Qigong

Submitted By: gracefulwaves@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Qigong
$10 – 20 sliding scale. Cash or checks only
Tuesdays at 6:30 pm

Increase strength & flexibility
Detoxify the body & reduce pain
Improve circulation
Harmonize the body & balance emotions

Each class begins with warm up exercise
gentle warm-up and self-massage.
Learn sitting and standing meditation

DIGITAL BOOK BURNING

Submitted By: bbq@nehalemtel.net – Click to email about this post
Librarian’s lament: Digital books are not fireproof
Publishers are using copyright law as a battering ram to assert corporate control over the public good.

Written by Chris Freeland, Contributor
Posted in Tech Broiler on February 10, 2022 | Topic: Government : US | Editor: Jason Perlow
The disturbing trend of school boards and lawmakers banning books from libraries and public schools is accelerating across the country. In response, Jason Perlow made a strong case last week for what he calls a “Freedom Archive,” a digital repository of banned books. Such an archive is the right antidote to book banning because, he contended, “You can’t burn a digital book.” The trouble is, you can.
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A few days ago, Penguin Random House, the publisher of Maus, Art Spiegelman’s Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel about the Holocaust, demanded that the Internet Archive remove the book from our lending library. Why? Because, in their words, “consumer interest in ‘Maus’ has soared” as the result of a Tennessee school board’s decision to ban teaching the book. By its own admission, to maximize profits, a Goliath of the publishing industry is forbidding our non-profit library from lending a banned book to our patrons: a real live digital book-burning.
We are the library of last resort, where anyone can get access to books that may be controversial wherever they happen to live — an existing version of Perlow’s proposed “Freedom Archive.” Today, the Internet Archive lends a large selection of other banned books, including Animal Farm, Winnie the Pooh, The Call of the Wild, and the Junie B. Jones and Goosebumps children’s book series. But all of these books are also in danger of being destroyed.
In the summer of 2020, four of the largest publishers in the U.S. — Penguin Random House among them — sued to force our library to destroy the more than 1.4 million digital books in our collection. In their pending lawsuit, the publishers are using copyright law as a battering ram to assert corporate control over the public good. In this instance, that means destroying freely available books and other materials that people rely on to become productive and discerning participants in the country’s civic, economic, and social life.
Copyright law grants authors and publishers a limited monopoly over the books they produce. The law also enshrines a host of socially beneficial uses the public may make of those books without permission or payment. The famously flexible fair use doctrine has allowed libraries to continue serving the public in the face of rapid technological and social change.
If ever there was a moment of compelling “socially beneficial” access to books, it came in March 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic shut down in-person library use almost everywhere. In response to the unprecedented crisis, more than 100 libraries holding critical books they could not lend signed a statement supporting the Internet Archive’s establishment of a temporary National Emergency Library. The NEL allowed patrons controlled digital access to those collections that were locked away physically. It was a lifeline to trusted information for parents, teachers, and students around the world.
Yet, in an extreme overreaction to the facts, the publishers sued in June 2020 to shutter the NEL, along with our book lending practice as a whole. And in addition to demanding millions of dollars in monetary damages and fees, the lawsuit is calling on the Internet Archive to destroy all the digital books in our collections. It’s a digital book burning on a massive scale.
If the publishers prevail, much more than the future of the Internet Archive will be at risk. What publishers want is to end libraries’ ownership of their own collections. Instead, publishers want to rent digital books to libraries, like landlords. They want to control our cultural commons for their own commercial benefit.
Think about what just happened with Maus. When a local government entity banned this book, the publisher decided to pull it from a digital library’s bookshelves, restricting our patrons from reading it in order to extract maximum profits. Whether through corporate bullying or government banning, digital books are not immune from censorship.
The Internet Archive’s lending of a digital version of the book did nothing to diminish Maus’s recent surge in sales. Even so, the publisher decided it had to do everything possible to remove the book from our library. It turns out you can burn a digital book.
Chris Freeland (@chrisfreeland) is a librarian and Director of the Internet Archive’s Open Libraries program

Bring A Little Hawaii Home

Submitted By: ketzel.levine@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Warm and toasty 5-week old pups looking for fun-loving, athletic and Aloha-filled homes!

