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Hoover hosts the largest single collection of digitized publications from Afghanistan

Picture of Nationalist Chinese special unit stationed on the island of Saipan

The discovery of new archival materials brings findings and interpretation to modern Chinese history.

In efforts to expand to online audiences, the Hoover Institution Library & Archives’ proudly present “HI Stories.”

The Hoover Institution Library & Archives is excited to announce that the Hoji Shinbun Digital Collection now has global coverage

kitaji_bible_picture

Masuo Kitaji’s hand-illustrated Japanese translation Bibles acquired by Hoover

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Server room by Torkild Retvedt (Creative Commons BY-SA 2.0)

Hoover Signs Digital Storage Agreement with Stanford ITS

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Stanford Information Technology Systems (ITS) is the new storage site for the archives’ eighty-two terabytes of digital historical materials under an agreement signed in April. Those materials cover a wide range of twentieth-century history, including digitized World War II radio broadcasts and film footage, digital copies of Soviet KGB files, and born-digital photographs of US National Guard units deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

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Lee Edwards (Image courtesy of the Heritage Foundation)

Lee Edwards’s Interviews of Conservative Luminaries Digitized

Friday, May 2, 2014

Audio interviews of William F. Buckley, Steve Forbes, Milton Friedman, Newt Gingrich, Barry Goldwater, Edwin Meese III, and Ronald Reagan are among the 470 audiotapes dating from the 1960s to the 2000s that have been digitized for preservation and access by Hoover’s audio lab.

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Solidarnosc High Noon Poster

Labor Organization NSZZ Solidarność Audiotapes Digitized

Friday, April 25, 2014

Five hundred and thirty audiotapes of meetings of the Polish Solidarność trade union have been digitized for preservation and access by Hoover’s audio lab. The Independent and Self-Governing Trade Union Solidarity, formed in 1980 under the leadership of Lech Wałęsa, became a pro-democracy and anticommunist political and social movement. Its recordings, which comprise the NSZZ Solidarność Records at the Hoover Archives, offer an inside look at labor, economic, and political conditions in Poland during the pivotal period from 1980 to 1991.

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Ambassador Zdzisław Rurarz speaking at the National Press Club in Washington, DC

New Collection: Papers of Polish Ambassador Zdzisław Rurarz

Thursday, April 17, 2014

In December 1981, when Poland’s communist authorities declared martial law and arrested thousands of Solidarity activists, two distinguished Polish diplomats protested by renouncing their allegiance to the Moscow-dominated government in Warsaw and seeking political asylum in the United States. One was Romuald Spasowski, ambassador to the United States; the other was Zdzisław Rurarz, Poland’s ambassador to Japan. The Spasowski papers came to Hoover nearly two decades ago, the Rurarz archives only now. That both collections ended up here and not in Poland or elsewhere reflects the donors’ confidence in the strength and the credibility of the Hoover Archives, which are already home to the largest and most comprehensive holdings on modern Poland outside Poland.

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The new archives reading room on April 15, 2014

Archives Opens in Renovated Reading Room

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

The newly renovated archives reading room reopened on March 31, with seats for sixteen more researchers--and their laptops and cameras. It can now hold fifty-five researchers: forty of those working with paper-based collections, eight computer workstations for those using digital collections, six microfilm readers, and a DVD viewing station. More computer workstations and microfilm readers may be added in the future.

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