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October 1, 2004
The 1st Bush-Kerry Debate
(This commentary by William Rivers Pitt is the best I've read on last night's presidential debate)
"Shrill. Defensive. Muddled. Angry, very angry. Repetitive. Uninformed. Outmatched. Unprepared. Hesitant. Twenty four minutes into the debate, Bush lost his temper, and spent the remaining hour and six minutes looking for all the world as though he were sucking on a particularly bitter lemon." http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/100204Z.shtml

Google 1960. Create random works of art through text. The biggest PC myths.  A different kind of clock site. (thanks Kathy D.) The nation's front pages updated daily. A step-by-step guide in how to pick a lock.


Before Theodore Seuss Geisel found fame as a children's book author, the primary outlet for his creative efforts was magazines. His first steady job after he left Oxford was as a cartoonist for Judge, a New York City publication. In 1927 one of these cartoons opened the way to a more profitable career, as well as greater public exposure, as an advertising illustrator. The Dr. Seuss Collection, housed at the Mandeville Special Collections Library at the University of California, San Diego, contains many examples of Dr. Seuss's advertising artwork. The library has scanned a selection of these advertisements for greater access.
http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/dsads/index.shtml


The Worlds Largest Ball of Paint.
Imagine an ordinary baseball. Now imagine that same baseball with over 18,350 coats of paint on it. Getting the picture? Good, because that's exactly what Mike Carmichael of Alexandria, Indiana and his wife, Glenda and have done for the past 28 years. Now that ordinary baseball that once weighed less than one pound now weighs in over 1,300 pounds. That's right, recently weighing in just over 1,300 pounds with a circumference of 114" inches and still growing to this very day.
http://ballofpaint.freehosting.net/

Ballpoint pen Art by Dave Archambault The artists draws photgraphic quality images using a black ballpoint pen. Why a ballpoint pen? "Grey" is the answer. Technical pens don't do grey. They do black and white crosshatches that look grey from a distance. The ball point has the ability to produce such a microscopic line that even tones of grey are achievable. Much better for reproducing photographs.
http://www.davearchambault.com/


(at left: Nastassja Kinski (2003) Bic Pen on paper.)

If librarianship is the connecting of people to ideas - and I believe that is the truest definition of what we do - it is crucial to remember that we must keep and make available, not just good ideas and noble ideas, but bad ideas, silly ideas, and yes, even dangerous or wicked ideas.”
Graceanne A. Decandido


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