Statistical & Numeric Data

Help save the American Community Survey (ACS)

The Free Government Information blog has been tracking on HR 5326 "Making appropriations for the Departments of Commerce and Justice, Science, and Related Agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2013" and more specifically the Webster-Lankford amendment (which passed the House on May 9, 2012 by a vote of 232 - 190) which cuts funding for the American Community Survey. Data collected by the ACS are used by policy makers to determine the distribution of federal funding for everything from schools to roads and bridges, to emergency services and Medicaid benefits -- and is of vital interest to researchers, teachers, students and the public to learn more about and track on issues important to their communities. As the Sunday NY Times succinctly put it, in an article entitled "The Beginning of the End of the Census?":

This survey of American households has been around in some form since 1850, either as a longer version of or a richer supplement to the basic decennial census. It tells Americans how poor we are, how rich we are, who is suffering, who is thriving, where people work, what kind of training people need to get jobs, what languages people speak, who uses food stamps, who has access to health care, and so on.

It is, more or less, the country’s primary check for determining how well the government is doing — and in fact what the government will be doing. The survey’s findings help determine how over $400 billion in government funds is distributed each year.

But last week, the Republican-led House voted to eliminate the survey altogether, on the grounds that the government should not be butting its nose into Americans’ homes.

If you care about this vital program, please sign the Save the American Community Survey petition. It's crucial that our Federal lawmakers know about the public's concern, and understand why they need the ACS to do their very jobs!

[Note: this was originally posted on Free Government Information, the personal blog of James Jacobs, Stanford's US Government Information Librarian]


Q&A: Airplane Production Statistics from the pre-World War II years

Question:
Where can I find aircraft production statistics for the years just before and during World War II?

Answer: 

Lexis Nexis Statistical Insight (available only to Stanford users) is a good database to start your hunt for statistics. Using Lexis Nexis Statistical Insight, I used the search terms: (aircraft or airplane) and production.

One of the first five publications to appear in the results list was "Aerospace Facts and Figures". Lexis Nexis's digital holdings only went back to early 80's so I searched the title "Aerospace Facts and Figures" in Searchworks. I found we have print volumes in Green Stacks back to 1945. In addition if you use the "browse around" function in Searchworks, you will see that Aviation Week and Space Technology is nearby in the stacks, and this journal goes back to 1916, and they published production figures sporadically - Since these old issues are not indexed, you just have to browse through the issues - they probably pick one issue a month or year to report summary statistics.


Global Literature in English

Interested in the newest international literature available in English translation?
Go to Three Percent, a database developed at the University of Rochester to search for original fiction and poetry published since January 2008.


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