LLRXBuzz - February 11, 2002
By Tara Calishain, Published on February 11, 2002
The Latest on
Legal Research
Click here to subscribe to the weekly LLRXBuzz Email Update.
Census Stats
The Census Bureau has the 2001 Statistical Abstract of the US online at
http://www.census.gov/prod/2002pubs/01statab/stat-ab01.html. Tables,
in PDF format, are listed by sections. Click on a selected section and,
while the first page opens on the right, thumbnail prints of the each page
appear on the left. Categories in the abstract include Prices, Energy,
Social Insurance and Human Services, and and several appendixes to help
you use the guide.
Links to a subject index and a search engine are at the bottom of the
page. Search options include full-text or narrowing to titles and
keywords. Additional
options are searching by place, staff or map. The map choice offers a map
of the US with each state listing QuickFacts along with those of the
entire country. The question mark proceeding the fact provides the source
and definition.
YourCongress.com
The banner on YourCongress.com says you can learn, track and laugh on this
site at
http://www.yourcongress.com/. There is so much to learn that the site
has a category entitled Your Congress U. which explains, among other
things, the way a bill actually becomes a law and seldom heard answers to
frequently asked questions.
This site also contains, among other things, sections for what's upcoming
in Congress (and "breezy" is the only way to describe the writing: "The
Prez's new budget makes its debut, the Senate still tries to stimulate the
economy, and everybody's in a snit over taxes. Congress is getting jiggy
with it, so see what's in it for you on the Week Ahead... ") transcripts
of celebrities testifying before Congress, and a lookup feature to
discover who your Congressional representatives are. (Representative
profiles include haikus.) YourCongress.com offers the option to track your
representatives' activities in Congress for free. (You can track other
reps, but that will cost you.) .
Where's the laugh? Well, there's Current Capital Craziness and
Congressional Diseases. This site imparts a lot of useful information, but
the presentation is just this side of silly. Lots of fun. Worth a look.
NYU Guide to Foreign and International Legal
Databases
The title says it all -- The NYU Guide to Foreign and International Legal
Databases --
http://www.law.nyu.edu/library/foreign_intl/index.html -- provides
links to lots of different offsite databases and informative pages.
Links are divided into several categories including Citing Electronic
Information, Environmental Law, Human Rights, and International Treaties.
Click on a
category and you'll get a page of links, most decently annotated. Nicely
done, worth a look.
Power Utilities on the Internet
Competitive Analysis Technologies has announced the 8th quarterly update
of its industry database, Power Utilities on the Internet. The database
maintains 3,000+ profiles on gas and electric generation and distribution.
Database formats include hardcopy and Intranet plug-ins. Demos can be
viewed at
www.catsites.com/demo. Get the
whole press release at
http://library.northernlight.com/FB20020205960000024.html.
Google Tweaks News Headlines
Google's tweaked their news headlines a little bit. You can get to the
headline page at
http://www.google.com/news/newsheadlines.html. Categories are at the
top of the page. Click on a category and you'll get a list of the five
most popular news topics in each category. Each topic itself contains the
five most popular stories for that topic.
I don't understand some of the placement -- the story about the Superbowl
was in the top stories category and not in the sports category -- but for
the most part this is an easy way to get both an overview of hot news at
the moment and several different perspectives on each story. Now, if
they'd only make this available as an RSS file.
Digital Library of Secret Tobacco Documents
Now Available
The UCSF (University of California, San Francisco) Library and Center for
Knowledge Management has announced the release of the Legacy Tobacco
Documents Library, a collection of over 20 million (you read that right)
previously-secret documents from tobacco industry files. You can access it
at
http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/.
There is a list of the most popular documents on the front page, and a
link to a list of resources in several different categories (industry
documents, activism, etc.) but the essence of the site is the search
engine at
http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/cgi/b/bib/bib-idx?g=tob.
Using this tool you can search choose one or all of several collections,
including Council for Tobacco Research Documents, Brown and Williamson
Documents, and Tobacco Institute Documents. After marking the checkboxes
of the items you want to search, choose simple search or advanced search.
Simple search allows you to specify keyword and search area (entire area,
authors, mentioned names, etc.) Advanced search is basically several
simple searches strung together with the Boolean options AND, OR, or NOT.
Searching for "idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis" in all collections found 13
results. "macho" found over 800 results. "apple flavored" had three
results. (And "chocolate flavored" had one result.) Look on the left side
of the results page and you'll see how many matches were in each
collection. The right side of the
page is devoted to the results list.
Results include title of document, authors, document date (documents go
back to the 1930s), document type, Bates number, page count, and the
collection it came from. You may view documents as TIFs (graphic files),
PDFs, or page-by-page graphics files. I could not get any of these
functions to work in Opera; they all worked fine in IE. You have the
option to add items from the search results to a bookbag. Once you've
finished your research you can download or e-mail the contents of your
bookbag.
Recent documents are very readable but some of the older ones are not. I
found a memo from 1938 darn near impossible to read. On the other hand, a
crop survey from 1939 from perfectly legible.
You could easily spend hours here. If you want to do a lot of document
downloading, be sure to a) check the page count, and b) use a broadband
connection if you can -- these files are not small!
