Gutenberg News 2003

This page has been created as an archive of the 2003 news from the gutenberg.org website.

PG Weekly Newsletter: Part 1 (2003-12-31)

The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter December 31, 2003
eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers For Since 1971

Part 1

In this week's Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter:

1) Editorial
2) News and Comment
3) Notes and Queries, Reviews and Features
4) Mailing list information


Editorial

Hello,

May I just take this small space to wish you a happy and peaceful
2004.


Happy reading,

Alice

Send suggestions and feedback to the newsletter editor at: news@pglaf.org

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2) News and Comment

To tell the truth, we are a bit short on news this week. However, I
can report that Distributed Proofreaders has successfully negotiated
it's way through a server move and the disruption it was suffering
seems to have gone away. There are a couple of threads in the forums
for Proofers to record their memories of 2003 which has turned into DP's
most successful year to date, and to note predictions and hopes for
2004. All contributions are welcome, and I suspect there may be just a
small party happening out there tonight.

Alice


Other news this week

A new mirror for Project Gutenberg has been made available at:

http://gutenberg.mirror.cygnal.ca
ftp://gutenberg.mirror.cygnal.ca/pub/gutenberg/

Many thanks to Rafal Rzeczkowsk and Cygnal Technologies Corporation






Radio Gutenberg Update

www.gutenberg.net/audio

channel 1 - Sherlock Holmes "The Sign of Four"
channel 2 - Robert Sheckley's "Bad Medicine"

Both are high quality live readings from the collection.

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3) Notes and Queries, Reviews and Features





Following last weeks article about Folkden recordings, Gali takes a
look at what else is out there for interested souls.

The embroidered in silk and beadings sarafan or old wool rug in
arabesques do not have a signature of a self-centered genius, however
their impersonal pattern still touches and warms our souls and homes,
being sometimes ridiculously misused, though. As the embellished
bridle is hanging on the wall, or the wedding-vessel holds the
pencils. And same for the old folk songs - even taken out of their
context, they still sound good to our modern ear. They never come from
the mind, so there is no complicated constructions or ambitious
attempts, they are more like an embodied emotion. That is, one single
emotion expressed on the proper occasion. And as to fully appreciate
Bedouin clothing you should ride a camel under cruel desert sun, to
understand the real value of the wild rider song, you should probably
get a horse and at least few kilometers of the free ride. But we are
listening to the passionate cante jondo without desire to love and
kill; in the middle of crowded town, Slavic songs bring us the feeling
of 'black' unbearable anguish in the waste space of earth with no soul
on it, or Celtic melodies evoke a sense of fight and hidden fire
under the cloudy northern skies, when we come back home from our very
prosaic job. We are consuming pure emotions embedded in the old chip
of simple melody and naïve words. In some sense it is an emotional
dope. May be this is why people can not actually listen to folk music
for long time in a row - it becomes an overdose.

All the above is implied 10 times stronger to the performers not
saying about composers. The professional passion or artificial irony
kills this fragile construction as careless touch destroys Buddhists'
sand pictures. Annoying and boring are the attempts of imitation and
very rarely the rearrangement is as good as original. And even when we
come to later urban folk music, the most successful examples are
created by anonymous, honestly drinking in the smelly pubs and
courting witty serving girls, and expressing in their verses not
personified feeling of a human being in certain situation. No
ego-reflections or back thoughts permitted in the real folk. The
successful stylizations such as Turlough O'Carolan, are good because
they little in common with the real folk music, filling its simple
form with the complicated content, as in the expensive restaurant it
is perversely delightful to have complex dish in the rough rural
plate. The folk song is very reach theme for a research and many smart
and talented written long interesting lines about it ? Frederico
Garcia Lorca, Jorge Borhes, K.Balmont and many others. But these notes
are serving only one simple purpose ? to evoke an interest to the
theme in you, dear reader, so you will find what folk music is for
yourself and highly probably that you will completely disagree with
all what is written above. Which will mean that my goal was achieved
and one more little piece of the great puzzle has come to its place in
your world.


