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April 18, 2007
Contents
U.S. & World News [#usworld]
ALA News [#alanews]
Booklist Online [#booklist]
D.C. Update [#dcupdate]
Division News [#divisionnews]
Round Table News [#roundtable]
Awards [#awards]
Seen Online [#seenonline]
Tech Talk [#techtalk]
Actions & Answers [#actionsanswers]
Poll [#poll]
Calendar [#datebook]
[http://www.sirsidynixinstitute.com/seminar_page.php?sid=89]
[http://www.sirsidynix.com]
U.S. & World News
====================================================================================================
LIBRARIAN Act of 2007 introduced
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/librarianact.htm]
On National Library Workers Day, April 17, the Librarian Incentive to Boost Recruitment and
Retention in Areas of Need (LIBRARIAN) Act of 2007 was introduced in both the U.S. Senate (S.
1121) and the House of Representatives (H.R. 1877). The bipartisan bill was introduced in the
House by Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-Calif.), along with Reps. Raúl Grijalva (D-Ariz.), Vern Ehlers
(R-Mich.), and John Shimkus (R-Ill.), and in the Senate by Sens. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) and Thad
Cochran (R-Miss.). The bill provides for Perkins student loan
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Perkins_Loan] forgiveness, which will encourage individuals
to become and remain librarians in low-income schools and public libraries....
Former “John Doe” warns of Patriot Act abuse
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/april2007/patriotabuse.cfm]
The Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution heard testimony April 11 from George
Christian, one of four former plaintiffs in the John Doe v. Gonzales lawsuit that contested the
constitutionality of the FBI’s use of National Security Letters (NSLs). Christian, the
executive director of the Connecticut nonprofit library consortium Library Connection, submitted
his testimony on behalf of the American Library Association....
Military libraries face closure
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/april2007/militarylibs.cfm]
In what could prefigure a distressing trend among military libraries, the Fort Huachuca Library,
located on an Army installation in southeastern Arizona, closed recently after officials
determined that the library did not meet community and Army standards. Meanwhile, in Falls Church,
Virginia, the Army Surgeon General’s Armed Forces Medical Library, founded in 1836, is
battling to avoid shutdown in the wake of budget cuts. The staff is currently gathering
information to make a case for their institution’s survival.....
Rochester residents weigh in on filtering
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/april2007/rochhearing.cfm]
Some 100 people attended the first of three public forums April 12 on whether staff at the
Rochester and Monroe County (N.Y.) Library System should continue their policy of allowing adult
users to view blocked websites on request. Trustees scheduled the hearings as part of a policy
review in response to a threat from County Executive Maggie Brooks to withhold $6.6 million in
funding if the library does not crack down on access to internet pornography....
Exhibit complainant defends free speech in Mesa County
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/april2007/mesacounty.cfm]
A retired attorney who voiced an objection in February to an anti-gay exhibit at the Mesa County
(Colo.) Public Library District has convinced trustees not to add any restrictions or prior
approval requirements to the library’s display policy. “Let the display go up,”
Bill Hugenberg told trustees at a special April 5 meeting....
ALA News
====================================================================================================
New data on U.S. libraries show almost 2 billion served
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/salpr07.htm]
Ten years after some experts predicted the demise of the nation’s system of libraries as a result
of the internet explosion, the most current national data on library use shows that the exact
opposite has happened. Data released April 16 by ALA indicates that the number of visits to public
libraries in the United States increased 61% between 1994 and 2004. According to the 2007 State of
America’s Libraries
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/march2007/stateoflibraries.htm] report, there were
nearly two billion visits to U.S. libraries in fiscal year 2004....
Fort Worth Public Library branch to get makeover
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/ALAIdearcmakeover.htm]
The Riverside branch of the Fort Worth (Tex.) Public Library is receiving a makeover during
National Library Week, thanks to a Reading Renovation Volunteer Project cosponsored by Idearc
Media and ALA. Over the course of three days, Idearc Media volunteers are moving collections,
landscaping, installing colorful furniture, and painting walls—highlighted by the creation of new
murals. The branch will reopen April 20....
