how to treat newspaper ?
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i think it would be treated as expense
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Preserving history
Here's how to keep that historic newspaper for years to come
By Dava Aiken Tobey
NYT Regional Newspapers
Tomorrow's fish wrapping and yesterday's news. Labels such as these have been applied to old newspapers for decades.
But the terrorist attack in New York City and Washington, D.C., on Sept. 11 and the continuing developments in the story as the United States retaliated on Sunday have brought a new respect for yesterday's editions.
''This has been a major event that has changed the way we look at our lives, our country and our world,'' said Sherelyn Ogden, head of conservation at the Minnesota Historical Society in St. Paul, Minn. ''A lot of people want to be able to remember and pass these memories along.''
Just as our parents and grandparents have vivid memories of the stock market crash of 1929 or the day President Kennedy was assassinated, the terrorist attack and the military action that follows are stories will share for decades to come.
The newspaper is one of the few chronicles of a defining event in history - or in our personal lives - that we are able to hold in our hands.
Librarians and historians
preserve newspapers from around the
world in carefully controlled
environments and transfer them to
microfilm or electronic images. They are
such an important record that, since the
early 1980's, the Library of Congress and the National Endowment for the Humanities have been working together on the United States Newspaper Program, which locates, catalogs, and preserves newspapers published throughout the country.
But how can individuals save that historic front page.
The key is to place the newspaper in an acid-free, stable environment, that is cool, dry, dark and free of insects, Ogden said.
Hopefully this helps you
Here's how to keep that historic newspaper for years to come
By Dava Aiken Tobey
NYT Regional Newspapers
Tomorrow's fish wrapping and yesterday's news. Labels such as these have been applied to old newspapers for decades.
But the terrorist attack in New York City and Washington, D.C., on Sept. 11 and the continuing developments in the story as the United States retaliated on Sunday have brought a new respect for yesterday's editions.
''This has been a major event that has changed the way we look at our lives, our country and our world,'' said Sherelyn Ogden, head of conservation at the Minnesota Historical Society in St. Paul, Minn. ''A lot of people want to be able to remember and pass these memories along.''
Just as our parents and grandparents have vivid memories of the stock market crash of 1929 or the day President Kennedy was assassinated, the terrorist attack and the military action that follows are stories will share for decades to come.
The newspaper is one of the few chronicles of a defining event in history - or in our personal lives - that we are able to hold in our hands.
Librarians and historians
preserve newspapers from around the
world in carefully controlled
environments and transfer them to
microfilm or electronic images. They are
such an important record that, since the
early 1980's, the Library of Congress and the National Endowment for the Humanities have been working together on the United States Newspaper Program, which locates, catalogs, and preserves newspapers published throughout the country.
But how can individuals save that historic front page.
The key is to place the newspaper in an acid-free, stable environment, that is cool, dry, dark and free of insects, Ogden said.
Hopefully this helps you
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