep Web" search engine. Recently purchased by
Intelliseek and fitted with a new interface, ProFusion allows users
to search over 1,000 search sites, "including search engines, Web
directories, discussion groups, news sources, online publications,
and archives." Visitors can also perform targeted searches of
vertical search sources, selecting which databases to query. Two
other new features include an alert service that tracks changes to
selected pages and notifies users by email and a Search Assistant
that suggests results from search engine groups relevant to a query
in addition to the general Web results. Worth a spin around the
block. [MD]


20. AltaVista Tools
http://tools.altavista.com/
AltaVista
http://www.altavista.com/

As part of a general redesign that has returned AltaVista closer to
its search engine roots, the engine/ portal now offers a number of
useful tools. Chief among these are education and government
searches, which restrict searches to the .edu and .gov domains
respectively. Education search features keyword searches of 20
million university and college sites in numerous languages, an
education directory, and a list of the top four searches. Government
search indexes all sites hosted by the US federal government and also
offers a directory and top four list. The main AltaVista site has
also been improved, with a much more streamlined and user-friendly
interface. If you have drifted away from this venerable search engine
over the years, you might want to take another look. [MD]


21. Google Now Indexes PDF Files
http://www.google.com/

The indomitable Google has recently begun indexing content in .pdf
files, allowing searchers a significant peek into the "invisible
Web," the large area of online content not covered by most search
engines. PDF files are differentiated by a [PDF] label and instead of
a cached version, Google provides a link to a plain text version of
the document. Keeping a plain text version allows Google to apply its
PageRank technology and integrate .pdf content with normal search
returns. Test searches did not turn up a large number of .pdf files,
but adding "pdf" to the query produced a more significant proportion
in the returns, although they were not always the majority. [MD]



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

22. Peace Summit in Columbia
Columbia: War Without End -- CNN [RealPlayer, QuickTime, Windows Media Player]
http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2000/colombia.noframes/
"Pastrana meets with rebel" -- _Miami Herald_
http://www.herald.com/content/today/news/americas/digdocs/040671.htm
"Colombia talks enter second day" -- BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1161000/1161048.stm
"Talking Peace on Rebel Turf" -- _Washington Post_
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45717-2001Feb8.html
_Columbia Report_
http://www.colombiareport.org/
"Columbia's War Comes to Town" -- _Mother Jones_
http://www.motherjones.com/news_wire/barranca.html
Columbian Government
http://www.presidencia.gov.co/webpresi/index2.htm
_El Tiempo_
http://eltiempo.terra.com.co/
_El Espectador_
http://www.elespectador.com/
_El Columbiano_
http://www.elcolombiano.terra.com.co/

Peace talks between Columbian President Andres Pastrana and guerrilla
leader Manuel Marulanda entered their second day today, fueling hopes
for some breakthrough in ending the country's 37-year conflict. On
Thursday, Pastrana rather boldly placed himself in the hands of the
enemy, flying into the town of San Vicente del Caguan with a minimal
security detail. The town is held by the main rebel army in Columbia,
the 17,000 strong Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known by
its Spanish initials, FARC. Two years ago, Pastrana ceded a 16,200
square mile area of the country to FARC as a goodwill gesture to
jumpstart peace talks. So far, these talks have been disappointing,
as kidnappings and violence by both the rebels and right-wing
paramilitaries have continued unabated. Popular fatigue and anger at
continued insecurity in Columbia has inspired Pastrana's latest
efforts to secure peace. At the very least, he is expected to get
FARC to return to the formal negotiations they left in November,
claiming the government had made insufficient efforts to halt attacks
by right-wing paramilitary groups. The outcome of this meeting will
also most likely impact US policy in the region, as Columbia is now
the second-largest recipient of US foreign aid, mostly in the form of
combat helicopters and troop training. These have been provided
ostensibly to battle the drug trade, which is protected and taxed by
the FARC, but in reality, Columbia's civil war and drug war are now
almost impossible to segregate.

