Posts Tagged ‘Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports’

Announcing Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

Readex to Launch Digital Edition of Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports, 1957-1994

Hard-to-find reports support research into 20th-century science and history, including international political events and research developments

MARCH 1, 2011 (NAPLES, FL) — A digital edition of Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports, 1957-1994, will be released by Readex, a division of NewsBank, in late summer 2011. This unique new resource—fully searchable for the first time—will feature English translations of foreign-language monographs, reports, serials, journal articles, newspaper articles, and radio and television broadcasts from regions throughout the world. With an emphasis on communist and third-world countries, JPRS contains a wealth of hard-to-find scientific, technical, and social science materials translated from many languages; in fact, few libraries or institutions outside of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Library of Congress hold a complete microform edition, especially for the first two decades following the founding of JPRS.

Featuring four million pages from more than 130,000 reports, the Readex digital edition of Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports, 1957-1994 will enable researchers to explore a vast corpus of foreign material. These reports, some of which are quite rare, are ideal for researching military, socioeconomic, political, environmental, scientific and technical issues and events. The comprehensive Readex digital edition will feature an intuitive interface that includes digital full-text searching, metadata search assistance and an individual bibliographic record for each JPRS Report. In addition, JPRS Reports, 1957-1994, will be cross-searchable with the Readex digital edition of Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports, 1941-1996.

“The breadth and depth of this collection is astonishing, making it an exceptional tool for the study of history of science, global economics, agriculture, health, political culture, international relations, and military affairs,” says August A. Imholtz, Jr., Readex Vice President, Government Publications. “Non-technical materials include translations of little-known material on religion in China in the late 1950s, biographies of members of East Bloc Communist Parties, and even the works of dissident Soviet poets.”

JPRS was established in March 1957 as part of the United States Department of Commerce’s Office of Technical Services, about six months before the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1. Acting as a unit within the Central Intelligence Agency, JPRS staffers prepared translations for the use of U.S. Government officials, various agencies, and the research and industrial communities. During the Cold War, the reports were primarily translations rather than analysis or commentary, with an emphasis on scientific and technical topics. Over time, however, that scope expanded to cover environmental concerns, world health issues, nuclear proliferation, and more.

About Readex, a division of NewsBank

For more than 60 years, the Readex name has been synonymous with research in historical materials and government documents. Recognized by librarians, students and scholars for its efforts to transform academic scholarship, Readex offers a wealth of Web-based collections in the humanities and social sciences, including the Archive of Americana, a family of historical collections featuring searchable books, pamphlets, newspapers, and government documents printed in America over three centuries; World Newspaper Archive, created in partnership with the Center for Research Libraries; and Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports, the U.S. government’s fundamental record of political and historical open source intelligence between 1941 and 1996.

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For more information, contact Readex Marketing Director David Loiterstein by calling 1.203.421.0152 or emailing dloiterstein@readex.com.

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The Muslim Brotherhood Through the FBIS Looking-Glass

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

Hassan al-Banna

Founded in Egypt in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna, the Muslim Brotherhood these days is more often mentioned in the news than ever before as the current political crisis in Egypt continues to develop. In the retrospective collection of English translations of foreign radio and television broadcasts as well as newspaper articles that constitute the Daily Reports of the U.S. Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS), one finds just for the period 1956-1996 some 2,700 items, largely translations of broadcasts, on the Muslim Brotherhood and another couple of hundred under the formulation Moslem Brotherhood.

In order to give a little sense of how The Brotherhood, as it is sometimes called, appeared in those Arabic and other broadcasts, let us consider a few examples beginning with Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser [his surname is transliterated “Nasir” by the FBIS translators and editors] in 1957.

NASIR BEGINS MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD PURGE—May 20, 1957. 1115 Greenwich Mean Time. Broadcast in Arabic to Israel and the Near East

Reports from Damascus attributed to reliable sources there indicated that when Lt. Col. Jamal Abd-an-Nasir felt the resumption of the underground activities of the Muslim Brotherhood and their infiltration in the various governmental departments and the army, he asked Minister of Interior, Lt. Col. Zakariya Muhyi-ad-Din, to take strong measures to purge government departments of the members of the Muslim brotherhood…

From an FBIS Daily Report. Click to open.

