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Post 0

Monday, September 8 - 11:07amSanction this postReply
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Google to partner with newspaper publishers to get ALL past newspaper articles online. This is incredible!

Today, we're launching an initiative to make more old newspapers accessible and searchable online by partnering with newspaper publishers to digitize millions of pages of news archives. Let's say you want to learn more about the landing on the Moon. Try a search for [Americans walk on moon], and you'll be able to find and read an original article from a 1969 edition of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Not only will you be able to search these newspapers, you'll also be able to browse through them exactly as they were printed -- photographs, headlines, articles, advertisements and all.


Bringing History Online, One Newspaper at a Time





Post 1

Monday, September 8 - 11:31amSanction this postReply
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Wonderful. An extra dozen decades of crap to wade through when doing a search. When will they be archiving obsolete white pages listings? I hope there will be a way to exclude this. Unless they archive my article in the Livingston Medium about President Blaustein of Rutgers University dying of a heart attack while in the Bahamas - sleeping with a hooker. Now that would be worth looking up at google!




Post 2

Monday, September 8 - 12:27pmSanction this postReply
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Go Google!

I don't see the quantity of stuff that can be accessed as the problem. That is more of a technical issue inherent in search engines and meta-data (data about data) - both will be addressed as time goes by.

The bigger problem with the Internet is the idiots... but what can do about that?
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And my congratulations to Blaustein on his colorful exit - many university presidents (like that fellow at Columbia) would favor us were they to emulate him - with or without the hooker, on an island or at home... just exit.

After all, they hold at least some of the responsibility for many of the aforementioned idiots - online and otherwise.



Post 3

Tuesday, September 9 - 7:30amSanction this postReply
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The bigger problem is not with the idiots - by whom I assume you mean bloggers and wikipedia editors. Bloggers can be avoided, and you get what you pay for at wikipedia. But try looking up something at google for which you have no key words - you know - that quote that guy said that you don't already know verbatim. Such things are a bitch to search for. If you want to know what John Smith of the Hickville Pickayune said about the Moon shot - and you already know that John Smith and Hickville Tribune are your target - then this is good news. But if you vaguely remember some Russian lady who praised the shot, and you type in "comment Apollo Launch" do you think that having every home town paper in the nation added to your search domain will help or hinder your quest? Let's just hope they add a button exclude newspaper archive.



Post 4

Tuesday, September 9 - 9:01amSanction this postReply
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Meta data and smarter search engines are the only long-term answer to the problem. They are making feeble efforts now with the tagging, but it is just a drop in the bucket.

When I was programming I noticed that the more 'intelligent' the software was that I was designing, the more data it needed about the data. I could easily measure this ratio of meta-data to data just by counting the bytes of raw data fields in the database versus the bytes of data used to categorize, index, measure, tag, cross-reference, etc.

When we can intelligently configure our search data entry screen to conform to the search we want to make, and the search engine does multiple searches and cross-links the results, and can analyze our reaction to the results to modify the search parameters, then we will be getting some where - but right now the data is just raw, with no exposed attributes or characteristics but key words, titles, date, and not much else.



Post 5

Tuesday, September 9 - 11:41amSanction this postReply
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Read Rainbows End by Vernor Vinge if you want to see his ideas for how the massive volume of ancient (i.e., pre 1970s) books could end up being digitized. :-)

Regards,
--
Jeff



Post 6

Tuesday, September 9 - 4:55pmSanction this postReply
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Ahh - that was a terrific book...
tho, for myself, prefer having the paper in my hands...;-)




Post 7

Wednesday, October 8 - 9:35pmSanction this postReply
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Edward J. Bloustein
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Edward J. Bloustein

Born January 20, 1925(1925-01-20)
Bronx
Died December 9, 1989 (aged 64)
Nassau, Bahamas
Education New York University
Title President of Bennington College (1965-1971)
President of Rutgers University (1971-1989)
Spouse(s) Ruth Ellen Steinman (1923-1988)
Relatives Francis Bloustein, brother

Edward J. Bloustein (January 20, 1925 – 9 December 1989) was the seventeenth President of Rutgers University serving from 1971 to 1989. [1] [2]
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Biography
* 2 Legacy
* 3 See also
* 4 References
* 5 External links

[edit] Biography

He was born in New York City, and he graduated from James Monroe High School in the Bronx in 1942. He served in the United States Army from 1943 to 1946. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree from New York University in 1948 and subsequently traveled to the University of Oxford as a Fulbright scholar and received a Bachelor of Philosophy degree in 1950. Returning to the United States, he taught philosophy briefly at Brooklyn College and spent close to a year in Washington, DC with the Office of Intelligence in the State Department, where he served as a political analyst, specializing in Marxist theory and international political movements in the German Democratic Republic. Later, Bloustein earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1954 from Cornell University, and entered Cornell Law School earning a Bachelor of Laws in 1959. During that time, he served as Editor-in-Chief of the Cornell Law Quarterly.

Bloustein began his professional career as a law clerk to Judge Stanley H. Fuld of the New York State Court of Appeals, serving from 1959 to 1961. He then joined the faculty of the New York University Law School until 1965, when he was named president of Bennington College. In 1971, following the retirement of Mason Welch Gross he was appointed president of Rutgers University.

During his tenure as President of Rutgers University, Bloustein implemented programs that expanded the institution's research facilities, attracted internationally known scholars to the faculty, and achieved distinction as one of the major public research universities in the nation, leading to an invitation for Rutgers to join the Association of American Universities. Bloustein died in the Bahamas on 9 December 1989. [2]



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