Some useful links:

http://www.elyrics.net/songs/c/Celtic_Folk/ - mp3 downloads
http://www.contemplator.com/folk.html - plenty of texts and midi files
for England, Ireland, Scotland and America folk music
http://www.empireclubfoundation.com/details.asp?SpeechID=2470&FT=yes -
speech about Folk Songs in French Canada by Barbeau, Marius in 1929
with somewhat interesting examples in two languages.


Unfortunately I could not find any site for free downloading of
Spanish, Georgian or Bulgarian folk music - that I personally like
very much. Maybe some of you will have more success.

Gali Sirkis









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Credits

This weeks newsletter done by autopilot, so thanks to everyone for
their contributions.

pgweekly_2003_12_31_part_1.txt

PG Weekly Newsletter: Part 2 (2003-12-24)

The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter December 24, 2003
eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers For Since 1971

New Project Gutenberg Documents

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Part 2 of the Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter:
  - Current procedures for accessing Project Gutenberg eBooks
  - Updates/corrections to previously posted eBooks
  - 49 New Public Domain eBooks posted under U.S. Copyright
  - 1 New From PG Australia (Australian Copyright)
  - Mailing list information

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     Note:  this listing best viewed with a fixed-width font, such as
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=============================================================================
=           [ Here Are The Updated Listings For This Past Week ]            =
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TOTAL COUNT as of today, Wed 24 Dec 2003:  10,800 (incl. 307 Aus.).

Last week the Total Count was 10,750, including 306 at PG of Australia.
This week we added 50 new.(incl. 1 at PG of Australia).

RESERVED count:   39

=-=-=-=[ CORRECTIONS, REVISIONS AND NEW FORMATS ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

.:Please note the following changes, corrections and improvements:

The following have been re-posted in new HTML formats as indicated:

The following entry in the GUTINDEX is being revised to include the
publisher and edition information:
Feb 2006 France and England in North America, by F. Parkman[?fen3xxx.xxx] 9997
  [Title: France and England in North America, a Series of Historical
   Narratives, Part Third]
  [Subtitle: The Discovery of the Great West]
  [Author: Francis Parkman]
  (Note: this is the Little, Brown and Co. 1870 edition)

The original text files of the following ebook were never indexed, and
are being added to this posting (the HTML files were posted previously):
Jan 2005 The Gift of the Magi, by O Henry [Christmas story][magixxxx.xxx] 7256
  [Files added: magi10.txt; magi10.zip]


-=-=-=-=[ 49 NEW U.S. POSTS ]-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Audio: Ride Railroad Bill, by Roger McGuinn                              10530C
  [Recorded in September 2002.]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/3/10530 ]
  [Files: 10530-m-readme.txt; 10530-m-001.mp3; 10530.txt; 10530.zip; ]

Audio: I am a Pilgrim, by Roger McGuinn                                  10529C
  [Recorded in November 2002.]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10529 ]
  [Files: 10529-m-readme.txt; 10529-m-001.mp3; 10529.txt; 10529.zip; ]

Audio: I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day, by Roger McGuinn              10528C
  [Author: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (lyrics)]
  [Author: John Baptiste Calkin (composer)]
  [Recorded in December 2001]
  [Note: Original title was "Christmas Bells"]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10528 ]
  [Files: 10528-m-readme.txt; 10528-m-001.mp3; 10528.txt; 10528.zip; ]

Audio: On the Banks of the Ohio, by Roger McGuinn                        10527C
  [Recorded in October 2003.]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10527 ]
  [Files: 10527-m-readme.txt; 10527-m-001.mp3; 10527.txt; 10527.zip; ]

Audio: Nancy Whiskey, by Roger McGuinn                                   10526C
  [Recorded in July 2001]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10526 ]
  [Files: 10526-m-readme.txt; 10526-m-001.mp3; 10526.txt; 10526.zip; ]

Audio: Michael Row the Boat Ashore, by Roger McGuinn                     10525C
  [Recorded in May 2002.]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10525 ]
  [Files: 10525-m-readme.txt; 10525-m-001.mp3; 10525.txt; 10525.zip; ]

Audio: We Wish You a Merry Christmas, by Roger McGuinn                   10524C
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10524 ]
  [Files: 10524-m-readme.txt; 10524-m-001.mp3; 10524.txt; 10524.zip; ]

