========  The Scout Report                                            ==
========  March 12, 1999                                            ====
========  Volume 5, Number 44                                     ======
======                                   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 Social Sciences and Business & Economics

====== Research and Education ====
2.  Agricultural Trade Briefing Room -- USDA ERS
3.  Coral Bleaching, Coral Mortality, and Global Climate Change
4.  American Women's History: A Research Guide
5.  South Asia Analysis Group (SAAG)
6.  European Voyages of Exploration
7.  Information Technology in Teacher Education
8.  Molecular Models
9.  Historical Data on the Foreign-Born Population in the United States --
US Census Bureau

====== General Interest ====
10. Two from the Library of Congress (LOC)
11. Collage
12. NewsWatch: A Consumer's Guide to the News
13. Defend Your Data -- ACLU
14. Two Resources on Electronic Publishing
15. Mysteries of the Nile -- NOVA Online
16. The Feather Trade and the American Conservation Movement -- NMAH

====== Network Tools ====
17. Netscape Communicator 4.51 (Windows and Mac) and Smart Download
(Windows 95/98/NT)
18. Internet Research News/ ResearchBuzz
19. Linuxberg

====== In The News ====
20. NATO Expansion


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/scout/

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/scout/report/criteria.html

Feedback is always welcome: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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

1.  Scout Report for Social Sciences and Business & Economics
Scout Report for Social Sciences
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/socsci/1999/ss-990309.html
Scout Report for Business & Economics
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/bus-econ/1999/be-990311.html

The twelfth issues of the second volumes of the Scout Reports for Social
Sciences and Business & Economics are available. The In the News section of
the Social Sciences Report annotates nine resources on the life and legal
legacy of former US Supreme Court Associate Justice Harry Andrew Blackmun.
The Business & Economics Report's In the News section offers seven
resources on the nationwide strikes in Ecuador. [MD]


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

2.  Agricultural Trade Briefing Room -- USDA ERS [.pdf]
http://www.econ.ag.gov/briefing/agtrade/index.htm

This new briefing room from the US Department of Agriculture Economic
Research Service (reviewed in the July 2, 1998 Scout Report for Business &
Economics) provides general information and data on US agricultural trade
with all of the countries and regions of the world. Data publications such
as the <I>US Agricultural Trade </I>(FATUS), <I>Agricultural Outlook,</I>
and <I>US Agricultural Trade Balance </I>are gathered here on a monthly or
yearly basis with export and import values by commodity and country. Users
will also find FATUS reference tools as well as special ERS articles
covering topics such as agricultural export figures by state and the US
agricultural trade's effect on the overall economy. [MW]


3.  Coral Bleaching, Coral Mortality, and Global Climate Change
http://www.state.gov/www/global/global_issues/coral_reefs/990305_coralreef_rpt.h
tml

Presented to the US Coral Reef Task Force on March 5, this report contends
that in 1998 coral reefs all around the world "appear to have suffered the
most extensive and severe bleaching and subsequent mortality in modern
record," in excess of 70 percent in some areas. Corals "bleach" when they
lose much of their symbiotic algae in response to the stress from elevated
temperatures, and last year's record-high tropical sea surface temperatures
resulted in "devastating mortality." Although some scientists have
disagreed, the report's authors conclude that the mass bleaching is a
"consequence of a steadily rising baseline of marine temperatures, driven
by anthropogenic global warming." Users can read the full text of the
report at the site, provided by the US State Department. [MD]


4.  American Women's History: A Research Guide
http://frank.mtsu.edu/~kmiddlet/history/women.html

Created by Ken Middleton, reference librarian and graduate student in
American Women's History at Middle Tennessee State University, this site is
an excellent resource for researchers, especially graduate students or
advanced undergraduates, interested in US women's history. At the site,
users will find a large number of citations of print and online reference
materials and primary resources. These are grouped into three sections:
General Reference and Biographical Sources, Subject Index to Research
Sources (currently containing resources in 27 topical areas), and State and
Regional History Sources. Middleton supplies full bibliographical
information for print sources and a link for those available in electronic
form. The site also offers two sections on tools and strategies for finding
additional sources and a collection of (unannotated) select bookmarks.


