News
story
research
guide:
Duke
Library
resources
for
news
archives
First
steps
Be
sure
to
review
three
excellent
library
resources
prepared
by
the
subject
librarian,
Catherine
Shreve:
1.
Public
policy
guide:
http://guides.library.duke.edu/public-policy
2.
Library
orientation
for
grad
students:
http://guides.library.duke.edu/grad- orientation
3.
Guide
for
Public
Policy
114:
http://guides.library.duke.edu/PUBPOL114
(the
News/Media
section
gives
you
a
preview
of
what
will
be
covered
here.)
The
services
are
best
for
established
news
organizations.
Whats
missing
Stories
written
by
freelancers
(often
opinions
and
columns)
may
not
be
included
in
a
given
news
source.
Thats
the
common
reason
youd
find
something
on
a
Google
search
that
you
cant
find
in
the
databases.
Our
versions
of
Nexis
and
Factiva
are
less
complete
than
their
commercial
cousins.
In
fact,
some
of
them
are
a
bit
misleading
for
us
regarding
what
might
be
missing
from
our
version.
Newspaper
companies
New
York
Times,
Washington
Post,
USAToday
Nexis
and
Factiva
Wall
Street
Journal
and
other
Dow
Jones
news
sources
Factiva
only
Regional
newspapers
Both,
but
Nexis
has
better
coverage
of
McClatchy
newspapers,
which
include
many
major
metro
dailies
including
the
Raleigh
News
&
Observer
and
the
Charlotte
Observer.
The
Chicago
Tribune,
Los
Angeles
Times1
and
other
newspapers
owned
by
the
Tribune
Co.
are
effectively
missing
in
both
of
these
sources.
You
have
to
search
them
elsewhere.
Look
in
the
e-journal
section
of
the
Duke
Library
to
find
them.
Whats
wrong
with
Google?
Google
is
great
for
finding
tidbits
and
looking
at
hobbyist
or
special
interest
websites.
Its
not
great
as
a
way
to
efficiently
search
established
sources
archives.
When
you
use
the
news
databases
available
through
the
library
you
dont
have
to
worry
about
the
pedigree
of
the
material
you
find
it
actually
appeared
in
the
source
listed.
You
can
choose
your
sources
or
types
of
sources
and
conduct
a
targeted
search
across
all
of
them
at
once.
And
you
dont
have
to
sign
up
or
pay
at
each
news
site
for
the
full
story.
You
are
encouraged
(sometimes
required)
to
use
them
and
can
quote
the
original
source
without
fear.
(Professors
differ
on
whether
they
want
you
to
say
how
you
found
the
source.)
Other
types
of
news
sources
Web-based
publications
Nexis
Established
news
sites
with
original
content
such
as
Politico
and
Slate;
online
editions
of
many
major
news
The
Los
Angeles
Times
is
crucial
for
news
about
the
media
or
entertainment;
national
investigative
stories
and
West
Coast
.
The
Chicago
Tribune
is
important
for
stories
about
the
Obamas
or
Midwestern
news.
It
also
has
traditionally
had
good
international
investigations.
To
get
to
those
sources,
you
can
search
their
own
sites,
then
find
1
Choose
your
sources
Google
gives
you
lots
of
results,
but
it
doesnt
tell
you
what
it
hasnt
searched.
It
also
includes
a
lot
of
sources
that
require
vetting
and
circling
back
to
the
original.
The
news
databases
LexisNexis,
Factiva,
Americas
Newsbank
and
Proquest
tell
you
what
you
are
searching
and
assure
you
youre
getting
the
correct
version.
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
Duke
Library
resources
organizations
such
as
CNN.com
and
NPR.org.
None
have
Huffington
Post
or
the
Drudge
Report.
2
Blogs
Nexis
A
large
collection
of
special
interest
blogs.
Look
for
Newstex
Media
blogs
for
a
collection
of
media
critics.
Broadcast
transcripts
Nexis
Business
publications
and
Reuters
-
Factiva
General
interest
and
trade
magazines
Nexis
NOTES
This
list
suggest
that
you
will
often
start
with
LexisNexis,
then
move
to
Factiva
to
fill
in
the
gaps
once
you
know
what
you
are
looking
for.
The
search
concepts
are
the
same
in
both
places.
Fill
in
the
gaps
One
way
to
overcome
some
of
the
shortcomings
of
the
resources
we
have
is
to
create
your
own
Google
Custom
search.
