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CBRLife = 堪 生 活 is now being received through legal deposit. Published by a group of young Chinese Australians, it is a ‘magazine for Chinese Australians living in Canberra, recording their lives and memories with connection of this City . While many multicultural publishers are pleased to deposit their works with the Library, others can be less responsive to the Library’s standard ‘official’ approach. There was a good example recently with the acquisition of three volumes of Aodaliya hua ren nian jian = Yearbook of Chinese in Australia, which we believe to be the first Chinese language yearbooks published in Australia. The acquisition was achieved indirectly, as the publisher did not respond to direct approaches requesting deposit. One of the Library’s volunteers made contact with the editor via his personal network, at which point the volumes were deposited. In these situations, the ‘community-based’ collecting approach is liable to be more successful, and applies in a multitude of other situations as we.
Letters: QR scans, fair pay, PC gone mad, under delivery, and silencing the military 9 May, 2021 05:00 PM 8 minutes to read In a letter in Thursday s Herald Heng Teoh wrote that all retailers should refuse to serve any person who failed to scan the QR code. Photo / Greg Bowker In a letter in Thursday s Herald Heng Teoh wrote that all retailers should refuse to serve any person who failed to scan the QR code. Photo / Greg Bowker NZ Herald QR scans elude the phoneless In a letter in Thursday s Herald Heng Teoh wrote that all retailers should refuse to serve any person who failed to scan the QR code.
Chris Packham and his New Caledonian crow Are humans as smart as crows? Once the BBC poses a question like that, you already know the answer. In a new series, However, Telegraph reviewer Anita Singh notes that the first episode “had an air of being cobbled together” with old footage of animals doing amusing tricks. One experiment involved a New Caledonian crow, a species which has acquired a reputation for tool-making amongst biologists. In the wild, it removes grubs and bugs from logs with twigs. Packham set up an experiment in which the bird had to access a treat from a perspex box through a series of manoeuvres. It needed to “push a ball out of the way, withdraw three sticks barring the door, reach inside and pull out the string attached to the food”.