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The Scout Report -- February 18, 2005
- From: Educational CyberPlayGround <admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
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- Date: Thu, 24 Feb 2005 11:37:06 -0500
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WOMEN IN SCIENCE
Changing Girls' Attitudes About Computers
Educating Girls in the New Computer Age (2000)
HERSTORIES Classroom Project
Best Online Resources For Women and Minorities in Science and Technolgy
National Women's History Month
Computer Wonder Women
What you can do to help GRRLS get into technology!
http://www.edu-cyberpg.com/Teachers/womenspecialedition.html
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======== The Scout Report ==
======== February 18, 2005 ====
======== Volume 11, Number 7 ======
====== 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 ========
====== NSDL Scout Reports ====
1. NSDL Scout Reports for the Life Sciences and Physical Sciences
====== Research and Education ====
2. Interactive Dig: Hierakonpolis
3. The Cartographic Modeling Lab at the University of Pennsylvania
4. Commercialism in Education Research Unit
5. Simple Machines
6. Alcohol, Temperance & Prohibition
7. National Energy Foundation
8. The Goodspeed New Testament Manuscript Collection
9. North American Native Fishes Association
====== General Interest ====
10. Collage Machine 1.0
11. Jacques-Louis David: Empire to Exile
12. VII Photo Agency
13. St. Petersburg 1900: A Photographic Travelogue
14. Musictheory.net
15. House Committee on Veterans' Affairs
16. History Channel: Audio and Video
====== Network Tools ====
17. Ciphire 0.10.51
18. MiniLyrics 3.3.137
====== In The News ====
19. Allegations of steroid abuse mar start of spring training
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.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.wisc.edu/About/criteria.php
The Scout Report on the Web:
Current issue: http://scout.wisc.edu/Reports/ScoutReport/Current/
This issue: http://scout.wisc.edu/Reports/ScoutReport/2005/scout-
050218.php
Visit the Internet Scout Weblog at:
http://scout.wisc.edu/Weblog/
Feedback is always welcome: scout@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
====== NSDL Scout Reports ====
1. NSDL Scout Reports for the Life Sciences and Physical Sciences
The fourth issues of the fourth volumes of the Life Sciences Report and
Physical Sciences Report are available. The Topic in Depth section of the
Life Sciences Report annotates sites on Biodiesel. The Physical Sciences
Report's Topic in Depth section offers websites and comments about
Quaternary Studies.
====== Research and Education ====
2. Interactive Dig: Hierakonpolis
http://www.archaeology.org/interactive/hierakonpolis/index.html
During the past few years, Archaeology Magazine has seen fit to document a
number of very worthwhile archaeological digs from across the globe. In
recent years, the magazine has been out looking for shipwrecks off the
Crimea Peninsula and searching for evidence of George Washington's career as
a whiskey distiller at Mount Vernon. Its most recent online feature will
take visitors to Hierakonpolis, which is a crucial site for understanding
the foundations of Egyptian civilization. The site is located approximately
400 miles south of Cairo, and happens to be the largest site of its kind
from the Pre- and Protodynastic period, which lasted from 3800 to 3100 B.C.
In the From the Field section, visitors can view essays that detail the
various finds and discoveries of the past three years, complemented with
some illustrative photographs and diagrams. Visitors who would like to know
more about the participants on this dig should check out the staff profiles
area and continue on to learn about some of the special meals that they
experienced while they were in the field. [KMG]
3. The Cartographic Modeling Lab at the University of Pennsylvania [pdf]
http://cml.upenn.edu/index.html
While many schools no longer have academic departments devoted specifically
to the discipline of geography, the almost innate human interest in mapping
and analyzing various types of spatial data continues unabated. The
Cartographic Modeling Lab at the University of Pennsylvania is an
outstanding example of this trend, and their website contains a great deal
of information on their work and their applied projects in and around the
city of Philadelphia. The Lab is a joint venture of the School of Design and
the School of Social Work at the University and many of their research
projects reflect a rather novel and creative dedication to interdisciplinary
approaches to various policy questions. Visitors will want to take a look at
some of the group's recent projects, including a historical study of the
trend of "redlining" in Philadelphia and an interactive database of murals
throughout the city. [KMG]
4. Commercialism in Education Research Unit [pdf]
http://www.asu.edu/educ/epsl/ceru.htm
The Arizona State University's College of Education has a distinguished
record of conducting important research through its numerous research
centers and institutes. One of these groups is the Commercialism in
Education Research Unit (CERU), which was formerly located at the University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. The CERU conducts research about commercial
activities in schools, and its staff members are "guided by the belief that
mixing commercial activities with public education raises fundamental issues
of public policy, curriculum content, the proper relationship of educators
to the students entrusted to them, and the values that the schools embody."
