Roosevelts "New Deal", Kennedys "New Frontier", LBJs "Great Society", Obamas ? Månlandningen 1969. Änkan, Lady Bird Johnson, har avlidit. (McNamara deceived LBJ on Vietnam - berättar Gareth Porter på TRNN, baserande sig på bandupptagningar från bibliotekets arkiv.)
Welcome to Chronicling America, enhancing access to America's historic newspapers. This site allows you to search and view newspaper pages from 1880-1922 and find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Library of Congress as part of the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP).
This site serves as a repository for the NYU Digital Library Team's METS implementation development projects. At present a modest handful of XSLT-based page-turner and search implementations are freely available for use on an "as is" basis. In the pipeline are a java-based SMIL viewer, a java-based application and a perl-based application to extract a METS file from a database using NYU's zeroDB schema.
The California Digital Newspaper Collection offers over 200,000 pages of California newspapers spanning the years 1849-191l: the Alta California, 1849-1891; the San Francisco Call, 1893-1910; the Amador Ledger, 1900-1911; the Imperial Valley Press, 1901-1911; the Sacramento Record-Union, 1859-1890; and the Los Angeles Herald, 1905-1907. Additional years are forthcoming, as are other early California newspapers: the Californian; the California Star; the California Star and Californian; the Sacramento Transcript; the Placer Times; and the Pacific Rural Press.
The California Newspaper Project is an 18 year effort by the CBSR to identify, describe and preserve California newspapers. Close to 9,000 California newspapers were inventoried in over 14,000 repositories throughout the state, 1.5 million pages of California newspapers were preserved and made available on microfilm, and 100,000 rolls of negative microfilm rolls are being processed for permanent storage at the UC Regional Library Storage Facilities.
E-Government ist gut für Staat und Bürger - aber nur dann, wenn die Behörden die von ihnen gesammelten Daten auch wieder herausrücken. In den USA bemühen sich zahlreiche Initiativen auch seitens der Regierung um mehr Offenheit. In Europa arbeitet auch WWW-Erfinder Tim Berners-Lee daran mit, die Datenschätze der Behörden zugänglich zu machen.
K. zu Guttenberg. Schriften zum internationalen Recht . - Berlin : Duncker u. Humblot;176 Duncker & Humblot, (2009)von Karl-Theodor Frhr zu Guttenberg.