Having trouble viewing this HTML e-mail? Click here [<%= util.viewHtmlLink %>].
The e-newsletter of the American Library Association | July 4, 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]
Calendar [#datebook]
[http://www.sirsidynix.com/Solutions/Products/integratedsystems.php]
[http://www.sirsidynix.com]
U.S. & World News
====================================================================================================
SKILLs Act gives high marks to school librarians
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/skillsact.cfm]
As some 50 librarians attending the ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C., looked on, a
bipartisan group of senators and representatives announced June 26 the introduction of the
Strengthening Kids’ Interest in Learning and Libraries Act, which mandates every public
school district in the nation “to the extent feasible [to have] not less than one highly
qualified school library media specialist in each public school” by the start of the
2010–11 school year....
Potential victory for librarians: EPA library funding
[http://blogs.ala.org/districtdispatch.php?title=victory_for_librarians_epa_library_fundi&more=1&c=1
&tb=1&pb=1]
After considerable pressure by librarians, researchers, and the public, the Senate is pressuring
the Environmental Protection Agency to restore its library network. In its FY 2008 Interior
Appropriations bill, the Senate Appropriations Committee ordered EPA to reopen the closed
libraries: “$2,000,000 shall be used to restore the network of EPA libraries recently closed or
consolidated by the administration.” The bill is headed to the full Senate. The House
appropriations bill does not contain the EPA library language....
District Dispatch blog, June 29
FTC cautions against net neutrality legislation
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/netneutrality.cfm]
The Federal Trade Commission issued June 27 a 170-page report titled Broadband Connectivity
Competition Policy (PDF file [http://ftc.gov/reports/broadband/v070000report.pdf]), which largely
dismisses the necessity of establishing laws to protect network neutrality—the principle of
a nondiscriminatory internet that forbids service providers from charging increased fees for
higher tiers of service....
Nashville library spared budget cut
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/nashville.cfm]
The $1.57-billion FY2008 budget approved by the Nashville (Tenn.) Metropolitan Council June 26
restores $800,000 that was initially planned to be sliced from the public library’s budget
to balance the municipality’s 2007–08 books. Had the cut gone through, Nashville
Public Library would have had to reduce service by 10 hours per week at the main library and close
eight branches on Sundays....
Residents rally to save Bowling Green branch
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/bowlinggreen.cfm]
Some two-dozen concerned residents gathered June 25 to discuss ways to save Bowling Green (Ky.)
Public Library’s Smiths Grove branch (right). The library board of directors voted June 18
to close the branch as of September 1, as well as to eliminate Sunday hours systemwide beginning
July 1, after losing 50%—$150,000—of the library’s county funding....
Weekly’s use of “F” word irks Missouri patron
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/stlouis.cfm]
St. Louis area resident Richard Greathouse has called for Jefferson County (Mo.) Public Library to
remove the free weekly Riverfront Times newspaper from distribution there. Greathouse saw the
paper while he took his 13-year-old son to the library’s Northwest branch to research birds,
and complained to Library Director Pam Klipsch. “The content of this thing really upset
me,” Greathouse said. “They use the ‘F’ word in there.”...
====================================================================================================
[http://www.hwwilson.com]
====================================================================================================
ALA News
====================================================================================================
Media diversity in libraries [http://donwood.alablog.org/blog/_archives/2007/6/29/3057889.html]
The ALA Intellectual Freedom Committee’s Subcommittee on the Impact of Media Concentration on
Libraries issued a guideline in June titled Fostering Media Diversity in Libraries: Strategies and
Actions (PDF file [http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/ifissues/fostering_media_diversity.pdf]). The
document is designed to provide libraries, library consortia, and library networks with a
centralized list of strategies and actions to help them provide access to a diverse collection of
resources and services....
Don Wood: Library 2.0 blog, June 29
Booklist Online
====================================================================================================
Featured review: Media [http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1908323]
Lyga, Barry (author); Scott Brick (reader). The Astonishing Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl.
Mar. 2007. 10 hrs. Listening Library, CD (978-0-7393-4861-1). Grades 8–12.
