582
Augusta (GA) Chronicle

Last Loaded on Web: Thursday, October 02, 2008

Last Update To Bluesheet: September 1, 2005

Bluesheet Contents     PDF version

File Description Database Content DIALINDEX/OneSearch Categories Basic Index Rank
Subject Coverage Document Types Indexed Contact Additional Indexes Predefined Format Options
Tips Geographic Coverage Terms and Conditions Limit Rates
Dialog File Data Special Features Sample Record Sort


File Description [top]

TheAugusta Chroniclefrom Augusta, Georgia, updated daily, monitors state issues, and nearby Columbia County enhances local coverage. The region is home to the Savannah River Site nuclear facility, the Medical College of Georgia, and the U.S. Army's Fort Gordon. Regional sections report on issues related to Columbia County and the neighboring state of South Carolina. File coverage begins with November, 1996.



Tips [top]

USE PAPERS or PAPERSNU FILES

to find the complete text of local, national, and international news articles from more than 100 U.S. newspapers.

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to scan the entire collection of U.S. fulltext newspaper databases.

     B 411
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USE CURRENT

to limit your search to the most recent 1 to 2 years of data.

     B PAPERSCA CURRENT      S TURNOVER OR SALES

USE AU=

to retrieve articles written by particular authors.

     S AU=(JOAN(1N)JACKSON)

USE TI,LP,DE FIELDS

to narrow search to particular topics.

     S TERMS/TI,LP,DE


Subject Coverage [top]

  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Business
  • Columns
  • Editorials
  • Features
  • Full Text News Stories
  • Leisure
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Sports
  • Wire Stories


Dialog File Data [top]

Dates Covered: November 1996 to the present
File Size: 509,710 records as of July 2008
Update Frequency: Daily


Database Content [top]

  • Complete Text Records


Document Types Indexed [top]

  • Newspaper Articles


Geographic Coverage [top]

  • US Only


Geographic Restrictions [top]

  • None


Special Features [top]


DialIndex/OneSearch Categories [top]

ACRONYM CATEGORY NAME
PAPERSGA Georgia Newspapers
PAPERSNU New Papers added since March 1997
PAPERSSE U.S. Southeast Region Newspapers


Contact [top]

Each newspaper is provided by the individual newspaper publisher. Questions concerning file content should be directed to:

Dialog LLC
The Knowledge Center
11000 Regency Parkway, Suite 10
Cary, NC 27511

Telephone: 919-462-8600
800 Line: 800-334-2564
Fax: 919-468-9890
E-Mail: dialogcustomer@thomson.com


Terms and Conditions [top]

For Dialog's Redistribution and Archive Policy, enter HELP ERA online. The following terms and conditions also apply.

Articles copyrighted by the individual newspapers. No part of any database may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without written permission from the individual newspaper. Customers should familiarize themselves with the terms and conditions relating to the use of each database (see DIALOG Information Provider Terms & Conditions).


Dialog Standard Terms & Conditions apply.


SAMPLE RECORD [top]

    08813049  (THIS IS THE FULLTEXT) 
  /TI  NASA LAUNCHES SPACE PROBE 
    ON 10-MONTH TRIP TO RED PLANET 
    DELTA ROCKET BOOSTS SPACECRAFT ON A 435-MILLION-MILE JOURNEY TO MAP MARS 
     ENVIRONMENT 
  AU=  Knight-Ridder 
  JN=, ED=, PG=  Augusta Chronicle, ALL ED, P A12 
  PD=, PY=  Friday, November 8, 1996 
  JC=, LA=, RT=  JOURNAL CODE:  AC  LANGUAGE:  ENGLISH   RECORD TYPE:  FULLTEXT 
  /SH, SH=  SECTION HEADING:  NEWS 
    Word Count:  664 
     
    TEXT: 
  DL=, /LP, /TX  WASHINGTON - NASA kicked off an intensive search for evidence of life on 
    other worlds Thursday by launching the first of 13 Earth-to-Mars spaceships 
    scheduled over the next 10 years. 
     
       After a one-day delay because of high winds, the Mars Global Surveyor 
    blasted off from Florida's Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 50 seconds 
    after noon, with six scientific instruments to explore the Martian 
    environment. 
        "It's the beginning of a long sequence of missions ultimately whose 
    goal must be to determine whether life was ever on Mars or even perhaps 
    exists now," said Wesley Huntress Jr., chief of space science for the 
    National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 
     
       The unmanned missions - 10 American, two Russian and one Japanese - were 
    planned long before the tantalizing discovery that at least two Martian 
    meteorites contain what may be relics of once-living organisms. 
     
       A team of American scientists announced in August that they had found 
    what looked like fossilized bacteria in a 4.5 billion-year-old Martian rock 
    picked up in Antarctica. Last week, British scientists who had examined a 
    second meteor from Mars said they had found similar signs that life might 
    have existed 600,000 years ago. 
     
       The fossil reports added urgency and excitement to humanity's 
    fascination with the Red Planet. 
     
       The series of interplanetary voyages - spaced 26 months apart when Mars 
    is in the best position relative to Earth - is supposed to culminate in 
    2005 with the return of samples of Martian rocks and soil for detailed 
    study. 
       Scientists say they need such materials to confirm the highly uncertain 
    evidence of tiny, bacteria-like organisms found in Martian rocks that fell 
    to Earth many years ago. 
     
       "We won't know for sure until we go to Mars and bring back samples," 
    said David McKay, a NASA scientist who is studying the Martian meteorites. 
     
       The Surveyor is to reach Mars next September after a journey of 435 
    million miles that will take it half way around the sun. 
     