ALA joins Informed Meetings Exchange
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/inmex07.htm]
ALA is the latest subscriber to the Informed Meetings Exchange. INMEX [http://www.inmex.org/]
closely researches and analyzes the hotel industry, and will provide information to ALA that will
support the Association’s efforts to share meeting and convention dollars with hotels that respect
their workers and their collective bargaining rights....
OIF podcast features Chris Crutcher
[http://blogs.ala.org/oif.php?title=chriscrutcher_1&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1]
Enjoy the Office for Intellectual Freedom podcast (mp3 file
[http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/oifprograms/oifpodcasts/chriscrutcherreading_jan232007.mp3], 53:13) of
teacher, family therapist, and award-winning author Chris Crutcher recounting stories related to
his popular novels at the Seattle Public Library. Crutcher was the featured speaker at a
fundraiser for the Freedom to Read Foundation on January 21, in conjunction with the 2007 ALA
Midwinter Meeting....
Office for Intellectual Freedom, Apr. 13
Booklist Online
====================================================================================================
Featured review: Reference
[http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1928887]
Larkin, Colin, editor. The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Dec. 2006. 10 vols. Oxford, hardcover
(978-0-19-531373-4).
Larkin’s new edition contains more than 27,000 entries, including 6,000 new ones and updates
of many existing ones. The most comprehensive guide to popular music, this work includes virtually
all well-known artists as well as thousands who are lesser known. The set has grown from 4 volumes
to 10 since the first edition appeared, in 1992. Although the set is international in scope, the
majority of the featured artists are from the U.S. and the U.K., arguably the most important
sources of what we call “popular” music....
[http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1954868]
[http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1954885]
David Wright [http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1954868] and Katie
Mediatore Stover [http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1954885] both
recommend some historical fiction, from The Big Sky to The Black Rose....
@ Visit Booklist Online [http://www.booklistonline.com/] for other reviews and much more....
D.C. Update
====================================================================================================
Washington’s distillery a new tourist spot
[http://www.cnn.com/2007/TRAVEL/DESTINATIONS/04/11/washington.distillery.ap/index.html]
After a nearly 200-year hiatus, George Washington’s still is bubbling again, churning out the same
sort of rye whiskey that made the Founding Father the nation’s most successful whiskey producer in
the years after his presidency. The Mount Vernon estate on March 30 officially opened a
$2.1-million reconstruction of Washington’s original distillery
[http://www.mountvernon.org/learn/pres_arch/index.cfm/sss/82] on the exact site where it was
located in 1799, a few miles down the road from his famous mansion overlooking the Potomac
River....
CNN, Apr. 11
Division News
====================================================================================================
ACRL’s 13th National Conference: The movie [http://blip.tv/file/203139]
American Libraries editors George Eberhart and Daniel Kraus filmed and edited this 7-minute video
memento of the ACRL Conference in Baltimore, March 29–April 1. No frogs or fish were harmed in any
way during production. Featuring filmmaker John Waters, educator Michael Eric Dyson, ACRL
President Pamela Snelson, a few poster session presenters, and other unsuspecting attendees.
(Another copy [http://youtube.com/watch?v=sJ_Tjd1MOow] of the video is on YouTube.)...
BlipTV, Apr. 18; YouTube, Apr. 17
editor [http://www.ala.org/ala/aasl/aaslpubsandjournals/slmrb/editor.htm]
AASL is looking for an editor for its online research journal. The School Library Media Research
editor, a stipend position, is responsible for setting the scope and tone of the journal,
coordinating the refereeing process, and developing and maintaining positive relationships with
authors and potential authors. The editor also coordinates all steps of the publication process
and serves as an ex-officio member of the AASL Publications Committee....
ALCTS President’s Program to feature Peter Morville
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/PresidentsProgram2007.htm]
Peter Morville, author of Ambient Findability and president of Semantic Studios, will speak at the
2007 ALCTS President’s Program, “Ambient Findability: Librarians, Libraries, and the
Internet of Things,” June 25, 10:30 a.m., during ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C....
