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	<title>Comments on: Cleaning Up</title>
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	<link>http://www.dunns.org/2005/10/10/cleaning-up</link>
	<description>News and Notes about the Dunn Family</description>
	<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 12:16:35 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: Hurricane Archive</title>
		<link>http://www.dunns.org/2005/10/10/cleaning-up/comment-page-1#comment-4</link>
		<dc:creator>Hurricane Archive</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Dec 2005 18:30:56 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Greetings,

On a recent web search we found your blog postings that relate
to the recent hurricanes. We at the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank
(http://hurricanearchive.org) invite you to upload your postings or
stories to this public database as part of a nationwide memory bank
that will help historians write the history of these storms. A
collaborative project between George Mason Universityâ€™s Center for
History and New Media, the University of New Orleans, and the
Smithsonian Institution the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank is
collecting, preserving, and presenting the stories, images, and
responses of the devastating 2005 hurricane season.

If you decide to contribute, your stories will be credited to you and you
will retain copyright over that data. When we display images, blog
postings, or podcasts, we also create a bibliographic citation as a
reference for those using the memory bank for research. If at any time
you change your mind, you may contact us (info@hurricanearchive.org)
and we will delete your materials.

Still wondering who we are and what we do? This project builds on prior
work by George Mason Universityâ€™s Center for History and New Media, and
other partners such as the Smithsonian Institution and the Library of
Congress, to collect and preserve history online, especially through
the ECHO (http://echo.gmu.edu) project and the September 11 Digital
Archive (http://911da.org). Check out these sites and see what you
think.

We are collecting all types of information, and we encourage you and
your friends and family to submit stories, documents, images, or audio
files through our website: http://hurricanearchive.org.

Thank you!
Hurricane Digital Memory Bank Staff</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Greetings,</p>
<p>On a recent web search we found your blog postings that relate<br />
to the recent hurricanes. We at the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank<br />
(http://hurricanearchive.org) invite you to upload your postings or<br />
stories to this public database as part of a nationwide memory bank<br />
that will help historians write the history of these storms. A<br />
collaborative project between George Mason Universityâ€™s Center for<br />
History and New Media, the University of New Orleans, and the<br />
Smithsonian Institution the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank is<br />
collecting, preserving, and presenting the stories, images, and<br />
responses of the devastating 2005 hurricane season.</p>
<p>If you decide to contribute, your stories will be credited to you and you<br />
will retain copyright over that data. When we display images, blog<br />
postings, or podcasts, we also create a bibliographic citation as a<br />
reference for those using the memory bank for research. If at any time<br />
you change your mind, you may contact us (info@hurricanearchive.org)<br />
and we will delete your materials.</p>
<p>Still wondering who we are and what we do? This project builds on prior<br />
work by George Mason Universityâ€™s Center for History and New Media, and<br />
other partners such as the Smithsonian Institution and the Library of<br />
Congress, to collect and preserve history online, especially through<br />
the ECHO (http://echo.gmu.edu) project and the September 11 Digital<br />
Archive (http://911da.org). Check out these sites and see what you<br />
think.</p>
<p>We are collecting all types of information, and we encourage you and<br />
your friends and family to submit stories, documents, images, or audio<br />
files through our website: <a href="http://hurricanearchive.org" rel="nofollow">http://hurricanearchive.org</a>.</p>
<p>Thank you!<br />
Hurricane Digital Memory Bank Staff</p>
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