Having trouble viewing this HTML e-mail? Click here [<%= util.viewHtmlLink %>].
The e-newsletter of the American Library Association | July 25, 2007
Contents
U.S. & World News [#usworld]
ALA News [#alanews]
AL Focus [#alfocus]
Booklist Online [#booklist]
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/portalsearch.php]
[http://www.sirsidynix.com]
U.S. & World News
====================================================================================================
Libraries examine policies as two counties target illegals
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/july2007/immigrants.cfm]
Following Congress’s failure to pass the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act in June, two
counties in Virginia have taken steps to limit illegal immigrants’ access to public
services. Resolutions passed in July by Prince William and Loudoun County supervisors could affect
library circulation policies, although agencies in both counties—including schools, parks,
hospitals, housing, sheriffs’ offices, and employment agencies—are scrambling to find
out whether the new directives conflict with federal and state laws and regulations....
D.C. residents protest branch replacement plans
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/july2007/naderwestend.cfm]
Some 75 people led by activist Ralph Nader staged a rally outside the District of Columbia Public
Library’s West End branch July 14 to protest the city council’s vote that week to
allow a developer to build a residential project on the site....
Salinas expands operating hours
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/july2007/salinashours.cfm]
Nearly three years after the Salinas, California, city council voted to close them because of a
massive budget deficit, the city’s three libraries have made an impressive comeback: The
addition of 10 hours each week per branch, effective July 17, brings the system’s total
weekly hours to 117–39 for each branch....
====================================================================================================
[http://www.hwwilson.com]
====================================================================================================
ALA News
====================================================================================================
Two surveys show progress in serving young adults
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/july2007/yalsastudy07.htm]
Two recent surveys illustrate progress in the staffing and use of library services to young
adults. The Public Library Data Service Statistical Report
[http://www.pla.org/ala/pla/plapubs/pldsstatreport/pldsstatistical.cfm] found that nearly 90% of
public libraries surveyed offer young adult programs. And a June 2007 poll (PDF file
[http://www.ala.org/ala/yalsa/HarrisYouthPoll.pdf]) conducted for ALA by Harris Interactive found
that a significant number of youths between the ages of 8 and 18 visit both the public library and
the school library media center for personal use....
Last chance to step up to the plate [http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/july2007/suplc07.htm]
All entries for the Step Up to the Plate @ your library program are due
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pio/campaign/sponsorship/stepuptotheplateyourlibrary/stepup2007.htm]
September 1, giving children and young adults 9–18 years of age their final opportunity for a
chance to win a grand prize trip to the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, New York,
by checking out a baseball book and writing about how their favorite character inspired them....
AL Focus
====================================================================================================
World premiere [http://alfocus.ala.org/videos/hollywood-librarian-world-premiere]
A huge crowd gathered at the June 22 world premiere of The Hollywood Librarian at Annual
Conference in Washington, D.C. In this recap (4:54), attendees enjoy a red-carpet entry before
viewing a film that mixes representations of librarians in cinema with current issues facing
librarians today. Along with a few special guests, writer/director Ann Siedl speaks afterwards
about the challenge of marketing ourselves and her plan to distribute the film in libraries during
Banned Books Week....
David Wiesner interview [http://alfocus.ala.org/videos/david-wiesner-interview]
Artist David Wiesner speaks (3:49) with American Libraries Senior Editor Beverly Goldberg from the
Annual Conference exhibit floor about winning his third Randolph Caldecott Medal for Flotsam, how
his interest in “visual storytelling” led him to children’s books, and the gratifying feedback he
has received from librarians, teachers, and kids....
The Greg Show #2 [http://alfocus.ala.org/videos/greg-show-2]
Spying on Bill Bradley, hotel mixups, that weird blimp, book cart drill teams, and lost
luggage—all this and more awaits you in the second chapter (2:54) of The Greg Show, a skewed take
on the 2007 ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C., by American Libraries editorial assistant
and first-time conference attendee Greg Landgraf....
’s Keir Graff [http://alfocus.ala.org/videos/booklists-keir-graff-reading]
Keir Graff, senior editor of Booklist Online, speaks (2:25) from the Booklist booth in the exhibit
hall of Annual Conference in Washington, D.C., about developing the website, the possibility of
being a “booth babe,” and his new book My Fellow Americans (Severn House, October 2007). Then it’s
off to his reading from the exhibit hall’s “Live! @ your library” reading stage....