Nasser, the second President of Egypt, was succeeded by Anwar El Sadat, who himself was assassinated, allegedly by fundamentalists, on Oct. 6, 1981. Here is an excerpt from the speech Sadat gave on Sept. 30, 1981, before the closing session of Second National Democratic Party Conference in Cairo as translated from the Cairo Domestic Service text.

EGYPT, RECOMMENDATIONS, SPEECHES CLOSE NDP CONGRESS—September 30, 1981

Events escalated last year. The situation was charged on the other side among the Islamic groups and the Muslim Brotherhood. You heard me explain the situation to the two parliament councils — the People’s Assembly and the Consultative Council — and to the advisers. All of you and the people heard the resolutions which I adopted to stop this sedition – the religious sedition — which would have harmed this country more than anything in the past, had it been destined to take its course.

The most perilous thing for us to do is to be divided, and the most perilous thing that can happen to us is for some — Muslims or Copts — to exploit religious feelings for political ends.

From an FBIS Daily Report. Click to open.

Here is a brief summary on the fate of the plotters.

EGYPT—November 13, 1981

Indictment of Plotters — MENA [Middle East News Agency] transmitted the text of the indictment released by the military prosecutor against 24 persons involved in the 6 October assassination of President Anwar as-Sadat. The document notes that the various offenses call for the death sentence.

Charges of Prison Deaths; Hunger Strike – AFP reported that three Muslim fundamentalists arrested last month after the assassination of President Anwar as-Sadat have died under torture…

From an FBIS Daily Report. Click to open.

And here is the official Soviet view of the assassination of Sadat from Pravda:

EFFECT OF AS-SADAT, MUBARAK POLICIES NOTED—November 30, 1981

On the eve of his death As-Sadat felt that he was losing the ground beneath his feet and falling into ever greater isolation in his own country, and he rushed about, striking out in all directions. The “Muslim Brotherhood,” which was opposed to Camp David, was proscribed, and more than 1,000 of its members, including its leader U. al-Tilmisani, were arrested.

From an FBIS Daily Report. Click to open.

And finally Babrak Karmal, general secretary of the Central Committee of the People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan and chairman of the Revolutionary Council of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan, makes this interesting, and surely, surely incorrect charge to reporters from a Cairo newspaper about the wider role of the Muslim Brotherhood outside of Egypt:

BABRAK KARMAL INTERVIEWED BY EGYPTIAN PAPER—January 15, 1986

Question: Which are the political forces and organizations that comprise the counterrevolutionary elements and which are publicly known as the “mujahidin”? Is the Muslim Brotherhood playing a role among these forces? What is the truth regarding what has been said about the formation of a unified front of the forces hostile to the revolution on the Afghan-Pakistan borders?

Answer: … the major part of these forces consists of Afghan nationals who were deceived as a result of misunderstanding, lack of consciousness, and the false slogans about the protection of Islam as well as a result of fear of, and terror by, these gangs. At the center of these forces stands the Muslim Brotherhood, which, prior to the revolution, was the basic force opposed to development and progress. In our country the Muslim Brotherhood has worked in full coordination with the CIA and the reactionary forces.

From an FBIS Daily Report. Click to open.

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ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content): 2010 Update Six

Thursday, January 13th, 2011

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with one-of-a-kind historical content unavailable online elsewhere. In addition, the ETC program ensures the latest and most useful features and functionality, and provides guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. ETC also covers online access and storage support.

Just as Readex is committed to providing its customers with the highest level of ongoing support and maintenance, it is also committed to ensuring that its definitive and comprehensive digital collections continue to grow through the addition of highly relevant new content and features. The ETC program enables you to be certain that you are providing your users and patrons with the most complete and robust digital edition of every Readex collection available at your institution. Through ETC, new content that brings significant enrichment and up-to-date interface functionalities and features will be added periodically. In this manner, ETC will continuously enrich your Readex collections by providing added value and content for your users and patrons for years to come.

The sixth ETC release for 2010 was completed in December and included:

  • Early American Newspapers: up to 230 additional issues in seven series
  • U.S. Congressional Serial Set: House and Senate Journals from 1966, 89th Congress, 2nd session
  • Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS): 23 issues of the Central Eurasia and Soviet Union Report.

Releases will continue throughout 2011 on a monthly basis, including additional content for Early American Newspapers, U.S. Congressional Serial Set and Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1974-1996. A new schedule of training sessions will be posted shortly.