The CERU is directed by Professor Alex Molnar, and visitors to the site will
want to look through the various sections dedicated to their publications
and annual reports. Educational administrators and policy-makers will want
to hone in on the resources area, which provides access to helpful
information on current guidelines for commercial activities in schools and
news about pending litigation in this arena. [KMG]
5. Simple Machines
http://www.edheads.org/activities/simple-machines/index.htm
At this website, EdHeads, a nonprofit, offers five interactive, animated
modules to educate second- through sixth-graders about simple machines. By
identifying the many machines located throughout a house, students can learn
about fulcrums, wheel and axles, levers, pulleys, inclined planes, and much
more. The website is equipped with simple animations to help children
understand how the machines work. After students have a handle on simple
machines, they can begin to see how they work together to create compound
machines. The website also provides a brief glossary summarizing nine types
of simple machines. This site is also reviewed in the February 18, 2005_NSDL
Physical Sciences Report_. [RME]
6. Alcohol, Temperance & Prohibition
http://dl.lib.brown.edu/temperance/
That legendary man of letters, Samuel Johnson, once opined that "Abstinence
is as easy to me as temperance would be difficult". Over the centuries,
many have shared at least part of Johnson's sentiment as regards the
temptations offered by spirits, and just as many have concerned themselves
with the cause of cautioning others about alcohol and its potentially
pernicious effects. The good people at Brown University have created this
digital collection which includes a host of primary documents from the past
several centuries, including broadsides, sheet music, and government
publications. These items will be of great interest to anyone interested in
the history of alcoholism, and how various forms of media were used to
disseminate ideas and information about this phenomenon and the prohibition
movement. Visitors can browse the collection by document creator, publisher,
and general title. Another item of note here is the online essay "Temperance
and Prohibition Era Propaganda: A Study in Rhetoric" by Leah Rae Berk. [KMG]
7. National Energy Foundation [pdf]
http://www.nef1.org/
The National Energy Foundation (NEF) is a nonprofit educational organization
that provides a host of educational materials and programs primarily related
to discussing natural resources, technology, conservation, and the
environment. The NEF also provides a number of teacher training and student
programs that complement their existing work. Young people visiting the site
will want to look over the student section which provides four purpose-built
sites that provide information on earth sciences activities, environmental
stewardship, and several other topical areas. Educators will want to take a
look at the section provided for them, as it contains links to the NEF's
educational catalog and information about upcoming workshops of interest.
The site is rounded out by a links page that offers a host of topical links
to other relevant science education sites, such as one on alternate fuel
vehicles and the Captain Planet Foundation. [KMG]
8. The Goodspeed New Testament Manuscript Collection
http://goodspeed.lib.uchicago.edu/
Collections of ancient Christian manuscripts and texts have always been the
province of bibliophiles, scholars, and erudite members of the clergy. One
particular person who was quite interested in such manuscripts was the late
Edgar J. Goodspeed. Born in tiny Quincy, Ill., Goodspeed went to study at
the University of Chicago, and after completing his studies he spent a
significant amount of time traveling abroad on the Continent. After this, he
joined the University's faculty and became quite passionate about collecting
New Testament manuscripts for the school. One of his stellar finds was of
what became known as the Rockefeller McCormick New Testament, which was a
complete Byzantine New Testament written in a fine cursive hand.