Featured review: Books for youth
[http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=2160283]
Rowling, J. K. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. July 2007. 756p. Scholastic/Arthur A. Levine,
hardcover (978-0-545-01022-1).
The cloak of inevitability hangs on the final installment of the Harry Potter series. One must
die, one will live. Friends will be distinguished from foes. All will be revealed. To
Rowling’s great credit, she manages this finale with the flair and respect for her audience
that have permeated the previous six novels, though the mood here is quite different. The story
has a certain flatness that extends through much of the book. Rowling can no longer rely on
diversions like Quidditch matches and trips to Hogsmead for relief; Harry has made the decision
not to return to Hogwarts. Aided by Hermione and Ron, he will instead search for the remaining
Horcruxes that hide pieces of Voldemorte’s soul....
And so it ends [http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=2045691]
Ilene Cooper writes: “Not everyone gets to live through a cultural phenomenon, but if you do, it
is something you never forget, the sort of experience that bonds a generation. For baby boomers,
lightning-in-a-bottle came in the form of the Beatles, who changed music and just about everything
else. Another British phenomenon began in 1997, when the first Harry Potter book was published in
the UK under the title Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. The buzz began immediately,
and Scholastic’s bid for the American rights set a record high for a children’s book.
Under the title Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, the novel was launched in the U.S.
with plenty of fanfare, but it was the captivating story of the young wizard that made the book a
hit.”...
@ Visit Booklist Online [http://www.booklistonline.com/] for other reviews and much more....
Division News
====================================================================================================
WrestleMania reading challenge
[http://www.ala.org/ala/yalsa/teenreading/trw/trw2007/wrestlemania.htm]
Registration ends July 31 for YALSA’s WrestleMania Reading Challenge, sponsored by YALSA with
support from World Wrestling Entertainment. The program is designed to encourage teens in grades
7–12 to continue their reading beyond Teen Read Week and win prizes donated by WWE. Teen
participants can win a trip for two to WrestleMania 24. Every teen who turns in a reading log at
the end of the challenge will win a prize from WWE; for grand prize eligibility, teens must also
submit an essay on the topic “Why WrestleMania Got Me Reading.” Librarians who register can win
$2,000 for their libraries....
John Wood to keynote PLA Conference [http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/july2007/pla0s08.htm]
John Wood, founder and CEO of Room to Read, will present the keynote address at the Opening
General Session at the PLA 12th National Conference, on Wednesday, March 26, 2008, in Minneapolis.
Since its start in 2000, Room to Read has sponsored the opening of more than 280 school and 3,600
multilingual libraries across the developing world....
ALCTS Serials Section changes name, mission
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/july2007/alctsnc07.htm]
The ALCTS Serials Section has changed its name to the Continuing Resources Section. With the new
name comes a revised mission, which will be to contribute to library service and librarianship
through development of theory and practice concerning continuing resources in all formats....
in Reno [http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/july2007/aaslr08.htm]
Daniel H. Pink’s A Whole New Mind will be the topic of discussion during the One Book One
Conference, an early-morning book-discussion session held Friday, October 26, during AASL’s 13th
National Conference and Exhibition in Reno, Nevada. Pink, who will deliver the keynote speech at
the Opening General Session, charts the rise of right-brain thinking and lists six aptitudes that
people and groups must have in order to succeed in this outsourced world....
Round Table News
====================================================================================================
DttP cover contest [http://www.ala.org/ala/godort/dttp/covercontest.htm]
The Government Documents Round Table is seeking photographs for the cover of the Spring 2008 issue
of Documents to the People. Submissions may include images of state, local, federal, foreign, or
international publications. Photo orientation should be portrait (not landscape). Digital photos
must be at least 300 dpi. Submit all images to Andrea Sevetson [mailto:dttp.editor@verizon.net] by
December 1....
Awards
====================================================================================================
Improving Literacy Through School Libraries grants announced
[http://www.ed.gov/news/pressreleases/2007/07/07242007.html]
U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings joined Laura Bush July 24 to announce $19 million
in federal funds to enhance libraries in 78 low-income school districts across the United States.