Preconference to focus on users with disabilities
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/ALSCASCLApreconference.htm]
ALSC and ASCLA will host an all-day preconference on “The Underserved 20 Percent: Children,
Teens, and Adults with Disabilities,” June 22, during ALA Annual Conference in Washington,
D.C. Harriet McBryde Johnson, a leading disabilities-rights activist, lawyer, and author of Too
Late to Die Young and Accidents of Nature, will be the keynote speaker....
AASL to offer advocacy institute
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/AASLadvocacyworkshop.htm]
AASL will offer an advocacy preconference workshop entitled “Advocacy Begins with Strategic
Planning,” June 22, during ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. Organizational
consultant Maureen Sullivan will lead this interactive workshop, teaching strategic planning
skills for the school library setting....
ASCLA annual dinner to benefit Century Scholarship
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/LSSPSAnnualDinner.htm]
The ASCLA Libraries Serving Special Populations Section will host its annual dinner on June 24
from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at La Tasca Spanish Tapas Bar and Restaurant during the ALA Annual
Conference in Washington, D.C. A portion of the proceeds raised from the event will be used to
benefit the Century Scholarship Fund....
Round Table News
====================================================================================================
Fighting government disinformation is a librarian’s mandate
[http://librarian.lishost.org/?p=724]
Kathleen de la Peña McCook writes: “I began my work as a librarian during the time of the Pentagon
Papers. That early experience convinced me that a central value of librarianship is the
public’s right to know. At the very center of the lies that undergird the Bush
administration has been a calculated pattern of disinformation. Fighting disinformation is
embodied in the work of the ALA Government Documents Round Table.”...
Librarian blog, Apr. 15
Awards
====================================================================================================
Nine winners of the AIA/ALA Library Building Awards
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/AIAALALibraryBuilding.htm]
The American Institute of Architects has announced the nine recipients of the 2007 AIA/ALA Library
Building Awards. Biennially, representatives from the AIA and ALA gather to celebrate the finest
examples of library design by architects licensed in the United States. The 2007 awards
(administered by LAMA) honor nine separate projects, ranging in size from a public elementary
school library (Robin Hood Foundation Library for P.S. 192 in New York City, above) to a
presidential library (William J. Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock)....
Alliance System is 2007 Library of the Future
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/04172007.htm]
Kitty Pope, executive director of the Alliance Library System in East Peoria, Illinois, and the
international collaborative group of librarians working on Alliance Second Life Library, are the
2007 recipients of the $1,500 ALA/Information Today Library of the Future Award. Pope and the
Alliance Second Life Library librarians are recognized for their ground-breaking work in the
development of a 3D virtual-world library, for forging new partnerships within the virtual world,
and for providing programs, services, and materials to the more than 1.3 million residents who
inhabit Second Life....
Winston Tabb receives Lippincott Award
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/LippincottAward2007.htm]
Winston Tabb, dean of university libraries and Sheridan director at Johns Hopkins University, is
this year’s recipient of ALA’s Joseph W. Lippincott Award. The award, founded in 1938, is
given annually to an individual for distinguished service to the profession of librarianship and
consists of a gold-framed citation and $1,000 donated by the award founder’s grandson,
Joseph W. Lippincott, III....
Dresang wins Scholastic Library Publishing Award
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/ScholasticLibraryAward.htm]
Eliza T. Dresang is the winner of the 2007 Scholastic Library Publishing Award, to be be presented
June 26, during ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. The award is bestowed on a librarian
whose extraordinary contributions to promoting access to books and encouraging a love of reading
for lifelong learning exemplifies outstanding achievement in the profession. Dresang will receive
a citation and $1,000 prize, donated by Scholastic Library Publishing....
LITA names Kilgour Award winner
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/april2007/LITAKilgourAward.htm]
Richard Pearce-Moses is the winner of the Frederick G. Kilgour Award for Research in Library and
Information Technology for 2007. The award is sponsored by OCLC Online Computer Library Center and
LITA. Among Pearce-Moses’ achievements is the Arizona Model for preservation and access of
web documents....