Alcestis, by Euripides                                                   10523
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10523 ]
  [Files: 10523.txt; 10523-8.txt]

Beacon Lights of History, Volume IV, by John Lord                        10522
  [Subtitle: Imperial Antiquity]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10522 ]
  [Files: 10522.txt; 10522.zip; 10522-8.txt; 10522-8.zip; 10522-h.htm;
   10522-h.zip; ]

The Primadonna, by F. Marion Crawford                                    10521
  [Subtitle: A Sequel to "Fair Margaret"]
  [Zip files include one image.]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10521 ]
  [Files: 10521.txt; 10521.zip; 10521-8.txt; 10521-8.zip; ]

The Compleat Cook, by Nath. Brook                                        10520
  [Subtitle: Expertly Prescribing The Most Ready Wayes, Whether Italian,
   Spanish Or French, For Dressing Of Flesh And Fish, Ordering Of Sauces
   Or Making Of Pastry]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/2/10520 ]
  [Files: 10520.txt]

Mercy Philbrick's Choice, by Helen Hunt Jackson                          10519
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10519 ]
  [Files: 10519.txt; 10519-h.htm]

Poems, by John Hay                                                       10518
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10518 ]
  [Files: 10518.txt; 10518-8.txt]

Government and Rebellion, by E. E. Adams                                 10517
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10517 ]
  [Files: 10517.txt; 10517-h.htm]

Bits About Home Matters, by Helen Hunt Jackson                           10516
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10516 ]
  [Files: 10516.txt; 10516-8.txt; 10516-h.htm]

Rhymes of a Roughneck, by Pat O'Cotter                                   10515
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10515 ]
  [Files: 10515.txt; 10515.zip; 10515-8.txt; 10515-8.zip; 10515-h.htm;
   10515-h.zip; ]

De jongere generatie, by E. D'Oliveira                                   10514
  [Language: Dutch]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10514 ]
  [Files: 10514.txt; 10514-8.txt]

On the Seashore, by R. Cadwallader Smith                                 10513
  [Note: This is the Seventh Book of Cassell's "Eyes and No Eyes" Series]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10513 ]
  [Files: 10513.txt; 10513.zip; 10513-h.htm; 10513-h.zip; ]

Het portret van Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde                              10512
  [Translated by Mevr. Louis Couperus]
  [Language: Dutch]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10512 ]
  [Files: 10512.txt; 10512-8.txt]

A Rogue by Compulsion, by Victor Bridges                                 10511
  [Subtitle: An Affair of the Secret Service]
  [Note: zip files include frontispiece illustration as jpg file]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/1/10511 ]
  [Files: 10511.txt; 10511.zip; 10511-8.txt; 10511-8.zip; ]

Inaugural Presidential Address, by William Jefferson Clinton             10510
  [Files: 10510.txt]

The Bars of Iron, by Ethel May Dell                                      10509
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10509 ]
  [Files: 10509.txt; 10509.zip; 10509-8.txt; 10509-8.zip; ]

The Sorrows of a Show Girl, by Kenneth McGaffey                          10508
  [Subtitle: A Story of the Great "White Way"]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10508 ]
  [Files: 10508.txt; 10508.zip; ]

Mary, Erzaehlung, by Bjornstjerne Bjornson                               10507
  [Language: German]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10507 ]
  [Files: 10507.txt; 10507-8.txt]

Romance de lobos, comedia barbara, by Ramon del Valle-Inclan             10506
  [Language: Spanish]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10506 ]
  [Files: 10506.txt; 10506-8.txt]

Audio: Waltzing Matilda, by Roger McGuinn                                10505C
  [Recorded in January 2002]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10505 ]
  [Files: 10505-m-readme.txt; 10505-m-001.mp3; 10505.txt; 10505.zip; ]

Audio: Liverpool Gals, by Roger McGuinn                                  10504C
  [Recorded in June 1999]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10504 ]
  [Files: 10504-m-readme.txt; 10504-m-001.mp3; 10504.txt; 10504.zip; ]