This
lets
you
search
your
own
collection
of
sites
but
is
unrelated
to
Google
News.
For
example,
Ive
created
a
search
that
combines
most
of
the
specialized
sites
for
investigative
news
stories
it
doesnt
replace
Nexis,
but
it
helps
overcome
its
shortcomings:
http://www.google.com/cse/home?cx=01835 0939584033857265:71-nhhxlqxm
Its
easy
to
create
one:
just
go
to
Google
Custom
Search
at
http://www.google.com/cse/
and
get
started.
I
cant
find
any
stated
reason
for
this
but
can
make
an
educated
guess:
these
sources
originate
very
little
reporting
on
their
own
most
is
compilations
of
other
sources
or
independent
unpaid
bloggers.
I
would
guess
but
dont
know
that
they
resist
distinguishing
the
material
they
own
(and
can
get
paid
for)
from
material
that
someone
else
owns.
2
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
Search
strategies
A
common
strategy
in
any
search,
whether
on
the
Internet
or
in
library
databases,
is
to
find
one
or
two
useful
examples,
then
examine
those
for
markers
that
might
help
you
either
narrow
or
widen
to
find
more.
These
traits
dont
have
to
be
words
or
phrases
they
might
be
the
kind
of
source,
the
author,
people
quoted,
common
industry
terminology,
style
conventions
and
shorthand
descriptions
Washington
Post,
Wall
Street
Journal
(Factiva
only),
Fox
News,
MSNBC.
In
Lexis
Congressional,
look
for
congressional
hearings
on
the
topic.
Use
the
librarys
think
tank
Google
custom
search,
linked
off
of
the
public
policy
guide
to
find
organizations
with
particular
interest,
then
look
at
profiles
by
subject
area.
Once
youve
found
a
few
specialists,
return
to
your
sources
to
find
people
who
appear
with
them
at
conferences,
hearings
or
in
articles.
Be
careful
of
local
news
organizations
use
of
experts.
They
are
often
under
pressure
to
find
someone
local,
regardless
of
their
qualifications.
No
more
than
you
need
Set
out
a
research
plan
for
yourself
and
decide
how
much
you
need
to
know.
Then
stop
when
you
find
it.
There
are
three
common
levels
of
research:
A
few
articles
or
a
few
names
of
people
to
give
you
just
enough
information
to
get
started
on
your
work.
This
might
be
a
basic
chronology
of
events
from
a
trusted
source;
a
few
of
names
of
people
to
research
or
call;
or
a
general
sense
of
the
controversies
within
a
policy
or
topic.
Editorials,
op-eds
and
other
opinion
pieces
are
sometimes
more
efficient
(and
shorter)
than
news
stories
for
this
level.
A
reasonable
understanding
of
the
topic,
person
or
organization.
You
will
probably
have
to
read
6-12
pieces
before
you
feel
informed,
but
you
dont
have
to
go
very
deep
so
long
as
you
stick
with
news,
not
opinion.
Deep
research
to
determine
all
significant
works
on
the
person
or
topic.
This
is
reserved
for
when
you
want
to
make
sure
you
will
not
be
repeating
someone
elses
work
especially
important
in
original
research
and
investigative
journalism.
Backgrounding
a
person
Getting
background
on
a
person
can
be
as
simple
as
finding
contact
information
and
as
extensive
as
getting
information
in
advance
of
an
interview
or
before
using
a
person
as
a
source.
Make
sure
to
confirm
that
the
information
you
find
is
really
about
the
right
person.
Examine
anything
that
would
give
you
a
middle
or
maiden
name,
an
approximate
date
of
birth
(age),
hometown,
family
member
or
employer.
Youd
be
surprised
how
many
people
have
same
name,
even
when
its
not
common.
Search
news
sources,
including
trade
publications.
If
you
need
to
narrow
to
a
few
news
organizations
or
papers,
find
their
hometown
media
or
an
industry
newsletter.
Use
variations
of
the
name
and
common
misspellings.
In
Nexis,
for
example:
((james
or
jim!)
pre/4
(stuart
or
stewart))
Finding
policy
experts
Your
usual
academic
research
skills
will
help
you
find
many
policy
experts.
Consider
adding
these
sources
to
Google
Scholar
an
other
key
sources:
In
Nexis
and
Factiva,
try
a
range
of
national
publications:
New
York
Times,
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
Search
strategies
Elected
and
other
high-level
government
officials
have
additional
sources,
notably
financial
disclosure
and
confirmation
documents.