Awards for serving the blind and physically handicapped
[http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2007/07-084.html]
The National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped at the Library of Congress
presented network library awards April 17 to the Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
at the Free Library of Philadelphia, and to the Washtenaw County Library for the Blind and
Physically Disabled of Ann Arbor, Michigan....
Library of Congress, Apr. 17
Billington receives inaugural Lafayette Prize [http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2007/07-077.html]
Librarian of Congress James H. Billington is the recipient of the inaugural Lafayette Prize, given
by the French-American Cultural Foundation for contributions to the development of relations
between the United States and France. The new annual award was created to celebrate the 250th
anniversary of the birth of the Marquis de Lafayette, the French general who served heroically in
the American Revolution....
Library of Congress, Apr. 17
IFLA International Marketing Awards [http://www.ifla.org/III/grants/ima-award.htm]
The IFLA Section on Management and Marketing, in collaboration with SirsiDynix, has announced the
winners of the 5th IFLA International Marketing Award for 2007. First place was awarded to Olga
Einasto (right), representing the University of Tartu Library, Estonia, for “The Night Library and
the Mom-Student Library Project.” Second place went to the Zadar (Croatia) Public Library, and
third place to the Miraflores Public Library in Lima, Peru....
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions
Seen Online
====================================================================================================
Ruling freezes library surveillance video
[http://www.postcrescent.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070417/APC0101/704170603/1003/APCnews]
The Neenah (Wis.) Public Library possesses a surveillance video of a man who reportedly was
masturbating earlier this month among the nonfiction book aisles on the library’s second floor.
Library Director Stephen Proces said he wants the suspect caught. He has shown the video to
library employees and directed them to call police if they see the man enter the library again.
But he can’t legally share the video with police without a court order....
Appleton (Wis.) Post-Crescent, Apr. 17
Pascagoula library holds grand reopening
[http://www.gulflive.com/news/mississippipress/index.ssf?/base/news/1176804984144660.xml]
“There’s no place like home” was the theme of the grand reopening of the Pascagoula (Miss.) Public
Library, which was attended April 16 by nearly 100 people. Most books damaged by Hurricane Katrina
were saved, but carpeting, sheet rock, and rusty shelving had to be replaced. Now the Pascagoula
branch, the Jackson–George Regional Library System’s largest, has a new circulation desk, tables
and chairs, larger public reading areas, and 20 public computers....
Pascagoula Mississippi Press, Apr. 17
Codex Gigas returns to Prague for exhibition
[http://www.ctk.cz/english/news/english_view.php?id=247407]
The Codex Gigas, which Swedish troops took away from Bohemia in 1648 during the Thirty Years’ War,
will return temporarily to Prague this year for display in the National Library. Stockholm’s Royal
Library experts told Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek that the bible is one of the most
valuable medieval manuscripts. The Swedes are digitizing the bible as a gift to the Czech
Republic....
Czech News Agency, Apr. 17
Terrorism books face ban in Australia [http://www.bordermail.com.au/news/bm/national/739341.html]
Books and DVDs that glorify terrorism will face much tougher censorship tests under new laws,
federal Attorney-General Philip Ruddock said. Ruddock and state attorneys-general struck an
agreement April 13 to allow materials that “advocate” terrorism to be pulled from bookstore
shelves and stopped at Australia’s border. The state attorneys-general will report back to
Canberra on the feasibility of the proposed laws by July. ...
Wodonga (Vic.) Border Mail, Apr. 14
Condemning books has no end [http://www.joplinglobe.com/editorial/local_story_104200321.html]
A Joplin Globe reader was so outraged that the Joplin (Mo.) Public Library was offering certain
books to teenagers that she wrote a letter to the editor condemning them. In her letter she used
phrases like “moral decay,” “societal anarchy,” and “twisted
priorities” to make her point. Two of the books she referenced were The Sex Book by Jane
Pavanel and The Whole Truth about Contraception by Beverly Winikoff and Suzanne Wymelenberg. Guest
columnist Ron Hutchison writes, tongue-in-cheek, “The less high-school students know about the
consequences of sex and contraception, the better off they’ll be, especially if there is an
unwanted pregnancy involved.”...
