The default view for any image in METSNavigator is "screen." This view allows the left-side menu to display. To see a larger version of the image, use the "Image Size" drop-down menu to change the view to "Image Size: large." The image size will increase and the left-side menu will disappear. Change the image size back to "screen" to make the image smaller and bring back the left-side menu.
The box above the item image shows a citation modeled after the MLA style. Use the information contained herein to cite an article from the IMH online.
An example of proper MLA formatting is as follows:
Glazier, Jack. "'Transplanted from Kiev to Hoosierdom': How the Industrial Removal Office Directed Jewish Immigrants to Terre Haute." Indiana Magazine of History 97.1 (2001): 1-25. 21 April 2008 <http://purl.dlib.indiana.edu/iudl/imh/VAA4025-001-1-a01>.
Reference the latest date of online access and use the persistent URL for citing the article found in the footer of the full text view of the article.
Use the "Download Article" drop-down menu to download the PDF version of the image(s) you are viewing or, if available, the XML source for the text being viewed.
Use this link to go to the home page for the Indiana Magazine of History Online. Basic and advanced searching of all full-text articles is available here along with a browsable menu of all issues except for the most recent 2 years.
Use these links (Visit the IMH: Subscribe | Contribute | Teach | Contact) to visit the Indiana Magazine of History's web site for information about subscribing or contributing to the magazine, ideas and lesson plans for teachers, and contact information for the magazine's staff and editorial board.
Use this link to return to the full-text version of the article that is currently being viewed.
The "Table of Contents" tab shows the full list of articles available in the issue of the Indiana Magazine of History currently being viewed. Click on any linked article title to view the page images of that article.
For any current article being viewed, the "Article Description" tab offers more details about the article from what is seen in the "Table of Contents." Citation information will also be similar but this offers information such as "Article Type" that will not be found in the citation above the page image.
The IMH can be explored at the issue- or article-level. ÊFront matter, articles and back matter are accessible, and from any given section of the issue, you can jump from article to article or back matter to article by using the table of contents or the previous/next controls located above and below the page images. ÊThe numbering reflects a sequential order of the images and not the actual page numbers. ÊTherefore, the image number shown in the pagination control may not coincide with the actual page number.
Directly above and below the page image is a set of controls that looks similar to the following:
|< - Jump to the first page of the current magazine issue (sequential page image number 1 - normally the first page of the Front Matter, or the front cover).
<< - Jump back one page from the current page being viewed (if on image number 37, this link will take you to image number 36).
Text box containing a number (in the above example, 37) - Jump to any particular image number within the magazine issue currently being viewed.
NOTE: When looking for page 38 in the article, "Oatmeal and Coffee," located on pp. 31-76 of IMH Volume 97, Issue 1, 2001, entering image number 38 in the text box will not necessarily bring up article page 38; the sequential numbering of the pages often does not directly match the article page numbering. However, the numbering is often off by only a few so you can then navigate by using the previous/next links to access the actual page number.
>> - Jump forward one page from the current page being viewed (if on page 37, this link will take you to page 38).
>| - Jump to the last page of the current magazine issue (normally the last page of the Back Matter, or the back cover).
These navigation controls are available above and below each image when viewed at either "screen" or "large" image size.