*This is the Project Gutenberg Newsletter for Wednesday, June 2, 1999* Etexts Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since Before The Internet [Usually sent the first Wednesday of each month, delayed if by relay.] Main URL is promo.net Webmaster is Pietro di Miceli, of Rome, Italy New and reposted files: Jul 1998 Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy/Tolstoi [Tolstoy #5][nkrnnxxx.xxx]1399 This file was never completed, and should have been released as version 09 as it is now named, and the completed file [now spellchecked] is version 10. We also hope to have a version 11 with an even more thorough proofreading, soon. * Apr 1999 The Survivors of the Chancellor, by Jules Verne #8[tsotcxxa.xxx]1698 This is from a different source than our previous edition [tsotcxxx.xxx]1652 [My apologies, I thought I posted this a long time ago, but it never made it] ****Requests for Assistance from our Volunteers**** * We need a pre-1923 edition of the Velveteen Rabbit, or one that SAYS in it that it is a reprint of one. * Below is a sample from a German play by Goethe, Iphigenie auf Taurus. This material in its entirety will be available shortly and will need a German-speaking proofreader. I am requesting a volunteer to take on the challenge and assist in the final phase of this project. Kindly contact me (globaltraveler5565@yahoo.com) if you can offer aid. Thanks! Mike Pullen F|nfter Aufzug. Erster Auftritt. Thoas. Arkas. Arkas. Verwirrt mu_ ich gestehn, da_ ich nicht wei_, Wohin ich meinen Argwohn richten soll. Sind's die Gefangnen, die auf ihre Flucht Verstohlen sinnen? Ist's die Priesterin, Die ihnen hilft? Es mehrt sich das Ger|cht: Das Schiff, das diese beiden hergebracht, Sei irgend noch in einer Bucht versteckt. Und jenes Mannes Wahnsinn, diese Weihe, Der heil'ge Vorwand dieser Zvgrung, rufen Den Argwohn lauter und die Vorsicht auf. Thoas. Es komme schnell die Priesterin herbei! Dann geht, durchsucht das Ufer scharf und schnell ****And here are our 36 Etexts for January, 2000, and a few for February**** Mon Year Title and Author [filename.ext]#### *****A "C" Following a Project Gutenberg Etext Number Indicates Copyright**** Jan 2000 Iphigenie auf Tauris, Johann von Goethe[#4] German[iphgnxxx.xxx]2054 This is labelled as version iphgn09.txt and .zip, as we need some practice. Jan 2000 The American Republic, by O. A. Brownson [amrepxxx.xxx]2053 Jan 2000 Everybody's Business is Nobody's Business, Defoe#8[ebdybxxx.xxx]2052 Jan 2000 Dickory Cronke, by Daniel Defoe [Daniel Defoe #7][dckcrxxx.xxx]2051 Jan 2000 Old John Brown, by Walter Hawkins [ojbrnxxx.xxx]2050 Jan 2000 Liber Amoris, or, The New Pygmalion, by Wm Hazlitt[nwpygxxx.xxx]2049 Jan 2000 The Sketch-Book of Geoffrey Crayon by W. Irving #5[sbogcxxx.xxx]2048 Jan 2000 Stories of Modern French Novels: Scribners Ed. [sbmfaxxx.xxx]2047 This is part of Julian Hawthorne's Lock and Key Library Contains: Victor Cherbuliez Count Kostia Paul Bourget Andre Cornelis Anonymous The Last of the Costellos Lady Betty's Indiscretion Jan 2000 Clotel; or, The President's Daughter, by Wm. Brown[clotlxxa.xxx]2046 Also see our previous release, based on a separate source edition: ^ Apr 1995 Clotelle; or The Colored Heroine by Wm Wells Brown[clotlxxx.xxx] 241 Jan 2000 My Memories of Eighty Years, by Chauncey M. Depew [depewxxx.xxx]2045 Jan 2000 The Education of Henry Adams, by Henry Adams [eduhaxxx.xxx]2044 Jan 2000 The Education of Henry Adams, by Henry Adams[HTML][eduhaxxh.xxx]2044 Jan 2000 Stories by Modern American Authors: Scribners Ed.