Fortunately, the University of Chicago Library's Digital Collections Project
has digitized this entire manuscript (along with one other work in the
collection), and has also planned to create a collection of high-quality
digital images from the other 63 manuscripts. The site will definitely
warrant several return visits, and visitors may also want to read the
particulars detailing the creation of the project. [KMG]
9. North American Native Fishes Association
http://www.nanfa.org/
The North American Native Fishes Association (NANFA) works "to increase and
disseminate knowledge about North America's native fishes and their habitats
among aquarium hobbyists, biologists, fish and wildlife officials, anglers,
educators, students, and others, through publications, electronic media,
regional and national meetings, and other means." The NANFA website features
a Checklist of Freshwater Fishes Native to North America and a Fish in Focus
section with beautiful images and brief descriptions of such fish as the
Hogchoker (Trinectes maculatus), Central Stoneroller (Campostoma anomalum),
and Southern Redbelly Dace (Phoxinus erythrogaster). The site also contains
information about an award program for breeders, grant programs, annual
meetings, membership, and the NANFA quarterly magazine, _American Currents_.
NANFA offers a solid collection of related links, and an electronic mailing
list as well. The website is under construction and promises future sections
relating to natural history, captive care, conservation, and collecting.
This site is also reviewed in the February 18, 2005_NSDL Life Sciences
Report_. [NL]
====== General Interest ====
10. Collage Machine 1.0
http://www.pentacom.jp/soft/ex/collage/collage.html
Some of our readers no doubt have fond memories of getting out various
newspapers, magazines, old art books, and other such materials and creating
their own collages on a dreary Saturday morning that seemed to call out for
such an indoors activity. While there might not be the same visceral feeling
with this online collage machine, it is still definitely worth a visit.
Presented with a blank work screen, visitors can peruse the collection of
objects offered here, and then drag them onto their workspace. After doing
so, the images can be cut up and manipulated in a variety of ways. Some of
the objects include a butterfly, a menacing shark, a puppy, traffic signs, a
picture window, and a daunting iceberg. As one might imagine, the
pedagogical possibilities of such a site are quite interesting and may prove
useful in a classroom setting. [KMG]
11. Jacques-Louis David: Empire to Exile
http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/david/
Deftly combining art and history, this site from the Getty presents the
works of painter Jacques-Louis David, "Image-maker to Napoleon". Although
there are not a huge number David's paintings and drawings in the Web
exhibition, those present are extensively researched. For example, a
portrait of Suzanne Le Peletier de Saint-Fargeau, daughter of an
assassinated revolutionary who came to be called "Mademoiselle Nation"
during the French Revolution, is accompanied by both a video and a
discussion, relating her political history and analyzing the style and
iconography with which David depicts it. In the section on Napoleon,
visitors can zoom in on details of David's <i>The Emperor Napoleon in His
Study at the Tuileries</i> 1811-1812, read a biography of Napoleon, view
several other studies and paintings of the French emperor, and read about
his relationship to David. [DS]
12. VII Photo Agency
http://www.viiphoto.com
To say that we in the modern world are bombarded with visual mass-produced
images is, to say the least, a vast understatement. Photography certainly
provides many of these images, yet only a small portion of their number
qualify as compelling or worthy of more than a quick glance. Fortunately,
there is the VII Photo Agency website, which contains dozens of thought-
provoking photo essays that capture some of the zeitgeist of our time.