Brick’s narration makes the tension of this debut novel palpable as listeners wonder whether
geeky Fanboy, the school pariah, will do something with the names of those who have “pissed
him off” (“The List”) or use the bullet he fingers in his pocket. Brick sounds
older than a 15-year-old, yet he easily captures the impatience and attitude of long-suffering
Fanboy, especially his ennui, self-absorption, and incredible lack of understanding of Kyra, a
smart-talking Goth who befriends him and encourages his artistic endeavors (he is writing a comic
book)....
@ Visit Booklist Online [http://www.booklistonline.com/] for other reviews and much more....
D.C. Update
====================================================================================================
Char’s Annual Conference superlatives
[http://kittylady5.blogspot.com/2007/06/1st-ala-conference-awards.html]
Queens (N.Y.) Library staffer Char Gwizdala provides her take on the best tote bags and exhibitor
coffee bar, the friendliest greeter, the best national monument to visit at night, the best
library blimp promotion (right), the best vendor swag, and other ALA Annual Conference
superlatives....
Char’s blog, June 28
Division News
====================================================================================================
available in September [http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/june2007/ACRLforthcomingtitle.htm]
ACRL will release Studying Students: The Undergraduate Research Project at the University of
Rochester in September. This book, edited by Nancy Fried Foster and Susan Gibbons, provides a view
into the groundbreaking application of ethnographic tools and techniques to the understanding of
undergraduate students and their use of information....
Round Table News
====================================================================================================
LIRT’s top 20 for 2007 [http://www3.baylor.edu/LIRT/lirtnews/2007/jun07.pdf] (PDF file)
The Library Instruction Round Table presents reviews of the 20 best articles relating to library
instruction and information literacy published in 2006. LIRT’s Top 20 Committee convened at the
Midwinter Meeting to select 20 articles out of 150 that provide the best mix of practical and
theoretical perspectives from a variety of library environments....
LIRT News 29, no. 4 (June): 5–8
Awards
====================================================================================================
SLA recognizes five for outstanding service to the profession
[http://www.sla.org/content/SLA/pressroom/pressrelease/07pr/pr2715.cfm]
At its annual conference in Denver, the Special Libraries Association honored Terri Brooks,
Patricia Cia, Toby Pearlstein, Gail Stahl, and Wei Wei as SLA Fellows. The honor of Fellow of SLA
is given to an association member in mid-career to recognize past, present, and future service to
the profession....
Special Libraries Association, June 21
UK public votes on favorite Carnegie and Greenaway books
[http://www.cilip.org.uk/aboutcilip/newsandpressreleases/news070622.htm]
At the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals’ Carnegie and Kate Greenway
Anniversary party June 21, journalist Mariella Frostrup declared the nation’s favorite
medal-winning books to be Philip Pullman’s Northern Lights and Shirley Hughes’s Dogger. Pullman
received 40% of the total Carnegie votes cast by the public in an online poll; Dogger took 26% of
the votes for the Greenaway of Greenaways....
Chartered Iinstitute of Library and Information Professionals, June 22
Seen Online
====================================================================================================
D.C.’s King Library declared a historic landmark
[http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/citydesk/index.php/2007/07/03/mlk-finally-declared-histori
c/]
The District of Columbia Historic Preservation Review Board granted historic-landmark status to
the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library June 28, giving the deteriorating Mies van der Rohe
building a legal protection against getting demolished. The decision came a day after the
Washington Examiner reported
[http://www.examiner.com/a-801220%7ED_C__Public_Library_to_begin_renovations_at_MLK_Memorial.html]
Mayor Adrian Fenty’s administration’s decision to shelve plans to sell the building and
build a new central library on another site....
Washington City Paper, July 3; Washington Examiner, June 27
Harry Potter’s legacy benefits authors, readers
[http://www.statecollege.com/news/local/article.php?cat=6&id=14281]
Penn State librarian Steven Herb, author of two children’s literature textbooks, can’t think of
any other book as wholeheartedly anticipated throughout the world as Harry Potter and the Deathly
Hallows, due out July 21. Here he reveals some of the secrets of author J. K. Rowling’s success
and makes some predictions about what the last book in the series might contain....
StateCollege.com, June 27
A real-life civics lesson
[http://www.nydailynews.com/boroughs/bronx/2007/07/03/2007-07-03_kids_reallife_civics_lesson.html]
After a year-long letter-writing campaign—and a publicity boost from the New York Daily
News—students at a Bronx public school have gotten a reward for civic activism: a brand-new,
$200,000 learning center and library funded by elected officials. The campaign started out as a
civic lesson; P.S. 41 students targeted local officials, asking for help funding a new library
after a 2003 population surge turned the old library into a school classroom....
