AMERICAN LIBRARIES DIRECT July 26, 2006 AL Direct is a weekly electronic newsletter sent by the American Library Association every Wednesday to personal members by e-mail as a perquisite of membership. Click here to view the online version of our email: <%= util.viewHtmlLink %> POLL: What do YOU think? ******************************* Results of the July 19 poll: How do you use Wikipedia for answering reference questions? As a first choice for some questions (17%) When it comes up in a search-engine result (17%) As a secondary choice when other online options fail (22%) When print sources fail (6%) Rarely or occasionally (38%) Never (20%) Other (11%) (201 responses) For cumulated results and selected responses to all AL Direct polls, visit the AL Online website. U.S. & WORLD NEWS ******************************* New WorldCat search site offers public access http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2006abc/july2006a/worldcat.htm OCLC has announced that it will launch a new destination website that will allow users to search the holdings of libraries participating in the WorldCat database directly rather than finding the records as part of search-engine results. The firm says the aim of WorldCat.org, to be released in beta form in August, is “to make library resources more visible to Web users, and to increase awareness of libraries.”... Firings precede new DCPL director’s arrival http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2006abc/july2006a/dcpl.htm Days before Ginnie Cooper was slated to begin her tenure as director of the District of Columbia Public Library July 24, acting director Ellen M. Flaherty summarily dismissed five senior librarians, the Washington Post reported July 20. Board President John W. Hill said the board “fully supports this move.”... Union supporters disrupt Indianapolis library budget hearing http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2006abc/july2006a/indypl.htm Some 50 employees of the Indianapolis–Marion County Public Library demonstrated inside and picketed outside a public meeting July 20 on the library’s proposed budget—one that calls for cutting a scheduled 2% salary increase in half and trimming spending on staff telephone calls, travel, and training.... City agrees to consultant’s plan to keep Providence branches open http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2006abc/july2006a/providence.htm After accepting a financial consultant’s report that questioned the leadership ability of the Providence (R.I.) Public Library, the city’s Finance Committee agreed to the report’s recommendation July 20 to allocate an additional $250,000 to help keep six branches open and avoid staff layoffs. A day earlier, the PPL board of trustees agreed to contribute $250,000 from the library’s endowment and adopt the report’s suggestions for cutting the 2007 budget by $500,000.... Community mourns murder of Seattle school librarian http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2006abc/july2006a/seattlelibn.htm Hundreds of family and friends gathered July 20 along a hiking trail to honor the lives of Seattle school librarian Mary Cooper, 56, and her 27-year-old daughter Susanna Stodden. Cooper and Stodden, who were avid hikers, were found shot to death the afternoon of July 11 along the Pinnacle Lake Trail in the Mount Baker–Snoqualmie National Forest.... Texas State Library sues for return of documents http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2006abc/july2006a/texassues.htm The Texas State Library and Archives Commission in Austin has filed suit against Mary Ann Davis of Waco and the Robert E. Davis Family Trust to recover 48 documents relating to Texas history from the 1830s to the 1850s.... ALA NEWS ******************************* NPR’s Juan Williams to keynote JCLC http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2006/july2006/williamsjclc.htm Journalist Juan Williams will serve as presenter during the Joint Conference of Librarians of Color morning keynote session October 14 at the Dallas Adam’s Mark Hotel. Williams will discuss his controversial book Enough: The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America—and What We Can Do About It (Crown, August 2006).... Booklist Online ******************************* Featured review: Reference http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1697090 Gates Jr., Henry Louis, ed. Oxford African American Studies Center [database]. Oxford, [www.oxfordaasc.com]. July 2006. Oxford has built this new database with content from its recently published Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience and Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619–1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass, along with the second edition of Black Women in America (2005) and various other Oxford and Grove titles. There is additional material from the yet-to-be-published African American National Biography. Currently, researchers can access more than 7,500 articles on the site. Also on hand are more than 1,000 images, more than 100 maps, more than 100 charts and tables, and primary sources with specially written