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Forget 'What are your strengths and weaknesses?' If you want to get the real dope on prospective employees, ask job candidates these seven questions.

Helped by mounting political pressure, two new nuclear reactor designs are coming into play: small, safe units that can be easily sent to remote locations, and fast reactors that could change the whole energy landscape.

Talking with your parents about their estate is important to protect your family’s finances, but the conversation can be difficult at best. Here's what you need to ask and how to do it.

Library of Congress: New on the Web Site
New features to the Library of Congress Web site, including new collections and content, as well as major modifications and upgrades.

  • New Library of Congress Information Bulletin
    The new issue contains features on the World Digital Library, the Federal Writers Project, abstract art, disabled vets and more.
  • Willing to Serve: American Indians
    American Indians have eagerly served a government which did not always keep its word to their ancestors. All of the Native Americans featured here volunteered to serve in conflicts from World War II to Iraq. New from the Veterans History Project.
  • Women Photojournalists: Charlotte Brooks
    Charlotte Brooks is a photojournalist who worked for Look magazine from 1951 until 1971. As a sociologist with a camera, she liked to document changes in American life, including politics, health and science, education, families, urban and suburban issues, entertainment, racial conflicts, and women's roles. New from the Prints and Photographs Division.
  • Archie and Robert Frost
    A notable Poet Laureate has an impact on America's oldest teenager.
  • Updated Reader Registration
    Information on physical access to the Library's reading rooms.
  • 2008 Annual Report of the Librarian of Congress
    The new report of the Librarian to Congress for the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, 2008, is now available for download.
  • New Wise Guide
    The latest issue of the Wise Guide to the Library of Congress website features fascinating facts on Coptic chant, Herblock, women inventors reading resources and the relationships between lobsters and wise guys.
  • Louis Braille: His Legacy and Influence
    Online version of the Library exhibition celebrating Louis Braille’s invention of a tactile six-dot reading and writing system, which revolutionized the way blind people perceived and contributed to the world.
  • Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps
    The Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps Online Checklist provides a searchable database of the fire insurance maps published by the Sanborn Map Company housed in the collections of the Geography and Map Division. Not all of these maps are available online.
  • Poetry of September 11
    A guide to print and online poetry about the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
  • Russian Imperial Government Serials on Microfilm
    A guide to the uncataloged collection in the Library of Congress.
  • New Library of Congress Information Bulletn
    The new issue contains features on Stevie Wonder, the Gershwn Brothers, Youtube, the future of learning and more.
  • America's Pastime
    Historic baseball resources from the Library of Congress.
  • Herblock Collection Image Sampler
    More Herblock cartoons from the Library's Prints and Photographs Division.
  • Herblock!
    The Library of Congress celebrates Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Herb Block (1909–2001) with a look at his remarkable seventy-two-year career (1929–2001).
  • Chester Arthur: A Resource Guide
    The digital collections of the Library of Congress contain a wide variety of material associated with American President Chester Arthur.
  • Revelations from the Russian Archives
    Exhibit Publications from the Library of Congress.
  • New Wise Guide: Gimme Some Candy!
    The latest issue of the Wise Guide to the Library of Congress website features fascinating facts on English dialects, the Coast Guard, ghosts, baseball and avant-garde dance.
  • World War I Posters
    During World War I, the impact of the poster as a means of communication was greater than at any other time during history. The ability of posters to inspire, inform, and persuade combined with vibrant design trends in many of the participating countries to produce thousands of interesting visual works. The Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division makes available online approximately 1,900 posters created between 1914 and 1920. Most relate directly to the war, but some German posters date from the post-war period and illustrate events such as the rise of Bolshevism and Communism, the 1919 General Assembly election and various plebiscites.
  • Stabilizing Special Collections for High-Density Storage
    n 2005, the Library of Congress opened a state-of-the-art, high-density storage facility thirty miles from Capitol Hill at Fort Meade in Maryland. The Conservation Division Move Project team was charged with preparing especially challenging special format collections for off-site transport and storage.
  • Finding Census Data for Business Research
    A new tutorial from the Business Reference Section.
  • James Garfield: A Resource Guide
    The digital collections of the Library of Congress contain a wide variety of material associated with American President James Garfield.
  • Endangered Species: Selected Internet Resources
    Information from the Science, Technology and Business Division.
  • Baseball Resources at the Library of Congress
    Baseball Resources at the Library of Congress is a guide to baseball resources available on the Library's Web site and in its physical collections. The breadth and depth of materials highlighted will appeal to baseball researchers, while casual and diehard fans alike will find many digitized items documenting the history of baseball to fuel their passion for the game.
  • Middle East Images in the Prints and Photographs Division
    The Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division has numerous varied and unique collections of Middle East images. This visual material includes photographic prints, negatives, albums, book illustrations, posters, architectural drawings, and cartoons. The majority of images were created between 1840 and 1970, although some earlier and later materials are also available.
  • Rutherford B. Hayes: A Resource Guide
    The digital collections of the Library of Congress contain a wide variety of material associated with American President Rutherford B. Hayes.
  • Coptic Orthodox Liturgical Chant & Hymnody
    With its roots in Ancient Egyptian music, Coptic Christian chant is one of the oldest liturgical genres still performed today. Drawing on the Ragheb Moftah Collection, this presentation explores some of the earliest music transcriptions by explorers, missionaries, and scholars in Egypt, highlighting Moftah's efforts to notate, record, and preserve all Coptic Orthodox hymns.
  • National Disability Awareness Month
    This year's theme: "Expectation + Opportunity = Full Participation"
  • Women of Invention: Women Inventors & Patent Holders
    A general bibliography from the Science, Technology and Business Division.
  • Physical Handicaps: A Selective Bibliography
    A number of efforts have been made to extend equal opportunity to people who are physically handicapped and to encourage their full participation in all aspects of society. These efforts include the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990 and other federal laws that protect the rights of disabled people with respect to access to education, employment, and public accommodations. Other efforts have involved achieving full acceptance by working to change attitudes toward people with handicaps. This bibliography explores myths and misconceptions that continue to exist about handicapped people and offers ways to interact with and write about these individuals in order to foster greater awareness and sensitivity.
  • Finnish Collections at th