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There are surprisingly few documents from 1969 that mark the birth of the kubki stanley (https://www.stanley-cups.pl) internet. We have so stanley quencher (https://www.stanley-quencher.co.uk) me notes scribbled on a pad of paper, and a few newspaper articles after the fact. But there weren ;t any reporters parked outside of 3420 Boelter Hall at UCLA on October 29, 1969 to witness that historic moment when the ARPANET gasped its first breaths. In fact, it wasn ;t even above-the-fold news. This lack of media interest isn ;t terribly surprising, but it somehow feels strange with the benefit of hindsight. The world was about to get a whole lot smaller, but very few people stanley bottles (https://www.cup-stanley.us) understood that just yet. However, one of the few newly digitized artifacts that we do have from this era includes a tiny article in UCLA student newspaper, The Daily Bruin. Country computers linked here first, read the headline from the July 15, 1969 edition. The article briefly explains that work was being done at UCLA on a new network and that it should be up and running by the following year. The piece also quotes Leonard Kleinrock, an internet pioneer whose early work on queuing theory would contribute to the basic technology that allows the internet to function. Many thanks to Simon Bensoussan, a research associate at UCLA Kleinrock Internet History Center, who sent me this newly digitized artifact. It a fascinating little piece of history, and one of those things that makes me want to get in a time machine and yell at people from the p