commentaries.... Reference books in Spanish for children and adolescents http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1701226 Isabel Schon, director of the Barahona Center for the Study of Books in Spanish for Children and Adolescents, California State University at San Marcos, reviews atlases and dictionaries, including Atlas enciclopédico infantil (Everest, 2005) and Diccionario de términos del mundo antiguo (Alianza, 2005).... NEW ORLEANS UPDATE ******************************* Florida librarians volunteer during conference http://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/content/news/librarians0720.html Four Palm Beach librarians helped process books at the storm-battered Our Lady of Perpetual Succor school in St. Bernard Parish as volunteers during ALA’s Annual Conference. Laura Brenkus, director of outreach and communications for the Society of the Four Arts adult library, and three colleagues worked in one of the school’s few air-conditioned rooms, entering numbers into databases and pasting bar codes onto books. The school’s new librarian supplied tablets to counteract the headaches induced by mold.... Palm Beach (Fla.) Daily News, July 20 Google interviews conference-goers http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8309754983738455682&hl=en Librarians at Annual Conference in New Orleans express their thoughts at the Google booth as well as at the company’s reception in this 3-minute video.... Google Librarian Center DIVISION NEWS ******************************* Teen Tech Week logo winner http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2006/july2006/TeenTechLogowinner.htm YALSA has announced that teen Ahmad Ghadban (right) of the Wood County District Public Library in Bowling Green, Ohio, is the winner of the Teen Tech Week logo contest for his design, “Plug into Technology.” Teen Tech Week, March 4–7, 2007, is a new YALSA celebration aimed at getting teens to use their libraries for the different technologies offered there, such as DVDs, databases, audiobooks, and video games.... Participants named in 2006 YA Galley project http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2006/july2006/YAGalleyTTTproject.htm YALSA has selected 15 public libraries and school library media centers from across the country to participate in its Young Adult Galley/Teens’ Top Ten project. YA Galley is an ongoing project in which publishers of young adult books provide copies of their recent titles to teen book discussion groups in libraries.... Lexington to host Arbuthnot lecturer Kevin Henkes http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2006/july2006/KentuckyhostsArbuthnot.htm ALSC has chosen Lexington, Kentucky, as the site of the 2007 May Hill Arbuthnot Honor Lecture to be held Sunday, March 4. Children’s illustrator and author Kevin Henkes will deliver the lecture, which will be hosted by the McConnell Center for the Study of Children’s Literature at the University of Kentucky School of Library and Information Science.... PLA announces new start dates for e-learning courses http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2006/july2006/PLAeLearningcourses.htm “E-Learning @ PLA,” the online education program of the Public Library Association, will offer five new start dates for two of its popular courses. “New Planning for Results” and “Creating Policies for Results” will each be offered five times between September 2006 and April 2007.... Shoaf selected as LA&M associate editor http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2006/july2006/ShoafLAMassociateeditor.htm LAMA has announced that Eric C. Shoaf, preservation librarian at Brown University’s Rockefeller Library in Providence, Rhode Island, is the new associate editor of its quarterly magazine Library Administration and Management.... Lapsley is 2006–2007 LAMA president http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2006/july2006/LapsleyLAMApresident.htm Andrea R. Lapsley, director of development for libraries at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, began her 2006–2007 term as president of LAMA on July 1.... AWARDS ******************************* Norman Horrocks named Officer of the Order of Canada http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20060724/order_canada_060724/20060724?hub=Canada Norman Horrocks, former director of the library school at Dalhousie University, was one of 77 people appointed July 24 to the Order of Canada by Governor General Michaelle Jean. The Order of Canada was established in 1967 to recognize outstanding achievement and service in various fields of endeavor. It is Canada’s highest honor for lifetime achievement and has three different levels of membership: Companion, Officer, and Member.... Canadian Press, July 24 SEEN ONLINE ******************************* Vamos a Cuba ordered back on shelf http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/15114360.htm A federal judge on Monday ordered all copies of Vamos a Cuba and 23 other children’s books returned to Miami-Dade school libraries, hobbling the School Board’s attempt to ban the controversial books. In a sometimes scathing 89-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Alan Gold said the School Board “abused its discretion in a manner that violated the transcendent imperatives of the First Amendment.”