Visiting Driggs Elementary School in Waterbury, Connecticut, one beneficiary of an Improving
Literacy Through School Libraries Grant, Spellings and Bush underscored the need to equip all
students with a strong reading foundation so they can achieve grade-level success under No Child
Left Behind....
U.S. Department of Education, July 24
SPARC announces Mind Mashup contest [http://www.sparkyawards.org/]
The Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition launched on July 25 the first annual
SPARC Discovery Awards, a contest to promote the open exchange of information. “Mind Mashup,” the
2007 theme, calls on entrants to illustrate in a short video (2 minutes or less) the importance of
sharing ideas and information of all kinds. Submissions are due by December 2....
Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, July 25
Texas Senate honors Loriene Roy [http://www.newswatchnativeamerica.com/070725.RoyProc.htm]
The Texas State Senate has adopted a proclamation honoring ALA President Loriene Roy. The
proclamation recognizes Roy for her “deep concern with matters of education, social justice, and
literacy” and for “her philosophy of inclusiveness and for drawing on her American Indian heritage
to embrace a library ethos based on the guiding ideas of community, collaboration, and culture.”...
NewsWatch Native America, July 25
Seen Online
====================================================================================================
records [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/25/arts/design/25arch.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin]
The New York Times has donated a vast collection of personal letters, financial documents,
confidential reports, and photographs—more than 700,000 pages in all—to the New York
Public Library. The archives, which have been previously made available to authors on occasion,
include records of the newspaper’s founding, its sale to Adolph S. Ochs, editorial
direction, advertising policies, and tensions between the newsroom and the ruling Sulzberger
family....
New York Times, July 25
Clintons give $100,000 to South Carolina library
[http://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/newyork/ny-bc-ny--clintons-donation0724jul24,0,7939242.story
]
The Clintons are donating $100,000 to a South Carolina library to be named after one of Hillary
Rodham Clinton's mentors, children’s rights activist Marian Wright Edelman. Organizers plan to
build a library named after Edelman in her hometown of Bennettsville, S.C. The Clintons are making
the donation through the Clinton Family Foundation, which they created after leaving the White
House....
Associated Press, July 25
More on Maricopa [http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118340075827155554.html]
Andrew LaVallee writes: “The opening of a Dewey-free facility in the Maricopa County (Ariz.)
Library District has sparked heated debate in the library world. But the debate, say many
librarians, is about more than one branch’s organizational system. It feeds into a broader,
increasingly urgent discussion about libraries, where a growing number of patrons, used to Google
and Yahoo, simply don’t look for books and information the way they used to.” Karen Schneider
[http://www.techsource.ala.org/blog/2007/07/raising-arizona.html] has more details....
Wall Street Journal, July 20; ALA TechSource blog, July 23
Stonewall Library is premiere archive for gay/lesbian materials
[http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/broward/sfl-flbstonewall0724nbjul24,0,7761199.story]
Located in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the Stonewall Library and Archives
[http://www.stonewall-library.org/] boasts the largest private collection of gay and lesbian
writings, videos, and historical documents in the southeastern United States. The library’s
circulating collection is open to anyone over 18 and includes common subject areas such as gay and
lesbian fiction, nonfiction, sociology, history, and art. It also stocks 60 gay periodicals from
across the country....
Fort Lauderdale South Florida Sun-Sentinel, July 24
D.C. library gets a lift
[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/23/AR2007072301865.html]
For more than five years, day or night, summer or winter, one thing was always the same at the
District of Columbia central library: At least two elevators were out of service, and those who
tried the others were tempting fate. Then one recent day, it happened: All five worked. For Head
Librarian Ginnie Cooper, restoring elevator service at the main library was no small feat....
Washington Post, July 24
I play banned games [http://www.dailyherald.com/news/cookstory.asp?id=334068]
Scores of preteens and teens will compete July 29 in the popular, alien-killing Halo 2 video game
tournament at the Mount Prospect (Ill.) Public Library. While the library will require permission
slips to play, the slips will not spell out that the bloody and violent Halo 2 is rated by an
independent video rating board specifically for those 17 and up—not the junior high and high
school students that the library is targeting. That has the National Institute on Media and the
Family calling the library event “irresponsible.”...
