The University of Pennsylvania Libraries' newspapers broadly support the informational and scholarly needs of the University community.

The University of Pennsylvania Libraries' newspapers broadly support the informational and scholarly needs of the University community.
Bibliographers select newspapers for the Libraries and wecome suggestions from faculty and students. However, because of the high cost of digitized newspapers, as well as paper copies delivered by airmail, the Library is parsimonious in what it adds.
For current newspapers, the Libraries rely on electronic delivery. These include newspapers in facsimile format provided by Library PressDisplay (720 newspapers from 78 countries in 38 languages with 60-day back issue access) - as well as large, commercial aggregated electronic news products such as Factiva, NewsBank, Ethnic NewsWatch and LexisNexis. Selection is based on the titles covered, search functionality, timeliness, access policies, and cost. Newspapers, of course, are also widely available on the World Wide Web at no cost.
In addition, the Libraries receive a small number of newspapers in print format:
The Libraries purchase microfilm backfiles of U.S. and foreign historic newspapers to support teaching and research at Penn, although most backfiles are now available to Penn scholars through Center for Research Libraries, which holds microfilms of over 6,000 foreign newspaper titles and 500 U.S. ethnic newspaper titles. (CRL also maintains current subscriptions to 54 foreign-language ethnic papers and 19 African-American papers.) As funds allos, historic newspapers are acquired in digitized format. These current include The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Defender, The Philadelphia Tribune, The Pittsburgh Courier, as well as collections like the Burney Collection (historic British newspapers), African American Newspapers, and Early American Newspapers.