5.  South Asia Analysis Group (SAAG)
http://www.saag.org/

Online since September 1998, this site offers, in the form of short papers,
the combined wisdom of "retired officers of the Government of India, with
nearly three decades of experience in dealing with foreign policy &
national security issues." Behind the no-nonsense home page of the SAAG,
users can currently access 35 papers analyzing and assessing contemporary
diplomatic, security, and foreign policy events from an Indian perspective.
Offerings include a number of pieces on Indo-Pak relations, nuclear policy,
and Osama Bin Laden. It should be noted that it seems that the majority of
the papers currently available have been written by one individual, B.
Raman, retired Additional Secretary in the Cabinet Secretariat and current
Director of the Institute for Topical Studies. Nonetheless, South Asian
specialists or anyone with an interest in reading about these issues from
an Indian perspective will find these short papers useful. [MD]


6.  European Voyages of Exploration
http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/HIST/tutor/eurvoya/index.html
University of Calgary Applied History Research Group Multimedia History
Tutorials
http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/HIST/tutor/

This richly illustrated (yet quickly loading) tutorial from the Applied
History Research Group at the University of Calgary guides users through
the European voyages of exploration and conquest in the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries. Focusing on Spain and Portugal, the site explores the
economic, political, and cultural factors that sustained and advanced
exploration. Users will find brief histories of the two kingdoms and
overviews of their voyages to the Atlantic, Africa, Asia, the Caribbean,
and the Americas. The tutorial includes numerous maps, in addition to
discussions of issues such as cartography, navigation, warfare, religion,
slavery, and communication, in the Knowledge & Power section. Secondary
School or freshman-level university instructors teaching courses on
exploration or Early Modern Europe may find this a useful resource for
students. Other multimedia tutorials available include The Peopling of
Canada, The End of Europe's Middle Ages, and the Islamic World to 1600. [MD]


7.  Information Technology in Teacher Education [.pdf, 57p.]
http://www.milkenexchange.org/research/iste_results.html
Milken Exchange on Education Technology
http://www.milkenexchange.org/

This report was commissioned by the Milken Exchange on Education technology
to establish baseline data on the status of technology in teacher training.
In the spring of 1998, the International Society for Technology in
Education (ISTE) surveyed 416 teacher-preparation programs, representing
approximately 90,000 graduates. In general, the report finds that the
incorporation of IT tools into teaching and learning has not kept pace with
the expansion of the technology infrastructrure in schools. The report
makes a number of recommendations to address this issue, including school
technology planning that goes beyond facilities and includes the
integration of IT in teaching and learning. Users can download the full
text of the report, in .pdf format, from the site. The Milken Exchange's
home page offers a variety of additional resources on technology and
learning, including articles, reports, policy guides, surveys and polls,
and information on several of its ongoing projects. [MD]


8.  Molecular Models [Chemscape Chime]
http://www.sci.ouc.bc.ca/chem/molecule/molecule.html

Created and maintained by Dr. Dave Woodcock of the Chemistry Department at
Okanagan University College in British Columbia, Canada, this site features
models of over 1,100 molecules in .pdb, or Chemscape Chime, format (link to
free download provided). Users may search the molecular database using an
internal search engine or browse by category or alphabetically. Index page
entries include the molecule's name, formula, molar mass, and comments. The
site also features more detailed models of selected molecular fragments.
[MD]


9.  Historical Data on the Foreign-Born Population in the United States --
US Census Bureau
http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0029/twps0029.html

On March 9, the Census Bureau released this report, an update of and
expansion on the last Census report on the foreign-born population, which
was published in 1975. This report contains "decennial census data on
several characteristics of the foreign-born population, including country
of birth, length of residence in the United States, citizenship and age-sex
distribution." Users will also find data on the total foreign-born
population for states and large cities. The report consists of three brief
introductory sections followed by 22 detailed statistical tables and a list
of references. [MD]


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

10. Two from the Library of Congress (LOC)
Oliphant's Anthem
http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/oliphant/
The South Texas Border, 1900-1920: Photographs from the Robert Runyon
Collection
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award97/txuhtml/

