Thursday, June 12, 2008

Harper's First Month

Well, we made it through the first month. Harper had her one month checkup and she is now 8 pounds, 1 ounce (up from 6 lbs., 11 oz) and 21 inches long (up from 19.3 in.). And, of course, she is brilliant. Well, we think so anyhow.

This month has been filled with fun, and not so fun outings, and meeting her fan club. We have lots more planned for the summer before I have to go back to work. I wonder if we'll get to it all.

So far most of our pictures have been taken at home. That is one of our favorite afternoon past times - mommy torturing Harper with the camera. We'll work on getting her out and about for her photo shoots.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

A Librarian's Guide to Etiquette

This blog provided a necessary chuckle to my sleep-deprived state. While it is directly mainly at librarians, I do think that many of these can apply to non-library workplaces. If it doesn't, then it will provide a window into the perverse and twisted world of librarians. As much as I hate to say it, I'm actually kind of surprised that it is written by two men. One, because it seems like many of the sentiments come from women, and two, because there are so few men in the profession. Enjoy!

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Announcing our newest arrival!!

Harper Elise Carr arrived healthy and very happy on Sunday, May 11, 2008, at 2:10pm. She was 6 lbs., 11 ounces ("a little peanut!"), a little over 19 inches long. She is the most beautiful baby I have ever seen, but I'm a little biased. So far, Aaron and I are having a wonderful time just sitting and staring at her. I have a few pictures of her with various family members, but will be adding more to the blog in the next few weeks.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Yes, Virginia, censorship does still exist

While on the one hand I love to hear librarians in the news. It thrilled me to hear an interview with a librarian on NPR this morning until I realized why they were talking to a librarian. Recently, a large medical database decided that "abortion" would be a stop word. Essentially, this means that it stops the search from working. If you were to try and search for abortion in this database, you would retrieve nothing back. You might ask, "how can that be? Aren't there are a lot of scholarly, research articles about abortion?" The answer is yes, which is a big problem. In my mind, this is a perfect example of politics determining access to information, which should not be. If we allow these practices to continue, it could be as bad as the futuristic society found in Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451. Luckily, the change to the database has been reversed, and the ever-previous access to information has been restored. But if it happened once, do we have to worry about it happening again? It could. Optimistically, I'd like to believe that it might not happen after a change in our administration, but that's just too Polly Anna-ish for me.

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