Archive for September 28th, 2004

Profile of the Unique Brautigan Library

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

Boston Globe correspondent and public librarian Kevin O’Kelly looks at the Brautigan Library, currently housed in the Fletcher Free Library in Burlington, Vermont. The idea for the library of unpublished manuscripts comes from Richard Brautigan’s novel “The Abortion.” Organized by the Mayonnaise System, the collection used mayonnaise jars as bookends until someone dropped one and [...]

Congrats, Jessamyn!

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

Jessamyn’s Librarian.net is the Guardian Unlimited’s Pick of the Day!

Harvard in the News Mentioned on a Blog

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

Harvard in the News is probably the publication my office is best known for, but we don’t do a very good job of publicizing its existence and that we do it. I’ve never really understood why; it’s just one of those battles I decided isn’t worth fighting. I also think it would be very easy [...]

Editorial about Scholarly Publishing: Which Model to Use?

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

John H. Ewing, executive director of the American Mathematical Society, compares and contrasts several models of scholarly publishing in this Chronicle of Higher Education opinion piece in order to explore where scholarly publishing has gone wrong and how to fix it.

Blogging and Politics

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

Matthew Klam takes a look at blogging on the campaign trail in this New York Times Magazine piece. He discusses the potential influence of blogs during the upcoming election and what it’s like to cover the political conventions.

Fire Severely Damages Special German Collection

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

The news about the fire that destroyed many key works in and damaged much of the Duchess Anna Amalia Library is old, but I first learned of it yesterday and feel like I should point to it. As with many fires, officials report the losses are actually greater than intitally thought. The American Library Association [...]

Chinese NY Times Researcher Detained and Accused of Leaking State Secrets

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

The Chinese government has arrested a Chinese New York Times researcher working in a bureau in China and accused him of leaking state secrets. The U.S. Department of State expressed its concern to China.

I like it when I can see that someone used the research I did for them.

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

I’m particularly proud of this work because no one asked me to do it. I just voluntarily sent around the numbers of MacArthur winners at Harvard in case they’d need it. And they used it! Go me! ::pats self on back::
This article is going in my portfolio.


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