In addition, Early American Imprints, Series I and II and American Broadsides and Ephemera transitioned in 2010 to a new America’s Historical Imprints interface that makes searching more productive for novice and experienced users alike. Specifically, the intuitive new platform provides more powerful search capabilities, including the ability to simultaneously search the full text or metadata of any combination of two or more of these previously separate collections.

As part of this update the image viewer page has also been updated for Early American Imprints, Series I: Evans, 1639-1800 and Early American Imprints, Series II: Shaw-Shoemaker, 1801-1819. This update enables users to drag and position the image as well as reset the image view.

Questions or comments? Please feel free to post them here or email me directly at bkolcun@readex.com.

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Best of the Readex Blog: A 2010 Sampler

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

In 2010 our 20 bloggers combined for more than 70 posts on a wide-range of topics related to the use of digital resources for historical research. Did you miss any of these during the past year? 

The United Nations as Teacher by Ed Beckwith

A Future That Never Arrived by Bruce Coggeshall

HMS Titanic and Deepwater Horizon: Lessons of Limited Liability Lost to History by Seamus Dunphy

If At First You Do Not Succeed: Walt Disney Introduces Mickey Mouse (May 15, 1928) by Kathie Flood

MARC Records for the U.S. Congressional Serial Set and American State Papers by Carol Forsythe

The Short-Lived Republic of West Florida: A Tale of Deception and Intrigue by Benjamin Hunt

The Curious Case of Sherlock Gregory: Social Justice Advocate or Proto-Know Nothing? by August A. Imholtz, Jr.

Acclaimed biographer James McGrath Morris — featured speaker at recent Readex event — participating in National Book Festival by Erin Luckett

The More Things Change: Selected U.S. Congressional Serial Set Documents, 1983 by Georg Mauerhoff

The Police in Revolt? The Jails Open? Four Views of Mexico on November 25th, 1911 by Remmel Nunn

Newspapers: “the rough draft of history” by Tony Pettinato

Indian Opinion: A Key Title in World Newspaper Archive: Africa by Tim Russell

The Personal and Poignant Stories of Civil War Soldiers: Uncovering the Claims of Veterans and Their Survivors in Government Publications by William Stearns

Washington Crosses the Delaware River: A Unique Christmas Tradition by Emily Stringham

“She Wields a Mighty Dashing Pen”: Journalist Jane Cunningham Croly by Leslie Tschaikowsky

Boston Honors its First African American Police Officer by Jim Walsh

How Uncle Wiggily Taught Me to Read by Lynn Way

Or Searching for Ancient Dead in the Modern Age, a guest post by SJ Wolfe, senior cataloguer at the American Antiquarian Society and independent mummyologist.

Thank you to all of our 2010 contributors! Each of our staff writers now has a brief biographical sketch, which can be found by clicking on the writers’ name in this post or in each of their own posts.

Don’t miss their forthcoming posts in 2011; subscribe to our RSS feed

Do you know someone else who should contribute to the Readex Blog? Would you like to recommend a specific topic for 2011? We look forward to your comments!

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Explore Our Newest Resources at the American Library Association Midwinter Conference

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

Learn more about new Readex collections for 2011, including African American Periodicals from the Wisconsin Historical Society, 1825-1970, by visiting us next month in San Diego at NewsBank booth 2432.

To explore the recently released resources below, please either stop by our booth or email us today at sales@readex.com. (more…)

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ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content): Overview and 2010 Update 5

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with one-of-a-kind historical content unavailable online elsewhere. In addition, the ETC program ensures the latest and most useful features and functionality, and provides guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. ETC also covers online access and storage support.

From ETC 2010 Update 5

Just as Readex is committed to providing its customers with the highest level of ongoing support and maintenance, it is also committed to ensuring that its definitive and comprehensive digital collections continue to grow through the addition of highly relevant new content and features. The ETC program enables you to be certain that you are providing your users and patrons with the most complete and robust digital edition of every Readex collection available at your institution. Through ETC, new content that brings significant enrichment and up-to-date interface functionalities and features will be added periodically. In this manner, ETC will continuously enrich your Readex collections by providing added value and content for your users and patrons for years to come.

The fifth ETC release for 2010 was completed in October and included:

From ETC 2010 Update 5

Releases will continue throughout 2010 on a bi-monthly basis, including additional content for Early American Newspapers, 1690-1922; U.S. Congressional Serial Set, 1817-1994 and Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1974-1996.