... Miami Herald, July 24 UC–Google partnership explored http://www.dailycal.org/sharticle.php?id=20931 The University of California system may soon team up with search-engine giant Google to put millions of university library books online. The UC Board of Regents is in talks with the company to join the Google Library Project, which is currently scanning the libraries of the University of Michigan, the University of Oxford, Harvard University, Stanford University, and the New York Public Library.... Daily Californian, July 20 DC’s Rule 7 a barrier to literacy http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/24/AR2006072401018.html Leonard Minsky is a longtime Naderite, an academic who has helped produce the research that Ralph Nader and his various projects use to change public policy. Minsky is not one to yield to bureaucratic and regulatory obstacles. But he leaves his post as director of Nader’s D.C. Library Renaissance Project—a four-year-old effort to boost support and funding for the libraries—concluding that Rule 7 is effectively preventing the city from teaching immigrants and U.S.-born adults how to read.... Washington Post, July 25 Indiana University’s Lilly Library acquires collection of mechanical puzzles http://newsinfo.iu.edu/news/page/normal/3776.html Puzzle enthusiast and author Jerry Slocum has announced his intention to donate his prized collection of more than 30,000 puzzles and nearly 4,000 puzzle-related books to IU’s Lilly Library. Beginning August 3, approximately 400 of the puzzles will be on display in a refurbished exhibition space named in Slocum’s honor.... Indiana University, July 19 NYPL opens its 86th branch http://www.nypl.org/press/2006/morrispark06.cfm A ribbon cutting and dedication ceremony marked the opening of New York Public Library’s new $2.4-million Morris Park branch library, located at 985 Morris Park Avenue in the Bronx, on July 21. Designed by architect Joel David Zeiden, the 6,600-square-foot, two-level library has an extensive collection of 25,000 adult, young adult, and children’s books; DVDs and audio recordings; and 19 public-access computers, wireless internet, and a self-checkout station.... New York Public Library; Time Warner Cable’s NY1 News, July 25 100-year-old librarian “keeps dust off the floor” in Vinland, Kansas http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2006/jul/24/100yearold_librarian_keeps_dust_floor_vinland/ For the last eight decades, Martha Cutter Kelley Smith has tended to the books at the Coal Creek Library. But not because she’s an avid reader. Just as she has for the past 80 years, the 100-year-old Smith toils away at Kansas’ oldest library, keeping herself busy and keeping a monument to the small community of Vinland up and running.... Lawrence (Kans.) Journal-World, July 24 Dictionary marks 200th anniversary http://www.masslive.com/living/republican/index.ssf?/base/living-1/1153727068293630.xml&coll=1 A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language turned 200 years old this year, but most Americans probably have never heard of the work that introduced 5,000 new words to readers and is widely considered the first American dictionary. The 408-page book, created by lexicographer and writer Noah Webster, does not look like a modern dictionary.... Springfield (Mass.) Republican, July 24 Readers vs. resellers at library book sales http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/22/nyregion/nyregionspecial2/23ctbooks.html When the Pequot Library in Southport, Connecticut, begins its five-day book sale on Friday, there will be 147,000 books available, including a first printing of the novel Ben-Hur and a 1911 edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica. But those books, and many of the other 300 rare books there, are expected to be gone soon after the gate opens at 9 a.m.... New York Times, July 22 ACTIONS AND ANSWERS ******************************* Skokie Read posters capture Illinois pols http://www.flickr.com/photos/skokiepl/sets/72157594171085212/ U.S. Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) displays one of her favorite books, Real Chicago: Photographs from the Files of the Chicago Sun-Times (2004), by Richard Cahan, Michael Williams, and Neal Samors. The poster is one in a series of eight produced by the Skokie (Ill.) Public Library.... Skokie (Ill.) Public Library Can Wikipedia conquer expertise? http://www.newyorker.com/fact/ On March 1, Wikipedia, the online interactive encyclopedia, hit the million-articles mark, with an entry on Jordanhill, a railway station in suburban Glasgow. The Encyclopædia Britannica, which for more than two centuries has been considered the gold standard for reference works, has only 120,000 entries in its most comprehensive edition. Apparently, no traditional encyclopedia has ever suspected that someone might wonder about Sudoku or about prostitution in China.... New Yorker, July 31 Ex Libris acquired http://blogs.ala.org/pace.php?title=ex_libris_acquired AL blogger Andrew Pace welcomes speculation on this automation news: “It might not be the ‘continued consolidation’ of the ILS market that has been predicted by many, including me, but it’s clearly a step in that direction. Ex Libris Group announced early this morning (not quite as early in Jerusalem, where the company is headquartered) that it will be acquired by Francisco Partners, ‘one of the world’s largest technology-focused private equity funds.’”