Special Non-Network Edition of the Project Gutenberg Newsletter Our #1 goal: give away one trillion etexts by the end of 2001, by giving ten thousand etexts to one hundred million people. #2: To make these etexts universally usable on virtually every combination of computers and programs. (Plain Ascii etext such as you are reading now is the only way we know of, so far.) #3: the founding of a Public Domain Register in 1997, on 100th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Copyright Register. ** December, 1991 (Thanks for your patience as we adapt for mail, as opposed to our usual format of electronic mail. We can't do the same newsletter for both, as most of the e-mail newsletters deal with electronic transmission of our books.) The first few paper newsletters may look a little odd, as we are cutting from our email newsletter and pasting here, and some items may be in here twice, etc. * Michael S. Hart, Director, Project Gutenberg This month's release is Roget's Thesaurus (roget11x.txt or zip) Last month's release was Aesop's Fables (aesop11x.txt or zip) A full listing of the 12 monthly Project Gutenberg releases for 1991 has been appended to the end of this newsletter. Alice28, aesop11, and roget11 are now becoming available. Alice28 is an upgrade of significance with many spelling, punctuation, even a few missing line, errors having been corrected. You may see some very similar etexts for sale on CDROM or disks for well over $100, the CIA World Factbook for example is being sold on CDROM for prices ranging from over $50 to over $125 (is available in our edition as file world11). Thank you for your interest in our work. We hope you will feel you can cooperate and assist. One of the best ways you can for the present is to relay the newsletters and disks for others to use. That way we won't get as swamped with mail requests as we already are. 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Etext is very easy to edit, and you may be happy to hear that we will be soon releasing the 28th edition of Alice in Wonderland due to a continuing interest in helping us creating the best editions. A Partial History of Project Gutenberg Releases (and from other related and unrelated sources) 1971 The U.S. Declaration (whenxxxx.xxx) 1972 The Bill of Rights (rightsxx.xxx) 1973 The U.S. Constitution (constxxx.xxx) 197x The Complete Shakespeare* ( unreleased ) ( Due to chnages in copyright law ) 198x The Bible (various eds) (biblexxx.xxx) 1975 Paradise Lost (Joseph Raben) ( unreleased ) 198x Early Alice in Wonderland (alicexxx.xxx) 198x Early Looking-Glass (lglassxx.xxx) This is the index of 1991 Project Gutenberg books as of December 15, 1991. If you already have any copies of Alice or Roget, then we suggest you get the new copy from this list as they have been put through a significant improvement process. A new copy of each of these files will be posted as the 1992 editions, not all with major revisions. Jan 1991 Alice in Wonderland (alice28x.xxx) Feb 1991 Through the Looking Glass (lglass15.xxx) Mar 1991 The Hunting of the Snark (snark11x.xxx) Apr 1991 The CIA World Factbook (world11x.xxx) May 1991 Moby Dick (From OBI) (mobyxxxx.xxx) Jun 1991 Peter Pan (for US only) (peter14a.xxx) Jul 1991 The Book of Mormon** (mormon11.xxx) Aug 1991 The Federalist Papers+ (feder11x.xxx) Sep 1991 The Song of Hiawatha+ (hisong10.xxx) Oct 1991 Paradise Lost (Boss) (plboss10.xxx) Nov 1991 Aesop's Fables (aesop11x.xxx) Dec 1991 Roget's Thesaurus (roget11x.xxx) **, +, etc. indicate notes in our newsletters. Numbers after titles indicate current releases, the newest not available at all sites at present. Get the highest number you can find. When two releases are available, that means the newer one has just been posted for testing. Please let us know how this file worked for you. * We currently recommend Shakespeare of Disk, and request you call 1-800-446-2089, ask for Niloufer or Sam Reifler, and please tell them you heard of their work through Project Gutenberg. Ask for an electronic text license for an entire school, all students present and future included. Staff will not be included, however. Also recommended is an etext CD called Library of the Future. You might call Valerie Hustwit at 1-800-443-0238; Grolier's Encyclopedia is on CD, call 1-800-356-5590.***End ** Donated by Infobases (801) 375-7371, call them more Mormon etexts at inexpensive prices. Ask for Paul Allen and please mention you heard of their work through Project Gutenberg. + Was prepared and released by user request. Various editions of these early releases are in circulation, many of them unrecognizable due to editing, markup, and other changes. These were not labeled as from any source, but were freely posted for Internet and BBS access. Others are still in the process of being assigned to legal status for Public Domain release or permissions for various kinds of distribution, and thus are not being listed. Long Range Projects (some now completed, some in progress, some not started) Paradise Lost (Raben) (2plostxx.xxx) Britannica 11th Edition Merriam-Webster's International Dictionary The Century Dictionary A New Dictionary Based of the English Language Based on Historical Priciples by Murray (Currently named after a large English university) All major religious documents Plus the Magna Carta (Freenet) Mark Twain, collected works Jules Verne, collected works Shakespeare (a new edition for Public Domain) A. Conan Doyle (most of Sherlock Holmes, etc) Wuthering Heights (wutherxx.xxx) From the Earth to the Moon(ttmoonxx.xxx) Pride and Prejudice (pridexxx.xxx) Origin of Species (spare) (darwinxx.xxx) Grimms' Fairy Tales (grimmxxx.xxx) Buddha (buddhaxx.xxx) Far From the Madding Crowd(crowdxxx.xxx) Civil Disobedience (civildxx.xxx) The War of the Worlds (wotwxxxx.xxx) The Time Machine (tmachxxx.xxx) The Brick Moon (bmoonxxx.xxx) Einstein's Moving Bodies (1einstxx.xxx) Sir Walter Scott ===================================================== | The trend of library policy is clearly toward | the ideal of making all information available | without delay to all people. | |The Software Toolworks Illustrated Encyclopedia (TM) |(c) 1990 Grolier Electronic Publishing, Inc. Thank you for your interest, Michael S. Hart, Director, Project Gutenberg National Clearinghouse for Machine Readable Texts The views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the views of any person or institution. 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