Joplin (Mo.) Globe, Apr. 14
Professor and librarian lauded for health literacy study
[http://www.ourmidland.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18213124&BRD=2289&PAG=461&dept_id=472542&rfi=6]
A Central Michigan University professor and librarian are being honored
[http://www.infolit.org/star_8.html] for their study that found that some rely on the internet for
medical information in a way that’s bad for their health. Lana Ivanitskaya, associate
professor of health sciences, and Anne Casey (right), associate dean of libraries, began their
study six years ago on the effective use of electronic documents, including those available
through the internet....
Midland (Mich.) Daily News, Apr. 15
Traffic Safety reading room could disappear
[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/16/AR2007041601637.html]
Alarm bells went off last year when researchers learned that the U.S. National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration might archive, discard, or otherwise send off-site a trove of materials in
preparation for a move to a new building with less space. The agency has maintained a public
document room since it opened in 1970, but in 2006 no space was allocated for a NHTSA reading room
in a new building that will house most of the Transportation Department....
Washington Post, Apr. 17
Sacramento retains unfiltered adult access
[http://www.calcatholic.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?id=06f4043e-2d7a-4ea5-93ad-07a98dfbe0ad]
The Sacramento (Calif.) Public Library Authority rejected March 22 by a 5–4 vote a proposal to
prohibit adults from requesting unfiltered internet access. During an open hearing, ACLU member
and Sacramento attorney Allen Asch argued that enforced filters would be unconstitutional,
prompting city councilwoman and library board member Bonnie Pannell to respond, “excuse my
language, but screw folks’ constitutional rights,” which Asch has incorporated into a YouTube
video [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HSkWN5eIxWM]....
California Catholic Daily, Apr. 9; YouTube, Mar. 29
The 2007 “Who Reads What” list
[http://www.boston.com/news/local/maine/articles/2007/04/14/who_reads_what_list_includes_authors_ana
lyst_skateboarder/]
A skateboarding pro and a former Pentagon security analyst are among the latest readers to detail
their favorite books in the “Who Reads What? [http://www.gpl.lib.me.us/wrw.htm]” list, which for
two decades has surveyed the top picks of presidents, movie stars, and athletes. “Some of these
books are pretty heavy, but it really correlates with what the times are,” said Glenna Nowell, a
retired librarian for Gardiner, Maine, who compiles the annual list as a way to inspire people to
read more....
Associated Press, Apr. 14
Library honors nonagenarian’s reading
[http://www.wirralglobe.co.uk/news/wirralnews/display.var.1332163.0.library_honours_ruths_87_years_o
f_reading.php]
Pensioner Ruth Ogden, 94, has one of the longest-running library memberships in the Borough of
Wirral, England, and staff at Wallasey Central Library helped to honor her 87 years of reading
with a party celebrating her borrowing of nearly 19,000 books. Ruth spends seven days a week
choosing her next book and usually heads straight for the horror section....
Wirral (U.K.) Globe, Apr. 16
Intellidating at the library
[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/15/AR2007041501096.html]
The hot spot du jour of Manhattan nightlife looms large over Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street, where
crowds of stylish YoCos—young cosmopolitans—were jostling inside one evening last week for the
right to pay the $15 cover. Rather than crossing the velvet ropes for a rave, house party, or
disco, the hip patrons here were packing into a controversial lecture at the New York Public
Library on the modern meaning of feminism....
Washington Post, Apr. 16
UK library protesters in mass Read Out
[http://www.thisishampshire.net/news/hampshirechroniclenews/display.var.1332042.0.library_protesters
_in_mass_read_out.php]
More than 200 people congregated in downtown Winchester to show their support for Hampshire’s
library service. Unison, the trade union organizing the demonstration, invited supporters to bring
along their favorite book for a mass “Read Out” at the Buttercross on April 16. Some 4,000
residents have already signed a petition protesting against plans to axe 27 out of 60 professional
librarians and downgrade a further 17 to “library officers” with pay cuts of up to £6,700....