The first of these two new online exhibits highlights the LOC's recent
acquisition of 60 cartoon drawings by Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial
cartoonist Pat Oliphant. One of the most talented and influential editorial
cartoonists in American history, Oliphant has been providing provocative
commentary on political and social issues for over 30 years. The cartoons
featured in the exhibit are organized by topic and offered in thumbnail
format with concise and helpful explanatory text. The second site, the
newest addition to the American memory Collection (last discussed in the
February 5, 1999 Scout Report), features over 8,000 photos by commercial
photographer Robert Runyon (1881-1968), a longtime resident of South Texas.
Representing his life work, these photos "document the history and
development of South Texas and the border, including the Mexican
Revolution, the U.S. military presence at Fort Brown and along the border
prior to and during World War I, and the growth and development of the Rio
Grande Valley." Users may search the collection by keyword or browse by
subject. [MD]


11. Collage
http://collage.nhil.com/

Collage stands for Corporation of London Library and Art Gallery
Electronic, and at the Collage Portal, users can search an image database
which consists of approximately 20,000 items from the collections of the
Guildhall Library and the Guildhall Art Gallery of London. Collage is a
great resource for those seeking visual materials related to the long
history of the city of London. From the Print Room of the Guildhall
Library, there are prints, drawings, and caricatures of social life and
culture in London dating back to the fifteenth century, and also hundreds
of maps and cityscapes. These are augmented by paintings and drawings from
the Guildhall Art Gallery collection. Users can search by keyword or browse
by a variety of broad subject groupings, such as Society, which is further
divided into categories such as Family, Fashion & Clothing, and Law &
Crime. There are also more specific topics, including St. Paul's Cathedral,
London Bridge, and Westminster Abbey, and it is possible to retrieve images
by format, such as map, sketch, portrait, or still life. Collage is
intended to be a reference resource, not a download site. Images may be
viewed, and users can then purchase prints online. [DS]


12. NewsWatch: A Consumer's Guide to the News
http://www.newswatch.org/

The Center for Media and Public Affairs, a nonpartisan research
organization that conducts scientific analyses of the media, has recently
launched NewsWatch, a new daily Web magazine created for news consumers,
promising to "tell you when [news is] accurate, when it's wrong, and why."
NewsWatch contains several sections: Today's News, a daily news summary
from NewsWatch editors; Media Critic, a daily digest of news about the news
media from leading media critics; Spotlight, feature articles analyzing the
news media; Resources, a collection of links to online media publications,
watchdog organizations, and research institutions; and Talk Back, a
directory of news organizations for consumers who want to provide feedback
directly to news agencies. The entire site is searchable by keyword(s). [AO]


13. Defend Your Data -- ACLU
http://www.aclu.org/privacy/

>From Secret Service funding of efforts to develop a national database of
driver's license photographs to the unique Processor Serial Number (PSN) on
the new Pentium III processors, individual privacy has become increasingly
difficult to protect in the digital age. In response to recent and
pervasive threats to privacy by the government and the private sector, the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has launched a new Web-based campaign
on privacy rights. At the site, users will find a selection of background
information and press releases, a demonstration of just what others can
learn about you on the Web, and a Data Defense Kit. The Kit includes a
privacy survey, a pocket card with tips on protecting your privacy, and a
complaint form for reporting privacy violations. Additional resources at
the site include faxable letters to Congress and a free mailing list. [MD]


14. Two Resources on Electronic Publishing
Who Owns What Intellectual Property, Copyright, and the Next Millenium --
Journal of Electronic Publishing
http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/04-03/glos0403.html
"The New Age of the Book" -- <I>New York Review of Books </I>
http://www.nybooks.com/nyrev/WWWfeatdisplay.cgi?19990318005F

Anyone interested in scholarly electronic publishing will want to visit
these sites. The first, the latest issue of the Journal of Electronic
Publishing, examines the challenges and opportunities for intellectual
property and copyright in the digital age. The featured articles examine
topics such as the current state of electronic publishing, managing rights
electronically, the future of scholarly publishing, libraries as
publishers, and even open source software as a model for managing
intellectual property. The second resource, a ten-page article by cultural
historian Robert Darnton, explores the potential and pitfalls that arise
from the electronic publication of scholarly monographs. Darnton discusses
the prospects of electronic monographs in relation to issues such as recent
changes in publishing in general and to university presses in particular,
publishing and tenure, and the pricing of journals. [MD]