New York Daily News, July 3
Brehm-Heeger encourages youth reading
[http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070705/NEWS0105/707050347/1061/NEWS01]
Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County’s teen reading specialist Paula Brehm-Heeger, who
just became YALSA president, says that teens are reading more now. “There is more material being
published for teens,” Brehm-Heeger said. “And the reading programs have been effective in getting
them to read for fun. They are coming to the library and reading more books, magazines,
newspapers, and periodicals.”...
Cincinnati Enquirer, July 5
In the spirit of a far-seeing librarian [http://www.startribune.com/562/story/1246979.html]
At the turn of the last century, visionary librarian Gratia Countryman began delivering books to
the residents of rural Hennepin County, even though her Minneapolis Public Library was under no
obligation to do so. Believing that “schools and libraries are not luxuries in a democracy,” she
went on to create a network of libraries throughout the rural countryside to encourage literacy
for all. She called them the People’s Schools....
Minneapolis Star-Tribune, June 15
Your job prospects in 2030 [http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2007/06/20/42skills.h26.html]
Stuart W. Elliott, director of the Board on Testing and Assessment at the National Research
Council says that by 2030, the question of what skills current employers might want could be moot
for most jobs. By then, according to his pilot analysis (PDF file
[http://www7.nationalacademies.org/cfe/Stuart_Elliott_Paper.pdf]) of how many jobs might be
gobbled up by computers, 60% of human jobs as we now know them—including 74% of U.S.
library, training, and teaching positions—may disappear....
Education Week, June 13
Recipe book is a top library fundraiser
[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/01/AR2007070100476.html]
300 Years of Black Cooking in St. Mary’s County, Maryland, was first published in 1975, but it has
been enjoying a revival of sales since the St. Mary’s County Library system reissued it in
September 2005. After 1,000 copies sold out within a year, the library had a second 1,000 copies
printed last fall. Part of the $6,000 profit that the library system received from sales has gone
to support such programming as lectures by a children’s author and a one-woman show about Harriet
Tubman....
Washington Post, July 1
Hattiesburg’s long Katrina recovery
[http://www.hattiesburgamerican.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070705/NEWS01/707050350/1002]
Although she started working at the Hattiesburg (Miss.) Public Library after Hurricane Katrina
hit, library assistant Chris Thornhill said she still could see the damage. And until recently,
the library wasn’t back to normal, with all areas open and shelves completely restocked. For
months after the hurricane, scaffolding scaled the walls, roof tiles were loose, water dripped in
through the ceiling, and the library’s Mississippi Tower and meeting room were closed....
Hattiesburg (Miss.) American, July 5
California public libraries bursting at the seams [http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_6246573]
After missing two chances in the past year to gain state funding, libraries in Los Angeles County
and throughout the state are struggling to meet a massive demand for new facilities that far
exceeds available funds. But in June 2006, state voters rejected a $600-million bond measure to
build new libraries. And earlier this month, a $4-billion library bond proposal for next year’s
ballot was held in committee in the state legislature, dashing the hopes of library supporters who
say local resources are not enough to meet the demand....
Los Angeles Daily News, June 27
Where do the books go when a college closes?
[http://www.chicagotribune.com/services/newspaper/premium/printedition/Sunday/art/chi-0701_litlife2j
ul01,1,917131.story]
The Antioch College Board of Trustees announced in June that after a century and a half of
educating the young and the restless, the Yellow Springs, Ohio, school will close permanently a
year from now. Still undetermined, though, is the fate of the Olive Kettering Library. “We are
told that the library will be maintained. What that means, I’m not sure,” said Curator of Special
Collections Nina Myatt in an interview last week at the library....
Chicago Tribune, July 1
Sno-Isle’s new pilot library [http://heraldnet.com/article/20070630/NEWS01/706300330]
Sno-Isle Libraries in Marysville, Washington, hired five staff members, bought 4,000 new books,
DVDs, and audio books, and budgeted $300,000 to be spent this year—all on a library that isn’t
expected to last more than three years. The Camano Island branch is a first. It’s Sno-Isle’s first
pilot library in at least 20 years—and the first of the organization’s 21 branches designed to
look like a bookstore....