In addition, as of June 30, 2010, Readex’s Early American Imprints, Series I and II and American Broadsides and Ephemera have transitioned to a new America’s Historical Imprints platform that makes searching more productive for novice and experienced users alike.

Its intuitive new interface provides more powerful search capabilities, including the ability to simultaneously search the full text or metadata of any combination of two or more of these previously separate collections.

Also as part of this update the image viewer page has also been updated for Early American Imprints, Series I: Evans, 1639-1800 and Early American Imprints, Series II: Shaw-Shoemaker, 1801-1819. This update allows users to drag and position images as well as reset the image view.

Questions or comments? Please feel free to post them here or email me directly at bkolcun@readex.com.

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A Future That Never Arrived

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

Buried among the verbiage of a lengthy speech by Nikita Khrushchev from 1960 is a Communist Party plan that I’d never heard before – that the Soviet Union would abolish taxes on workers and employees by 1965, and also shorten their workday! It turns out this was a major Soviet domestic policy in 1960, worthy of headlines in the Trenton Evening Times, as can be seen from this page view.

From America's Historical Newspapers

What can also be seen is that this announcement coincided with the shooting down of the CIA U-2 spy plane piloted by Gary Francis Powers. The plane’s downing led to the cancellation of the Paris Four Powers Summit, as President Eisenhower refused to apologize for violating Soviet air space.

After these events, Khrushchev addressed the Third Congress of the Romanian Workers’ Party on June 21, 1960. He spoke at length – the speech runs over thirty pages in the June 22, 1960 Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Report. The following short excerpts give the flavor of his address and highlight the rhetoric of the time.

From FBIS Daily Reports, 1941-1974

He offered greetings:

“I am happy that I have been entrusted…to transmit to you, and through you all communists, peasants, workers and intellectuals…warm fraternal greetings and best wishes for success at your congress.”

He had well wishes:

“Allow me, dear comrades, to wish the Rumanian Workers Party, workers class, and working peasantry, and the intelligentsia of the Rumanian People’s Republic success in implementation of your six-year plan, which will be a decisive phase in the grandiose plan for the final completion of the development of socialism in fraternal Rumania.”

He gave a history lesson:

“The natural resources of Rumania were plundered by imperialist powers which thought of it as their agrarian and raw material appendage. Such a situation apparently also fully suited the ruling group of bourgeois Boyar Rumania…”

He bashed capitalism:

“Capitalism is outliving its age. Insoluble contradictions are eating it away. The foundations of the old world are cracking and crumbling, and illusions about the solidity of the capitalist system are disappearing. The old girl groans, moans, and snaps, and everything goes wrong with her. As the saying goes: ‘For an old woman even a comfortable bed is full of lumps.’”

He praised new social initiatives in the USSR:

From FBIS Daily Reports, 1941-1974

He praised the achievements of the Soviet Union:

“The peoples of the Soviet Union, now united and rallied as never before around the Communist Party, its Leninist Central Committee, and the Soviet Government, are fully determined to implement the plans of scientific communism and to erect the bright, majestic edifice of the communist society. Every day brings nearer that time when we shall be able to say that communism, like socialism today, has become an actual reality instead of a cherished aim.”

He went on:

“Speaking figuratively, the successes of the socialist countries are like a multistage rocket, which will certainly lead the people of the whole world into the orbit of communism.”

He answered some criticism:

“It would be truer to say, when the question arises as to who will bury whom, that the gravedigger of capitalism, as Karl Marx said, will be the working class. And, I, as a member of the Communist Party, a member of the great and mighty workers class, do not exclude myself from the ranks of gravediggers of capitalism.”

We’re less than half way through his speech at this point. He starts talking about the U-2 spy plane being shot down and the Paris talks being ruined:

“Now the people who wrecked the meeting are shedding crocodile tears. They are grieving as Judas grieved after betraying Christ. They crucified this meeting on the cross, and they now act as though the Soviet Union were the culprit…

“The President announced cancellation of the flights at the preliminary meeting of the four heads of state in Paris. This was done approximately in this spirit: ‘I, Dwight Eisenhower, hereby condescend to do the following: Cancel spy flights over the Soviet Union.’ Judge for yourself. Is such a tone permissible for serious conversation with the representatives of a great and powerful socialist state?”

