USA TODAY International Edition

Digital tools provide ticket back in time

- Jefferson Graham @ jeffersong­raham USA TODAY Graham is a USA TODAY tech reporter, based in Los Angeles. His father, Jerry, worked side by side with Toobin’s mom, Marlene Sanders, at WNEW Radio in the early 1960s.

We all know how LOS ANGELES journalism has changed in the digital age — we don’t wait for the morning or afternoon paper anymore to get the latest news. It’s available in the moment, around the clock.

What about the logistics of writing a book about historical subjects?

How do you use digital tools to go back in time without stepping on a plane?

I posed this question recently to Jeffrey Toobin, the senior CNN legal analyst and staff writer for The New Yorker, who is out on the book tour circuit plugging his American Heiress tome. It’s about the abduction of heiress Patricia Hearst in 1974 and its aftermath.

I know something about what it’s like to go back in time for book research. My first two books were about TV game shows and how Las Vegas became a gambling and entertainm­ent mecca, both primarily set in the 1950s and 1960s. I wrote them in the late 1980s.

I remember many trips to university libraries far from home, reading through tedious reams of

microfiche for old newspaper and magazine clippings. For the

Come on Down book, I spent hours at the library combing through the first issues of TV Guide.

Toobin didn’t have to leave home to do all his research. “Much of what I wanted was online,” he says.

The Berkeley Barb, an undergroun­d paper outside San Francisco, was online and available via the archives of New York University, near Toobin’s home, he said. For the rest — the San Francisco Chronicle and The Examiner? “Newspapers. com,” he says.

“It wasn’t perfect,” he says, but it did the trick.

Newspaper. com is a website with an archive of 4,100 papers that the company says date back to the 1700s. Monthly subscripti­on rates start at $ 7.95. Beyond authors, the site is targeted to history and genealogy buffs.

The size of the archive and accessibil­ity to papers is amazing. As a lark, I found my parents’ wedding announceme­nt in the

The Indianapol­is Star from 1954 and my grandmothe­r’s obit from 1980.

Newspapers played a huge role in Toobin’s research, because it was a newspaper clipping that gave birth to the abduction of Hearst.

One of the kidnappers saw her engagement announceme­nt in The Examiner, went to the University of California- Berkeley to find her home address ( schools made that kind of informatio­n public back then) and soon Hearst got a latenight knock on the door that evolved into 19 months with the Symbionese Liberation Army, culminatin­g with her bank robbery conviction.

Another huge resource for Toobin — one I certainly didn’t have for Come on Down or Vegas:

Live and In Person — was social media. More specifical­ly, Facebook. The social network is “an incredible tool for a journalist,” Toobin says.

Toobin didn’t use Facebook to locate members of the Symbionese Liberation Army, which abducted Hearst; most of them are dead. But he did find lawyers who had represente­d them back then, as well as former FBI agents who had worked on the case. “It was enormously helpful,” he says.

( Obviously, Toobin didn’t do all his research from his New York apartment. He went to San Francisco and Los Angeles and interviewe­d many people in person.)

Toobin used digital tools to archive the 150 boxes of research material he purchased from former SLA leader Bill Harris.

Instead of having to rummage through all the boxes at once, he paid a friend to archive the folders digitally in a Word document.

He had looked into scanning them all but says there were so many boxes, it would have been too expensive. “This was my improved way of dealing with massive paper,” Toobin says.

Now — and I’ve been waiting for this for years — can someone find me a digital tool to accurately transcribe long interviews and get them 100% right? That’s the missing link and what we all need.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Patty Hearst, center, daughter of California newspaper magnate Randolph Hearst, is escorted by U. S. marshals in 1976.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Patty Hearst, center, daughter of California newspaper magnate Randolph Hearst, is escorted by U. S. marshals in 1976.
 ?? USA TODAY ?? Author Jeffrey Toobin
USA TODAY Author Jeffrey Toobin
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