+Vote!
paidContent:UK (Free subscription) | 13/06/2008
Times Online has switched on the 200-year digital archive we revealed in May that it would launch . Times Archive includes more than 20 million searchable newspaper clippings going back to 1785, both the scanned papers and best guesses at the text within, as determined by OCR software. Thomson Gale had already scanned the two centuries to 1985 for its Times Digital Archive product, used primarily...
+Vote!
About Home Guard (Free subscription) | 13/04/2008
Safety & security systems/equipment.: An article from: Nursing Homes This digital document is an article from Nursing Homes, published by Thomson Gale on July 1, 2005. The length of the article is 5351 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and [...]
+Vote!
About Home Guard (Free subscription) | 12/04/2008
Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program.(Program Descriptions and Legislative History): An article from: Social Security Bulletin This digital document is an article from Social Security Bulletin, published by Thomson Gale on January 1, 2004. The length of the article is 1852 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The [...]
+Vote!
WisBlawg - From the UW Law Library (Free subscription) | 10/04/2008
New from the Milwaukee Public Library: 19th Century U. S. Newspapers Consisting of just under 17 million articles, 19th Century U. S. Newspapers from the Thomson Gale Company is a genealogy or history buff's dream come true. Fully searchable by...
+Vote!
Grasping For The Wind (Free subscription) | 16/03/2008
* Genre: Epic Fantasy; Coming-of-Age Fantasy * ISBN: 1594146594 * ISBN-13: 9781594146596 * Format: Hardcover, 399pp * Publisher: Thomson Gale Group (Five Star Imprint) * Pub. Date: April 16, 2008 * Series: Book One of the Iron Dragon Series In his first full length fantasy, Paul Genesse straddles the line between young adult and adult fiction. The Golden Cord is the first novel in a planned trilogy...
+Vote!
Polymath Paradise (Free subscription) | 15/11/2007
About two months ago, a friend with whom I play tennis mentioned an article that had appeared in the local business paper. It recorded the advent of a new literary journal in my hometown of New Haven. It was tentatively named the New Haven Review of Books, and she thought it appropriate to share because two years earlier I had tried the idea of just such a publication out on her. My reasoning