FYI...Stefanie

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College Park, MD. . . Archivist of the United States John W. Carlin
announced today that the first group of digitized images of some of the
National Archives and Records Administration's (NARA's) most significant
documents are now available to the public through the Internet.  As part
of NARA's Electronic Access Project, these 5,300 documents are the first
of approximately 120,000 items that will be digitized and  available
electronically over the next year. In making the announcement, the
Archivist said, "The Electronic Access Project will enable anyone,
anywhere, with a computer connected to the Internet to search descriptions
of NARA's nationwide holdings and view digital copies of its most popular
documents."  The project is funded by the U.S. Congress with the support
of Senator Bob Kerrey of Nebraska who said, "This is an exciting
technological advancement that will bring the valuable resources of the
National Archives into homes and schools across the nation."

The digitized materials including photographs, drawings, maps, charts and
textual documents, can be accessed on the World Wide Web through the NARA
ARCHIVAL INFORMATION LOCATOR (NAIL) at

http://www.nara.gov/nara/nail.html

Additional documents will be added to NAIL monthly through April 1999.

Highlights of the newly digitized materials include:

*  Watercolor sketches by John J. Young from a 1859 exploration of the
Utah territory
* Civil War maps, plans, engineering drawings, diagrams, blueprints and
sketches of forts
* Civil War photographs by Mathew Brady, Alexander Gardner and George N.
Barnard
* Photographs of civil works projects in northwestern states, 1900-52;
* Groundbreaking photographs by Lewis Hine documenting child labor abuses
for the National Child Labor Committee, 1908-12;
* Photographs and documents from a 1921 survey of Blackfeet Indians;
* Original sketches drawn by artist Charles Alston to highlight the
participation of African Americans during World War II;
* Photographs of the Kennedy White House;
* Environmental Protection Agency photographs of environmental issues of
the 1970's;
* United States Information Agency reports on U.S. involvement in the war
in Vietnam and on the impact of race relations in the U.S. on American
foreign policy.

The documents are from NARA units across the country: the Cartographic and
Architectural Branch, Textual Reference Branch, and Still Picture Branch
in College Park, MD; the Rocky Mountain Region in Denver, CO; the Pacific
Alaska Region in Seattle, WA; and the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library in
Boston, MA.  Documents from other units will be included as other groups
of materials are digitized.

DoxSys, Inc., of Bethesda, Maryland, is the contractor for digitizing the
documents.  The work is being done by Micrographic Specialities, Inc., of
Beltsville, Maryland, a subcontractor to DoxSys.

* * * *
For PRESS information, please contact the National Archives Public Affairs
staff at (301) 713-6000.  Visit the National Archives Home Page on the
World Wide Web at http://www.nara.gov.


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Dr. Stefanie S. Rixecker
Department of Resource Management
Lincoln University, Canterbury
PO Box 56
Aotearoa New Zealand
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Fax: 64-03-325-3841
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