Archive for the ‘News’ Category.

Die Zeit Launches Free Online Archive

Die Zeit, a German newspaper, has launched a free online archive that goes back to 1946 and contains over 250,000 stories. The archive is available at http://www.zeit.de/archiv/index .

My German’s not very good, but it looks like you can browse the contents by year, do a full text search, or do field searching, including title, author, year, and date span.

I did a search for “Dusty Springfield”. There were seven results, ranging from 1973 to 2007. Results included the title and author of the article as well as a snippet. Click on the title and you’ll go to the article. It looks like just the text is available — I didn’t see digitized images.

You’ll get more out of this archive, obviously, if your German is better than mine. One caveat: the search results seem to take a little longer than usual.

New Options for Advanced Google News Search

Google has announced a couple new options for advanced searching of the Google News service. First there’s the fact that advanced searching and operator searches work for all versions of Google News now — great for folks using the non-US versions.

Second is that suggested sources has been implemented for the advanced search page. If you start typing the name of a source in the source search box, Google will give you suggestions. So if you type Houston, for example, you’ll get a variety of suggested sources including Houston African-American News, Houston Business Journal, Houston Chronicle, and so on. (I guess this would also be a quick way to see if your media source is even listed in Google News.)

Third is that source search is not limited to the exact name of the source. Before if you used the source: syntax, you had to be exact or pretty close with the source name for Google News to find results. This was annoying. Now you can use the syntax with an incomplete name and you’ll get results from all sources with your keyword in the name. This could be useful for topical searching — try doing a query with source:business or source:agriculture or source:retail.

Here’s another fun one — do a general source search combined with the location syntax. I think I want an RSS feed of television station stories in Texas. source:tv location:tx would do the trick.

Digital Archive of Northern New York Newspapers

I found out about this archive thanks to a story in the Plattsburgh (New York) Press-Republican, which announced recently the first phase of its online archive. The first round of its digitization project will put 270,000 pages of its back issues (1959 to 1992) online.

The pages will be available on the Press-Republican’s Web site, but will ALSO be available, for free, at the Northern New York Historical Newspapers Web site, which is at http://news.nnyln.net . This yummy crunchy site has over 900,000 pages of archives from 27 newspapers.

From the front page you’ll see a list of newspapers, from the Adirondack Record-Elizabethtown Post to the Watertown Herald. Pick a paper to search and you’ll get a framed page with a search form. I searched the Akwesasne Indian Time for “tribal court” and got 201 results. The results actually come with very extensive summaries on the left side of the page — lots of context with your keywords highlighted. Click on the file name for the result you find interesting and you’ll get the entire page as PDF on the right side of the screen.

Yes, the entire page. So in addition to reading “New Chief Judge Will Lead Set-Up Of Tribal Court”, I also got to see a list of fire calls for the Akwesasne-Hogansburg fire department and an ad for railroad ties. The picture on the page was a total loss, but the text was very readable. (I looked at other pictures — they varied in quality depending on the size and detail. The text was uniformly good.) There’s a FAQ on the site which gives a little additional information on printing part of PDF pages and navigating through the archives.

If you have family in the northern New York area, this is a really good search. The only problem is that if you’re not from that area, you might not know about the proximity of any given small town to any of these newspapers, which you’ll need to know since you can only search one paper at a time. I found a nice tool on ePodunk that lets you search for newspapers within a certain distance from a given community. Search for the town in which you’re interested and then look for Media Outlets on the information page.