Audio: John Henry, by Roger McGuinn                                      10503C
  [Recorded in 1959, at 57 East Division St. in Chicago, Illinois on a
   Pentron reel-to-reel recorder at 7-1/2 IPS]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10503 ]
  [Files: 10503-m-readme.txt; 10503.txt; 10503.zip; ]

Vecchie Storie, by Emilio De Marchi                                      10502
  [Language: Italian]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10502 ]
  [Files: 10502.txt; 10502.zip; 10502-8.txt; 10502-8.zip; ]

Audio: The Whale Catchers, by Roger McGuinn                              10501C
  [Recorded in March 2001]
  [Note: The banjo is tuned in open D-minor tuning and a 12-string guitar
   plays melody]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10501 ]
  [Files: 10501-m-readme.txt; 10501-m-001.mp3; 10501.txt; 10501.zip; ]

Audio: Heave Away, by Roger McGuinn                                      10500C
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/5/0/10500 ]
  [Files: 10500-m-readme.txt; 10500-m-001.mp3; 10500.txt; 10500.zip; ]

Audio: Delia's Gone, by Roger McGuinn                                    10499C
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10499 ]
  [Files: 10499-m-readme.txt; 10499-m-001.mp3; 10499.txt; 10499.zip; ]

Audio: Ain' No Mo' Cane on De Brazis, by Roger McGuinn                   10498C
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10498 ]
  [Files: 10498-m-readme.txt; 10498-m-001.mp3; 10498.txt; 10498.zip; ]

Audio: Battle Hymn of the Republic, by Roger McGuinn                     10497C
  [Author: Julia War Howe (lyricist)]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10497 ]
  [Files: 10497-m-readme.txt; 10497-m-001.mp3; 10497.txt; 10497.zip; ]

Red Masquerade, by Louis Joseph Vance                                    10496
  [Subtitle: Being the Story of the Lone Wolf's Daughter]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10496 ]
  [Files: 10496.txt; 10496.zip; 10496-8.txt; 10496-8.zip; 10496-h.htm;
   10496-h.zip; ]

Under King Constantine, by Katrina Trask                                 10495
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10495 ]
  [Files: 10495.txt; 10495.zip; 10495-8.txt; 10495-8.zip; ]

Henry the Second, by Mrs. J. R. Green                                    10494
  [Author AKA: Alice Stopford Green (1848-1929)]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10494 ]
  [Files: 10494.txt; 10494.zip; 10494-8.txt; 10494-8.zip; ]

The Old Bush Songs, by A. B. Paterson                                    10493
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10493 ]
  [Files: 10493-0.txt; 10493-h.htm]

Agnes, by Minna Canth                                                    10492
  [Language: Finnish]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10492 ]
  [Files: 10492.txt; 10492-8.txt]

Practice Book, by Leland Powers                                          10491
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10491 ]
  [Files: 10491.txt; 10491-8.txt; 10491-h.htm]

The Golden Legend, by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow                         10490
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/9/10490 ]
  [Files: 10490.txt; 10490-8.txt; 10490-h.htm]

An English Garner, by Edited by Professor Arber and Thomas Sercombe      10489
  [Subtitle: Critical Essays & Literary Fragments]
  [Introduction by J. Churton Collins]
  [Contents:
    Extract from Thomas Wilson's _Art of Rhetoric_, 1554
    Sir Philip Sidney's _Letter to his brother Robert_, 1580
    Extract from Francis Meres's _Palladis Tamia_, 1598
    Dryden's _Dedicatory Epistle to the Rival Ladies_, 1664
    Sir Robert Howard's _Preface to four new Plays_, 1665
    Dryden's _Essay of Dramatic Poesy_, 1668
    Extract from Thomas Ellwood's _History of Himself_, describing
        his relations with Milton, 1713
    Bishop Copleston's Advice to a Young Reviewer, 1807
    The Bickerstaff and Partridge Tracts, 1708
    Gay's _Present State of Wit_, 1711
    Tickell's Life of Addison, 1721
    Steele's Dedicatory Epistle to Congreve, 1722
    Extract from Chamberlayne's Angliae Notitia, 1669
    Eachard's Grounds and Occasions of the Contempt of the Clergy
        and of Religion, 1670
    Bickerstaff's Miseries of the Domestic Chaplain, 1710
    Franklin's Poor Richard Improved, 1757]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/8/10489 ]
  [Files: 10489.txt; 10489-8.txt]