Everett (Wash.) Herald, June 30
Rochester agrees to internet restrictions
[http://www.democratandchronicle.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070703/NEWS01/70703013/1002/NEWS]
The Rochester (N.Y.) Public Library will follow the recommendations from a task force to use the
library’s internet filtering software to block all pornographic sites unless—after a
written request—an administrator deems a site appropriate for a patron to view. The
city’s library board relented in order to preserve $6.6 million in county aid. Monroe County
Executive Maggie Brooks had threatened to pull the money if the Central Library didn’t ban
pornographic websites....
Rochester (N.Y.) Democrat and Chronicle, July 3
Toronto libraries offer museum passes
[http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/June2007/27/c9555.html]
Beginning July 3, Toronto Public Library users can borrow a Sun Life Financial Museum and Arts
Pass, [http://www.torontopubliclibrary.ca/spe_ser_museum_arts_pass.jsp] in the same way they can
borrow a book or CD from the collection. The pass provides full admission to a family of up to two
adults and five children to the Art Gallery of Ontario and at least four other Toronto cultural
institutions....
Toronto Public Library, June 27
The library was the perfect place for a new immigrant
[http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0702/p19s01-hfes.html?page=1]
How does a newcomer to the U.S. get acclimated? A Russian woman found all she needed in one spot.
Svetlana Grobman describes how she first learned English as a library shelver in a Midwestern town
17 years ago, then went on to get a library science degree at the local university....
Christian Science Monitor, July 2
====================================================================================================
[http://www.maintainitproject.org/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=banner&utm_content=AL%2BDirect]
====================================================================================================
Tech Talk
====================================================================================================
Second Earth [http://www.technologyreview.com/Infotech/18888/page1/] (free registration required)
The World Wide Web will soon be absorbed into the World Wide Sim: an immersive, 3-D visual
environment that combines elements of social virtual worlds such as Second Life and mapping
applications such as Google Earth. What happens when the virtual and real worlds collide? Wade
Roush writes that “many computer professionals think the idea of a ‘Second Earth’ mashup is so
cool that it’s inevitable, whether or not it will offer any immediate way to make money.”...
Technology Review, July/August, pp. 38–48
Can U TXT the LBRY? [http://www.techsource.ala.org/blog/2007/06/can-u-txt-the-lbry.html]
Michael Stephens writes: “We talk these days about going where the users are. What the librarians
at Southeastern Louisiana Univerity noted was the prevalence of students using text messaging to
communicate with each other. Could the library have a place there? Should the library try? One
thing is for sure, the experience is useful to consider as we look for more ways to reach our
users and their information needs.”...
ALA TechSource blog, June 29
The Apple iPhone reviewed [http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,2082361,00.asp]
When he announced the iPhone, Steve Jobs said to expect three things: “an incredibly great cell
phone,” “the best iPod we’ve ever made,” and “the internet in your pocket.” One out of three isn’t
bad. Yes, the iPhone is the best iPod ever—ironic for something not even called an iPod! But
it’s just a plain lousy phone, and although it makes some exciting advances in handheld web
browsing, it’s not the internet in your pocket....
PC Magazine, June 30
The iPhone and other internet tablets
[http://maisonbisson.com/blog/post/11856/#apple-iphone-vs-internet-tablets]
Casey Bisson writes: “Sure, the iPhone is a sweet phone (even at $600), but how does it compare to
the less definable internet tablet category? The iPhone, Pepper Pad 3, OLPC (right), and Nokia
n800 all have feature-complete browsers and can take advantage of the rich Web 2.0 applications
their larger cousins can. And each offers some local applications, including media players. But
these aren’t general-purpose PCs, and they’re not trying to replace PCs. These are
Information Age devices that deliver the network in places we generally don’t bring our
laptops.”...
maisonbisson blog, June 28
Meebo works on the iPhone (kinda) [http://www.webware.com/8301-1_109-9739681-2.html]
Josh Lowensohn writes: “The team behind Meebo [http://www.meebo.com] has feverishly been trying
since June 29 to get it working on Apple’s iPhone. One of the handset’s shortcomings is its lack
of an instant messaging client. Meebo, which has been providing a web-based IM client that mimics
desktop chatting software, did not work come iPhone launch due to the mobile version of Safari
using its double-tap navigation. Meebo requires double clicking to start up an IM conversation,
and many of the buttons and window functionality were simply not working.”...
