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Exhibit A
08 Wednesday Oct 2008
Posted in our family
08 Wednesday Oct 2008
Posted in our family
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27 Friday Jun 2008

Just heard this story from the StoryCorps oral history project on NPR this morning while riding to work on the T. It’s best listened to on the audio, but you can read a partial transcript at the site as well.
30 Friday May 2008
Posted in a sense of place
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As most of you know, I’ve been in the midst of moving out of my Simmons dorm this week, and into an apartment in Allston.* I’m very happy to be done with dorm life, and am already planning meals to cook this weekend!
This morning, I commuted in to work on my new route along with my newest accessory–a hand-me-down mp3 player (not the iPod brand) given to me by Hanna (thanks Hanna!) It even plays NPR! I was very excited. Now I look like all the other Bostonian commuters with their little ear buds in their ears. I guess we’ll all be ready when the aliens come to colonize our brains.
Since my camera and USB cord are lost somewhere in the shuffle of packing, I don’t have any pictures yet of my new digs (it’s all boxes at the point anyway!), so I thought I’d post this MadTV clip instead in honor of my not-iPod mp3 player. Many of you have already seen it (and thanks to Brian and Maggie, of course, who introduced me to it last year), but I showed it to Hanna last night and think it’s still worth a giggle.
More soon . . .
*If anyone who wants/needs my new address hasn’t gotten it, shoot me an email and I’ll gladly provide it. For obvious reasons, I’m not posting it here!
15 Thursday May 2008
Posted in media
28 Friday Mar 2008
Posted in Uncategorized
Stephen D. Levitt, author of the wildly popular book on weird statistics, Freakonomics, has just reviewed Philip Pullman’s fantasy novel The Golden Compass on his blog over at the New York Times. Did he like it? Not so much. As Hanna wrote when she sent me the link, “okay, this has to be the fastest and most complete pan of a book I have read in a long time.” Check it out and have yourself a giggle.
21 Friday Mar 2008
Posted in linkspam
It’s that point in the semester (I’m sure all students and former-students will identify) at which the end of term seems both impossibly far away and alarmingly at hand. Projects develop glitches. The panic-o-meters on everyone around you start to rise and your own barometer cranks it up in response. “Many college students stressed out, study finds”, the Boston Globe reported this week, in a classic “No duh! Don’t we know this already?” headline. What is always amazing to me is how normalized and individualized the state of being stressed out–physically and emotionally–is. We expect to spend our educational careers overworked and frazzled, and inability to get things done is always seen as a personal failure, not as a systemic problem of a social system that requires students to work part- and full-time as well as attending school in order to make ends meet.
Meanwhile, we haven’t entirely lost our sense of humor. Here’s a little something that’s been circulating on the internet for all my political-junkie friends out there. My friend and colleague Laura Cutter forwarded it to a bunch of us after our history class last night:
The George W Bush Presidential Library is now in the planning stages.
The Library will include:
- The Hurricane Katrina Room , which is still under construction.
- The Alberto Gonzales Room, where you can’t remember anything.
- The Texas Air National Guard Room, where you don’t have to even show up.
- The Walter Reed Hospital Room, where they don’t let you in.
- The Guantanamo Bay Room, where they don’t let you out.
- The Weapons of Mass Destruction Room (Which no one has been able to find).
- The Iraq War Room. After you complete your first tour, they make you to go back for second, third, fourth, and sometimes fifth tours.
- The Dick Cheney Room, in the famous undisclosed location, complete with shooting gallery.
- Plans also include: The K-Street Project Gift Shop – Where you can buy (or just steal) an election.
- The Airport Men’s Room, where you can meet some of your favorite Republican Senators.
- Last, but not least, there will be an entire floor devoted to a 7/8-scale model of the President’s ego.
To highlight the President’s accomplishments, the museum will have an electron microscope to help you locate them. When asked, President Bush said that he didn’t care so much about the individual exhibits as long as his museum was better than his father’s
Happy Spring Equinox to you all and hope this finds you all well. I always enjoy your emails and calls and correspondence (I actually still receive letters by post from a number of you!) and will be in touch when I can.
13 Thursday Mar 2008
Posted in media
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Thanks to Jesus Camp, I was expecting this one, but it’s still depressing and kinda creepy: Sarah Seltzer over at RH RealityCheck illuminates the connection between Horton Hears a Who! and anti-choice activists.
02 Sunday Mar 2008
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This week in Oral History, we watched a documentary called Hamburger America, which is a tour of some unique hamburger joints in America. I was a little skeptical, I will admit, because of all the documentary focus on the meat industry and American food recently, in books like Fast Food Nation. But the movie was really entertaining and fascinating. Here’s a clip showing one of the places they profiled:
26 Tuesday Feb 2008
Posted in linkspam
30 Wednesday Jan 2008
Posted in linkspam
Classes start in earnest this week, so I can tell the next few days I’m going to be scrambling around getting used to the new schedule and so on. More to come on what I’m actually taking. I also have a backlog of more “serious” posts I want to write, including a couple of book reviews. I’ll try to get to them, slowly but surely, over the next few weeks. But meanwhile, in honor of returning to library school, here’s a bit of satire:
And here I thought my bibliomania was, well, kinda normal. Shows you what freakish circles I travel in!