This month, I will choose a photo for the Annaberg Photography Space Exhibition instead of an ostrich. Watch more free usage, reuse the set
These are exhibited in the Library of Congress, but this is a large library. The Library of Congress also provides physical sharing by providing this service. Therefore, I agree with them and I'm happy to be a member of their family. These towns have done their best to make them show their best to them - I grab it, go back, put metadata, color correct it, and make sure it is good I was able to. Then it went to the Congress library, they did a lot of work to complete it, then that existed for thousands of years. How can I lose this? This is what the whole world can see, let the world see what we see - this is wonderful
The Library of Congress is the official research library in the United States. The definition of the subject of the Congressional Library (LCSH) includes "the thesaurus (controlled vocabulary in the sense of information science) of the subject headings maintained by the Congress library for bibliographic records." Librarians and researchers You can use the Congress library to narrow down the vocabulary of indexing and cataloging. The history of controversies entitled "illegal alien" was proposed by Mexican student Melissa Padilla during her immigration study. She noticed that she used "an illegal alien" in her research.
The term "illegal alien" is the subject of the Congress library. "The subject heading of the Library of Congress (LCSH) has actively maintained the information directory of the Library of Congress since 1898" (http://id.loc.gov/) in the article " The way people use will be our parents The choice is a crime to provide us with a better life and to completely compromise the courageous choices and obstacles we have overcome to survive (Http://www.nytimes.com). Undocumented immigrants claim to be survivors devoted to a better future Padilla said the term "illegal aliens" Regardless of its legal status, I believe it is being used to respect Mexican immigrants. Padilla and Dartmouth students spent more than two years trying to delete topic titles.