... Hectic Pace, July 26 Most people use two-word phrases for online searches http://www.onestat.com/html/aboutus_pressbox45-search-phrases.html Dutch web-analytics company OneStat.com reports that most people use two-word phrases in search engines. Of all the search phrases worldwide, 28.9% of the people use two-word phrases, 27.8% use three-word phrases, and 17.1% use four-word phrases. Fewer people use one keyword since the last measurement in July 2005.... OneStat.com, July 24 2006 Improving Literacy grants http://www.ala.org/ala/washoff/washnews/2006ndx/074jul25.htm The Department of Education announced on July 25 the 2006 grantees for the Improving Literacy Through School Libraries program. In total, only 78 grants were awarded in only 26 states. View the list of grant awards and abstracts here. The program is administered by the U.S. Department of Education and is the first program specifically aimed at upgrading school libraries since the original school library resources program was established in 1965.... ALA Washington Office, July 25 Conference to focus on serving youth during out-of-school time http://www.urbanlibraries.org/lil_conf_factsheet.html Serving urban youth during out-of-school hours will be the focus of a major conference—Learning in Libraries: A National Call to Action—to be held October 19–20 in New York City. The deadline for registration is August 31. Out-of-School Time programming is attracting serious attention from local, state, and national policy makers and legislators.... Urban Libraries Council, July 17 Free template for writing disaster plans http://www.dplan.org/ The Northeast Document Conservation Center and the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners have created dPlan, a free online program to help institutions write comprehensive disaster plans. dPlan provides an easy-to-use template that allows museums, libraries, archives, and other cultural institutions of all sizes to develop a customized plan that includes disaster response procedures, salvage priorities, preventive maintenance schedules, and more.... Northeast Document Conservation Center Collaborative reference work in the blogosphere (PDF file) http://dlist.sir.arizona.edu/1267/01/Pomerantz-Preprint-RSR-2006.pdf UNC-Chapel Hill SILS Assistant Professor Jeffrey Pomerantz and Ph.D. candidate Frederic Stutzman argue that blogs can be used to good effect in reference services and discuss Lyceum, an open source blogosphere application, as an environment for blog-based reference service.... Reference Services Review 34, no. 2 (2006) ARL salary survey highlights http://www.arl.org/newsltr/246/salarysrvy.html The combined median salary for U.S. and Canadian ARL university libraries rose to $57,074—a 3.3% gain over the past year. This kept pace with inflation in the U.S., where the Consumer Price Index rose 3.2%, and outperformed inflation in Canada, where the CPI increased 2.0%. The median nonuniversity library salary increased to $76,083; that 2.8% increase was half as large as in 2004–2005.... Association of Research Libraries, Bimonthly Report, June Book trailers are building hype, movie-style http://www.cbc.ca/arts/media/viewtothrill.html Judith Keenan says the rationale behind book trailers is to take the onus off retailers to promote books and market to consumers directly. The convenience and immediacy of the internet make it a no-brainer. HarperCollins has produced close to a dozen trailers since early February. The motivation is “to drive early word of mouth,” says Steve Osgoode, director of online marketing and new media for HarperCollins Canada.... CBC, July 3 Documetary filmmakers’ statement of best practices in fair use (PDF file) http://www.documentary.org/resources/src/Fair_Use/bestpractices.pdf This statement of best practices in fair use is necessary because filmmakers have found themselves, over the last decade, increasingly constrained by demands to clear rights for copyrighted material. Today, documentarians believe that their ability to communicate effectively is being restricted by an overly rigid approach to copyright compliance, and that the public suffers as a result.... International Documentary Association, November 18, 2005 CONTACT US ******************************* George M. Eberhart, Editor: geberhart@ala.org Karen Sheets, Graphics and Design: ksheets@ala.org Send feedback: aldirect@ala.org AL Direct FAQ: www.ala.org/aldirect/ To advertise in American Libraries Direct contact: Leonard Kniffel, Editor-in-Chief, lkniffel@ala.org American Libraries 50 E. Huron St., Chicago, IL 60611 http://www.ala.org/alonline/ 800-545-2433, ext. 4216 ISSN 1559-369X.