Webware, July 3
iPhone sells out faster than an ’80s rock star
[http://www.engadget.com/2007/07/05/iphone-sells-out-faster-than-an-80s-rock-star/]
Thomas Ricker writes: “Unless you live in or near Tigard, Oregon, or Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
chances are you’ll be out of luck this week if you’re jonesin’ for that quick retail fix of
consumer crack called the iPhone—Apple’s retail locator lists the iPhone as unavailable for the
rest of the nation. Sales have been so brisk in the first week that AT&T claims to have ‘sold more
iPhones than in the first month of any other wireless phone AT&T ever offered. That’s how good
it’s been.’ However, neither Apple nor AT&T have released any figures.”...
Engadget blog, July 5
Facebook to library apps: Drop dead
[http://stevelawson.name/seealso/archives/2007/07/facebook_to_library_apps_drop_dead.html]
Steve Lawson notes that libraries are having their apps rejected by Facebook staff, apparently for
a variety of reasons: “I’m not ready to give up on Facebook yet. For one thing, it’s
fun. For another, it really is where our users are. The group for the class of incoming Colorado
College students already has 354 members two months before school starts. Now whether Facebook
really wants a Colorado College library application—when that valuable profile space could be
taken up with SuperPoke!, Food Fight!, or Booze Mail—who’s to say?”...
See Also... blog, July 3
Putting the world in WorldCat
[http://blogs.ala.org/pace.php?title=putting_the_world_in_worldcat&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1]
Andrew Pace writes: “Seems like a guy can barely put a print column to bed before there’s another
change in the library automation landscape. OCLC has just purchased the remaining shares of OCLC
PICA, the European arm of the library cooperative formed in 2002, two years after OCLC acquired a
majority of shares (60%) in the Dutch PICA (Project for Integrated Catalogue Automation). This
deal, the value of which is unreported (but which is likely forthcoming), gives OCLC the remaining
40%.”...
Hectic Pace blog, July 3
Actions & Answers
====================================================================================================
979-prefixed ISBNs to appear early in 2008 [http://www.bisg.org/news/press.php?pressid=44]
The first ISBNs to be prefixed by 979 are likely to be assigned in the second quarter of 2008,
according to a recent press release from the International ISBN Agency. This is the first public
announcement to include a date for the appearance of 979-prefixed ISBNs. The news is important for
everyone in the book trade. Until now, all 13-digit ISBNs have been prefixed by 978, allowing
systems to contain both 10- and 13-digit ISBNs for all books. Once the 979 prefixes are
introduced, there can be no 10-digit equivalents for 13-digit ISBNs....
Book Industry Study Group, June 6
12 laws every blogger should know [http://www.avivadirectory.com/blogger-law/]
For U.S. bloggers in particular, blogging has become a veritable land mine of potential legal
issues, and the situation isn’t helped by the fact that the law in this area is constantly
in flux. This article highlights 12 of the most important U.S. laws related to blogging and
provides some simple and straightforward tips for safely navigating them....
Aviva Directory, May 1
SOLINET’s scenarios for the future of libraries
[http://www.solinet.net/whatsnew/whatsnew.cfm?doc_id=4635]
The Southeastern Library Network has released a 10-page report (PDF file
[http://www.solinet.net/emplibfile/ScenarioPlanningReport.pdf]) detailing results of recent
discussions regarding the future of libraries. The report is the result of a series of 12
discussion groups SOLINET facilitated with its member libraries. The discussions focused on three
scenarios (PDF file [http://www.solinet.net/emplibfile/ACF1C65.pdf]) that depict libraries three
to five years into the future. Participants debated what was likely, unlikely, and missing in each
of the scenarios....
SOLINET, July 5
Mellon awards Columbia $563,000 for primary-source project
[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/news/libraries/2007/2007-06-29.mellon_interns.html]
Columbia University Libraries has received a $563,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
to fund a three-year pilot project that will award a series of internships to graduate students to
collaborate with librarians in the organization and description of primary source collections. The
project began July 1....
