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Newsletter
FOR SEPTEMBER, 1994 !!!
Please send your feedback directly to Michael S. Hart This is the Newsletter
of Project Gutenberg: the oldest Information Provider on the Internet,
creating Etexts Readable by Both Humans and Computers Since 1971. personal messages to our readers. HOT OFF THE PRESS information new to this edition. THE GUTENBERG PROJECT a summary for those unfamiliar with the project. ETEXT
AVAILABILITY
Again, my most sincere apologies to those volunteers who felt they weren't getting the instructions or cooperation required for them to fulfill their hopes and Project Gutenberg Volunteers; Mark's presence is the result of a rather intensive search, and we hope you will be very glad to have him. As always, I am
terrified of the prospect of doubling our output to 16 Etexts per month
for next year, we reall need your help!!! HOT OFF THE PRESSES--NEW INFORMATION *August 26th, 1994 marked the 74th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment to the *U.S. Constitution, on which date we announce the release of these etexts You can find the U.S. Constitution and amendments as Project Gutenberg Etexts #2 and #3, dated 1972 and 1973 in /pub/etext/etext90 as per directions below. A " C " following the Etext number indicated a COPYRIGHTED Electronic Text. Please note: neither
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do, but we will try to see a new copy has at least one byte more or less. THE GUTENBERG PROJECT The Gutenberg Project, founded in 1971 by Michael Hart, who still directs the project, is aimed towards making public-domain documents freely available in electronic form. What this means to you is that there are now many novels, short-stories, reference books, and information texts available over the internet, from your local network, or on disk. (Methods of obtaining the texts are explained in detail in section 4.) At present, over one hundred full texts are available, ranging from Moby Dick, through the Declaration of Independance and the Bible, to the CIA World Fact Book. These texts were produced through the work of hundreds of volunteers, and aided by many donations. (Yes, you can take that as a hint.) The texts are all entered in "Plain Vanilla ASCII." This means that they use only those characters which work on all systems, and can be easily read by both humans and machines. In an effort to make Project Gutenberg Etexts universal, we have ended each line with a "carriage return" AND a "line feed". (Macs require a cr, UNIX needs an lf, DOS machines require both. Macs users CAN
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