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“Light and liberty go together.”

For the past 10 weeks, 47 college students have been digging through a variety of Library of Congress collections–finding amazing stuff so people like you can come here and get lost in it.

Such as?

Such as an ad for a patent medicine that figured in an 1898 murder case; a first edition in Russian of Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s “The Possessed;” small Brazilian books of populist poetry in Portuguese commemorating everything from the regional Robin Hood (Pernoite de Lampiao) to the felling of the World Trade Center towers; and the small-but-astonishing notebooks of artist and designer James Miho (who dropped in to see the display).

Today was results day for the fifth class of Library of Congress Junior Fellows, who showed off fascinating materials turned up in their work researching, inventorying, and cataloging these collections to make them easier to use. The internships are made possible by the generosity of the late Mrs. Jefferson Patterson and the Library’s James Madison Council.

Leslie Tabor, a second-year master’s candidate in Library Information Science at Syracuse University who worked with materials found in the Copyright Office, described how Kutnow’s Effervescent Powder figured in a murder case. A killer laced the nostrum with poison; today’s display featured a newspaper ad for the medicine–that offered free samples!

Jacob Roberts, who’ll be a junior majoring in History at Wesleyan University in the fall, used the Library’s “Chronicling America” collection of U.S. newspapers to research U.S. angles on the Dreyfus Affair, an infamous French anti-Semitism case that drew the famous phrase “J’Accuse!” from writer and journalist Emile Zola.

Shireen Al-Zahawi of Salt Lake City, who graduated last year with a Fine Arts degree from the University of Utah, researched the life of Library of Congress Japanese specialist Shiho Sakanishi, who died in 1976. The Japanese-born Sakanishi, a translator and scholar, attended college in the U.S., taught for a time, then became a specialist in the Library’s Japanese-language collections from 1930-1941. With the declaration of war against Japan in World War II, however, she was first interned and later deported to the nation of her birth. There, Dr. Sakanishi was honored for her scholarship. She returned to the U.S. in 1963 to give a convocation address at her alma mater, the University of Michigan.

Lest you think all these newly-exposed nuggets are still yellow with age, consider this: that collection of Brazilian folk poetry (”literatura de cordel”) continues to grow. Fellow Amy Jankowski, a master’s candidate in Library Science at the University of Indiana at Bloomington, noted that one of the freshest items in it is an ode to pop singer Michael Jackson … written, and placed in the collections, since his death.

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What People Are Saying:

Just a thought/suggestion... what about creating a blog for the college students? Not that I don't love your retelling of what they find but it'd be great to get their first person narratives of their experiences as they're discovering everything... kind of like diaries of a treasure hunter.

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This year’s Library of Congress National Book Festival already promises the biggest lineup of literary stars this side of the Crab Nebula. Book-lovers can look forward, on Saturday, Sept. 26, to hearing from David Baldacci, John Grisham, John Irving, Julia Alvarez, Judy Blume, Ken Burns, Gwen Ifill and Jodi Picoult–not to mention celebrity chef …

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What is dance?
Is it storytelling, using human forms to advance the storyline?
Is it movement with music?
Is it movement alone?
Merce Cunningham, a giant of modern dance, asked these questions and answered them–affirmatively in each case–over seven decades.  He died, at age 90, on Sunday in Manhattan.  From his introduction to the avant-garde composer John Cage in 1938 …

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Take a moment out of this busy day to relax at the side of a waterfall at Fairy Glen in Bettws-y-Coed Wales or go explore the castle ruins at Aberystwith, Wales. We’ve loaded 167 new color Photocrom travel views of Wales from 1890-1900 on our Flickr photostream at www.flickr.com/photos/library_of_congress/. The set is full of castles …

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Interactivity with one’s television or computer is normal, today. But there was a time–in a day when talking back to the tube would mark you as a bit odd–when families in the United States gathered to interact with their television receivers in a big way:
They sang along with Mitch.
Between 1961 and 1965, many Americans …

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Herblog

From time to time, we ask ourselves:
Where is the outrage?
Well, for an amazing 72 years, it was on editorial pages, especially that of the Washington Post–in political commentary by the influential cartoonist Herblock (Herb Block), who made presidents and other public figures, from Herbert Hoover to George W. Bush, ink-stained and wretched.
The Library of Congress is …

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To paraphrase the old Elvis Presley album, 200 million Facebook fans can’t be wrong.  If you’re reading this, chances are that you might be among them.  So now you can show your de facto national library a little love the easy way—by becoming a fan of our new official Facebook page!
We’ve started with a pretty …

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The authors’ lineup for the National Book Festival on Saturday, Sept. 26 went public today–what star-power!
Bestselling authors David Baldacci, John Grisham, John Irving, Julia Alvarez, Judy Blume, Ken Burns, Gwen Ifill, and Jodi Picoult–as well as celebrity chef Paula Deen–will be among scores of authors and illustrators presenting at the festival, organized and sponsored by …

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Letter from Junius Brutus Booth to Andrew JacksonYou know how some of the best jobs are the ones where you learn something new every day? I definitely have one of those.

I was watching a new episode of History Detectives last night on PBS (one of the few shows to which I am hopelessly addicted). Tukufu Zuberi did a segment about a letter purportedly written by the father of John Wilkes Booth to President Andrew Jackson threatening to assassinate Old Hickory.

The piece turned up some interesting tidbits supporting the notion that at least thoughts of assassination ran in the Booth family, such as what appears to be a contemporaneous apology for the letter from Booth the elder to Jackson in a Philadelphia newspaper.

The Library of Congress in the past had done some pretty exhaustive work of which I was unaware that signals our letter’s authenticity. Quoting Barbara Bair of the Library’s Manuscript Division:

[A]ccording to research by an LC conservator who specializes in manuscripts [Mary Elizabeth (Betsy) Haude], and who has examined the letter, the paper used in the Junius Booth to Andrew Jackson letter of July 4, 1835, as evidenced by the watermarks (dove, and A KELTY), was that of the paper maker Anthony Kelty. He operated a paper mill from 1830-1840 on Buck Run, near Coatesville in East Fallowfield Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. [The letter was dated July 4, 1835, and addressed from Philadelphia.]

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It’s sometimes said that if you want a really steady income, become an undertaker.
There’s no doubt right now that times are tough all over.  The news media is among the industries that have been hit especially hard–in this case, by factors including changing technology and news-consumption habits, but also by lower ad revenues from the …

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