Hampshire Chronicle, Apr. 16
Tech Talk
====================================================================================================
A newbie’s guide to Flickr [http://www.webware.com/8301-1_109-9703620-2.html]
Josh Lowensohn writes: “Flickr [http://www.flickr.com/] is a popular photo-sharing and hosting
service with advanced and powerful features. It supports an active and engaged community where
people share and explore each other's photos. You can share and host hundreds of your own pictures
on Flickr without paying a dime. There’s also a pro service that gets you unlimited storage and
sharing for about $2 a month, making it one of the cheapest hosting sites around.”...
Webware, Mar. 30
Create your own search engine [http://www.searchengineshowdown.com/cse/]
Create your own customized search engine that searches just a portion of one of the big search
engines. Several options are available with various services and limitations. To compare these
search builders, Greg Notess tried creating a search engine to search the sites of State Libraries
using each tool. See the Search State Libraries
[http://www.searchengineshowdown.com/cse/search-state-libraries/] page for the resulting search
engines, notes, and a list of sites included....
Search Engine Showdown, Apr. 13
Online converters [http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/04/10/online-converters/]
Online converters always come in handy. Once you need to perform some operation with your files,
they can save you time achieving the same results online without installing some specific
software. In fact, there are many online tools that convert formats, files, and code snippets for
free. This overview for users and developers links to many different tools that generate pdf
documents out of images, images out of texts, or RSS feeds out of websites....
Smashing Magazine, Apr. 10
Actions & Answers
====================================================================================================
Teens as content creators in times of tragedy
[http://blogs.ala.org/yalsa.php?title=teens_as_content_creators_during_times_o&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1]
Kelly Czarnecki writes: “As I watch the news about the tragedy at Virginia Tech, there was a
reporter from CNN that said this was the first time she remembers the volume of photos and video
coverage being sent to them from the public about a particular incident. The global news coverage
will affect teens everywhere and the librarians that work with them through such portals as Teen
Second Life. Since creating media and ‘putting themselves out there’ is an important part of
adolescent development, why not create opportunities in the library for teens to respond?”...
YALSA blog, Apr. 17
New Britannica student encyclopedia [http://corporate.britannica.com/press/releases/bse2007.html]
Students in grades 3–6 have a lively new way to do research with an all-new Britannica Student
Encyclopedia. Containing 2,300 articles, 3,300 photos and images, and 1,000 maps and flags, the
16-volume set gives students what they need for homework and projects while making special efforts
to introduce them to the craft of research....
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Thomson Gale holds National Library Week video contest
[http://www.prweb.com/releases/2007/4/prweb520018.htm]
In honor of National Library Week 2007, Thomson Gale is launching librareo,
[http://www.gale.com/librareo] an online community for libraries and the people who love them. To
make certain librareo gets off to a great start, from now until the end of June, the company will
host an “I Love my Library” video contest. Both librarians and library users can upload their
library-loving videos to the YouTube librareo group [http://www.youtube.com/group/LIBRAREO] by May
25 to be eligible for a $10,000 prize....
PR Newswire, Apr. 16
A Queens-sized centennial cake [http://www.qgazette.com/news/2007/0418/Front_page/]
Director Thomas W. Galante (center) and a host of government and community well-wishers joined to
cut Queens’ Biggest Anniversary Cake in honor of Queens Library’s 100th anniversary of
incorporation. The event was held at Antun’s in Queens Village. The anniversary cake measured 16
feet by 20 feet, and it used 1,200 pounds of cake batter, 500 pounds of fudge filling, and 500
pounds of frosting. The total calorie count defied description....
Queens (N.Y.) Gazette, Apr. 18; Queens Library, Apr. 17
Scholastic sends 7 million books to Middle East
[http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/04-17-2007/0004567278&EDATE=
]
Publisher and distributor Scholastic and the U.S. Department of State have sent more than 7
million children’s books—translated into Arabic and adapted to the culture—into classrooms and
libraries across the Middle East and North Africa as part of a program called My Arabic Library.
Scholastic estimates it will have reached more than 2.5 million students in Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan,
Lebanon, Libya, and Morocco by December....
