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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

New Resource from Library of Congress: Finding and Using Online Primary Sources from the Manuscript Division



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NASA First-of-its-Kind Map Depicts Global Forest Heights


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“What is the Center for Research Libraries?”

Our Work

We collect the unique and little-known documents vital to humanities, science, and social science research.
We preserve the records of the past and the present to make them available for the researchers of the future.
We connect researchers, libraries, and institutions to vital source materials and information.
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The Chronicle of Higher Education: Outsourced Ed: Colleges Hire Companies to Build Their Online Courses


by Marc Parry

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JSTOR Current Scholarship Program Price Calculator

Use our calculator to get a quick estimate for your 2011 institutional subscriptions.
1. Select your organization type and country.
2. Click the icon next to a title to expand the list of subscription options.
3. Select a subscription type from the list that appears beneath the journal name.
Your price total is calculated and updated automatically at the bottom of the screen.
4. When you have made your selections, enter your contact information and click 'Send to JSTOR'.


JSTOR Outreach staff will verify your prices, add any applicable tax and shipping costs, and provide you with instructions for placing your order and completing the licensing process.
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Science: New Searchable Database from FDA and NLM: Substance Registration System

This database provides access to the FDA Unique Ingredient Identifier (UNII) assigned to substances by the FDA Substance Registration System).



The UNII is an essential element required for the listing of substances in the FDA Structured Product Labeling (SPL). The Division of Specialized Information Services (SIS) of the National Library of Medicine (NLM) and the FDA collaborated to make access to this code easier.


Users entering a substance name or a UNII will be directed to the FDA record. Spell checking and autosuggest are available for each query. If no UNII is available for a substance, the user is referred to the FDA to request one.


Links to the NLM ChemIDplus and the Drug Information Portal are provided for most drugs. The database is updated weekly with data provided by FDA.
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New York Times: Readers Are Abandoning Print, Yet Don’t Trust the Web

July 27, 2010, 4:43 pm



By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER
Where are people going to find news and information they trust, in a world with a dwindling number of print publications and an ever-expanding number of online publications?


Readers have not yet figured out the answer to that, according to a recent report released by the Center for the Digital Future at the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California.


Almost a quarter of Internet users who also read newspapers would miss the print edition of their newspapers if they disappeared, according to the study, and 18 percent have stopped subscribing to a newspaper or magazine because they can read the same material online. More than three-quarters ranked the Internet as an important source of information, yet just over half said newspapers were important.


While most people get their information online these days, they do not necessarily trust their new sources of news. Just 39 percent of people said that most or all of the information they read online is reliable, the lowest percentage since the university began doing annual studies a decade ago. Fourteen percent said that only a small portion or none of the information online was reliable, the highest level ever.


If that makes you think that people read the sites they trust and distrust the others, think again. Almost a quarter of people said that half or less than half of the information they read on sites they visited regularly was reliable.


As for print publications that are trying to figure out a way to make money from the flood of readers that are abandoning print for the Web, either by running ads or selling subscriptions, the study offered a bleak outlook.


Internet users overwhelmingly do not want to pay for access to Web sites that they already view free, yet half said they never clicked on Web ads and 70 percent called Internet advertising annoying. Still, just over half said they would rather see ads than pay to see Web sites.


“Online providers face major challenges to get customers to pay for services they now receive for free,” said Jeffrey I. Cole, director of the Center for the Digital Future.
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