He muses on the present:

“We live at a time when we have neither Marx, nor Engels, nor Lenin with us. If we act like children, who in studying the alphabet build words out of letters, we shall not get very far….One must not only be able to read but must also correctly understand what one has read…”

He starts to sum up:

“The unity of the Marxist-Leninist parties is the guarantee of our future victories.”

He concludes:

“Long live and prosper the unity of the peoples of the socialist countries. Long live the solidarity of workers of all countries in their struggle for peace and friendship among peoples.”

And TASS goes on to remark:

“This message was received with great enthusiasm. All those present at the congress stood and rendered a loud ovation. Shouts hailing the CPSU and its Leninist Central Committee, the Soviet Union, the Rumanian Workers Party and its Central Committee, the fraternal friendship between the peoples of the Soviet Union and the Rumanian people, and all the fraternal socialist countries were heard in the hall.”

Although today it can be amusing to look back at the rhetoric employed by Khrushchev, this speech was given at a time when the U-2 incident and the breakdown of the Paris summit talks had further ratcheted up tensions between East and West. Khrushchev, who boasted of becoming the gravedigger of capitalism, was regarded seriously in Western capitals. The fact that he wasn’t successful doesn’t diminish the sincerity of the threat.

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Rare FBIS Annexes now available online

Friday, October 8th, 2010

FBIS Daily Report Annexes, 1974-1996 is an essential complement to FBIS Daily Reportsthe fully searchable broadcast and news resource featuring first-hand reporting from around the globe.

This new international archive offers an additional 7,500 items, each designated “For Official Use Only” and previously unavailable outside the intelligence community and other Federal agencies. The Annexes were not an item in the Federal Depository Library Program, which distributed the Daily Report in microfiche from 1978 to 1996. No institution other than the Central Intelligence Agency holds all of the Annexes. (more…)

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Sign Up for Readex Webinar Training

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Beginning September 14 and running through November 2, Readex will be conducting live training webinars on various digital collections. These webinars are open to all librarians, faculty and students at institutions participating in the Readex Enhancement, Training and Content (ETC) program.

While each training session will focus on interface functions and features, it will also provide important background on Readex collections from expert product specialists.

To register, please select the training session(s) you would like to attend using this ETC Training form. If you have questions of any kind, please contact Brett Kolcun, Readex Product Director at bkolcun@readex.com.

There is still time to sign up for the upcoming webinars. We hope you can join us!

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ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content): Overview and 2010 Update 4

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with one-of-a-kind historical content unavailable online elsewhere. In addition, the ETC program ensures the latest and most useful features and functionality, and provides guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. ETC also covers online access and storage support.

Just as Readex is committed to providing its customers with the highest level of ongoing support and maintenance, it is also committed to ensuring that its definitive and comprehensive digital collections continue to grow through the addition of highly relevant new content and features. The ETC program enables you to be certain that you are providing your users and patrons with the most complete and robust digital edition of every Readex collection available at your institution. Through ETC, new content that brings significant enrichment and up-to-date interface functionalities and features will be added periodically. In this manner, ETC will continuously enrich your Readex collections by providing added value and content for your users and patrons for years to come.

The fourth ETC release for 2010 was completed in August and included:

Early American Newspapers: up to 300 additional issues in seven series;

U.S. Congressional Serial Set: House and Senate Journals from 1964, 88th Congress, 2nd Session;

Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1974-1996: 25 issues of the Central Eurasia and Soviet Union Report.

Releases will continue throughout 2010 on a bi-monthly basis, including additional content for Early American Newspapers, 1690-1922, U.S. Congressional Serial Set, 1817-1994 and Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1974-1996.

America's Historical Imprints

In addition, as of June 30, 2010, Readex’s Early American Imprints, Series I and II and American Broadsides and Ephemera have transitioned to a new America’s Historical Imprints platform that makes searching more productive for novice and experienced users alike. Its intuitive new interface provides more powerful search capabilities, including the ability to simultaneously search the full text or metadata of any combination of two or more of these previously separate collections.

Also as part of this update the image viewer page has also been updated for Early American Imprints, Series I: Evans, 1639-1800 and Early American Imprints, Series II: Shaw-Shoemaker, 1801-1819. This update allows users to drag and position images as well as reset the image view.

Questions or comments? Please feel free to post them here or email me directly at bkolcun@readex.com.

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