Scholastic, Apr. 17
OCLC pilots WorldCat Local [http://www.oclc.org/news/releases/200659.htm]
OCLC is piloting a new service that will allow libraries to combine the cooperative power of OCLC
member libraries worldwide with the ability to customize WorldCat.org as a solution for local
discovery and delivery services. Through a locally branded interface, the service will provide
libraries the ability to search the entire WorldCat database and present results beginning with
items most accessible to the patron. These might include collections from the home library,
collections shared in a consortium, and open access collections....
OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Apr. 11
Six ways to market on Facebook [http://www.bivingsreport.com/2007/6-ways-to-market-on-facebook/]
Marketing on social networks is not always that successful, but there are sly ways to garner some
success. Facebook [http://www.facebook.com/] has an interesting feature—the news feed. While some
Facebook denizens loathe this feature, it enables people to find out what their friends are up to.
Here are some tips on how to harness the news feed for peddling a product, person, or cause that
will coax people to do things that are visible to others....
The Bivings Report, Apr. 9
I want to be a librarian [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ne_WXP7lUWM]
A music video (4:10) by New Zealand band HauntedLove, which performs ghostly pop tunes about
werewolves, haunted museums, vengeful librarians, love inside computers, and ponies that just
won’t go. Filmed on location at the Dunedin Public Library. Camera work by Claudia Babirat,
direction and editing/effects by Don Ferns. Starring Haunted Love (Rainy McMaster and Geva Downey)
and Henri Davidson....
YouTube, Apr. 9
SMU faculty comments on Bush Library and Institute
[http://bushlibraryblog.wordpress.com/2007/04/15/faculty-senate-president-circulates-faculty-comment
s-on-bush-complex/]
Sixty-five Southern Methodist University faculty members offered their anonymous opinions on
whether the university should agree to host the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum and
its associated public policy institute. There is discord and dispute, with views ranging from an
enthusiastic endorsement of the package and condemnation of opponents, through outright
opposition, to considered positions somewhere between. The preponderance of opinion seems to be
cautiously optimistic and supportive of the library and museum, but highly suspicious of the
institute....
Bush Library Blog, Apr. 15
Top 25 requested CIA documents in March
[http://www.foia.cia.gov/search.asp?pageNumber=1&freqReqRecord=Top25.txt]
This collection of 25 previously released documents represents those most frequently requested
during the previous month. Topping the list are Volume 1 of the Comprehensive Report of the
Special Advisor to the Director of Central Intelligence on Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction
(2004) and the Senior Executive Intelligence Brief for March 21, 2003....
Central Intelligence Agency, Electronic Reading Room
Change—arrghhhhh! [http://www.imakenews.com/sirsi/e_article000788260.cfm?x=b9m9hF6,b2rpPgSw]
Stephen Abram writes: “As the old wag noted, the dinosaurs didn’t go extinct because the
climate changed—not at all. They went extinct because they couldn’t adapt to the changes
happening around them. Anyway, shift happens. So I found myself spending the first part of 2007
shifting gears. Some things have become very clear that we predicted in our strategic planning
exercises years ago. Some parts of our crystal ball are cloudy. It does seem that change in
library land is happening more quickly.”...
SirsiDynix One Source, Apr.
NYPL to present new musical on bibliomania [http://www.playbill.com/news/article/107325.html]
The new musical The Rosenbach Company will be presented for one night only at the New York Public
Library [http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/pep/pepdesc.cfm?id=2776] at Fifth Avenue and 42nd
Street, April 20 at 7 p.m. (It’s already sold out.) The musical, written by the graphic novelist
Ben Katchor and composer Mark Mulcahy, is a “multi-media ‘chamber rock opera’ about the pleasures
and perils of bibliomania.” It chronicles the life of the brothers Abe and Philip Rosenbach, who
were the famed dealers of rare books and antique artifacts....
