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Bringing the Library of Congress Newspapers Online

smooth wombat writes "If you want to read a newspaper article from sometime in the past (say 1920 for example) your only options right now are to go to your local library and hope they have a microfiche file of that paper or take a visit to Washington, DC and the Library of Congress. That may soon change. CNN is reporting that by 2006 the government will have the first of 30 million digitized pages from papers published from 1836 through 1922 which will be available to anyone who has a connection to the net. The project is a joint cooperation between the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Library of Congress. The span of the joint project is limited because type faces of printers used before 1836 are too difficult for optical scanners to read, and copyright restrictions are in force on papers published after 1923."

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  1. Thats why I went as Sonny Bono for Halloween by yorkpaddy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I was so ticked about the extension of copyrights that I went as Sonny Bono this year for Halloween. I dripped fake blood (candy apple sauce across my face), and taped branches to my ski jacket. I went around saying " I got you babe" check my blog post about it http://yorkpaddy.blogspot.com/2004/11/halloween-04 .html

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