From London's The Morning Star (Wednesday 3rd November 2004); reproduced by kind permission of the author, John Branston Love and Death in Publand IN FOCUS: Patrick Hamilton JOHN BRANSTON gets to grips with the darkly prophetic novels of Patrick Hamilton, whose troubled life was mirrored by his writing. See also the photographs
Just heard that the publication time of the electronic version of Responses to the Committee's Tenth Report, Session 2003–04: Scientific Publications: Free for all? has been brought forward to 00.01 on Monday 8th November. So go online just after Andy Kershaw.
The government response to Scientific Publications: Free for all? will be published next Monday, 8th November at 10 am GMT. Intriguingly, the press notice says "this Report consists of the Government’s and other responses to the Committee’s original Report as well as a further Report by the Committee".
The Centre for Life History Research here at the University of Sussex are holding a diary event, Our Hidden Lives: Publishing everyday diaries, on 17 November 2004. I'm speaking, on the blog as diary, but don't let that put anyone off.
I'm perturbed by news on lis-rare-books that the Library of Congress is proposing to change their advices on transliteraing classical Greek, instiutionalising the inappropriate modern Greek practice of ioticisation. I can't see that they've actually put these proposals up on their web site, but wiser people than me are opposing them fiercely.
'The most dangerous man in British librarianship' Anon, 1990s
'An intellectually arrogant Bolshevik'...'his reach exceeds his grasp'
Headmaster, 1972
'Dear Sir,
There is a person on your staff called Tom Roper, whom I believe to be a librarian of some kind...' from a letter to the Vice-Chancellor of Sussex University, 26 June 2010
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