Readers can begin with CNN's special report on Columbia, which
features background, analysis, maps, timeline, key players, comment,
archived stories, and video selections. Reports on the latest meeting
can be found in the _Miami Herald_, _Washington Post_, and at the
BBC. The _Columbia Report_ offers history and analysis of the drug
war in Columbia, with a focus on human rights and US involvement. An
excellent account of the civil war at the local level can be found at
_Mother Jones_, which also links to several related stories.
Spanish-speaking readers can consult the official site of the
Columbian government and _El Tiempo_, _El Espectador_, and _El
Columbiano_ for recent news and analysis. [MD]




======                        ======
==   Index for February 9, 2001   ==
======                        ======

1.  Open Letter to Our Readers
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/about/letter-010202.html

2.  Scout Reports for Social Sciences & Humanities and Business & Economics
_Scout Report for Social Sciences & Humanities_
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/socsci/2001/ss-010206.html
_Scout Report for Business & Economics_
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/report/bus-econ/2001/be-010208.html

3.  Tobacco Control Archives [.pdf]
http://www.library.ucsf.edu/tobacco/

4.  New Jersey Environmental Digital Library (NJDEL) [.pdf, RealPlayer]
http://njenv.rutgers.edu/njdlib/

5.  Making of America Collection (MOA) Update
http://moa.umdl.umich.edu/

6.  War, Chaos, and Business: Modern Business Strategy
http://www.belisarius.com/

7.  "No Child Left Behind": President Bush's Education Initiative to
Congress -- US Department of Education
http://ed.gov/inits/nclb/index.html
Executive Summary:
http://ed.gov/inits/nclb/part2.html
.pdf version:
http://ed.gov/inits/proposal.pdf

8.  Foreign Relations of the United States
http://libtext.library.wisc.edu/FRUS/

9.  UNICEF Innocenti Report Card [.pdf]
http://www.unicef-icdc.org/publications/pdf/repcard2e.pdf
Press Release
http://www.unicef.org/newsline/01pr10.htm

10. H-Caribbean
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~carib/

11. The Hannah Arendt Papers at the Library of Congress
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/arendthtml/arendthome.html

12. "Sexual Victimization of College Women" -- DOJ [.pdf]
http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/nij/182369.pdf
ASCII version:
http://www.ncjrs.org/txtfiles1/nij/182369.txt
Press release:
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/press/svcw.pr

13. The Centennial Exhibition -- Philadelphia 1876
http://libwww.library.phila.gov/CenCol/index.htm

14. "Resource Guide on Racial Profiling Data Collections Systems:
Promising Practices and Lessons Learned" -- DOJ [.pdf]
http://www.ncjrs.org/pdffiles1/bja/184768.pdf
Text Version
http://www.ncjrs.org/txtfiles1/bja/184768.txt

15. "Road Map for National Security: Imperative for Change" [.pdf]
http://www.nssg.gov/phaseIII.pdf
US Commission on National Security/21st Century
http://www.nssg.gov/

16. Breakthrough Books -- _Lingua Franca_
http://www.linguafranca.com/bookworm/breakthrough/

17. Louis Armstrong Discography
http://www.satchography.com/

18. Public Radio Fan
http://www.Publicradiofan.com/

19. ProFusion - Version 2 Beta
http://beta.profusion.com

20. AltaVista Tools
http://tools.altavista.com/
AltaVista
http://www.altavista.com/

21. Google Now Indexes PDF Files
http://www.google.com/

22. Peace Summit in Columbia
Columbia: War Without End -- CNN [RealPlayer, QuickTime, Windows Media Player]
http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2000/colombia.noframes/
"Pastrana meets with rebel" -- _Miami Herald_
http://www.herald.com/content/today/news/americas/digdocs/040671.htm
"Colombia talks enter second day" -- BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/americas/newsid_1161000/1161048.stm
"Talking Peace on Rebel Turf" -- _Washington Post_
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45717-2001Feb8.html
_Columbia Report_
http://www.colombiareport.org/
"Columbia's War Comes to Town" -- _Mother Jones_
http://www.motherjones.com/news_wire/barranca.html
Columbian Government
http://www.presidencia.gov.co/webpresi/index2.htm
_El Tiempo_
http://eltiempo.terra.com.co/
_El Espectador_
http://www.elespectador.com/
_El Columbiano_
http://www.elcolombiano.terra.com.co/



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====== The Scout Report
====== Brought to You by the Internet Scout Project
====
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The Scout Report (ISSN 1092-3861) is published every Friday of the
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Copyright Susan Calcari and the University of Wisconsin Board of
Regents, 1994-2001. 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
community under a grant from the National Science Foundation, number
NCR-9712163. The Government has certain rights in this material.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of the
entire Scout Report provided this paragraph, including the copyright
notice, are preserved on all copies.










Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed
in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily
reflect the views of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, or the
National Science Foundation.
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