Rome Field of Mars (Campus Martius) a floodplain of the Tiber River, the site of the
altar of Mars and the temple of Apollo in the 5th century bc. Originally used primarily as a military
exercise ground, it was later drained and, by the 1st century bc,
became covered with large public buildings—baths, amphitheatre, theatres,
gymnasium, crematorium, and many more temples.
The Pantheon is the most notable structure extant. The historian Livy (1st century bc)
called the area campus ignifer because of the volcanic smoke often
seen there. https://www.britannica.com/place/Campus-Martius
Paris Field of Mars (Champ de Mars) Located
in the 7th arrondissement, the area that is now Champ de Mars was,
in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, a garden area where vegetables and
grapes grew. By the eighteenth
century, however, it had become a training ground for the adjacent École
Militaire, a military academy where cadet officers of poor aristocrat families
were trained in the art of war. A young
Napoleon was a student here between 1784 and 1785. The park was now closed off by a fence and
soon became known as Champ de Mars because of the war training maneuvers that
took place there, featuring as many as 10,000 men at a time. The Champ de Mars originally measured
42 hectares (about 103 acres), but for the 1890 World Exposition, architect
Jean-Camille Fromigé redesigned the park and reduced its size. It was redesigned yet again in the early
twentieth century to its current size, about 24.5 hectares (approximately 60
acres). http://www.aviewoncities.com/paris/champdemars.htm
St. Petersburg Field of Mars (Marsovo Pole)
One of the most famous squares
and green spaces in the city center, the Field of Mars is home to an eternal
flame that burns in the center of the square commemorating the victims of the
Russian revolutions of 1917. At the beginning of the 18th century, the area was
mostly a marshy swamp out of which flowed two small rivers, the Mya River and
Krivusha River (later the Moyka River and Griboedov Canal respectively). Peter I had the area drained due to its close
proximity to his Summer Palace. The
drained area was called the Grand Meadow.
Later, military parades and folk festivals were organized here, and the
space became known as the Amusements Meadow.
Residences of the nobility gradually filled up the surrounding area, and
during the reigns of Anna Ioannovna and Catherine I, the meadow turned into a
formal garden and was renamed Tsarina's Meadow.
After the flood of 1777 destroyed the garden, the meadow was once again
used as a training ground for the Russian army.
The Field of Mars gained its present-day name after a monument to the
military leader Alexander Suvorov, cast as the ancient god of war, was erected
in the square. The name was also an
obvious reference to the Fields of Mars in Rome and Paris; a bold indication
that Petersburg should be recognized as one of the great European
capitals. http://www.saint-petersburg.com/squares/field-of-mars/
Capital and capitol are homonyms. Capital can be used in a financial sense
to describe money, equipment, or property that is used in a business. It can sometimes be used figuratively to
describe a valuable resource such as “human capital.” It can also refer to a type of letter, a
capital or lowercase letter. Capital refers to the most important city or town in a
region, state, country, etc., and it generally refers to the seat of a
government or administration center. A capitol
is a building or set of buildings where legislators meet and
have session. You can keep track of
capitol vs. capital by visualizing the “O”
in capitol as the top of a dome. http://writingexplained.org/capital-vs-capitol
Chronicling America is a Website providing access to
information about historic newspapers and select digitized newspaper pages, and
is produced by the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP). NDNP, a partnership between the National
Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the Library of Congress (LC), is a
long-term effort to develop an Internet-based, searchable database of U.S.
newspapers with descriptive information and select digitization of historic
pages. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/about/
At least 15 public libraries in Iowa have been targeted by a toner pirate scam in 2016. That’s
according to the Iowa Attorney General’s Office, which filed a consumer fraud
lawsuit against three Orange County, California-based businesses September 1, 2016. The supposed scam came to light thanks
to Cate St. Clair, an attorney by training and library director by
trade. When Robey Memorial Library
in Waukon received a mysterious bill for about $400 for toner,
St. Clair called the number printed on the invoice. “They were very surly on the phone,” says St.
Clair. “They were like, ‘Just disregard
it. Just disregard it.’ So I was like, ‘Well, this is super sketchy.’” St. Clair then shared her story with a
librarian listserv. Turns out at least
14 other Iowa libraries have received similar bills this year. "A couple of them were really freaking
out," she says. "At lot of
small rural libraries, the yearly budget is small, so getting a $400 invoice
for something you don't remember getting or ordering . . . it's a ton of
money." St. Clair also told her father, Steve, who specializes in consumer
fraud at the Iowa Attorney General's Office.
The elder St. Clair is the assistant AG for the lawsuit, which
names Central Supply Solutions, Central Supply Center, and Elite
Supplies. None responded to requests for
comment. Sarah
Boden http://iowapublicradio.org/post/alleged-toner-pirate-scam-targets-iowa-libraries#stream/0
Crossover words
Terrible and terrific are both
formed off the same root: terror. Both started out a few hundred years ago with
the meaning of terror-inducing. But
terrific took a strange turn at the beginning of the 20th century and ended up
meaning really great, not terrible or terror-inducing at all. This happened through a slow reshaping of the
connections and connotations of terrific.
First it acquired the sense, not just of terror-inducing but of general
intensity. You could talk about a “terrific clamor,” meaning a whole lot of
clamor. This was a bit of hyperbole—“so
much noise it was terror-inducing!”—that eventually got reduced to a general
sense of “more intense than usual.” Once
a word like that gets established as a general intensifier, it may also be
applied to positive experiences—terrific beauty, terrific joy—and from there
the jump to a fully positive “terrific!” isn’t so unexpected. The same thing happened to the word
tremendous (“causing one to tremble in fear”).