Columbia University Libraries, June 29
NCLIS support for school media specialists
[http://www.nclis.gov/news/pressrelease/pr2007/NCLISNewsRelease-SupportCertifiedLibraryMediaSpeciali
sts2007-03.pdf] (PDF file)
At its June 4–5 meeting, the U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science
approved a resolution advising Congress that “every school library be staffed by a highly
qualified, state certified school library media specialist.” Chairman Beth Fitzsimmons said that
NCLIS was heartened by the bipartisan SKILLs Act legislation instroduced June 27....
U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science, July 2
New members named to Depository Library Council [http://www.gpo.gov/news/2007/07news21.pdf] (PDF
file)
Acting Public Printer William H. Turri has appointed six new members to the Depository Library
Council, which advises the Public Printer on the Federal Depository Library Program. They are Gwen
Sinclair, Victoria Trotta, Christopher Greer, Kathryn Lawhun, John Shuler, and Kendall Wiggin....
Government Printing Office, June 28
Making every school moment count [http://blog.reading.org/archives/002927.html]
The International Reading Association has released Making Every Moment Count: Maximizing Quality
Instructional Time (PDF file [http://www.reading.org/downloads/resources/MEMC_070620.pdf]), a
collection of short papers by nine educational organizations (including AASL). The free
publication, in part, responds to the narrowing of curriculum that has occurred under No Child
Left Behind....
International Reading Association, June 21
debuts [http://www.joci.ecu.edu/index.php/JoCI]
The inaugural issue of East Carolina University’s Journal of Curriculum and Instruction highlights
the efforts of teachers and researchers as they implement exemplary literacy practices at a time
when such efforts have been challenged and undermined by political influences. Guest editor Terry
S. Atkinson says that the journal will emphasize best practices, rather than techniques for
preparing students to score well on high-stakes assessments....
Journal of Curriculum and Instruction 1, no. 1 (July)
Biblioteca Santiago in Chile [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQ1u8L3vA28]
A student filmed and produced this wordless musical video (3:58) that showcases the many types of
services and activities available at the public library [http://www.bibliotecadesantiago.cl/] in
Santiago, Chile. The art gallery, reading rooms, storytime, internet terminals, martial arts
class, the graphic novel collection, the café, even the restrooms are featured....
YouTube, June 1
Ask the ALA Librarian
====================================================================================================
Q. I attended the ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C., in June. Several programs I attended
ran out of handouts. Can you tell me where I can find these? The presenters said they would be on
the ALA website.
A. How handouts and other output [http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php/Conferences]
from Annual Conference are disseminated varies considerably from division to division, or from one
program planner or speaker to another. With the growth in the number of blogs and wikis, the
possibilities have also grown. The range of possibilities includes: links from the Annual
Conference 2007 wiki
[http://wikis.ala.org/annual2007/index.php/Handouts%2C_Podcasts%2C_and_other_Post_Conference_Informa
tion] (best source), division blogs and podcasts
[http://wikis.ala.org/readwriteconnect/index.php/Main_Page], sponsoring unit webpages
[http://www.ala.org/ala/ourassociation/Default262.htm], the speaker’s personal or
institutional webpage, and a planned publication. To complicate matters even more, with the
exception of the very few contemporaneous blog posts, there is a time lag between the program
presentation and the posting or publication of the content. There is always the possibility that a
presentation is not recorded or written and may only be captured when the presenter uses the
content in a substantially revised form in a publication a year or more later.
See the ALA Professional Tips wiki
[http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php/ALA_Annual_Conference_handouts%2C_etc.] for
further assistance.
The ALA Librarian [mailto:AskTheLibrarian@ala.org] welcomes your questions.
Calendar
====================================================================================================
Online exhibits
Austin (Tex.) Public Library [http://texashistory.unt.edu/browse/collection/NDPC/]: “Portal
to Texas History” contains 800 images from Austin American-Statesman photographer Neal
Douglass.
Boston College [http://www.bc.edu/libraries/news-events-pub/exhibits/] archives exhibits from the
O’Neill Library and the Burns Library of Rare Books and Special Collections online,
including “Media and U.S. Wars,” “Free State Art: Judging Ireland by Its Book
Covers,” and “Lesser Lights or Major Literary Influences?”