Founded in 2001 by a group of seven photo-journalists, the VII Photo
Agency's work is united by "a sense that, in the act of communication at the
very least, all is not lost; the seeds of hope and resolution inform even
the darkest records of inhumanity; reparation is always possible; despair is
never absolute." Some of the very fine photo essays that may be perused here
include a selection of images that document the rapid growth and dynamism of
Shanghai, a day in the life of President George W. Bush, and an intimate
photo essay of Philip Roth. The other photo essays may be viewed by topic,
including those that deal with the recent U.S. presidential elections and
the conflict between Israel and Palestine. [KMG]
13. St. Petersburg 1900: A Photographic Travelogue
http://www.alexanderpalace.org/petersburg1900/index.html
Since 1995, Bob Atchison has been creating interesting Web exhibits and
collections, and he has also been responsible for maintaining the Alexander
Palace Russian History homepage. The site features a number of specific
exhibits that deal with such topics as the Romanovs and Siberia. His most
recent creation is this photographic travelogue of St. Petersburg, which was
the capital of Imperial Russia in 1900. Atchison had the idea for such a
project as he looked over a copy of the Burton Holmes Travelogue for Russia
from the period. All told, the travelogue contains 50 photographs, some of
which are drawn from this original travelogue, and the remainder of which
are drawn from Atchison's personal collection. The collection is rounded out
by a selection of links to other online works and several maps of St.
Petersburg which are provided for reference purposes. [KMG]
14. Musictheory.net [Macromedia Flash Player]
http://www.musictheory.net/
Ricci Addams came up with the idea for this site during his senior year of
high school, and shortly thereafter Musictheory.net became a reality. A
real find for any music student (and for those who would just like to learn
a bit about music), Musictheory.net contains over 30 interactive lessons on
such topics as the triad inversion, major scales, key changes, and diatonic
seventh chords. There are also a number of helpful trainers here as well,
including an interval and brass trainer, among others. The site also
contains a chord calculator and a staff paper generator. Additionally,
visitors can elect to download the entire website for offline viewing.
Finally, the entire site is also available in British English for the
convenience of those persons residing in the United Kingdom. [KMG]
15. House Committee on Veterans' Affairs [pdf]
http://www.house.gov/va/
Created by the enactment of Public Law 601 (officially titled "Legislative
Reorganization Act of 1946"), the House Committee on Veterans Affairs is
responsible for recommending legislation that can expand, curtail, or fine-
tune existing laws relating to veterans' benefits. Currently under the
leadership of Congressman Steve Buyer of Indiana, the Committee has a total
of 30 members. The site's homepage contains important, up-to-date
information on the activities of the Committee, along with basic material on
the Committee's hearing schedule and a complete site search engine. The
documents area contains the committee's budget reports for the past several
fiscal years along with the activities report it submits each year to
Congress. The site is rounded out by a fine tribute to the 60th anniversary
of the GI Bill that includes a brief history of that piece of legislation
and its legacy during the past six decades. [KMG]
16. History Channel: Audio and Video [RealPlayer]
http://www.historychannel.com/broadband/
It's perhaps a bit of a stretch of the imagination to think of a place that
would include both a clip of Spiro Agnew speaking out on what he perceived
to be the biases of television news coverage and some archival footage of
Depression-era gangsters, but it's all right here on the History Channel's
Audio and Video online archive. The speech archive is quite nice, and may
prove to be both edifying and entertaining. Visitors can browse the speech
archive by topics (such as War & Diplomacy) or alphabetically. Some of the
clips offered here include comments by the scientist Wernher von Braun after
hearing that the U.S.S.R had landed a spacecraft on the moon. The video clip
section is also quite well-developed, as it contains clips of the trial of
Adolf Eichmann and the breaking of the sound barrier. [KMG]
====== Network Tools ====
17. Ciphire 0.10.51
https://www.ciphirebeta.com/
More and more email users may be increasingly concerned about the security
of the messages they send over the Internet, and as such, Ciphire Mail is an
application worth looking at in detail. The application is essentially a
sophisticated email encryption tool which works in conjunction with the
users' existing email client. The application does not interfere with normal
emailing routines, and also has the capability to digitally sign each
message to provide authentication. This version of Ciphire is compatible
with Microsoft Windows 2000 or newer, MacOS 10.3, and recent releases of
Linux. [KMG]
18. MiniLyrics 3.3.137
http://www.philocode.com/minilyrics/index.htm
No doubt there are many readers of the Scout Report who will find this
little handy application quite useful, and more than a bit fun while at work
or school. MiniLyrics 3.3.137 is a song lyrics viewer that displays the
lyrics of the currently playing song timed with the music in a host of
different media players, including Winamp, RealPlayer, iTunes, and Windows
Media Player. The application also has some nice visual effects and has a
song database that continues to expand daily. This version of MiniLyrics is
compatible only with Microsoft Windows 2000 or newer.
