Error during command authentication.
Error - unable to initiate communication with LISTSERV (errno=10061, phase=CONNECT, target=127.0.0.1:2306). The server is probably not started.
To complement this article, below is a link to a press release about Rice University Press, is reopening under a digital model after ceasing operations at the end of 1996. The books will be published on a web site, where they can be read free of charge, or purchased for download. Additionally, readers wishing to have a bound paper version of the book can order a print on demand (POD) copy. A major focus of the press’s work will be Art History, because, according to the press announcement: "Over the years, many university presses have slashed the number of art history titles, severely limiting younger scholars' prospects of publication ... Rice University Press has identified art history as a field that would benefit immediately and therefore it will be the press's first area of major effort." http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~rup/press.html - Sigrid Kelsey Max Marmor <[log in to unmask]>@LSV.UKY.EDU> on 09/26/2006 21:44:06 Please respond to Max Marmor <[log in to unmask]> Sent by: ART LIBRARIES SOCIETY DISCUSSION LIST <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] cc: (bcc: Sigrid E Kelsey/skelsey/LSU) Subject: [ARLIS-L] "Art History and Its Publications in the Electronic Age" Colleagues, I thought I'd point out that the full text of the Mellon-funded report by Hilary Ballon (Columbia) and Mariet Westermann (NYU) on "Art History and Its Publications in the Electronic Age", to which Al Willis drew our attention, is now available on the web at http://cnx.org/content/col10376/latest/ The supporting data and analyses, by Lawrence McGill (Princeton), are also on the web at http://cnx.org/content/col10377/latest/ I believe these URLs will change in coming days, but hopefully there will be a reference to the new URLs. The study is being published by Rice University Press and CLIR. Best, Max Marmor