University
alumni
news
and
yearbooks
Social
media,
especially
LinkedIn,
Facebook
and
Twitter.
Icerocket.com
will
search
blogs
and
some
social
media
for
you.
Employer
websites,
especially
law
firms,
consultancies
or
colleges.
Dont
forget
to
look
for
non-profit
and
public
company
board
memberships,
which
may
have
more
detailed
bios
than
the
primary
or
current
employer.
Appointed
government
officials
usually
retain
their
status
at
law
firms
and
universities
their
profiles
are
still
there.
Search
public
records
in
their
hometown
and
their
recent
residences
(which
could
be
several
states).
The
most
common
ones
are:
State
and
federal
civil
and
criminal
court
indexes;
real
estate
transactions;
federal,
state
and
local
campaign
finance
reports;
Securities
and
Exchange
and
non-profit
tax
documents;
licensing
records
(gun,
pet,
business,
medical,
etc.);
state
corporate
records,
liens
and
UCC
reports;
voting
records
where
public.
There
is
no
national
or
comprehensive
free
source
for
these
records,
but
BRB
Publications
Inc.
has
a
list
of
common
public
records
and
will
connect
you
to
vendors
who
want
to
sell
you
the
information
for
about
$40:
Background
on
a
policy
Look
for
long
stories
on
your
topic
in
Nexis
using
a
broad
set
of
terms
you
know
will
appear
in
anything
on
it.
length(>2000)
If
the
term
is
common,
look
for
stories
that
mention
a
key
word
or
phrase
many
times:
atleast10(allcaps(aids))
and
atleast5(africa)
Once
you
find
a
few
stories,
look
for
commonly
quoted
people
(especially
government
officials
or
sponsoring
legislators)
or
other
terms
that
are
likely
to
appear
in
others.
Then
use
a
less
restrictive
query
that
includes
those
terms
or
people.
Search
for
other
stories
by
the
same
reporters.
They
may
have
beat
or
follow- up
coverage.
Look
for
one
policy
or
academic
journal
that
has
included
an
article
about
the
policy
and
examine
its
table
of
contents
for
the
past
several
years.
Beware
of
searching
for
acronyms
many
news
organizations
have
style
rules
that
discourage
their
use.
Before
publishing
anything
based
on
these
records,
confirm
them
with
the
person.
You
are
responsible
for
what
you
publish
--
besides
the
embarrassment,
mistakenly
saying
someone
is
a
criminal,
for
example,
is
libelous
if
youre
not
careful.
Look
for
oddities
that
might
make
you
miss
stories
in
particular
news
outlets.
For
example,
some
news
organizations
might
only
use
the
term
HIV/AIDS,
so
a
search
for
AIDS
wouldnt
catch
anything.
Others
use
middle
names,
initials,
nicknames
or
alternative
spellings.
If
you
think
a
news
source
should
have
stories
you
are
looking
for,
keep
trying
until
you
find
some,
then
figure
out
where
your
query
failed
it
might
be
failing
elsewhere.
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
Search
strategies
In-depth
background
of
a
topic
or
policy
Look
for
spikes
in
coverage
or
announced
reforms
that
might
have
been
prompted
by
an
investigation
by
a
government
body,
an
NGO
or
a
news
outlet.
Use
the
same
techniques
you
would
if
you
were
just
looking
for
basic
background,
but
expand
the
source
list
and
keep
looking.
Include:
Investigative
reporting
prize
sites,
especially
the
resource
center
at
ire.org
Broadcast
transcripts
Industry
trade
publications
Scholarly
journals
Government
agency
sites
Specialized
centers
that
cover
the
topic
at
universities
and
in
quasi-government
agencies
GAO
and
Inspector
General
reports
OpenCRS
for
Congressional
Research
Service
reports
Usaspending.gov
for
federal
contract
and
grant
information.
Lobbying
reports
.
And
anything
else
you
run
across
in
those
sources.
The
key
is
to
find
the
terms
that
you
need
to
use
and
the
people
youll
likely
find
and
keep
searching
for
them
in
a
wide
range
of
sources.
NOTES
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
Using
LexisNexis
Academic
news
sources
Getting
started
with
LexisNexis
Academic
Use
Firefox
or
Internet
Explorer
to
use
LexisNexis.
