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The Libraries are pleased to announce a subscription to the Wall Street Journal that allows the campus community unlimited access to WSJ.com on their desktop, tablet, and mobile device. The Wall Street Journal, launched in 1889, specializes in business and finance reporting. WSJ.com offers current web content, including breaking stories, a facsimile of the print edition, audio, and video, with a news archive back to December 1997.

Additional Wall Street Journal content includes:

  • Newsletters: Subscribers can choose from a diverse selection of daily and weekly email newsletters—featuring highlights, summaries, and updates on top interests and sectors. Find out more at WSJ.com/Newsletters.
  • Videos: Tech, markets, arts, and lifestyle coverage come to life along with daily news updates, opinions, and analysis from top Journal editors. Browse videos at WSJ.com/Videos.
  • Podcasts: WSJ’s diverse selection of podcasts provides essential news, analysis, and engaging discussions with editors and notable influencers. Podcasts range from the daily “Minute Briefing” to serialized content, such as “The Future of Everything” and “As We Work.” Browse or subscribe to podcasts at WSJ.com/podcasts.
  • Checkology: A free e-learning platform with engaging, authoritative tutorials on subjects like news media bias, misinformation, conspiratorial thinking, and more. Students develop the ability to identify credible information, seek out reliable sources, and apply critical thinking skills to separate fact-based content from falsehoods. Tutorials include “Making Sense of Data,” “Press Freedoms Around the World,” “Misinformation,” “Conspiratorial Thinking,” and “Citizen Watchdogs.” Explore the complete list of lessons at WSJ.com/Checkology.
  • Lessons Plans and Learning Content: WSJ.com provides interactive and customizable learning materials for instructors, including The Weekly Review: Curated by professors for professors, each Weekly Review highlights three of the week’s top articles for your selected discipline. Each article is accompanied by 3–5 questions to aid with assignments, quizzes, and more. Learn more at education.wsj.com. See the full list of instructor materials at education.wsj.com/instructors/.

To access WSJ.com through the Libraries, you must first create a personal account )see the registration instructions). Already have a personal WSJ.com account? You can transfer your account to fall under the Libraries’ subscription.

Interested in older Wall Street Journal articles? You can access HTML versions (which do not include charts or images) of the Eastern Edition of the Wall Street Journal through ProQuest from 1984 to present, or the European Edition from 1991 to present. Please note that WSJ.com articles are not comprehensively indexed or linked from OneSearch. You can access the full archive of the paper back to the first date of issue through ProQuest Historical Newspapers, 1889-2013, which includes page images and PDFs of the paper, as well as searchable full text, complete with photos, advertisements, tables, charts, and graphs. You can read the entire paper for a specific day as it appeared in the printed or microfilmed version.

For more information, visit the research guide for the Wall Street Journal at https://uark.libguides.com/WSJGuide.