[sbmaaxxx.xxx]2043 This is part of Julian Hawthorne's Lock and Key Library Contains: F. MARION CRAWFORD By the Waters of Paradise MARY E. WILKINS FREEMAN The Shadows on the Wall MELVILLE D. POST The Corpus Delicti AMBROSE BIERCE An Heiress from Redhorse The Man and the Snake EDGAR ALLAN POE The Oblong Box The Gold-Bug WASHINGTON IRVING Wolfert Webber, or Golden Dreams Adventure of the Black Fisherman CHARLES BROCKDEN BROWN Wieland's Madness FITZJAMES O'BRIEN The Golden Ingot My Wife's Tempter NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE The Minister's Black Veil ANONYMOUS Horror: A True Tale Jan 2000 Something New, by P.G. Wodehouse [P.G.Wodehouse#2][smtnwxxx.xxx]2042 Jan 2000 The House of the Wolf, by Stanley Weyman[Weyman#3][hwolfxxx.xxx]2041 Jan 2000 Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, de Quincey [opiumxxx.xxx]2040 Jan 2000 Evangeline, by Henry W. Longfellow [Longfellow #6][vnglnxxx.xxx]2039 Jan 2000 Evangeline, by Henry W. Longfellow [With Accents] [vnglnxxi.xxx]2039 Also see: Jun 1998 The Complete Poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow [cphwlxxx.xxx]1365 [A different version of Evangeline is in this collection] Jan 2000 Stories by Modern English Authors: Scribners Ed. [sbmeaxxx.xxx]2038 This is part of Julian Hawthorne's Lock and Key Library Contains: RUDYARD KIPLING (1865-) My Own True Ghost Story The Sending of Dana Da In the House of Suddhoo His Wedded Wife A. CONAN DOYLE (1859-) A Case of Identity A Scandal in Bohemia The Red-Headed League EGERTON CASTLE (1858-) The Baron's Quarry STANLEY J. WEYMAN (1855-) The Fowl in the Pot ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON (1850-94) The Pavilion on the Links WILKIE COLLINS (1824-89) The Dream Woman ANONYMOUS The Lost Duchess The Minor Canon The Pipe The Puzzle The Great Valdez Sapphire Jan 2000 Journey Scotland's Western Isles, Saumeul Johnson [jwsctxxx.xxx]2038 [A Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland [Johnson #3]] Jan 2000 Novel Notes, by Jerome K. Jerome[JeromeKJerome#19][nvlntxxx.xxx]2037 Jan 2000 Eight Years' Wanderings in Ceylon, by Samuel Baker[8yearxxx.xxx]2036 Jan 2000 Stories by English Authors: Orient, Scribners Ed.[sbeaoxxx.xxx]2035 Contains: The Man Who Would Be King, Rudyard Kipling Tajima, Miss Mitford A Chinces Girl Graduate, R. K. Douglas The Revenge of Her Race, Mary Beaumont King Billy of Ballarat, Morley Roberts Thy Heart's Desire, Netta Syrett Jan 2000 Waverley, by Walter Scott [Walter Scott #10][wvrlyxxx.xxx]2034 Jan 2000 The Unknown Guest, by Maurice Maeterlinck [ungstxxx.xxx]2033 Jan 2000 Martin Pippin in the Apple Orchard/Eleanor Farjeon[mpnaoxxx.xxx]2032 Jan 2000 Lock and Key Library, Magic & Real Detectives [#2][2lckyxxx.xxx]2031 This is part of Julian Hawthorne's Lock and Key Library Stories by several authors: P. H. WOODWARD^M Adventures in the Secret Service of the Post-Office Department An Erring Shepherd An Aspirant for Congress The Fortune of Seth Savage A Wish Unexpectedly Gratified An Old Game Revived A Formidable Weapon ANDREW LANG Saint-Germain the Deathless The Man in the Iron Mask The Legend The Valet's History The Valet's Master Original Papers in the Case of Roux De Marsilly M. ROBERT-HOUDIN [After whom Harry Houdini named himself] A Conjurer's Confessions Self-Training "Second Sight" The Magician Who Became an Ambassador Facing the Arab's Pistol DAVID P. ABBOTT Fraudulent Spiritualism Unveiled A Doctor of the Occult How the Tricks Succeeded The Name of the Dead Mind Reading in Public Some Famous Exposures HEREWARD CARRINGTON More Tricks of "Spiritualism" "Matter through Matter" Deception Explained by the Science of Psychology ANONYMOUS How Spirits Materialize Jan 2000 Legends of Babylon and Egypt, by Leonard W. King [behebxxx.xxx]2030 [Etext 2030 contains extended ASCII characters and _I_ did not name the file] Jan 2000 Lahoma, by John Breckinridge Ellis [lahomxxx.xxx]2029 Jan 2000 The Yellow Claw, by Sax Rohmer [Sax Rohmer #5][yclawxxx.xxx]2028 Jan 2000 Tartuffe, by Jean Baptiste Poquelin Moliere [#1] [trtffxxx.xxx]2027 Jan 2000 The Coming Conquest of England, by August Niemann [tccoexxx.xxx]2026 Jan 2000 My Lady Caprice, by Jeffrey Farnol [lcprcxxx.xxx]2025 Jan 2000 Diary of a Pilgrimage, by Jerome K. Jerome[JKJ#17][dypgmxxx.xxx]2024 Jan 2000 Malvina of Brittany, by Jerome K. Jerome [JKJ #16][mlvbtxxx.xxx]2023 Contains: Malvina of Brittany The Street of the Blank Wall His Evening Out The Lesson Sylvia of the Letters