These little boys and girls – along with their mamma – are living the Aloha life in a dear friend’s garage on the big island after she & I rescued all ten of them from a scary situation. The pups are now 5+ wks old and based on nightly FT visits with my friend, I’m happy to report they are fat, happy and getting excellent care. Their personalities are emerging!

We expect them to grow into 45-55 lb dogs whose lines include but are not limited to: Pointer, Pittie, Ridgeback, Lab. Mamma is a total love bug (sadly, only 8 mos old). Father is known, quite sweet, yet denies any knowledge of situation.

If you’d like to meet the little fockers, at least virtually, email with your good intentions.

ketzel.levine@gmail.com

Massage & Sauna Appointments Available this Week!

Submitted By: info@northfork53.com – Click to email about this post
Do feel tension or pain between your shoulders when you work at your computer?
Do find yourself rubbing and rolling your stiff neck when your stressed?

Massage therapy can help you find comfort!

Book an 60 or 90 minute massage at North Fork 53 Communitea Wellness to help release your tight muscles and get more mobility, happiness and sleep.
We also offer real wood-fired sauna before massage for the ultimate muscle melt.

Visit our website to book online at:
www.northfork53.com/book-wellness
or call/text 503- 568- 3510

Hiring at Buttercup

Submitted By: juliebuttercup22@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
It’s time to hire some help! Here’s what we need:

Part-time counter help – 2-3 days a week. Able to use Square cash register system, take orders, scoop ice cream – generally representing the front of the house. Need to be knowledgeable about our products and excited about selling them. $16 hour plus tips.

Prep Cook – this would work well if you have kitchen experience, knife skills and also want to help up front. This would then be a full-time, year-round position. Your salary would increase depending on your skill and experience.

Fully vaccinated only please

Call 503 368 2469 for interview or email us

Sony Stereo Turntable

Submitted By: johnfreethy@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Sony PS-LX56 Stereo Turntable.
Asking $45, located in Nehalem.
johnfreethy@gmail.com

Specs Below:
Description
The Sony PS-LX56 is a 2-speed, belt driven turntable with DC servo motor and dynamically balanced tonearm.

Specifications
Drive system: belt drive
Motor: DC servo motor
Platter: 300mm
Speeds: 33 and 45rpm
Wow and flutter: 0.2%
Signal to noise ratio: 60dB
Automatic system: return, reject
Tonearm: dynamic balance type
Effective length: 203mm
Cartridge: moving magnet
Frequency response: 20 to 20,000Hz
Stylus: 0.6 mil diamond
Replacement stylus: CN-234
Dimensions: 355 x 94 x 345mm

New Wave Enviro 10 Stage Plus Water Filter System

Submitted By: johnfreethy@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
New Wave Enviro 10 Stage Water Filter System provides fresh, great-tasting, safe, filtered water and removes common harmful contaminants that contribute to serious illnesses. The 10 Stage eliminates chlorine, trihalomethanes, organic arsenic and inorganic arsenic, mercury, lead, PCBs, floating solids, asbestos, pesticides, and herbicides. Once the water has been filtered, inert and desirable minerals like magnesium, potassium, chlorides, and fluoride are left behind. The 10 Stage easily attaches to your standard kitchen faucet that allows you to change between tap water and filtered water as needed.

This unit has a new filter in it that was replaced 2 months ago. The unit itself is about 3 years old. Filters are good for 1+ year for use by a family of four.

Asking $50. in Nehalem.
johnfreethy@gmail.com

Lost silver bracelet

Submitted By: soulargardens@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Lost on Saturday Feb. 26 while walking to park and around neighborhood up 3rd St to ocean and home. Silver round bracelet, no clasp and intermittent bead like design resembling east India. Not valuable but sentimental value as it belonged to my mother who took it off of her arm and gave it to me while she was dying.

Shark Professional Rotator Vacuum

Submitted By: johnfreethy@gmail.com – Click to email about this post
Bagless w/ 3 filters, at least 1 is HEPA filter for allergens.
Wand, brush and crevice tools included.
LED lights and swivel steering for “excellent visibility and control when maneuvering around furniture.
Extra large capacity dust cup.
Great all around powerful vacuum.
Used occasionally on pet hair.

The newer model sells for $269-$310. Asking $100.
3 years old. Located in Nehalem.

johnfreethy@gmail.com