The
results
are
un-readable
in
Chrome
and
Safari.
You
will
eventually
have
to
sign
into
the
Duke
Library
when
you
want
to
use
any
of
the
pay
services.
Get
to
LexisNexis
through
the
Databases
tab
at
the
top
of
the
library
home
page:
More
precise
searching
techniques
You
can
use
many
of
the
advanced
LexisNexis
search
features
within
the
News
form.
Here
are
a
couple
of
examples
using
a
search
for
stories
about
Apple
CEO
Steven
Jobs
and
the
iPad.
(Its
probably
overkill,
but)
This
section
says
that
a
word
starting
with
Steve
(including
Steven)
must
appear
no
more
than
two
words
before
the
word
Jobs
in
the
headline
or
lead
paragraph
(about
100
words).
This
one
is
more
complex.
It
says
that
the
words
jobs
and
apple
have
to
have
at
least
one
capital
(caps)
letter
each
(to
distinguish
them
from
the
common
nouns)
and
they
must
show
up
in
the
same
paragraph
(w/p)
at
least
once
in
the
story.
When
you
start
up
LexisNexis,
go
directly
to
the
News
section:
Then
pick
your
sources
(in
this
case,
under
newspapers
and
wires,
US
Newspapers
and
Wires).
And
this
one
makes
sure
its
about
iPads,
because
the
term
has
to
show
up
at
least
five
times
in
the
story.
The
program
defaults
to
all
available
dates,
which
differ
by
specific
publication.
You
might
change
it
to
something
recent
if
youre
just
testing
out
a
query:
Using
Power
Search
To
use
different
sources
or
timing,
you
may
have
to
and
start
over
again.
Thats
when
Power
search
comes
in,
which
you
can
get
to
by
clicking
on
the
link
at
the
bottom
of
the
form.
This
turns
your
selections
into
the
commands
needed
by
LexisNexis
for
a
search.
You
can
Then
fill
in
the
boxes
with
your
terms.
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
Power
searching
on
LexisNexis
Academic
then
edit
it
for
even
more
control.
In
this
case,
the
only
change
I
made
in
the
search
is
that
Ive
added
the
condition
that
the
story
be
at
least
1,000
words
long
to
distinguish
significant
stories
from
more
routine
ones.
Be
careful
about
using
the
company,
people
and
other
index
terms
these
are
created
by
computers
and
are
often
wrong.
For
example,
three
of
the
11
stories
that
met
the
criteria
of
this
search
didnt
recognize
Steven
Jobs
as
the
person
in
the
story.
Use
the
Edit
Search
link
at
the
top
of
the
page
to
change
your
search.
Using
the
Back
button
doesnt
always
work.
Reviewing
your
results
The
search
above
only
picked
up
11
stories,
three
of
them
duplicates
from
the
Associated
Press.
Expanding
it
to
the
latest
year,
before
the
iPad
was
released,
gave
a
better
set
of
stories:
38.
Browse
the
list
you
get
back
by
the
type
of
publication
and
the
publication
name.
You
dont
have
to
read
any
stories
to
see
whether
your
search
picked
up
expected
publications
or
if
you
got
way
too
much
to
even
begin
to
evaluate.
Reviewing
your
list
is
much
easier
if
you
know
of
one
good
example
story.(say,
something
you
found
on
Google).
Then
you
can
adjust
the
query
several
times
to
catch
it
and
others
like
it.
You
may
have
to
use
alternative
name
spellings
sometimes
to
catch
everything
you
want.
Even
if
you
have
to
start
from
scratch,
reviewing
the
headlines,
names
of
publications
and
other
basic
information
should
give
you
a
good
sense
of
whether
you
found
at
least
some
of
what
youd
hoped
to
find.
This
search
is
just
one
set
of
sources.
Youd
probably
repeat
it
using
blogs,
online
news
sources
and
television
transcripts.
Youd
also
repeat
the
search
in
Factiva
to
catch
the
Wall
Street
Journal,
if
nothing
else.
Reviewing
stories
Section
In
newspapers,
opinion
pieces
are
clearly
marked
as
editorial,
op-ed,
columnist
or
some
other
designation
in
the
SECTION
of
the
paper
shown.
These
should
rarely
be
your
source
for
facts.
Instead,
youll
use
them
as
informed
opinion
in
your
work.
(These
columnists
usually
do
original
reporting
and
often
have
exclusive
details.