15. Mysteries of the Nile -- NOVA Online [Quicktime 3.0]
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/egypt/

All this month, a team from the PBS program NOVA are in Egypt on their
second attempt (the first was in 1995) to raise an obelisk using only
materials and techniques that the ancient Egyptians might have used. At
this site, users can follow the team's progress with dispatches from the
field, learn about the history and physics of obelisks, and tour a modest
but attractive collection of QTVR and standard images of temples, tombs,
and other monuments. Additional features at the site include classroom
resources, a map and timeline, and a collection of annotated links. [MD]


16. The Feather Trade and the American Conservation Movement -- NMAH
http://www.si.edu/nmah/ve/feather/ftintro.htm

This new virtual exhibit from the National Museum of American History
focuses on the odd origins of the Audubon society and other early
conservation movements: nineteenth-century America's rage for plumage to
adorn women's hats. Divided into three sections -- Feather Adornment,
Hunting and Collecting, and Audubon Movement -- this exhibit begins by
illustrating the use of feathers, and indeed whole birds, as fashion
accessories in a period fascinated with the natural world. The excessive
hunting practices which fed this fashion and the subsequent devastation of
populations of native birds such as the egret led concerned "socialites" to
found the Audubon society. The exhibit is brief but studded with numerous
interesting thumbnails, from a 1903 advertisement urging consumers to "buy
direct" from an ostrich farm to a letter from Teddy Roosevelt praising "the
substitution of the camera for the gun." [TK]


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

17. Netscape Communicator 4.51 (Windows and Mac) and Smart Download
(Windows 95/98/NT)
http://home.netscape.com/computing/download/

Netscape has recently released the latest update to its Communicator
browser. This update has removed a number of bugs from the previous version
and also features AOL Instant Messenger, an ICQ-type chat program. Users
with Communicator or Navigator 4.04 or higher can save download time by
using the SmartUpdate feature. Also at the site, Netscape offers
SmartDownload, a Windows program that allows users to pause downloads and
pick up where they left off. Additional resources include a library of over
200 plug-ins for Netscape browsers. [MD]


18. Internet Research News/ ResearchBuzz
http://www.coppersky.com/ongir/news/

A companion site to the book <I>Official Netscape Guide to Internet
Research </I>(2nd edition), this current awareness resource features a
selection of Internet finds on a variety of topics, with a primary focus on
tools for research and more efficient searching online. Updated several
times a week, the site and its weekly email newsletter, ResearchBuzz, are
maintained by Tara Calishain, the book's co-author. Additional resources at
the site include a periodic series of articles on Internet research, Quick
Tips for searching online, and an internal search engine. [MD]


19. Linuxberg
http://www.linuxberg.com/

Associated with the Tucows Software Repository (reviewed in the October 18,
1996 Scout Report) this network of over 150 affiliate locations offers
links to thousands of Linux programs, both free and commercial. Programs
are organized by type within broader categories, such as Graphics, Office,
Multimedia, Entertainment, Development, and others. The network also serves
as a mirror site for a number of Linux distributions, such as kernel.org,
RedHat, and LinuxPro. Additional features at the site include the Howto
section -- a Linux resource center with news, technical information, links,
and the latest kernels -- and a mailing list. [MD]


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

20. NATO Expansion
NATO Official Home Page
http://www.nato.int/
Harry S. Truman Library
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/nato/nato.htm
NATO At 50: The Washington Summits
http://www.nato50.gov/
NATO Enlargement - State Department [.pdf]
http://www.state.gov/www/regions/eur/natoindex.html

Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic formally join NATO today. The entry
of these three former Warsaw Pact nations into the US-led alliance and
their ongoing negotiations to join the European Union mark a dramatic shift
in the political landscape and symbolize the final demise of a divided
Europe. However, a number of questions and difficulties remain. Not the
least of these is relations with Russia, which has consistently expressed
its disapproval of NATO expanding eastward. Should the country come under
the control of nationalist political parties, an expanded NATO may actually
increase rather than mitigate security concerns and political tensions.
Another untested factor is public opinion within the new NATO member
countries. The realities of NATO membership -- increased defense spending
and the prospect of military operations against fellow Europeans in
Yugoslavia -- may quickly erode popular support for the alliance in Poland,
Hungary, and the Czech Republic. At the official NATO site, users can learn
about the history and organization of the alliance; browse an archive of
publications, press releases, and fact sheets; and read current press
releases on the expansion. The Harry S. Truman Library, which hosts today's
Accession ceremony, offers a number of resources on the history of NATO,
including selected documents, a chronology, and photos and links. The 50th
Anniversary of NATO will be celebrated and analyzed at a Washington summit
in April. Discussions of the problems and opportunities presented by
today's enlargement will certainly feature prominently in the proceedings.
At the summit site, users will find press releases related to today's
Accession ceremony, comments from key players, a number of related links,
and information on the conference itself. Finally, the US State
Department's guide to NATO enlargement, produced in 1998, summarizes why
the Administration has pushed to offer membership to these three nations.
The site includes a 30-page publication on enlargement, fact sheets,
country information, testimony, questions and answers, and related links.
Additional resources for understanding the NATO expansion and Central
European politics can be found in the Scout Report Signpost, the Scout
Report's database. These include Central Europe Online, the Institute for
the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and Policy, and the EU's Reports on
progress towards accession by each of the candidate countries. [MD]

