HIVE for LC Web Archives: Web Archives and Automatic Subject Indexing

Presentation for the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. Discusses the unique challenges of automatic subject indexing as applied to web archives.
Date: May 1, 2012
Creator: Fitzgerald, Rick & Wills, Craig
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Leveraging Web Archives Research

Presentation for the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. Presentation describes the status and goals of the Lawa (longitudinal analytics of web archive data) project, a web crawling and analytics project by Internet Memory.
Date: May 1, 2012
Creator: Medjkoune, Leïla
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Library of Congress Web Archives Update

Presentation for the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. Update on the current status and goals of projects at the Library of Congress web archives.
Date: May 1, 2012
Creator: Grotke, Abigail & Taylor, Nicholas
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library

New collections, new measures: metrics and quality indicators for web archives

Document from the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. Description of a workshop on the development of quality indicators for web archives.
Date: May 4, 2012
Creator: Oury, Clément
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Looting and Restitution During World War II: a Comparison Between the Soviet Union Trophy Commission and the Western Allies Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives Commission (open access)

Looting and Restitution During World War II: a Comparison Between the Soviet Union Trophy Commission and the Western Allies Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives Commission

From the earliest civilizations, victorious armies would loot defeated cities or nations. the practice evolved into art theft as a symbol of power. Cultural superiority confirmed a country or empire’s regime. Throughout history, the Greeks and Romans cultivated, Napoleon Bonaparte refined, and Adolf Hitler perfected the practice of plunder. As the tides of Second World War began to shift in favor of the Allied Powers, special commissions, established to locate the Germans’ hoards of treasure, discovered Nazi art repositories filled with art objects looted from throughout Europe. the Soviet Union Trophy Commission and the Western Allies Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives Commission competed to discover Nazi war loot. the two organizations not only approached the subject of plunder as a treasure hunt, but the ideology motivating both commissions made uncovering the depositories first, a priority. the Soviet trophy brigades’ mission was to dismantle all items of financial worth and ship them eastward to help rebuild a devastated Soviet economy. the Soviet Union wished for the re-compensation of cultural valuables destroyed by the Nazis’ purification practices regarding “inferior” Slavic art and architecture; however, the defeated German nation did not have the ability to reimburse the Soviet State. the trophy brigades implemented …
Date: May 2012
Creator: Zelman, Laura Holsomback
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crowdsourcing Workshop & Use Cases (open access)

Crowdsourcing Workshop & Use Cases

This report describes a crowdsourcing workshop at the 2012 International Internet Preservation Coalition General Assembly. This report contains a workshop report, the discussion paper "Can Crowdsourcing Play a Role in Archiving the Web?, workshop schedule, a list of resources, questions to ask of crowdsourcing sites, crowdsourcing use case templates, and the article "The Crowd & the Library: The Agony and Exstasy of 'Crowdsourcing' Our Cultural Heritage."
Date: May 4, 2012
Creator: Pennock, Maureen E.; Hockx-Yu, Helen & Owens, Trevor
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

Los Alamos National Laboratory

Presentation for the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. This presentation describes Los Alamos National Laboratory's involvement in Project Memento for web archiving.
Date: May 1, 2012
Creator: Van de Sompel, Herbert
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Workshop on quality indicators

Presentation for the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. This is a workshop to discuss the possibility of standardizing quality indicators for web archives.
Date: May 4, 2012
Creator: Oury, Clément
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library

IIPC Memento Aggregator

Presentation for the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. Provides an overview of the goals of the Memento project, which seeks to provide access to and information about distributed web archives, as well as the issues it has faced.
Date: May 1, 2012
Creator: Sanderson, Robert
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Continuity of Caste: Free People of Color in the Vieux Carré of New Orleans, 1804-1820 (open access)

Continuity of Caste: Free People of Color in the Vieux Carré of New Orleans, 1804-1820