The Fawn Gloves Jan 2000 Angling Sketches, by Andrew Lang [Andrew Lang #21][angskxxx.xxx]2022 Jan 2000 Nostromo, by Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad #24][nstrmxxx.xxx]2021 Jan 2000 Tarzan the Terrible, by Edgar R. Burroughs[TARZ#8][tzntrxxx.xxx]2020 Jan 2000 The Bat, by M. R. Rinehart & Avery Hopwood [MRR13][thbatxxx.xxx]2019 And a few for February, 2000 Feb 2000 All For Love, by John Dryden [John Dryden #1][al4lvxxx.xxx]2062 Feb 2000 Not Ready Yet [ xxx.xxx]2061 Feb 2000 Not Ready Yet [ xxx.xxx]2060 Feb 2000 The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come by John Fox Jr[lsokcxxx.xxx]2059 Feb 2000 Messer Marco Polo, by Brian Oswald Donn-Byrne [mpoloxxx.xxx]2058 Feb 2000 The Last of the Plainsmen, by Zane Grey [Grey #10][plnsmxxx.xxx]2057 Feb 2000 Life of William Carey, by George Smith [wmcryxxx.xxx]2056 Feb 2000 Two Years Before the Mast, by Richard Henry Dana [2yb4mxxx.xxx]2055 And from Edupage, etc. [Now two Newsletters, I will create a new blurb for each of them. . .Michael] PAPER GOES ELECTRIC Researchers at Xerox and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have recently developed electronic ink and electronic paper, which some analysts say may make traditional paper obsolete. Electronic paper is easier on the eyes than a computer screen because it has a higher contrast, and it can display millions of different images in the same space. For example, analysts say that a paper newspaper could easily fit onto electronic paper, and information could be changed every morning by deleting yesterday's news and downloading the current news with no loss of print quality. Some former MIT students have already created a company called E Ink, which has developed electronic ink and paper products and is testing the prototypes commercially. The company recently hung an electronic sign in a Boston department store, where the display is controlled by a computer from within the store's main office. These electronic posters can have text changed instantaneously. (New Scientist 05/15/99) DISPUTES AND UNKNOWNS OF ELECTRONIC RIGHTS ROIL THE BOOK INDUSTRY For all the hype surrounding electronic books, the fast-moving industry is having trouble convincing the slow-moving book industry to get on board. The Authors' Guild mailed warnings to its 7,500 members last month criticizing current e-book contracts as bad deals, saying the distribution fees for e-book manufacturers are payment schemes that would deny publishers and authors their rewards in the information age. Other literary guilds are also advising authors to stay away from e-book agreements unless they promise to revise the deals when e-books become more popular. The book industry says it wants to see the market grow, but wants the terms to be fair. Current e-book deals give authors a share of just 4 percent of the book's list price, compared to 15 percent for traditional book deals. (New York Times 05/10/99) COURT SAYS TEMPS DESERVE EMPLOYEE BENEFITS A federal court of appeals has ruled that about 10,000 temporary workers at Microsoft are entitled to take part in the discounted stock-option plan the company offers to regular employees. Industry analyst Rob Enderle says, "This is a broad decision, and it applies to all businesses. If you've got a temp worker putting in 20-plus hours a week, you better start considering him or her like you would a part-time worker" -- and provide employee benefits. The ruling indicated that a temporary worker can be considered a "common-law employee" if the person's work was controlled not by the placement agency but by the company for which the work was being done. Microsoft plans to appeal. (New York Times 14 May 99) http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/05/biztech/articles/14soft.html EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT WANTS ISPs TO SPY The European Parliament last Friday passed the Lawful Interception of Communications council resolution on new technologies -- known as Enfopol -- which requires Internet service providers and telephone companies to provide law-enforcement agencies with full-time, real-time access to Internet transmissions, even those traversing along multiple networks. In addition, wireless communications providers are required to provide geographical location information on cell phone users, along with decoding of messages, if encryption is provided as part of the service. The European Internet Service Providers' Association has denounced the resolution. "Anyone who's got half a clue about the Internet can easily see the Enfopol proposals are unfeasible," says the chairman of U.K. ISP Linx. "The problem is it's a bunch of law-enforcement people who have cooked this up in a vacuum without public consultation." He also expressed concerns that the stringent requirements would prompt Internet users from other countries to route around Europe, damaging the European telecom industry's revenue. (TechWeb 14 May 99) http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB19990513S0009 PRIVACY PROPOSAL A Clinton Administration proposal to protect individual financial and medical records includes a request for more than $5 million to fund an increase in online surveillance and to train law enforcement officials in ways to combat security fraud. Congressman Jay Inslee (D-Wash.) explained the problem to his colleagues by writing: "Do you believe your banking transaction experiences are private? You may be surprised to learn that with certain exceptions, financial institutions may legally share all of the information about you and your bank account activity with affiliated businesses or even third parties." (Washington Post 4 May 99) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/business/daily/may99/privacy4.htm PC SALES UP, PROFITS DOWN Unit sales of PCs rose 21% in April, but revenue declined 2.2% as prices fell and sales of low-cost PCs surged. The average sales price of a PC was $928, according to PC Data Corp. Sales of sub-$1,000 computers accounted for 71% of all retail sales. (Bloomberg News/Los Angeles Times 20 May 99) http://www.latimes.com/home/business/t000045210.html Test blurbs for the new ways these are reaching us: These are excerpts from: NewsScan www.newsscan.com/, and send us mail: John Gehl and Suzanne Douglas , or call 770-590-1017. Edupage ... is what you've just finished reading excerpts of-- to subscribe to Edupage: send mail to: listproc@educom.unc.edu with the message: subscribe edupage Susan B. Anthony (if your name is Susan B. Anthony; otherwise use your own name To unsubscribe send a message to: listproc@educom.unc.edu with the message: unsubscribe edupage. If you have problems, send email to manager@educom.unc.edu.) "I love Edupage." mh Mac users can download our .txt files in binary mode to avoid the double spacing cr/lf line ends creates. Or download the .zip files, which unzip properly for nearly any operating system they are unzipped for... About the Project Gutenberg Newsletter: [Goes out approximately first Wednesday of each month. 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The body of the message should contain the text: subscribe gutnberg Your True Name and/or subscribe gutvol-l Your True Name and/or subscribe gutvol-d Your True Name So, if your name were Dudley P. Duck, your message would contain: subscribe gutnberg Dudley P. Duck You do not need to include your email address, because Listprocessor gets it from the header of your email message. Beware that the address must be "listproc@listserv.oit.unc.edu" You can't address your message to an address like "listserv" or "listprocessor" or "majordom" To UNSUBSCRIBE, just send this message to "listproc@listserv.oit.unc.edu" unsubscribe gutnberg If you are having trouble with the list, send a message to "owner-gutnberg@listserv.oit.unc.edu" and your message will be routed to the person who manages the list. Thanks!! Michael S. Hart [hart@pobox.com] Project Gutenberg Executive Director Internet User ~#100