~wer
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:15)
seed
~wer
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:16)
#1
not too overboard, is it?
~stacey
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:27)
#2
you like your bizzzness, eh?
~wer
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:29)
#3
I'm lost, Stace...huh?
~stacey
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:33)
#4
another"Conference news, business [read: bizzzness] and questions" topic...
I was just teasing you, virtually of course!
~wer
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:35)
#5
gotcha!
~stacey
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:37)
#6
huh?
*grin*
~wer
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:43)
#7
right where I wantcha, I must add...
~stacey
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:47)
#8
how'd you know I was blindfolded and nude?!?!??!
~wer
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:51)
#9
now those are talented fingers!!!
~stacey
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:53)
#10
new meaning to 'touch type'
~wer
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (14:54)
#11
*sigh*
~wolf
Fri, Jan 8, 1999 (20:55)
#12
*lol* (stacey, he's being vulnerable again *heehee*)
~MarciaH
Sun, Apr 16, 2000 (19:40)
#13
*ahem* sorry to get off topic *grin* but is there a topic for desert island books? Ones which you would take with you if you were stranded and could only have them to read for months and months or years?
~sprin5
Mon, Apr 17, 2000 (10:01)
#14
I started a topic for this.
~MarciaH
Mon, Apr 17, 2000 (12:20)
#15
Thank you very much. *hugs* It should be interesting to see what is chosen. Please participate. Your choices should be most interesting.
~sociolingo
Sat, Apr 22, 2000 (16:36)
#16
From: Timothy Troy, University of California Berkeley
Forwarded by: David Newbury, University of North Carolina
dnewbury@unc.edu
Prof. J. Desmond Clark, emeritus professor of paleoarchaeology at
the University of California, Berkeley, and one of the preeminent
paleoarchaeologist and Africanists in the world, has just shown
me a copy of a March 29, 2000 article from the Daily Telegraph
(London) entitled: "Last Record of African Explorers Faces
Ruin." The article was written by Ishbel Matheson in
Livingstone, Zambia. It reads in part:
"A priceless collection of books and documents, detailing the
earliest days of European exploration in Africa, is under threat
of destruction. The Livingstone Museum in southern Zambia has
hundreds of valuable books, written by the first missionaries,
adventurers and prospectors in central Africa. But the building's
leaking ceiling collapsed in recent heavy rains, and many
publications were damaged beyond repair. Others need expensive
conservation work to save them. Piles of ancient, sodden
volumes, with subjects as diverse as elephant-hunting and native
practices, have been left to dry in the tropical heat. Early
newspapers, with vivid descriptions of life in what was then
British-ruled Northern Rhodesia, can scarcely be opened, for fear
of tearing fragile, brittle pages. Flexon Mizinga, the keeper of
history at the museum, said: 'It means the whole history is wiped
out. When you lose this kind ofthing, there is no replacement.
You can't get copies anywhere else. These are the only copies we
have. Valuable historical documents, which escaped the flood, are
slowly disintegrating because the museum has no money for
conservation.
The original letters and journals of David Livingstone, the
Scottish missionary, are the pride of the collection. He was the
first European to discover the nearby Victoria Falls, and he is
remembered affectionately in the area as a Christian who
campaigned to stop slavery. His notebooks describing his second
Zambezi [River] expedition in 1858 are stored in the museum, with
those of his companions, even though the institution is ill
equipped to preserve them.
The journals of Sir John Kirk, a botanist, and Richard Thornton,
a geologist, which record their first impressions of the African
landscape and its commercial potential for the British Empire,
are in battered cardboard boxes. The acidity of the brown paper
which wraps the notebooks is slowly eating away the handwritten
testimony of these Victorian explorers. In the museum's clock
tower, amid a jumble of books and newspapers, is the work of
Thomas Baines, an artist and a member of the Zambezi expedition.
A beautiful first edition of his famous Victoria Falls
watercolours lies on a tabletop, vulnerable to the fierce heat
and high humidity of the southern Zambia climate.
Kinglsey Choongo, a museum curator, says, 'The documents will not
see the beginning of another century.' Family members of the
early explorers and settlers gave historical items to the museum
because they wanted their ancestors' contribution to this part of
Africa remembered. It seems, however, that in Livingstone and
Zambia the history of the whites in Africa is being erased from
the national consciousness.
Tim Holmes, an author, lives in Zambia and has written a
biography of Dr. Livingstone. He believes the museum has been
starved of funds because its collection is perceived as a relic
from the colonial past.'After independence came, what Zambians
wanted to know most of all, is their own history. The colonial
history was seen as an irrelevant burden.
But trying to ignore colonialaism is like trying to tell the
history of Britain without the Romans.'It is the former colonial
countries who are now trying to help the museum out of its
immediate crisis. The European Union has pledged 250,000 pounds.
Conservationists fear that the money is too late because so much
damage has been done. Nor will it be enough for the extensive
upgrade needed to preserve the collections."