====== In The News ====
19. Allegations of steroid abuse mar start of spring training
Steroid questions hang over spring training
http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/3399372
Steroid-user Canseco Names Names [RealPlayer]
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/60minutes/main3415.shtml
President Bush unaware of steroid abuse while with Rangers
http://www.cbs.sportsline.com/mlb/story/8173297
He's All Talk
http://www.nypost.com/sports/yankees/39891.htm
Baseball can't face, handle the truth
http://www.suntimes.com/output/mariotti/cst-spt-jay14.html
Major League Baseball: Spring Training 2005
http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/mlb/events/spring_training/y2005/index.jsp
NIDA Drugs of Abuse and Related Topics: Steroids (Anabolic)
http://www.nida.nih.gov/DrugPages/Steroids.html
The spring training season for major league baseball got underway this past
Tuesday, but most of the talk seemed to center around the claims contained
within the recent book penned by that proverbial Peck's Bad Boy of
baseball, Jose Canseco. In the book, which is named "Juiced: Wild Times,
Rampant 'Roids", Smash Hits, and How Baseball Got Big", Canseco claimed that
many of his former teammates (and many who were not) used steroids,
including Roger Clemens, Mark McGwire, Bret Boone, Miguel Tejada, and
numerous others. Throughout the book, Canseco defends the use of steroids,
and also claims that President George W. Bush (who was president of the
Texas Rangers when Canseco was on the team) also knew about the steroid use
that was going on at the time on the roster. White House press secretary
Scott McClellan responded to the claim that President Bush knew about
steroid abuse by stating that, "If there was, he was not aware of it at the
time."
The first link leads to a news report from Fox Sports Online which discusses
the ripple effect the claims made by Canseco have had around the league
during the past few days. The second link will take visitors to the 60
Minutes interview with Jose Canseco from this past Sunday. Here visitors can
read the transcript of the segment and view a video clip of Canseco talking
with Mike Wallace about his steroid use. The third link leads to a news
piece from SportsLine which talks about the accusation that President Bush
knew about the alleged steroid use that Canseco claims went on during his
time with the Texas Rangers. The fourth link leads to a piece from the New
York Post that talks about the accusation made by Canseco that noted Yankee
Jason Giambi was a heavy steroid user. The fifth link will take users to a
rather biting editorial on the current steroid scandal from the Chicago Sun-
Times' sports columnist, Jay Mariotti. On a bit more upbeat note, the sixth
link leads to the Major League Baseball's official spring training website.
Here visitors can learn about the upcoming games and read news reports on
their favorite teams and individual players. The final link leads to the
National Institute of Drug Abuse's homepage dedicated to providing
information about current research on anabolic steroids. [KMG]
====== ======
== Index for February 18, 2005 ==
====== ======
1. NSDL Scout Reports for the Life Sciences and Physical Sciences
The fourth issues of the fourth volumes of the Life Sciences Report and
Physical Sciences Report are available. The Topic in Depth section of the
Life Sciences Report annotates sites on Biodiesel. The Physical Sciences
Report's Topic in Depth section offers websites and comments about
Quaternary Studies.
