Business vs. Academic Models (or, Books and Libraries vs. Google)

This paper by librarian Thomas Mann, Ph.D., is circulating now among the library staff at my institution (and others, I’m sure): The Changing Nature of the Catalog and Its Integration with Other Discovery Tools. Final Report. March 17, 2006. Prepared for the Library of Congress by Karen Calhoun. A Critical Review Mann provides a number …

Read more

Preclassic Maya Finds

These two pictures come from the NY Times today telling of exciting new finds from Guatemala. Opinions of the Maya Preclassic Period are being revised based on this new information which is showing that people of this era were much more developed and sophisticated than thought. The origins of Maya glyph writing are being pushed …

Read more

Coursing Update

Courtesy of Margory Cohen, a couple of more or less “mainstream” articles defending open- field coursing here and here— though in the second I think the writer is a bit hard on the noble hare! But I just belatedly found a comment on one of my earlier posts that is frankly deranged and thought I …

Read more

Knocking Around

In Standing by Words, Wendell Berry writes of “poet watchers,” whose sport it is to find out what makes poets tick. It’s clear this annoys him; he’d rather them want to know what makes the poems tick. I get it. It’s another iteration of Berry’s emphasis on work and his impatience with infatuations for their …

Read more

African Truffles

The LA Times tells us (on the front page!) that truffles are a common delicacy in Namibia. Who knew?

What Matt is Reading

Well, if Reid can do it… First thing: I read one book at a time. This amounts to a fair stack by the end of a season, but it’s a serial adventure. The simultaneous readers—Steve, Reid, everyone else in my family—surround and amaze me. Yet I remain, tragically, monobiblic. So a “list” of books I …

Read more

What Reid is Reading

Well, if Steve can do it I can do it… The Fencing Master by Arturo Perez-Reverte (I’m a sucker for good historical novels. Don’t miss his Captain Alatriste) The Nature of Paleolithic Art by Dale Guthrie (Steve loves this one, too) Fish on Friday by Brian Fagan (Fagan writes so much so well on archaeology, …

Read more

Puppy and a Sunset

I’ve had several inquiries as to the progress our new Aussie puppy Sadie, is making so I thought I would put up a few pictures we took on a beach walk a week ago Friday. She really is growing. She weighed 10 pounds when we picked her up in early February and now she is …

Read more

Tulane Commencement

My alma mater, Tulane University in New Orleans, has just held its first commencement since the onslaught of Hurricane Katrina last year so damaged the school’s physical plant that classes were suspended for the fall semester. Two ex-Presidents, Bush and Clinton, delivered a joint commencement address. Not too shabby – but I’m not so sure …

Read more

Oldest Observatory in the New World

The LA Times reports the discovery of the oldest celestial observatory yet found in the New World, at the 4200 year-old Buena Vista site, north of Lima, Peru. This “frowning face” marks one of the solstice alignments that have been documented by Bob Benfer of the University of Missouri, atop a pyramid located at the …

Read more