Dr. Clark was the director and primary curator of the Livingstone
Museum in its early manifestations from 1937 to his departure for
Berkeley, California in 1961. In 1951 he raised the funds needed
for a major expansion of the museum complex and library in
Livingstone. A modest man, Clark neverless has told me in recent
oral history interviews I have conducted with him for the
Regional Oral History Office of the Bancroft Library, UC
Berkeley, that it was he who built the magnificent book and
manuscript collection for the museum's library. He personally
worked with the descendants of David Livingstone and others to do
so. Though now eighty-four years old, Clark can list practically
every rare book title, journal and manuscript collection which is
held in the Livingstone Museum library.
Curiously, however, Clark's great legacy to the world will be his
work as a paleoarchaeolgist in Africa. The paleolithic and
neolithic archaeolgical collections at the Museum are the result
of his work over the course of his years working in Central and
East Africa. It was always Clark's intention also to build the
museum's collections and library for the Zambian people. In the
1950s he instituted museum outreach educational programs in a
concerted effort to help the local peoples learn more about their
early history. Long before other museums instituted the
practice, Clark designed small, portable travelling exhibitions
for this purpose. Understandably it saddens him greatly to see
that the museum and its resources are falling into ruin.
I would hope that IFLA and its membership could rally support for
Flexon Mizinga, Kingsley Choongo and others in Livingstone who
are waging the uphill battle to preserve what remains of this
priceless library collection.
Thank you for spreading the word.
~wolf
Sun, May 27, 2001 (18:35)
#17
HELP! can we please do something about this background or the font? do you see eyeballs and music notes? though i like them, i can barely read what i typed or what anyone else typed for that matter. *smile* thanks!!
~terry
Mon, May 28, 2001 (10:08)
#18
I see the nature background in this conference, what background are you seeing?
~wolf
Mon, May 28, 2001 (16:21)
#19
BODY background="/yapp-icons/chalk.jpg" anyway, it comes up with a white backgroud with purple notes and eyeballs all over it. it's one that wer made and i do adore it but the font needs to change or something....
~terry
Mon, May 28, 2001 (17:57)
#20
Hmm, and you're in the book conference? I'm still seeing the nature conference. Am I in the twilight zone?
~wolf
Mon, May 28, 2001 (22:07)
#21
perhaps i am?
~MarciaH
Mon, May 28, 2001 (23:22)
#22
Nature conference? What am I missing? (Be kind!)
~terry
Tue, May 29, 2001 (09:18)
#23
I meant the nature background, there is no nature conference.
~wolf
Tue, May 29, 2001 (10:44)
#24
marcia, do you see a nature background in this conference too? am i using the wrong url??? (http://www.spring.net)
~terry
Tue, May 29, 2001 (11:35)
#25
(twilight zone music plays - do do do dooo do do do dooo . . . )
I'll look again.
~wolf
Tue, May 29, 2001 (12:52)
#26
*laugh* this is happening to me in inner too!!
~autumn
Tue, May 29, 2001 (16:03)
#27
OK, I'm still seeing the old gray safety paper!!
~terry
Tue, May 29, 2001 (19:52)
#28
The old gray safety paper, she aint' what she use ta' be, ain't what she use ta' be . ..
do do do dooo do do do dooo . . .
~MarciaH
Tue, May 29, 2001 (20:33)
#29
Silly me, I only get the default leaves. I wonder why? *boogying with you*
~MarciaH
Tue, May 29, 2001 (20:34)
#30
Is that the equivalent of a "plain brown wrapper"?
~MarciaH
Tue, May 29, 2001 (20:35)
#31
http://www.spring.net/yapp-bin/restricted/read/books/19/new is what I am using.
~wolf
Tue, May 29, 2001 (21:13)
#32
i'm still getting the music and eyeball background!
~wolf
Tue, May 29, 2001 (21:23)
#33
marcia, i've sent screen captures of the backgrounds i'm seeing in here and in inner. this is the weirdest thing!
~MarciaH
Tue, May 29, 2001 (21:41)
#34
Ok looking for them. I had the same trouble with eyeball and music wallpaper on all my conferences for a while. I finally deleted music from my hot list and that cured it. I added it later and it did not recur. Very strange.
~wolf
Tue, May 29, 2001 (21:48)
#35
marcia has saved my eyesight! i've got the leaves now and it's much much better! lemme check inner too! (i deleted music out of my conf list)....
~MarciaH
Tue, May 29, 2001 (22:16)
#36
Yay!!! Wolfie said it worked. I am so glad I was not alone with that problem and I could help rid her of those infernal eyeballs and notes. We gotta get rid of that wallpaper in music!
~MarciaH
Tue, May 29, 2001 (22:21)
#37
you should have default leaves (that is the name of it) background in Inner too andporch and all the rest excepting Babes, food, drool and you and my conferences. Oh, and the infernal eyeballs and notes on Music - how could we forget?! Did the grey safety paper go away too?
~autumn
Thu, May 31, 2001 (00:56)
#38
Nope, still gray!
~wolf
Thu, May 31, 2001 (14:30)
#39
HAPPY BIRTHDAY MARCIA!!!!!!!