Goin' Archivin'
Mar. 17th, 2011 12:22 pmI am about to head out to the muni-archives courtesy of Ysa & Chris, because Ysa & Chris are awesome! Also, the muni-archives are in the middle of no where and I don't understand why.
But, links!
Someone on my flist linked to this Craig's List ad but I can't remember who. It makes me ... I don't know. It makes me feel tired.
I am looking to hire someone with a PhD in Medieval History, or studying towards one, to ghostwrite a major, high-quality research project (40000-50000 words), based on both primary and secondary sources (I will provide electronic access/library card). The candidate should be able to prove that he/she has the required credentials and research experience (not necessarily reveal identity, there are other ways to prove one's education). They must read Latin and be available to dedicate to the project at least 500 hours (probably less if you specialize in the particular area of the field). Pay is negotiable, but in the general range of regular graduate student/post-doc earnings. Please write only if you are qualified, with your compensation expectations.
This is on CBC, and presented by Myrna Kostash, who I am unfamiliar with. The Incident at Seven Oaks
This is not my area of expertise, and I'm unfamiliar with Kostash's work, so to me it's just interesting. I have no idea if CBC is geo-locked. It's about an hour long, and I haven't listened to it all yet.
Wheelchair Dancer: Wheelchair Repair 2
capriuni has a PSA with Transcript about Service Animal Etiquette.
Beau Sia has done an interesting response to Alexandra Wallace's rant about too many Asian people at UCLA. Madame Thursday on Tumblr has done a transcript of the video.
But, links!
Someone on my flist linked to this Craig's List ad but I can't remember who. It makes me ... I don't know. It makes me feel tired.
I am looking to hire someone with a PhD in Medieval History, or studying towards one, to ghostwrite a major, high-quality research project (40000-50000 words), based on both primary and secondary sources (I will provide electronic access/library card). The candidate should be able to prove that he/she has the required credentials and research experience (not necessarily reveal identity, there are other ways to prove one's education). They must read Latin and be available to dedicate to the project at least 500 hours (probably less if you specialize in the particular area of the field). Pay is negotiable, but in the general range of regular graduate student/post-doc earnings. Please write only if you are qualified, with your compensation expectations.
This is on CBC, and presented by Myrna Kostash, who I am unfamiliar with. The Incident at Seven Oaks
This is not my area of expertise, and I'm unfamiliar with Kostash's work, so to me it's just interesting. I have no idea if CBC is geo-locked. It's about an hour long, and I haven't listened to it all yet.
On June 19, 1816, near the Red River settlement, twenty-eight armed settlers marched out from Fort Douglas and exchanged fire with seventy armed and mounted Métis traders and hunters. Myrna Kostash exhumes historical memory to reveal multiple meanings of the incident at Seven Oaks.
Wheelchair Dancer: Wheelchair Repair 2
Two: Granted, the representative was feeling frustrated with me -- I kept persisting for ideas about a solution for a probably unfixable situation -- but a broken chair is not the "price that we pay for our independence." I.e., shut up, suck it up; I've other phone calls to take. A chair, any chair, my chair is not the price for my independence, it is my independence. And this one isn't measuring up.
Beau Sia has done an interesting response to Alexandra Wallace's rant about too many Asian people at UCLA. Madame Thursday on Tumblr has done a transcript of the video.
It’s so hard maintaining fitting in when these Asian people clearly aren’t. They’re so not the TV I’ve seen, so not the stories I’ve read, so not my experience where I’m from, and I’m letting their existence jeopardize my idea of the world and I don’t like it.
no subject
Date: 2011-03-17 07:06 pm (UTC)Wallace is just...urgh. Not one of my students, thank goodness.
no subject
Date: 2011-03-20 04:30 am (UTC)