Audio: Away in a Manger, by Roger McGuinn                                10488C
  [Author: Anonymous (verses 1 and 2)]
  [Author: John Thomas McFarland (verse 3)]
  [Author: James Murray (composer)]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/8/10488 ]
  [Files: 10488-m-readme.txt; 10488-m-001.mp3; 10488.txt; 10488.zip; ]

Audio: Alabama Bound, by Roger McGuinn                                   10487C
  [Recorded in May 1999, on a 12-string guitar in "drop D" tuning, that is
   with the low E string tuned down to D]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/8/10487 ]
  [Files: 10487-m-readme.txt; 10487-m-001.mp3; 10487.txt; 10487.zip; ]

Audio: Twelve Gates to the City, by Roger McGuinn                        10486C
  [Recorded in May 2003]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/8/10486 ]
  [Files: 10486-m-readme.txt; 10486-m-001.mp3; 10486.txt; 10486.zip; ]

Experiments in Government and the Essentials of the Constitution,by Root 10485
  [Author: Elihu Root]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/8/10485 ]
  [Files: 10485.txt; 10485.zip; 10485-h.htm; 10485-h.zip; ]

Beacon Lights of History, Volume III, by John Lord                       10484
  [Subtitle: Ancient Achievements]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/8/10484 ]
  [Files: 10484.txt; 10484.zip; 10484-8.txt; 10484-8.zip; 10484-h.htm;
   10484-h.zip; ]

Short Stories Old and New, Selected and Edited by C. Alphonso Smith      10483
  [Contents:
    Esther, From The Old Testament
    The History Of Ali Baba And The Forty Robbers, From "The Arabian
      Nights"
    Rip Van Winkle, By Washington Irving
    The Gold-Bug, By Edgar Allan Poe
    A Christmas Carol, By Charles Dickens
    The Great Stone Face, By Nathaniel Hawthorne
    Rab And His Friends, By Dr. John Brown
    The Outcasts Of Poker Flat, By Bret Harte
    Markheim, By Robert Louis Stevenson]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/8/10483 ]
  [Files: 10483.txt; 10483-8.txt]

The Young Mother, by William A. Alcott                                   10482
  [Subtitle: Management of Children in Regard to Health]
  [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/4/8/10482 ]
  [Files: 10482.txt; 10482-8.txt; 10482-h.htm]


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pgweekly_2003_12_24_part_2.txt

PG Weekly Newsletter: Part 1 (2003-12-24)

The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter December 24, 2003
eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers For Since 1971

Part 1

In this week's Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter:

1) Editorial
2) News and Comment
3) Notes and Queries, Reviews and Features
4) Mailing list information


Editorial

Hello,

Ah, well, here I am ready to relax into another issue of the
newsletter mince pie in hand and mulled wine gently simmering away in
the kitchen. As per last week we are only sending two parts again this
week, you can find some of Michael's comments in the roundup section
below. Here at the newsletter we wish you a happy and peaceful
holiday.


Happy reading,

Alice

send email to the newsletter editor at: news@pglaf.org

Founding editor: Michael Hart hart@beryl.ils.edu
Newsletter editor: Alice Wood news@pglaf.org
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2) News and Comment

Roger McGuinn's Folkden Recordings

Coming through to Project Gutenberg this week are a series of
recordings first started in 1997 by Roger McGuinn. Roger has set up a
website on ibiblio where he gives away one new song a month. Actually,
when we say new, we mean old. Roger's intention is to help preserve
traditional folksong by giving away traditional tunes and new songs
developed in the folk tradition. On the website Roger explains how the
songs are recorded for internet use. He also includes the songwords
and guitar chords and tuning, so that you can sing and play the songs
yourself, and thereby help to keep the folk tradition alive.

The folkden website is at www.ibiblio.org/jimmy/folkden/index.html

and the songs are available for download as audio files from Project
Gutenberg.