Boston Public Library [HTTP://www.bpl.org/sportstemples/]: “Sports Temples of Boston: Images
of Historic Ballparks, Arenas, and Stadiums in Boston.”
British Library [HTTP://www.collectbritain.co.uk/collections/philatelic/], London:
“Philatelic Rarities.”
Buffalo and Erie County Library [HTTP://becpldigital.cdm.oclc.org/], New York: “The New York
to Paris Race” highlights the 1907 “Great Race” from New York to Paris by
automobile, won by Buffalo resident George Schuster.
Cleveland Public Library [http://www.cpl.org/collection-connection.asp]: Online exhibits including
“African American Family Photograph Collection,” “Patriotism & Propaganda—War
Posters,” and “Coming Attractions: Cinema Teasers from the Silent Era.”
Columbia University Library [HTTP://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/eresources/exhibitions/], New York
archives exhibits online, including “Children’s Drawings of the Spanish Civil
War” and “Shakespeare and the Book.” The Rare Book & Manuscript Library
[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/rbml/exhibitions.html] also hosts several online exhibits.
Library Company of Philadelphia [http://www.librarycompany.org/collections/exhibits/] archives
exhibitions online, including “Color-Plate Books From the Collection.”
Library of Congress [HTTP://www.loc.gov/exhibits/]: The Library of Congress has several dozen
online exhibits, including “A Century of Creativity: The MacDowell Colony
1907–2007,” “Bob Hope and American Variety,” “Earth as Art: A
Landsat Perspective,” “I Do Solemnly Swear... Inaugural Materials from the Collections
of the Library of Congress,” “Revising Himself: Walt Whitman and Leaves of
Grass,” and “Churchill and the Great Republic.” “The Veterans History
Project [HTTP://www.loc.gov/vets/]” includes digitized interviews, letters, photographs,
stories, and audio and video.
Plymouth (N.H.) State University [http://beyondbrownpaper.plymouth.edu/browse/]: “Beyond
Brown Paper.”
San Francisco Public Library [http://www.sfpl.org/news/exhibitions.htm#online] archives exhibits
online, including “Amusing America,” “Homage to Lulu: 100 Years of Louise
Brooks,” and “Picture This: Family Photographs of Everyday San Francisco.”
University of Nevada, [http://www.library.unlv.edu/exhibits/index.html] Las Vegas: Online exhibits
include: “Welcome Home Howard, or Whatever Became of the Daring Aviator?” “Las
Vegas and Water in the West,” “Before Gaming . . . Celebrating Las Vegas’
Centennial, 1905–2005,” and “Dino at the Sands.”
@ More [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/datebook/datebook.cfm]...
Contact Us
American Libraries Direct
AL Direct is a free electronic newsletter emailed every Wednesday to personal members of the
American Library Association [http://www.ala.org].
George M. Eberhart,
Editor:
geberhart@ala.org [mailto:geberhart@ala.org]
Daniel Kraus,
Associate Editor:
dkraus@ala.org [mailto:dkraus@ala.org]
Greg Landgraf,
Editorial Assistant:
glandgraf@ala.org [mailto:glandgraf@ala.org]
Karen Sheets,
Graphics and Design:
ksheets@ala.org [mailto:ksheets@ala.org]
Taína Benítez,
Production Editor:
tbenitez@ala.org [mailto:ksheets@ala.org]
Leonard Kniffel,
Editor-in-Chief,
American Libraries: lkniffel@ala.org [mailto:lkniffel@ala.org]
To advertise in American Libraries Direct, contact:
Brian Searles, bsearles@ala.org [mailto:bsearles@ala.org]
Send feedback: aldirect@ala.org [mailto:aldirect@ala.org]
To unsubscribe from American Libraries Direct: click here [<%= edition.unsubscribeLink %>]
AL Direct FAQ:
www.ala.org/aldirect/ [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/aldirecta/aldirect.cfm]
All links outside the ALA website are provided for informational purposes only. Questions about
the content of any external site should be addressed to the administrator of that site.
American Libraries
50 E. Huron St.
Chicago, IL 60611
www.ala.org/alonline/ [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/index.cfm]
800-545-2433,
ext. 4216
ISSN 1559-369X.
To unsubscribe from this newsletter: click here [<%= edition.unsubscribeLink %>]