So many of you to thank for keeping me hot!

Danielle S. Allen
         Dean of the Division of the Humanities
University of Chicago
       University of Chicago
Henry S. Bienen
         President
Northwestern University
       Northwestern University
William G. Bowen
Senior Research Associate/President Emeritus
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
       The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Laura N. Brown
         Former President
Oxford University Press
       Oxford University Press
Nancy M. Cline
         Roy E. Larsen Librarian
Harvard College
       Harvard College
Ira H. Fuchs
         Vice President for Research in Information Technology
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
       The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Kevin M. Guthrie
         Chairman, JSTOR Board of Trustees
President
Ithaka
       President
Ithaka
Mary Patterson McPherson
         Vice President
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
       The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Michele Tolela Myers
         President
Sarah Lawrence College
       Sarah Lawrence College
W. Taylor Reveley, III
         Dean, The Marshall-Wythe School of Law
The College of William and Mary
       The College of William and Mary
Judith Shapiro
         President
Barnard College
       Barnard College
Michael Spinella
         Executive Director
JSTOR
       JSTOR
Stephen M. Stigler
         Ernest DeWitt Burton Distinguished Service Professor in Statistics
University of Chicago
       University of Chicago
Herbert S. Winokur, Jr.
         Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Capricorn Holdings, Inc.
     Capricorn Holdings, Inc.
Trustees Emeriti
Richard De Gennaro
         Founding Trustee Emeritus, JSTOR
Roy E. Larsen Librarian, Emeritus
Harvard College
       Roy E. Larsen Librarian, Emeritus
Harvard College
Charles R. Ellis
         Founding Trustee Emeritus, JSTOR
Senior Advisor, Former President and Chief Executive Officer
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
       Senior Advisor, Former President and Chief Executive Officer
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Richard C. Levin
         Trustee Emeritus, JSTOR
President
Yale University
       President
Yale University
Cathleen Morawetz
         Founding Trustee Emeritus, JSTOR
Professor Emeritus
New York University
       Professor Emeritus
New York University
Dr. James Carmichael Renick
         Founding Trustee Emeritus, JSTOR
Chancellor
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Greensboro, NC
       Chancellor
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Greensboro, NC
Gilbert R. Whitaker, Jr.
         Founding Trustee Emeritus, JSTOR
Dean and Professor of Business Economics
Rice University
       Dean and Professor of Business Economics
Rice University
R. Elton White
         Founding Trustee Emeritus, JSTOR
Former President
NCR Corporation
     Former President
NCR Corporation
 JSTOR: Guarding the Back Door to the Palace of Wisdom since August, 1995, with an able assist from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. 2004 990-PF.
 JSTOR: Guarding the Back Door to the Palace of Wisdom since August, 1995, with an able assist from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. 2004 990-PF.Labels: Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, black hole, Box of Blockheads, form 990, fortress of fecklessness, hysterical blindness, jstor, Paris Hilton, roosters of cognitive oblivion



6 Comments:
Tom -
Your recent posts captured my attention.
I was wondering if you'd be interested in discussing the varied concerns you've expressed (and perhaps some you haven't).
Happy to have an offline conversation, if that works best.
Bruce
Bruce Heterick
Director, Library Relations
JSTOR | ARTstor | Portico | Aluka
I'd welcome an opportunity to understand JSTOR, Bruce. Please contact me if you'd like at tom (at) urbanrubbish (dot) com.
Tom, I hope you'll be able to share regarding your communication with Bruce Heterick. You are not the only person online to experience the frustration of hitting the wall of JSTOR.
I hope so too, fp. It would be interesting to know how many people experience that frustration, and how often.
There are several specific instances that I briefly noted in my blog over the last year that illustrate the impediment to community awareness caused by draconian intellectual property rules associated with electronic serialization. One is here, from last July, when I needed some information to buttress some writing I was doing about energy alternatives. The article, from 1982, would cost $25 to read for a non-JSTOR member.
Since then, I've written five posts expressing my frustration at the lack of a way to gain JSTOR access. I have two other specific projects, (not "mere" idle surfage, although plenty of that too) that would benefit from my access. One is time bound. A friend died and his journal articles from the sixties (that should have been long in the public domain by now) are online, but behind the JSTOR firewall. I had hoped to print some copies and have them available on a table where we will have photos and such. The other current need I have relates to some longer term research I'm doing on the prison system, incarceration policies, and so forth. Mountains of data exist just the other side of the JSTOR wall.
Tear down the wall! Or, if that's too rough an image, let's remodel it and put in some little doors and windows.
"The miscellaneous order is not transforming only business. It is changing how we think about the world itself is organized - perhaps more important - who we think has the authority to tell us so." - Weinberger.
I'd read your excellent review but didn't recall you'd pointed to JSTOR among other private troves.
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