Alice











How much have we given away?

Only a few years ago, we received the first report
that one of our Project Gutenberg sites had given
away a million eBooks in a single year.

Just now I received a note that says gutenberg.net
will likely hand out over TEN million eBooks in the
coming year.

gutenberg.net is a VERY noise-free site, with only
about 2.6 hits taken to generate each downloaded book!

More details on request.

Michael S. Hart
hart@pobox.com

Other news of interest from NewsScan and EduPage

GLOBAL INTERNET USE LIMITED BY LANGUAGE, ILLITERACY
According to the International Telecommunication Union, about 70% of the
world's Internet users live in countries that make up only 16% of the
world's population. To address the problem of population illiteracy,
South Africa is developing speech recognition, text-to-speech and
other voice technologies, starting with Zulu. Bulgaria, South Korea
are amongst many countries producing government sites in native
languages. The Canadian government is looking at adapting its
internal search engine to include materials in Inuktitut, the Inuit
language, as well as French and English.

(AP 19 Dec 2003)
http://apnews.excite.com/article/20031219/D7VH9OPO0.html

NORWEGIAN APPEALS COURT UPHOLDS ACQUITTAL
A Norwegian appeals court has upheld a lower court ruling acquitting
Jon Johansen of copyright violations. The seven-judge panel agreed
unanimously that Johansen did not violate copyright laws of Norway when
he broke the encryption for DVDs and then posted his code on the
Internet for others to use. The appeals court ruled that under
Norwegian law, circumventing the copy-protection mechanism to make
personal copies of legally purchased DVDs is acceptable, even more so
than making copies of a book would be since DVDs can become scratched
and unusable. Prosecutors have two weeks to decide if they will appeal
the case to Norway's supreme court.

Reuters, 22 December 2003
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?storyID=4032179






Project Gutenberg and Plucker

A PDA always seemed an unnecessary gadget which I would never need,
until I went camping with Lord Jim. Now Conrad and other great books
from Project Gutenberg have made my Palm PDA totally indispensable; I
really can't imagine being without it, and if I leave the house or
office without it I feel as if I've lost a friend.

I use a Palm IIIxe, which is getting antique, but with a PC-connecting
cradle it costs about $50 on EBay, runs for three weeks on two AAA
batteries, and has 8 Mb of RAM so can hold a good number of
ebooks. For example my pocket library today includes: Daniel Deronda
(PG), Three Men in a Boat (PG), The Magic Door (PG), Emma (PG), Pepys'
Diary 1660 (PG), Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom (Doctorow), and
several technical books.

Although holding a book is more pleasurable than holding a PDA, there
are compensations, such as being able to read in the dark using the
PDA backlight (which doesn't wake my wife, and is excellent for
camping); and being able to carry a dozen or more ebooks in my shirt
pocket. At first I imagined that the small screen size would make for
difficulties, but my experience has been that the Palm is just another
Magic Door.

There are many ebook readers for the Palm, but my favorite is Plucker,
a free, open-source reader that includes the tool to make your
ebooks. Plucker is a free download (though the developers appreciate
any monetary encouragement you can give) from

    http://www.plkr.org/index.plkr

The Plucker web site has a link to a helpful online mailing list for
any questions.

Plucker is designed to be an offline reader for HTML, so can be used
for downloading and viewing Web pages as well as for reading
ebooks. This has a slight disadvantage that Project Gutenberg texts
need to be converted to HTML before Plucker can use them, but it can
be a simple single-step process, and has already been done for many PG
texts. Using HTML as input is also an advantage, because it allows
book layout to be preserved, and chapters to be accessed directly. (In
other ebook readers it may be necessary to page through the whole text
to reach a given chapter.)

I have avoided using most of the commercial ebook readers (which
usually incorporate digital rights management,) so it's possible that
there may be good products among them, if you don't mind being locked
in.

Beyond Project Gutenberg, sources for Plucker ebooks are easy to find
using Google. The University of Adelaide Library Ebook Collection at
http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/ has a good set of PG texts
converted to HTML which Plucker can easily "pluck" directly.