2. Interactive Dig: Hierakonpolis
http://www.archaeology.org/interactive/hierakonpolis/index.html
3. The Cartographic Modeling Lab at the University of Pennsylvania [pdf]
http://cml.upenn.edu/index.html
4. Commercialism in Education Research Unit [pdf]
http://www.asu.edu/educ/epsl/ceru.htm
5. Simple Machines
http://www.edheads.org/activities/simple-machines/index.htm
6. Alcohol, Temperance & Prohibition
http://dl.lib.brown.edu/temperance/
7. National Energy Foundation [pdf]
http://www.nef1.org/
8. The Goodspeed New Testament Manuscript Collection
http://goodspeed.lib.uchicago.edu/
9. North American Native Fishes Association
http://www.nanfa.org/
10. Collage Machine 1.0
http://www.pentacom.jp/soft/ex/collage/collage.html
11. Jacques-Louis David: Empire to Exile
http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/david/
12. VII Photo Agency
http://www.viiphoto.com
13. St. Petersburg 1900: A Photographic Travelogue
http://www.alexanderpalace.org/petersburg1900/index.html
14. Musictheory.net [Macromedia Flash Player]
http://www.musictheory.net/
15. House Committee on Veterans' Affairs [pdf]
http://www.house.gov/va/
16. History Channel: Audio and Video [RealPlayer]
http://www.historychannel.com/broadband/
17. Ciphire 0.10.51
https://www.ciphirebeta.com/
18. MiniLyrics 3.3.137
http://www.philocode.com/minilyrics/index.htm
19. Allegations of steroid abuse mar start of spring training
Steroid questions hang over spring training
http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/3399372
Steroid-user Canseco Names Names [RealPlayer]
http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/60minutes/main3415.shtml
President Bush unaware of steroid abuse while with Rangers
http://www.cbs.sportsline.com/mlb/story/8173297
He's All Talk
http://www.nypost.com/sports/yankees/39891.htm
Baseball can't face, handle the truth
http://www.suntimes.com/output/mariotti/cst-spt-jay14.html
Major League Baseball: Spring Training 2005
http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/mlb/events/spring_training/y2005/index.jsp
NIDA Drugs of Abuse and Related Topics: Steroids (Anabolic)
http://www.nida.nih.gov/DrugPages/Steroids.html
== Subscription and Contact Information ==
To receive the electronic mail version of the Scout Report each week,
join the scout-report mailing list. This is the only mail you will
receive from this list.
To subscribe the Scout Report, or to manage your subscription, go to:
http://scout.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo
To receive the electronic mail version of the Scout Report each week in
HTML format, join the scout-report-html mailing list. This is the only
mail you will receive from this list.
To subscribe the Scout Report, or to manage your subscription, go to:
http://scout.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo
The Scout Report (ISSN 1092-3861) is published every Friday of the year
except the last Friday of December by the Internet Scout Project,
located in the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Department of Computer
Sciences.
Editor Max Grinnell [KMG]
Managing Editor Chris Long [CL]
Co-Director Rachael Bower [REB]
Co-Director Edward Almasy [EA]
Contributors Nathan Larson [NL]
Rachael Enright [RME]
Valerie Farnsworth [VF]
Debra Shapiro [DS]
Internet Cataloger Todd Bruns [TB]
Software Engineer Barry Wiegan [BW]
Technical Specialists Justin Rush [JR]
Michael Grossheim [MJG]
Website Designer Andy Yaco-Mink [AY]
For information on additional contributors, see the Internet Scout Project
staff page.
http://scout.wisc.edu/About/bios.php
Below are the copyright statements to be included when reproducing
annotations from The Scout Report.
The single phrase below is the copyright notice to be used when
reproducing any portion of this report, in any format.
>From The Scout Report, Copyright Internet Scout Project 1994-2004.
http://scout.wisc.edu/
The paragraph below is the copyright notice to be used when reproducing
the entire report, in any format:
Copyright Susan Calcari and the University of Wisconsin Board of
Regents, 1994-2004. The Internet Scout Project (http://scout.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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EDUCATIONAL CYBERPLAYGROUND
http://www.edu-cyberpg.com
Copyright statements to be included when reproducing
annotations from Network Newsletter.
The single phrase below is the copyright notice to be used when
reproducing any portion of this report, in any format.
> From Network Newsletter copyright
> Educational CyberPlayGround.
http://www.edu-cyberpg.com/Community/NetworkNewsletters.html
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