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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 47, November 5, 2005, Article 1

    WAYNE'S WORDS

    Among our recent subscribers are Riccardo Paolucci and
    Bertram C.J. Warr Jr. Welcome aboard! We now have 814
    subscribers.

    A number of AOL subscribers reported not receiving
    their E-Sylum issue last week. This is a recurring
    problem with AOL. I've sent new copies to everyone who
    asked. Remember, our back issues are archived on the
    NBS web site, so if you miss an issue you can also
    catch up on your reading there.

    Several of this week’s contributors didn’t get an
    acknowledgement from me for their submissions, as I’ve
    been traveling and email access has been in transition –
    my apologies. Meanwhile, I’ll be visiting the Washington, D.C.
    area often over the next several weeks. No numismatic
    adventures to report so far, but I did see some sights with
    my family over the weekend, including the National Zoo and
    in drive-by mode) the U.S. Capitol, Washington Monument,
    The White House and Old Executive Office Building. If any
    of the locals can tell us where they hide the parking spaces
    on the weekend, please me know. We drove past dozens
    of closed parking garages and failing to locate a space,
    opted for the Zoo instead.

    Roger deWardt Lane writes: "Hello from South Florida,
    one week and a day after Wilma, which left us with
    no power for a week and the telephone line down (no
    DSL) too. The fact that the TV cable was out also was
    a good relief from watching the news. When I got my
    computer back after the storm the first thing I read
    was The E-Sylum. (I got the previous one late Sunday
    night before the Hurricane."

    The week brings news of record-setting prices for
    numismatic items of many types, including coins, paper
    money and even numismatic literature. It’s interesting
    to see how the participants dream up catchphrases for their
    press releases. One item is compared to the Holy Grail,
    and another to the Hope Diamond. So what will the next
    mega-sale be compared to, now that these slogans are taken?
    “This piece is the Magna Carta of counterstamped Lithuanian
    Subway tokens…”

    So what’s the most expensive numismatic book? See our
    lead story. In other news, the Latin Paper Money Society
    library finds a new home and an American Bank Note Company
    vignette book comes up for sale. Among the controversies
    touched on in this issue are the use of English letters on
    Korean banknotes, the recent resignation of the head of the
    Canadian Mint and calls for reform at the American
    Numismatic Association. We also give the ANA a pat on the
    back for David Sklow’s efforts to educate the general public
    about selling coins. As if that weren’t enough, this issue
    has two more interesting excerpts from William Blades' 1888 work,
    "The Enemies of Books,” and we learn all about the coins placed
    on the eyelids of the deceased President Abraham Lincoln, and
    where these coins are today. Enjoy!

    Wayne Homren
    Numismatic Bibliomania Society

URL da fonte Data de publicação
  • 2005-11-06
Volume
  • 8

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