But
you
should
dig
deeper
if
you
are
trying
to
find
the
stories
that
present
the
original
material.)
Here
are
a
few
examples
from
The
Washington
Post
and
New
York
Times
after
searching
for
Henry
pre/2
Kissinger.
The
articles
that
come
back
include
an
op-ed
7
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
Power
searching
on
LexisNexis
Academic
Kissinger
wrote
about
recently
released
Nixon
tapes
that
included
some
anti-Semitic
statements;
a
news
story
in
the
New
York
Times
that
mentioned
Kissinger
after
the
START
treaty
was
passed;
and
another
op-ed
piece
that
mentioned
Kissinger
in
the
context
of
opinion.
You
can
tell
where
these
are
by
examining
the
SECTION
shown
in
the
list.
Broadcast
transcripts
are
much
more
difficult
they
can
include
segments
of
news,
exclusive
interviews,
investigative
reports
and
opinion
in
the
same
show.
The
show
itself
All
Things
Considered
or
60
Minutes
vs.
the
Larry
King
Show
or
Fox
and
Friends
can
help
guide
you.
There
is
little
distinction
made
in
most
online
news
sources
youll
have
to
read
the
piece
to
see
whether
it
is
straight
news
or
opinion
or
some
combination.
In
particular,
be
on
the
lookout
for
credits
given
to
other
news
organizations
youll
want
to
go
to
that
original
source.
Saving
your
searches
There
isnt
a
way
on
our
version
of
Nexis
to
save
your
search.
But
you
can
copy
the
terms
and
save
them
into
your
own
document
to
repeat
later.
It
is
shown
at
the
bottom
of
the
page:
Saving
your
sources
We
also
cant
save
our
sources
and
go
directly
to
the
ones
we
want.
But
LexisNexis
does
allow
creation
of
direct
links
to
forms
and
with
a
little
work
you
can
construct
a
bookmark
that
will
pre-select
your
favorite
sources.
Here
is
one
example
that
includes
U.S.
newspapers
and
wire
services,
transcripts,
blogs
and
web
publications.
Look
for
information
on
the
API
under
help
if
you
want
to
make
your
own.3
http://www.lexisnexis.com.proxy.lib.duke. edu/hottopics/lnacademic/?verb=sf&csi= 140954,8421,299488,222647
Using
Factiva
Most
of
these
concepts
translate
directly
to
Factiva.
The
biggest
difference
is
that
you
choose
the
search
builder
in
Factiva,
and
usually
will
change
the
default
timing
to
something
longer
than
three
months.
You
can
copy
that
whole,
long
search
term
into
a
document
and
save
it
for
your
next
visit
or
for
another
set
of
publications.
I
had
to
search
around
a
lot
for
the
codes
used
here
to
select
the
sources
these
combined
sources
arent
included
in
the
huge
downloadable
spreadsheet.
Instead,
I
clicked
on
the
I
button
when
I
found
a
source
I
liked,
then
looked
at
its
URL
to
find
the
part
that
says
csi=,
which
is
the
unique
identifier
for
each
source.
3
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
LexisNexis
vs.
Factiva
:
Common
search
examples
LexisNexis
and
Factiva
allow
very
similar
kinds
of
searching.
This
detailed
guide
to
the
syntax
will
help
you
get
exactly
the
results
you
need.
Many
of
these
options
are
available
on
the
search
forms
you
dont
have
to
type
them.
However,
typing
them
out
means
you
can
save
the
queries.
This
level
of
precision
is
not
available
in
the
other
sources
for
news
articles,
notably
Americas
News
Bank,
Google,
ProQuest
or
the
sites
own
archives.
This
search
guide
assumes
you
know
the
basics
of
Boolean
searching,
such
as
the
use
of
AND
and
OR.
In
all
of
these,
the
quotation
marks,
parentheses
and
slashes
matter
they
wont
work
without
them
and
the
error
message
you
get
isnt
very
useful
You
want
A
date
range
In
LexisNexis
Defaults
to
entire
archive
Begins
Jan.
1
2010:
Date(>12/31/2009)
Ends
12/31/2009:
Date(<1/1/2009)
Its
easier
to
fill
out
a
date
range
on
the
form
than
to
type
it
in
it
will
translate
it
for
you
and
then
you
can
save
it.
atleast10(aids
OR
hiv)
atleast10(rural
development)
In
Factiva
Defaults
to
only
3
months
be
sure
to
change
it.
