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Paul Streby

Paul Streby's Public Library

01 Oct 09

Justices to Consider Whether State Gun Laws Violate Second Amendment - washingtonpost.com


  • Washington Post Staff Writer


    Thursday, October 1, 2009
  • The Supreme Court set up a historic decision on gun control Wednesday, saying it will rule on whether restrictive state and local laws violate the Second Amendment right to gun ownership that it recognized last year.
13 Feb 08

Harvard Proposal to Publish Scholarly Research Free on the Internet - New York Times

  • Publish or perish has long been the burden of every aspiring university professor. But the question the Harvard faculty will decide on Tuesday is whether to publish — on the Web, at least — free.

    Faculty members are scheduled to vote on a measure that would permit Harvard to distribute their scholarship online, instead of signing exclusive agreements with scholarly journals that often have tiny readerships and high subscription costs.

    Although the outcome of Tuesday’s vote would apply only to Harvard’s arts and sciences faculty, the impact, given the university’s prestige, could be significant for the open-access movement, which seeks to make scientific and scholarly research available to as many people as possible at no cost.

22 Jan 08

The "Google generation" not so hot at Googling, after all


  • A new UK report on the habits of the "Google Generation" finds that kids born since 1993 aren't quite the Internet super-sleuths they're sometimes made out to be. For instance, are teens better with technology than older adults? Perhaps, but they also "tend to use much simpler applications and fewer facilities than many imagine."



    The report (PDF), sponsored by the British Library and the Joint Information Systems Committee, tries to get beyond the stereotypes to find out just how good young people are with information technology, and what the implications are for schools and libraries. Based on log analysis from British Library web sites and search tools, along with a "virtual" longitudinal study based on literature reviews from the past 30 years, the report explodes a number of myths about students today.

Planet Gore on National Review Online

  • How Many Lobbyists...   [Henry Payne]

    ...Tim Carney asks, does it take to change the light bulb.

    Had Thomas Edison employed the same business strategy as his 21st-Century heirs at General Electric, he would have lobbied Congress to outlaw the candle in 1879 when he perfected and patented the light bulb.

    Environmentalism, once again, turns out to be a for-profit business.

    On Dec. 18, the day the bill cleared its biggest hurdle and passed the Senate, GE’s stock jumped 8.8 percent, and Philips jumped 2.1 percent...GE makes its CFLs and other fancy light bulbs in China, while it makes its incandescents in the United States. The light bulb law will ship more American jobs offshore, shift manufacturing to China’s dirtier and less efficient factories, and increase shipping distances. Add in the mercury (in the CFL bulbs), and it’s not clear how good this law is for the environment. Its clearest benefit is to the companies who lobbied for it.

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17 Dec 07

Examples of how libraries can use Diigo

  • Here are some examples of electronic resources I've bookmarked for my library.  If you expand all, you can follow the "more information" links to the bibliographic records in our catalog.  (If you don't understand my library jargon, that's okay; just follow the links and it should be clear what I'm talking about.) 

    And this is just the tip of the iceberg; annotations could include sound and video clips, links to other suggested resources ("see also..."), hyperlinked search strings for the library catalog, WorldCat.org, Diigo, Google, or other sources, plus about a zillion things that I can't even think of.
    - pgstreby on 2007-12-17
    • Here are some examples of electronic resources I've bookmarked for my library.  If you expand all, you can follow the "more information" links to the bibliographic records in our catalog.  (If you don't understand my library jargon, that's okay; just follow the links and it should be clear what I'm talking about.) 

      And this is just the tip of the iceberg; annotations could include sound and video clips, links to other suggested resources ("see also..."), hyperlinked search strings for the library catalog, WorldCat.org, Diigo, Google, or other sources, plus about a zillion things that I can't even think of.
      - on 2007-12-17
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John Frum - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  • "The John Frum cult first emerged in Vanuatu in the 1930s, when the
    island was jointly ruled by Britain and France as the New Hebrides." BBC ARTICLE
    Though there may be "Frumm" or "Frumme" or "Fromme" which are common
    German/Jewish family names, much like 'Frum' may have been 'From.'
    - pgstreby on 2007-12-16
  • John Frum (or Jon Frum; John From) is a figure associated with cargo cults on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu. He is depicted as an American World War II serviceman, who will bring wealth and prosperity to the people if they follow him. He is sometimes portrayed as black, sometimes as white; from David Attenborough's report of an encounter: "'E look like you. 'E got white face. 'E tall man. 'E live 'long South America."[1]
15 Dec 07

Edit My Profile - Others | Diigo

  • Leave My Spoor
    • At the risk of sounding out of touch, I admit I had to look up "spoor." To be honest, it sounded slightly obscene. Maybe "Leave my footprints" would be clearer to most users. - on 2007-12-15
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Science & Math: Online Resources

This is what our subject pages will look like.

141.216.10.140/...science.htm - Preview

04 Dec 07

Put a tag cloud of the most widely held library works on your Web site or blog

  • The “OCLC Top 1000” list presents the top
    works most widely held by libraries. First published
    in the fall of 2004, the list was most recently updated
    in 2005. The list reflects true classics and
    canonical works of western culture. The list also
    shows the extent to which libraries strive to meet
    the needs of their readers, by offering books in high
    demand in any given year. The list contains
    classic works such as the Bible, utilitarian
    works such as the U.S. Census and
    also popular works such as Tom Brokaw’s
    Greatest Generation.
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