Scout Report Signpost
http://www.signpost.org
Central Europe Online
http://scout7.cs.wisc.edu/pages/00000287.html
Institute for the Study of Conflict, Ideology, and Policy
http://scout7.cs.wisc.edu/pages/00009051.html
Enlarging the EU: Reports on progress towards accession by each of the
candidate countries
http://scout7.cs.wisc.edu/pages/00008752.html


======                        ======
==   Index for March 12, 1999     ==
======                        ======

1.  Scout Report for Social Sciences and Business & Economics
Scout Report for Social Sciences
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/socsci/1999/ss-990309.html
Scout Report for Business & Economics
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/bus-econ/1999/be-990311.html

2.  Agricultural Trade Briefing Room -- USDA ERS [.pdf]
http://www.econ.ag.gov/briefing/agtrade/index.htm

3.  Coral Bleaching, Coral Mortality, and Global Climate Change
http://www.state.gov/www/global/global_issues/coral_reefs/990305_coralreef_rpt.h
tml

4.  American Women's History: A Research Guide
http://frank.mtsu.edu/~kmiddlet/history/women.html

5.  South Asia Analysis Group (SAAG)
http://www.saag.org/

6.  European Voyages of Exploration
http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/HIST/tutor/eurvoya/index.html
University of Calgary Applied History Research Group Multimedia History
Tutorials
http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/HIST/tutor/

7.  Information Technology in Teacher Education [.pdf, 57p.]
http://www.milkenexchange.org/research/iste_results.html
Milken Exchange on Education Technology
http://www.milkenexchange.org/

8.  Molecular Models [Chemscape Chime]
http://www.sci.ouc.bc.ca/chem/molecule/molecule.html

9.  Historical Data on the Foreign-Born Population in the United States --
US Census Bureau
http://www.census.gov/population/www/documentation/twps0029/twps0029.html

10. Two from the Library of Congress (LOC)
Oliphant's Anthem
http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/oliphant/
The South Texas Border, 1900-1920: Photographs from the Robert Runyon
Collection
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award97/txuhtml/

11. Collage
http://collage.nhil.com/

12. NewsWatch: A Consumer's Guide to the News
http://www.newswatch.org/

13. Defend Your Data -- ACLU
http://www.aclu.org/privacy/

14. Two Resources on Electronic Publishing
Who Owns What Intellectual Property, Copyright, and the Next Millenium --
Journal of Electronic Publishing
http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/04-03/glos0403.html
"The New Age of the Book" -- <I>New York Review of Books </I>
http://www.nybooks.com/nyrev/WWWfeatdisplay.cgi?19990318005F

15. Mysteries of the Nile -- NOVA Online [Quicktime 3.0]
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/egypt/

16. The Feather Trade and the American Conservation Movement -- NMAH
http://www.si.edu/nmah/ve/feather/ftintro.htm

17. Netscape Communicator 4.51 (Windows and Mac) and Smart Download
(Windows 95/98/NT)
http://home.netscape.com/computing/download/

18. Internet Research News/ ResearchBuzz
http://www.coppersky.com/ongir/news/

19. Linuxberg
http://www.linuxberg.com/

20. NATO Expansion
NATO Official Home Page
http://www.nato.int/
Harry S. Truman Library
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/nato/nato.htm
NATO At 50: The Washington Summits
http://www.nato50.gov/
NATO Enlargement - State Department [.pdf]
http://www.state.gov/www/regions/eur/natoindex.html


======                                ====
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