Newspapers
McFarlin Library provides access to a number of databases of major newspapers. These are listed below this box.
In addition, the library has institutional subscriptions to both The New York Times and The Washington Post that permit individual students, faculty and staff to create their own personal accounts to access the current digital versions of both newspapers. Your account will include access to back issues for the following years:
If you encounter any problems setting up your accounts or have any questions, please ask for assistance at the Reference Desk on the Main Level.
"Explore Tulsa history through local news, events and people with the Tulsa World Collection. Search current and archived issues with full-color newspaper pages, full-text articles and content only published online." -- TCCL
To access The New York Times you will need to create a FREE account while you're on the TU campus: accessnyt.com. Once you've created your account, you'll be able to access it from anywhere in the world. You may also download The New York Times mobile app and sign in on that. Once activated, a faculty account is valid for 1456 days and can be easily renewed simply by re-entering the email address at accessnyt.com. A student account is valid until graduation.
"PressDisplay provides digital versions of over 2000 newspapers from 100+ countries in 55+ languages that you can read online. These digital newspapers ("eNewspapers") are full-print, full-color duplicates of the print newspapers, containing every article, advertisement, crossword puzzle and cartoon. PressDisplay allows you to read online using any web browser without any additional software or plugin installation." -- TCCL
"This comprehensive news collection is ideal for exploring issues and events at the local, regional, national and international level. Its diverse source types include print and online-only newspapers, blogs, newswires, journals, broadcast transcripts and videos. Use it to explore a specific event or to compare a wide variety of viewpoints on topics such as politics, business, health, sports, cultural activities and people. Content is easily searched and sorted through an intuitive, map-based interface." -- NewBank