It happened to formidable (fear-inducing) too, but only in French, where
it means “really great!” It hasn’t quite
reached that stage in English, but it has acquired positive intensifier status
(“a formidable talent”). The path from
fear to happy enthusiasm isn’t an inevitable one. Awful also started as a fear word—“awe” used
to have much stronger connotations of quaking with fear before powerful
forces—and came to be a general intensifier (“that pie was awful good!”), but
it hasn’t crossed over to the happy side.
On the other hand, its close relative, “awesome,” did make the
jump. The fully positive “awesome,” a
child of the '80s, is a relatively recent innovation. It began as slang, with a dash of irony or
sarcasm to it. That seems to be the
crucial ingredient in these crossover words.
The positive “terrific” dates to the slang-heavy flapper era, where
“killer” also became a playful positive.
“Egregious,” a word that made the opposite crossing from positive to
negative (it used to mean notable, excellent), also appears to have arisen from
an ironic use. http://mentalfloss.com/article/56865/why-does-terrible-mean-bad-and-terrific-mean-good
Difference between mammoths and
mastodons Although they
might resemble their distant, mammoth cousins, mastodons came into
existence even earlier, about 27 million to 30 million years ago. They lived primarily in North and Central
America and, like mammoths, began to disappear between 12,000 and 10,000 years
ago. While similar in size and stature,
fossil evidence shows that mastodons were slightly smaller than mammoths, with
shorter legs and lower, flatter heads. Both
species stood between 7 and 14 feet (2 meters to 4 meters) tall, and were
covered in long, shaggy hair that
protected them from the harsh conditions of their respective environments. But mammoths also possessed fatty humps on
their backs that provided them with the additional nutrients necessary in their
more northerly, ice-covered habitats. The
most important difference between these two species, according to Smithsonian.com, lies in how they ate their food. Both
animals were herbivores, but mastodons had cone-shaped cusps on their molars
designed to crush leaves, twigs and branches.
Mammoths, however, had ridged molars that allowed them
to cut through vegetation and graze like modern-day elephants. Both species had long, curved trunks that the
animals may have used to scrape snow and ice off vegetation. Elizabeth
Palermo http://www.livescience.com/34446-mammoth-or-mastodon.html See also http://mentalfloss.com/article/54120/whats-difference-between-mammoth-and-mastodon
September 23, 2016 Thousands
of years before cats took up residence in 37
percent of American households, and managed to outnumber dogs by
roughly 75 million across the globe, they were hopping continents with
farmers, ancient mariners, and even Vikings, scientists have found. The first large-scale study of ancient feline
DNA has finally been completed, and the results reveal how our inscrutable
friends were domesticated in the Near East and Egypt some 15,000 years ago,
before spreading across the globe and into our hearts. The study was presented at the International Symposium on Biomolecular Archaeology in Oxford, UK last week, and sequenced
DNA from 209 cats that lived between 15,000 and 3,700 years ago--so from just
before the advent of agriculture right up to the 18th century. Found in more than 30 archaeological sites in
Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, these ancient feline specimens are helping
researchers to finally piece together the beginnings of an animal that we share
our beds with, but know surprisingly little about. "We don’t know the history of ancient
cats. We do not know their origin, we
don't know how their dispersal occurred," one of the team, Eva-Maria
Geigl, an evolutionary geneticist from the Institut Jacques Monod in France, told
Ewen Callaway at Nature.
Analysing the DNA of cats found in ancient
Egyptian tombs, burial sites in
Cyprus, and an old Viking settlement in Germany, the team found that cats
likely experienced not one, but two, waves of expansion during their early
history. The first wave is a story
you’re probably familiar with. When the team looked the mitochondrial DNA--genetic
information that’s passed on from the mother only--they found that wild cats
from the Middle East and the fertile eastern Mediterranean shared a similar
mitochondrial lineage. This suggests
that small wild cats spread through early agricultural communities, because
they were attracted to the mice that were attracted to the grains. Then, thousands of years after this, the
research points to a separate mitochondrial connection between cats descended
from those in Egypt to ones in Eurasia and Africa. "A mitochondrial lineage common in
Egyptian cat mummies from the end of the 4th century BC to the 4th century AD
was also carried by cats in Bulgaria, Turkey and sub-Saharan Africa from around
the same time," Callaway
reports. This second wave of
expansion has been attributed to ancient sea-faring people--farmers, sailors,
and Vikings--because the cats were likely encouraged to stay on board to keep
their rodent problem in check. http://www.sciencealert.com/cats-sailed-with-vikings-to-conquer-the-world-genetic-study-reveals
September 24 was National Punctuation Day. Find graphics with words like "Let's eat
grandma. Let's eat, grandma. PUNCTUATION SAVES LIVES" at http://www.ibtimes.com/national-punctuation-day-2016-facts-common-mistakes-avoid-how-spot-errors-2421137 See How
to Celebrate National Punctuation Day® by Jeff Rubin at http://www.nationalpunctuationday.com/celebrate.html
http://librariansmuse.blogspot.com Issue 1531
September 25, 2016 On this date
in 1789, the United States
Congress passed twelve
amendments to the United States
Constitution: The Congressional
Apportionment Amendment (which
was never ratified), the Congressional Compensation Amendment, and
the ten that are known as the Bill of
Rights. On this date in 1930, Shel Silverstein, American author, poet, illustrator, and
songwriter, was born. Word of the Day booklegging
noun The illicit publication and distribution of banned books. Banned Books Week, organized by the American Library Association to
celebrate the freedom to read and to draw attention to banned and challenged
books, is held in 2016 from September 25 to October 1.