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To: amom; Yellow Rose of Texas; Alamo-Girl; 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
What are your favorite sites?
To: Nita Nupress; OKCSubmariner; aristeides; gumbo; Fred Mertz
FYI
To: Bump in the night
Bumped and bookmarked.
5 posted on
12/07/2001 6:44:39 PM PST by
Drew68
To: Bump in the night
Thanks for these great links.....BUMP
To: Bump in the night
I doubt it's what you seek, but I greatly enjoy topozone.com. Topographical maps for the entire nation! Free! Their catalog of searchable names includes very obscure communities that haven't been actually featured on the maps themselves for years. I am a rather strange person and greatly enjoy looking at maps. Have several hundred USGS maps in my collection (actually on loan), and maps hanging on the wall. I know...
8 posted on
12/07/2001 6:46:33 PM PST by
Cleburne
To: Bump in the night
Dont know if this is useful, but
Findlaw is another law site that comes in handy for my research occasionally. Its a good resource on legislative resources as well.
To: Bump in the night
To: antivenom; archy; anniegetyourgun; piasa; Clarity; lawgirl
FYI
To: Bump in the night
Bump in the night, indeed.
Bumped for future personal reference.
To: Bump in the night
Here's one for ya!
If you can't find it here, don't bother!
RefDesk.com is created by Matt Drudge's father!
You could call it the "Daddy of reference links"!
To: Bump in the night
Fedworld.gov sounds kind of ominous.
The Library of Congress at loc.gov has lots of good stuff for research and general learning.
Findlaw.com looks better than megalaw.com.
Constitution.org has a good site for finding historical legal documents, as does Project Avalon (http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/avalon.htm). The Founders' Constitution (http://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/tocs/toc.html) is also a good site for constitutional history.
Yourdictionary.com is a great site for languages. M-w.com is the site for Merriam Webster Dictionaries. Wordreference.com lets you link to dictionaries with a right click.
About.com is a good way to find out about things -- not necessarily when you want a quick answer, but when you want to find out more about a topic.
21 posted on
12/07/2001 7:01:31 PM PST by
x
To: Bump in the night
For conservatives this one is a must: National Center for Policy Analysis http://ncpa.org/
Loads of useful facts and figures there. Dig around. It was indispensable to me when I worked in the State Capitol.
To: Bump in the night
To: Bump in the night
25 posted on
12/07/2001 7:05:13 PM PST by
sigSEGV
To: Bump in the night; chadsworth; Clovis_Skeptic
I love these threads, get some great sites this way. Thanks so much!
To: Bump in the night
Well, it all starts with http://www.weather.com/
To: Bump in the night
I've bookmarked this for use, Thanks!
To: Bump in the night
Wonderful tools. Thanks for the post, Bump.
To: Bump in the night
40 posted on
12/07/2001 7:22:50 PM PST by
Orion78
To: Bump in the night
Knowx.com -- not free, but pretty good for court history lookups.
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