bunnyjadwiga (
bunnyjadwiga) wrote2007-04-03 02:05 pm
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In case I haven't told you yet
I've been Cataloged.
Yes, when I was at Lehigh I gave them a copy of the Sage Treatise. They, very kindly, added it to the Special Collections under Faculty Authors, and cataloged it. You can see the cataloging record in Open Worldcat:
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/60819386&referer=brief_results
I have included a link in the notes for the record that points to the PDF version. I have also, in a moment of whimsy, printed out the PDF versions (both text with footnotes and cool font versions) and given them to the Amazing Drew Archivist Cheryl (who just passed her comps, so I have no idea when she sleeps, even if she only works part-time), for the Faculty Authors collection at Drew.
Yes. I am silly.
By the way, speaking of the Fabulous Cheryl, take a brief look at this exhibit put together Cheryl and the library's resident adjunct faculty member Sloane Drayson-Knigge and an unindicted co-researcher -- oh look, here's her name, Janet Stafford-- about Mildred Moody Eakin, first female professor at Drew
http://depts.drew.edu/lib/archives/online_exhibits/eakin/index.html
The reason this is important is because she worked on Methodist Religious Education materials - IN THE 1940s!-- that encouraged not just tolerating non-white and non-Christian people but interacting with them to encourage tolerance.
Yes, when I was at Lehigh I gave them a copy of the Sage Treatise. They, very kindly, added it to the Special Collections under Faculty Authors, and cataloged it. You can see the cataloging record in Open Worldcat:
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/60819386&referer=brief_results
I have included a link in the notes for the record that points to the PDF version. I have also, in a moment of whimsy, printed out the PDF versions (both text with footnotes and cool font versions) and given them to the Amazing Drew Archivist Cheryl (who just passed her comps, so I have no idea when she sleeps, even if she only works part-time), for the Faculty Authors collection at Drew.
Yes. I am silly.
By the way, speaking of the Fabulous Cheryl, take a brief look at this exhibit put together Cheryl and the library's resident adjunct faculty member Sloane Drayson-Knigge and an unindicted co-researcher -- oh look, here's her name, Janet Stafford-- about Mildred Moody Eakin, first female professor at Drew
http://depts.drew.edu/lib/archives/online_exhibits/eakin/index.html
The reason this is important is because she worked on Methodist Religious Education materials - IN THE 1940s!-- that encouraged not just tolerating non-white and non-Christian people but interacting with them to encourage tolerance.