Alan Sinclair


Radio Gutenberg Update

www.gutenberg.net/audio

channel 1 - Sherlock Holmes "The Sign of Four"
channel 2 - Robert Sheckley's "Bad Medicine"

Both are high quality live readings from the collection.

Testing of Radio Gutenberg audio books on demand is currently taking
place.


Improved Service

In a bid to make the newsletter more helpful to readers who may be
using screen reading software. We are able to offer the booklisting in
a different format to make your life a little easier. An example of
the changed listing is given below. If you would like either a daily
or weekly version of this list please email news@pglaf.org, and state
which version you require.

{Note to the unwary: this is an example.}

      34 NEW ETEXTS FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG US
A Complete Grammar of Esperanto, by Ivy Kellerman  Mar 2005[esperxxx.xxx]7787

The Female Gamester, by Gorges Edmond Howard       Apr 2005[fmgstxxx.xxx]7840
[Subtitle: A Tragedy]

A Primary Reader, by E. Louise Smythe              Apr 2005[preadxxx.xxx]7841
[Also posted: illustrated HTML, zipped only - pread10h.zip]

The Rise of Iskander, by Benjamin Disraeli         Apr 2005[?riskxxx.xxx]7842
[7-bit version with non-accented characters in 7risk10.txt and 7risk10.zip]
[8-bit version with accented characters in 8risk10.txt and 8risk10.zip]
[rtf version with accented characters in 8risk10r.rtf and 8risk10r.zip]
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3) Notes and Queries, Reviews and Features

Newsletter Cookery Club


This week we are focusing on festive drinks. All the recipes below are
drawn from the 1837 Directions for Cookery, in its Various Branches,
by Eliza Leslie
[http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext05/8cook10.txt].
The preface of this cookery book notes:

"The success of her little book entitled "Seventy-five Receipts in
Cakes, Pastry, and Sweetmeats." has encouraged the author to attempt a
larger and more miscellaneous work on the subject of cookery,
comprising as far as practicable whatever is most useful in its
various departments; and particularly adapted to the domestic economy
of her own country. Designing it as a manual of American housewifery,
she has avoided the insertion of any dishes
whose ingredients cannot be procured on our side of the Atlantic, and
which require for their preparation utensils that are rarely found
except in Europe. Also, she has omitted every thing which may not, by
the generality of tastes, be considered good of its kind, and well
worth the trouble and cost of preparing."

This text includes numerous recipes for beverages, including the
following selections:

EGG NOGG.

Beat separately the yolks and whites of six eggs. Stir the yolks into
a quart of rich milk, or thin cream, and add half a pound of
sugar. Then mix in half a pint of rum or brandy. Flavour it with a
grated nutmeg. Lastly, stir in gently the beaten white of an egg.

It should be mixed in a china bowl.


MULLED WINE.

Boil together in a pint of water two beaten nutmegs, a handful of
broken cinnamon, and a handful of cloves slightly pounded. When the
liquid is reduced to one half, strain it into a quart of port wine,
which must be set on hot coals, and taken off as soon as it comes to a
boil. Serve it up hot in a pitcher with little glass cups round it,
and a plate of fresh rusk.


PUNCH.

Roll twelve fine lemons under your hand on the table; then pare off
the yellow rind very thin, and boil it in a gallon of water till all
the flavour is drawn out. Break up into a large bowl, two pounds of
loaf-sugar, and squeeze the lemons over it. When the water has boiled
sufficiently, strain it from the lemon-peel, and mix it with the lemon
juice and sugar. Stir in a quart of rum or of the best whiskey.


And as a non-alcoholic choice, we offer the author's instructions on how

TO MAKE CHOCOLATE

To each square of a chocolate cake allow three jills, or a chocolate
cup and a half of boiling water. Scrape down the
chocolate with a knife, and mix it first to a paste with a small
quantity of the hot water; just enough to melt it in. Then put it into
a block tin pot with the remainder of the water; set it on hot coals;
cover it, and let it boil (stirring it twice) till the liquid is one
third reduced. Supply that third with cream or rich milk; stir it
again, and take it off the fire. Serve it up as hot as possible, with
dry toast, or dry rusk. It chills immediately. If you wish it frothed,
pour it into the cup, and twirl round in it the little wooden
instrument called a chocolate mill, till you have covered the top with
foam.