       Once there, it will spend six months settling into orbit, and then two 
    Earth years (one Martian year) mapping the planet's enormous mountains, 
    deep valleys and dried river beds. 
     
       At an average height of 234 miles above the Martian surface, the 
    spaceship's cameras can detect objects as small as 6 feet across. They 
    might photograph the two Viking landers that NASA abandoned there 21 years 
    ago. 
     
                                (. . .) 
        Copyright (c) 1996, The Augusta Chronicle 
  /CO, CO=  COMPANY NAMES (Dialog Generated):  National Aeronautics and Space 
      Administration ; NASA 


BASIC INDEX [top]

SEARCH
SUFFIX
DISPLAY
CODE
FIELD NAME
INDEXING
SELECT EXAMPLES
None None All Basic Index Fields Word S CAPE(W)CANAVERAL
/CO CO Company Name (Dialog Generated)1,2 Word S APPLE/CO
/CP CP Caption3 Word S PHOTOS/CP
/LP LP Lead Paragraph3 Word S EVIDENCE(2W)LIFE/LP
/ME ME Memo3 Word S WIRETAP/ ME
/SH SH Section Heading2 Word S NEWS/SH
/TI TI Headline Word S SPACE(W)PROBE/TI
/TX TX Text Word S UNMANNED(W)MISSION?/TX

1 Not available in all PAPERS files.

2 Searchable in the Basic Index and in the Additional Indexes.

3 Also searchable using /TX.


ADDITIONAL INDEXES [top]

SEARCH
PREFIX
DISPLAY
CODE
FIELD NAME
INDEXING
SELECT EXAMPLES
None AN DIALOG Accession Number
AU= AU Byline Word S AU=(PETER(1N)DELEVETT)
CO= CO Company Name (Dialog Generated)1,2 Phrase S CO=AMERICA ONLINE?
DL= DL Dateline Phrase S DL=WASHINGTON
DY= DY Publication Day1 Phrase S DY=FRIDAY
ED= ED Edition Phrase S ED=ALL?
JC= JC Newspaper Code4 Phrase S JC=AC
JN= JN Newspaper Name Phrase S JN=AUGUSTA CHRONICLE?
MO= MO Publication Month1 Phrase S MO=NOVEMBER
PD= PD Publication Date Phrase S PD=19961108
PG= PG Page Number Phrase S PG=A12
PY= PY Publication Year Phrase S PY=1996
RG= RG U.S. Region5 Phrase S RG=WEST
SF= SF Special Feature1,6 Phrase S SF=PHOTO
SH= SH Section Heading2 Phrase S SH=NEWS
None SO Source Information7
ST= ST Newspaper State Phrase S ST=GA
UD= None Update Phrase S UD=9999
None WD Word Count

4 Newspaper code is also shown following the newspaper name in the Source Information field.

5 Regions are: NORTHEAST, SOUTHEAST, CENTRAL, and WEST. Region does not display in predefined formats.

6 Special Feature may indicate the presence of PHOTO, GRAPH, DRAWING, CHART, TABLE, DIAGRAM, and/or MAP in the original article, not necessarily online.

7 Includes Newspaper Name, Publication Date, Edition, Section Heading, and Page Number.


LIMIT [top]

SUFFIX FIELD NAME EXAMPLES
/LONG Word Count of 1,000 words or more S S8/LONG
/SHORT Word Count of less than 1,000 words S S9/SHORT
/YYYY Publication Year S S2/2002


SORT [top]

SORTABLE FIELDS EXAMPLES
JN, PD, TI SORT S13/ALL/TI
PRINT S5/5/1-24/TI


RANK [top]

RANK FIELDS EXAMPLES
All phrase- and numeric-indexed fields in the Additional Indexes can be ranked. RANK PY S3


USER-DEFINED FORMAT OPTIONS [top]

User-defined formats can be specified using the display codes indicated in the Search Options tables. TYPE S3/TI,PD/1-5


PREDEFINED FORMAT OPTIONS [top]

NO.
DIALOGWEB
FORMAT
RECORD CONTENT
1 -- DIALOG Accession Number
2 -- Full Record except Text
3 Medium Bibliographic Citation and Word Count
4 -- Bibliographic Citation, Lead Paragraph, and Word Count1
5 -- Bibliographic Citation, Indexing, Lead Paragraph, and Word Count
6 Short Title, Publication Date, and Word Count
7 Long Bibliographic Citation and Text
8 Free Title, Indexing, and Word Count
9 Full Full Record
K -- KWIC (Key Word In Context) displays a window of text; may be used alone or with other formats


DIRECT RECORD ACCESS [top]

FIELD NAME EXAMPLES
DIALOG Accession Number TYPE 05805028/5 FROM 630
PRINT 00301964/9 FROM 634


Rates [top]

Rates For File: Augusta (GA) Chronicle[582]
Cost per DialUnit:                 $1.04
Cost per minute:                   $0.63
Rank Elements                      $0.00

Format    Types   Prints
     1    $0.00    $0.00
     2    $1.40    $1.40
     3    $1.40    $1.40
     4    $1.78    $1.78
     5    $1.78    $1.78
     6    $0.00    $0.00
     7    $2.97    $2.97
     8    $0.00    $0.00
     9    $3.20    $3.20
KWIC95    $0.00       NA
KWIC96    $0.00       NA

REDIST/COPY Multiplier Table:

      Range      Multiplier
        1-2       1.00
       3-25       1.50
     26-100       3.00
    101-200       4.00
    201-500       6.00
   501-1000       8.00
 1001 or more    10.00

ARCHIVE Multiplier Table:

      Range      Multiplier
       1-25       1.50
     26-200       3.00
    201-500       6.00
   501-1000       8.00
 1001 or more    10.00
[top]



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