You
can
only
do
this
on
the
Search
Builder
form.
Good
for
Testing
your
search
terms
to
a
manageable
set
of
documents.
Once
you
find
better
terms,
you
can
change
it
back.
Many
mentions
mentions
of
a
term
Not
exactly
available,
but
you
could
use:
atleast10
aids
OR
atleast10
hiv
hlp=aids
aids/F100/
(refers
to
first
100
words
you
can
change
that.
Note
the
slash
at
the
end.)
wc>2000
The
term
at
the
top
of
a
story
hlead(aids)
(refers
to
headline
and
lead
paragraphs.)
length(>2000)
Limiting
to
stories
that
are
really
about
a
topic
it
has
many
mentions
in
the
story.
(Google
use
this
as
one
but
not
the
only
element
in
ranking)
Again
limiting
to
stories
that
are
really
about
the
topic
Long
stories
(by
word
count)
An
author
Byline(sarah
cohen)
By=sarah
cohen
(notice
the
quotes)
Making
sure
its
a
significant
story.
Choosing
2,000
words
may
be
too
much
or
too
little.
Start
here
and
move
up
or
down
Once
you
find
one
good
story
on
a
topic,
search
the
byline
to
see
if
there
are
more.
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
Finding
terms
near
each
other
(called
proximity
searches)
1. Valerie
pre/2
Plame
(no
more
than
2
words
before
Plame)
2. Valerie
w/4
Wilson
(within
4
words,
any
order)
3. Valerie
w/s
Wilson
(same
sentence)
or
w/p
(same
paragraph)
Pub(washington
post
or
new
york
times)
Truncation:
!
Wild
card
(single
character):
*
Capitalization:
ALLCAPS
or
NOCAPS
Examples:
allcaps(aids)
allcaps(hiv!)
hiv*aids
NOT
(pub(Washington
Post))
You
dont
want
any
Post
stories.
(connect
with
an
AND,
not
an
OR)
1. 2. 3. Valerie
w/2
Plame
Valerie
near4
Wilson
or
Valerie/N4/Wilson
Valerie
same
Wilson
(same
paragraph)
Especially
good
for
peoples
names
putting
a
context
around
common
words
as
someones
name,
women
who
sometimes
use
maiden
names,
finding
couples,
and
people
who
sometimes
use
a
middle
name.
This
is
good
if
you
have
a
few
sources.
I
havent
found
a
way
to
type
in
ready-made
groups
that
arent
on
the
drop-down
lists.
Working
with
common
phrases
that
arent
what
you
intend.
Both
services
automatically
adjust
for
spelling
variations
and
singular
/
plural.
Thats
usually
good.
But
in
this
case,
you
want
to
distinguish
the
common
word
aid
from
the
disease
AIDS,
and
to
adjust
for
the
fact
that
some
sources
might
have
HIV/AIDS
instead.
Avoid
using
NOT
unless
its
a
real
problem,
such
as
easily
confused
people.
In
that
case,
you
could
exclude,
say,
a
company
name
that
is
for
the
wrong
person
to
avoid
some
of
the
confusion.
The
logic
of
NOT
gets
hairy
and
there
are
a
lot
of
terms
that
cant
go
with
it..
A
publication
name
Spelling
variations
1. Truncation
(any
#
of
letters
at
the
end)
2. Wild
card
(each
one
accounts
for
only
1
character)
Exclusions
*
?
No
comparable
command
hiv*
or
hiv$4
hiv?aids
NOT
pub=
More
help
from
Nexis:
Connectors
(eg,
AND,
OR,
NOT,
PRE,
etc.):
http://wiki.lexisnexis.com.proxy.lib.duke.edu/academic/index.php?title=Boolean_Searching
Looking
in
sections
of
a
story
(HLEAD,
BODY,
LENGTH,
etc.):
http://wiki.lexisnexis.com.proxy.lib.duke.edu/academic/index.php?title=Academic_Document_Sections
(however
be
careful
about
using
the
Company
name
and
the
index
search
terms.
These
are
made
by
computer
and
arent
always
right.)
More
help
from
Factiva:
http://customer.factiva.com.proxy.lib.duke.edu/en/custSvc/CSMain.aspx?id=3463&sa_from=GL
http://customer.factiva.com.proxy.lib.duke.edu/en/custSvc/CSMain.aspx?id=3948
Public
Policy
125
research
guide
Sarah
Cohen
10