Tonya Allen







Project Gutenberg eBook, Two Centuries of Costume in America by Alice
Morse Earle

This is a book first posted to the PG Archive in November. It comes in
fourteen volumes and on the fascinating scale it hits a big ten. The
first volume is the explanation for the illustrations in the other
volumes giving the background and context for the illustrations
themselves as well as the costumes portrayed. Now, when it comes to
this kind of thing in museums, I am usually the person at the back
being Bart Simpson, you know, looking in the things you're not
supposed to touch and generally goofing around. This set of books
though is in a different realm, it really is interesting to see how
people used to dress and why. You can find the book at

http://www.gutenberg.net/1/0/1/1/10115/10115-h/10115-h.htm#I

I think this is one case where the HTML version is essential.

Alice


Answers to the Christmas Quiz:

1. Christmas Banquet, by Nathaniel Hawthorne
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext05/haw5510.txt

"I have here attempted," said Roderick, unfolding a few sheets of
manuscript, as he sat with Rosina and the sculptor in the summer-
house,--"I have attempted to seize hold of a personage who glides
past me, occasionally, in my walk through life.


2. The Abbot's Ghost, Or Maurice Treherne's Temptation: A Christmas
Story, by A. M. Barnard [AKA: Louisa May Alcott]
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext05/8abgh10.txt

How goes it, Frank? Down first, as usual."


3. The Gift of the Magi, by O. Henry
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext92/magi10.txt

One dollar and eighty-seven cents.


4. Christmas Eve, by Robert Browning
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext04/chmsv10.txt

Out of the little chapel I burst into the fresh night-air again.


5. Snap-Dragons--A Tale of Christmas Eve, by Juliana H. Ewing
[In Junior Classics, V6, Edited by William Patten]
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext04/jrcl610.txt

Once upon a time there lived a certain family of the name of Skratdj.


6. Christian Gellert's Last Christmas, by Berthold Auerbach
[In Stories by Foreign Authors: German (V.2)]
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext04/s4fg210.txt

Three o'clock had just struck from the tower of St. Nicholas, Leipzig,
on the afternoon of December 22d, 1768, when a man, wrapped in a loose
overcoat, came out of the door of the University.


7. The First Christmas-Tree, by Henry Van Dyke
[In Short Stories for English Courses]
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext04/stngc10.txt

The day before Christmas, in the year of our Lord 722.


8. Beasley's Christmas Party, by Booth Tarkington
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext04/bslcp10.txt

The maple-bordered street was as still as a country Sunday; so quiet
that there seemed an echo to my footsteps.


9. Old Christmas, by Washington Irving
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext99/oxmas10.txt

There is nothing in England that exercises a more delightful spell
over my imagination than the lingerings of the holiday customs and
rural games of former times.


10. The Birds' Christmas Carol, by Kate Douglas Wiggin
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext96/tbscc10.txt

It was very early Christmas morning, and in the stillness of the
dawn, with the soft snow falling on the housetops, a little child
was born in the Bird household.


11. A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext92/carol13.txt

Marley was dead: to begin with.


With many thanks to Tonya Allen for the quiz, Tonya will be back in
the New Year to make us scratch our heads once more and click on the
Gutindex.


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Credits

Who to thank this week?

Well, everyone of course. Brett, George, Joe, Greg, Michael, and
everyone who chips in volunteering with the stuff that keeps the
wheels of PG turning. Everyone here at the newsletter, Gali, Tonya,
Brett, George, Thierry, me and Suzy the newsletter cat. All those
people who have sent in suggestions this year and have programmed
stuff to help me out. The nice people who provide entertainment as we
type, which includes a couple of CD collections and BBC Radio,
particularly BBC 6Music which is available via the internet and well
worth listening to (this isn't advertising as I have paid my licence
fee), Roger McGuinn and everyone else who has donated something to PG
this year. 'And anyone else who knows me'

Here's hoping you have a pleasant holiday.

pgweekly_2003_12_24_part_1.txt