Playbill, Apr. 15
Earliest printed books in selected languages, 1501–1879
[http://blogs.britannica.com/blog/main/2007/04/earliest-printed-books-in-select-languages-part-2-150
1-1879/]
George Eberhart continues his list of earliest books in various languages, from Slavonic (1508)
and Polish (1510) to Cherokee (1829) and Afrikaans (1861)....
Britannica Blog, Apr. 12
Display for dummies [http://lansinglibraryadult.blogspot.com/2007/04/for-dummies-book-display.html]
The Lansing (Ill.) Public Library borrowed a mannequin from the Lansing Historical Society and put
together this distinctive display of “For Dummies” books. Wiley, the publisher, is holding a
contest for the best display in a library. Winners will be announced in late June. Check out last
year’s winners here [http://www.dummies.com/WileyCDA/Section/id-291827.html]....
Lansing (Ill.) Public Library, Apr. 10
Poll
====================================================================================================
Results of the April 11 poll:
Are you attending ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C., this June?
53%
Yes
47%
No
(194 responses)
This is an unscientific poll that reflects the opinions of only those AL Direct readers who have
chosen to participate.
Ask the ALA Librarian
====================================================================================================
Q. What do you say when you hear “The Internet is the death of libraries”? Does ALA have research
and support materials to help libraries respond to this inquiry?
A. Yes! Our 2007 State of America’s Libraries
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/march2007/stateoflibraries.htm] report includes the
statistics that indicate that the number of visits to public libraries in the United States
increased 61% between 1994 and 2004. In short, libraries of all kinds are thriving. The ALA
Professional Tips wiki [http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php/Future_of_Libraries] and
the ALA website both have extensive resources for statistics
[http://www.ala.org/ala/ors/researchstatistics.htm] and advocacy
[http://www.ala.org/ala/issues/issuesadvocacy.htm] for you to use in your library.
The ALA Librarian [mailto:AskTheLibrarian@ala.org] welcomes your questions.
Calendar
====================================================================================================
May 31–
June 3:
North American Serials Interest Group, [http://www.nasig.org/conference/2007/] Conference,
Louisville, Kentucky. “Place Your Bet in Kentucky: The Serials Gamble.” Contact: NASIG.
[mailto:conf-plan@nasig.org]
June 3–6:
Special Libraries Association [http://www.sla.org/content/Events/conference/ac2007/index.cfm],
Annual Conference, Colorado Convention Center, Denver. Contact: SLA. [mailto:events@sla.org]
June 5–9:
Council on Botanical and Horticultural Libraries, [http://www.cbhl.net/meetings/meetings.htm]
Annual Meeting, Cincinnati, Ohio. “Eclectic Cincinnati: Legacies, Legends, and the
Lloyds.” Contact: Gayle Bradbeer. [mailto:Gayle.Bradbeer@auraria.edu]
June 7–8:
Northeast Map Organization, [http://www.northeastmap.org/] Annual Meeting, Fashion Institute of
Technology, State University of New York. Contact: Angelique Jenks-Brown,
[mailto:ajbrown@binghamton.edu] 607-777-4596.
June 13–15:
State University of New York Librarians Association,
[http://www.buffalostate.edu/library/sunyla2007/] Annual Conference, SUNY-Maritime. Contact: Carol
Anne Germain. [mailto:cg219@albany.edu]
June 24–27:
International Society for Technology in Education, [http://center.uoregon.edu/ISTE/NECC2007/]
National Educational Computing Conference, Georgia World Congress Center, Atlanta. “Learning
and Leading with Technology.” Contact: NECC, 800-280-6218.
Sept. 26–28:
Association for Rural and Small Libraries, [http://jupiter.clarion.edu/~csrl/great.htm] Annual
Conference, Columbus, Ohio. Contact: ARSL, [mailto:arsl@clarion.edu] 814-393-2014.
@ More [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/datebook/datebook.cfm]...
Contact Us
American Libraries Direct
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glandgraf@ala.org [mailto:glandgraf@ala.org]
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Graphics and Design:
ksheets@ala.org [mailto:ksheets@ala.org]
Leonard Kniffel,
Editor-in-Chief,
American Libraries: lkniffel@ala.org [mailto:lkniffel@ala.org]
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