Because of its trademark racial diversity, historians have often presented New Orleans as a place transformed by incorporation into the American South following 1804. Assertions that a comparatively relaxed, racially ambiguous Spanish slaveholding regime was converted into a two-caste system of dedicated racial segregation by the advent of American assumption have been posited by scholars like Frank Tannenbaum, Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, and a host of others. Citing dependence on patronage, concubinage, and the decline in slave manumissions during the antebellum period, such studies have employed descriptions of the city’s prominent free people of color to suggest that the daily lives of non-whites in New Orleans experienced uniform restriction following 1804, and that the Crescent City’s transformation from Atlantic society with slaves to rigid slave society forced free people of color out of the heart of the city, known as the Vieux Carré, and into “black neighborhoods” on the margins of town. Despite the popularity of such generalized themes in the historiography, however, the extant sources housed in New Orleans’s valuable archival repositories can be used to support a vastly divergent narrative. By focusing on individual free people of color, or libres, rather than the non-white community as a whole, this …
Date: May 2012
Creator: Foreman, Nicholas
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Overview and Introduction to the Organ Music of Alsatian-american Composer René Louis Becker (1882-1956) (open access)

Overview and Introduction to the Organ Music of Alsatian-american Composer René Louis Becker (1882-1956)

This dissertation provides the first biographical overview and annotated catalog of the organ music of Alsatian-American organist and composer René Louis Becker. Born and educated in Strasbourg, Alsace, Becker emigrated to the United States in 1904 and remained active as a composer and church musician for the next 50 years. in addition to providing sources for his biographical information, documentation of the specific organs with which Becker was professionally associated is included for the purpose of evaluating possible dates of composition of his undated organ works as well as for consideration of organ registrations when performing his works. Primary sources include newspaper clippings, personal correspondence, family scrapbooks, organ archives, and both published and unpublished manuscripts. Study of these manuscripts, including rediscovery of more than fifty works of Becker’s which were previously published in the early 1900s, present an opportunity to introduce a large new body of sophisticated repertoire from a distinguished and accomplished musician to the field of organ music. Becker composed more than 180 individual works for the organ, over half of which remain in manuscript and which were completely unknown since even before his death in 1956. Becker’s complete known oeuvre for organ includes 34 marches, 15 toccatas, …
Date: May 2012
Creator: Spritzer, Damin
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
10 CFR 830 Major Modification Determination for Advanced Test Reactor RDAS and LPCIS Replacement (open access)

10 CFR 830 Major Modification Determination for Advanced Test Reactor RDAS and LPCIS Replacement

The replacement of the ATR Control Complex's obsolete computer based Reactor Data Acquisition System (RDAS) and its safety-related Lobe Power Calculation and Indication System (LPCIS) software application is vitally important to ensure the ATR remains available to support this national mission. The RDAS supports safe operation of the reactor by providing 'real-time' plant status information (indications and alarms) for use by the reactor operators via the Console Display System (CDS). The RDAS is a computer support system that acquires analog and digital information from various reactor and reactor support systems. The RDAS information is used to display quadrant and lobe powers via a display interface more user friendly than that provided by the recorders and the Control Room upright panels. RDAS provides input to the Nuclear Engineering ATR Surveillance Data System (ASUDAS) for fuel burn-up analysis and the production of cycle data for experiment sponsors and the generation of the Core Safety Assurance Package (CSAP). RDAS also archives and provides for retrieval of historical plant data which may be used for event reconstruction, data analysis, training and safety analysis. The RDAS, LPCIS and ASUDAS need to be replaced with state-of-the-art technology in order to eliminate problems of aged computer systems, …
Date: May 1, 2012
Creator: Korns, David E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fifth Annual SAR/DAR Flag Retirement and Honor Our Veterans Ceremony (open access)

Fifth Annual SAR/DAR Flag Retirement and Honor Our Veterans Ceremony

Webpage from McKinney TXSSAR website containing photographs and a flyer from a flag retirement and honor ceremony on May 19, 2012.
Date: May 19, 2012
Creator: Texas Society Sons of the American Revolution, McKinney Chapter 63
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 97, No. 153, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 5, 2012 (open access)

The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 97, No. 153, Ed. 1 Saturday, May 5, 2012

Student newspaper of the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Oklahoma that includes national, local, and campus news along with advertising.
Date: May 5, 2012
Creator: Lusk, Chris
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

National Day of Prayer 2012

Webpage from McKinney TXSSAR website containing photographs from a flag presentation at the National Day of Prayer ceremony on May 3, 2012.
Date: May 3, 2012
Creator: Texas Society Sons of the American Revolution, McKinney Chapter 63
Object Type: Website
System: The UNT Digital Library

The Crowd & the Library

Presentation for the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. This is the presentation used during the crowdsourcing workshop, including the logic behind crowdsourcing and prompts for discussion on how to best attract and utilize crowdsourced volunteers.
Date: May 4, 2012
Creator: Owens, Trevor
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Věstník (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 20, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 16, 2012 (open access)

