Interlochen’s Successful Summer

The Interlochen Center has made some big changes in the school in the past year. Interlochen president Jeffrey Kimpton has been reorganizing the venerable institution and the changes seem to be paying off. “The goal is to retain Interlochen’s historical mission while adjusting to a changing society and becoming more financially secure. The quality and competence of the staff is paramount. This summer, we’ve not had one complaint about a teacher. Last year we had complaints all the time.”

In Minnesota: How About Restoring Arts Funding?

Minnesota’s state legislators “gutted arts funding” in 2003. Dominic Papatola writes that with the State meeting to consider funding for stadiums, they shouldn’t forget about restoring some of that arts money. “Yes, a bundle of money got tossed at the Guthrie and Children’s theaters. But cuts to the Minnesota State Arts Board — which serves individual artists, arts organizations and school kids from Moorhead to Ely to Rochester — cost the agency a third of its budget and two-fifths of its staff. Don’t forget that states and municipalities across the country are returning to the arts-funding table.”

Some Protest Hunter S’s Blast-off

Hunter S. Thmpson’s ashes were blasted off into space Saturday, but some of his admirers weren’t happy about the show. “I am pretty sure it isn’t how Hunter would have done it,” said longtime friend George Stranahan. The writer’s ashes were fired from atop a 15-story tower modeled after Thompson’s logo: a clenched fist, holding a peyote button, rising from the hilt of a dagger. It was built between his home and a tree-covered canyon wall.”

Will The Internet Save Classical Music?

“In the virtual absence of classical radio in America, the Internet can provide what radio does for other musical genres, namely a “free” means of hearing new and unfamiliar music, which if you like, you’ll go out and buy. But with the element of radio removed from the market structure, there are almost no places to randomly hear Beethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony or Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring” while driving home from school or work. The Net provides direct access. With the stuffiness removed from the classical experience, people can hear just how glorious Stravinsky really is.”

Print-On-Demand Changing The Book Business

Print-on-demand books are becoming a big presence in the book marketplace. “Unlike previous self-published books, PODs are digitally printed, which makes them cheaper and quicker to produce. Since 1997, when the technology became widely available, print-on-demand companies have taken over a big chunk of the book industry. Out of the 195,000 titles printed last year, one of every four was a POD.”

LA Times: Getty Has A Problem

The LA Times weighs in on matters Getty. “The Getty has long held an exalted place in the art world, with its diverse collections, incomparable setting and unmatched wealth. But these most recent disclosures show the foundation to be exceptional in an entirely different way. They bring back unpleasant memories of the tales of corporate greed earlier this decade, when it seemed that every scandal could be traced to an ‘imperial CEO’ and his all-too-compliant board.”

The Further Adventures Of Peter Pan (A Stronger Wendy, and Peter Becomes Hook?)

Geraldine McCaughrean, who won in a worldwide competition to write a sequel to Peter Pan has revealed a few details of her plans. “McCaughrean says she has rewritten the final pages of Peter Pan to help transport readers back to Neverland, to a setting 25 years after the boy who never grew up apparently vanquished his pirate foe. She hints that the character of Wendy will be a stronger, more modern woman, while – in a remarkable twist – the immortal Peter may be transformed into his dastardly nemesis, Captain Hook. While some aficionados may be shocked by the revelations, experts are excited and insist McCaughrean is doing justice to Barrie’s modern interests in issues of gender and humanity’s struggle with inner demons.”

A Short Story Booker?

The UK’s National Short Story Prize is the world’s richest. “In what organisers hope will one day grow to the size and prominence of the Booker Prize, the competition aims to honour the country’s finest writers of short stories so is only open to authors with a previous record of publication who are either UK nationals or residents.”