Věstník (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 20, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Weekly Czech and English language newspaper from Temple, Texas published as the official organ of the Slavonic Benevolent Order of the State of Texas that includes news of interest to members along with advertising.
Date: May 16, 2012
Creator: Zavodny, Melanie
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
From Associates to Antagonists: the United States, Great Britain, the First World War, and the Origins of War Plan Red, 1914-1919 (open access)

From Associates to Antagonists: the United States, Great Britain, the First World War, and the Origins of War Plan Red, 1914-1919

American military plans for a war with the British Empire, first discussed in 1919, have received varied treatment since their declassification. the most common theme among historians in their appraisals of WAR PLAN RED is that of an oddity. Lack of a detailed study of Anglo-American relations in the immediate post-First World War years makes a right understanding of the difficult relationship between the United States and Britain after the War problematic. As a result of divergent aims and policies, the United States and Great Britain did not find the diplomatic and social unity so many on both sides of the Atlantic aspired to during and immediately after the First World War. Instead, United States’ civil and military organizations came to see the British Empire as a fierce and potentially dangerous rival, worthy of suspicion, and planned accordingly. Less than a year after the end of the War, internal debates and notes discussed and circulated between the most influential members of the United States Government, coalesced around a premise that became the rationale for WAR PLAN RED. Ample evidence reveals that contrary to the common narrative of “Anglo-American” and “Atlanticist” historians of the past century, the First World War did …
Date: May 2012
Creator: Gleason, Mark C.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library

Final Service for Corporal Wayne R. Erickson

Webpage from McKinney TXSSAR website containing an obituary and photographs from a memorial service for Corporal Wayne R. Erickson.
Date: May 24, 2012
Creator: Texas Society Sons of the American Revolution, McKinney Chapter 63
Object Type: Website
System: The UNT Digital Library

Communications Officer Report

Presentation for the 2012 International Internet Preservation Consortium General Assembly. This presentation covers updates from the communications officer, including membership updates and proposed changes to IIPC branding and website design.
Date: May 1, 2012
Creator: Potter, Abbey
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inventory and Analysis of Archaeological Site Occurence on the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf (open access)

Inventory and Analysis of Archaeological Site Occurence on the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf

The goals of this project were to identify potential areas on the Atlantic OCS where submerged prehistoric sites might be located, and to provide historic context for historic shipwrecks within the Atlantic OCS region.
Date: May 2012
Creator: TRC Environmental Corporation
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Addressing Medicare Hospital Readmissions (open access)

Addressing Medicare Hospital Readmissions

This report highlights the issue of one-fifth of medicare patients in 2005 being readmitted to a hospital within thirty days time. These readmissions put a strain on the budget, the majority of which it is estimated may be avoidable. The report notes that Medicare as a program is working on moving around those difficulties, without reducing the quality of care.
Date: May 25, 2012
Creator: Tilson, Sibyl
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crowley Star (Crowley, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 24, 2012 (open access)

Crowley Star (Crowley, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 24, 2012

Weekly newspaper from Crowley, Texas that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: May 24, 2012
Creator: Hinton, Jay
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
In Pursuit of Image: How We Think About Photographs We Seek (open access)

In Pursuit of Image: How We Think About Photographs We Seek

The user perspective of image search remains poorly understood. the purpose of this study is to identify and investigate the key issues relevant to a user’s interaction with images and the user’s approach to image search. a deeper understanding of these issues will serve to inform the design of image retrieval systems and in turn better serve the user. Previous research explores areas of information seeking behavior, representation in information science, query formulation, and image retrieval. the theoretical framework for this study includes an articulation of image search scenarios as adapted from Yoon and O’Connor’s taxonomy of image query types, Copeland’s Engineering Design Approach for rigorous qualitative research, and Anderson’s Functional Ontology Construction Model for building robust models of human behavior. a series of semi-structured interviews were conducted with expert-level image users. Interviewees discussed their motivations for image search, types of image searches they pursue, and varied approaches to image search, as well as how they decide that an information need has been met and which factors influence their experience of search. a content analysis revealed themes repeated across responses, including a collection of 23 emergent concepts and 6 emergent categories. a functional analysis revealed further insight into these themes. …
Date: May 2012
Creator: Oyarce, Sara
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library