Arlington Heights (Ill.) Daily Herald, July 24
FBI investigates suspicious reading in public
[http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A12715&status=rate&ratebtn=5]
Two FBI agents visited Atlanta bookstore employee Marc Schultz after they were tipped off that he
had been reading something “suspicious” in a coffee shop. Turns out it was a printout of a column
by Hal Crowther titled “Weapons of Mass Stupidity
[http://tampa.creativeloafing.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A2752]” that appeared in a Tampa free
weekly. Schultz writes: “I say it seems like a dark day when an American citizen regards reading
as a threat, and downright pitch-black when the federal government agrees.”...
Creative Loafing (Atlanta), July 17
The Guantánamo library
[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andy-worthington/guantanamos-library-ad_b_57320.html]
Detainee Abdul Aziz, in a declassified letter, reveals the paucity of reading material in the
Guantánamo Bay detention camp: “The truth, as all will attest, is that the Gitmo camp library is
nothing more than two small gray boxes with which guards walk around in some cell blocks, carrying
them above their heads to protect themselves from the burning sun, or, at best, dragging them on a
dolly with two little wheels. Inside the two boxes, there are no more than a combination of old,
worn-out books, with their covers and some of their leaves torn by rain and other adverse
factors.”...
Huffington Post, July 22
Congress: P2P networks harm national security
[http://news.com.com/Congress+P2P+networks+harm+national+security/2100-1029_3-6198585.html?tag=nefd.
lede]
Politicians charged July 24 that peer-to-peer networks can pose a “national security threat”
because they enable federal employees to share sensitive or classified documents accidentally from
their computers. At a hearing [http://oversight.house.gov/story.asp?ID=1424] on the topic,
Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) said, without offering details, that
he is considering new laws aimed at addressing the problem. He said he was troubled by the
possibility that foreign governments, terrorists, or organized crime could gain access to
documents that reveal national secrets....
C|Net news.com, July 25
Alabama librarian’s workers’ comp ruling to be reviewed
[http://www.al.com/news/huntsvilletimes/index.ssf?/base/news/1185009428321870.xml&coll=1]
An Alabama appeals court July 20 ordered the Madison County Circuit Court to review part of its
ruling on a workers’ compensation case involving a celebrated retired Huntsville librarian. Nevada
Easley, who retired as branch manager of the Bessie K. Russell Branch of the Huntsville–Madison
County Public Library in 2005, sued for benefits for an arm injury sustained while she was
emptying a book bin in 2004. Easley was among the first black employees to integrate the staff of
the city-county library system in January 1966....
Huntsville (Ala.) Times, July 21
Poisonous leak at Yunnan Provincial Library [http://gokunming.com/en/blog/item.php?blog_id=335]
Thirty-nine people, including eight schoolchildren and 29 library staff,
[http://www.shanghaidaily.com/sp/article/2007/200707/20070722/article_324281.htm] were
hospitalized July 21 after being poisoned by a leak of concentrated carbon dioxide at the Yunnan
Provincial Library in Kunming, China. The leak in the library’s fire extinguisher system created a
large white cloud of carbon dioxide that quickly spread to the first and second floors. Those
affected by the leak suffered from dizziness, nausea, vomiting, and shortness of breath....
Go Kunming, July 23; Shanghai Daily, July 22
====================================================================================================
[http://www.maintainitproject.org/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=banner&utm_content=AL%2BDirect]
====================================================================================================
Tech Talk
====================================================================================================
Google’s $4.6-billion plan for an open wireless network
[http://machinist.salon.com/blog/2007/07/20/google_fcc/index.html]
Salon’s Farhad Manjoo writes: “Google announced
[http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2007/07/our-commitment-to-open-broadband.html] July 20 it would
set aside at least $4.6 billion to purchase a slice of the public airwaves in an upcoming
government auction of radio spectrum. The company is imposing one condition on its money: It will
only participate, it says, if the FCC requires that all bidders for the radio waves be forced to
adhere to principles of Internet ‘openness.’ You can think of it as the network neutrality debate
for wireless.”...
Machinist blog, July 20; Google blog, July 20
Swedish woman has fastest residential internet connection
[http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070719/ap_on_hi_te/sweden_high_speed_internet]
She is a latecomer to the information superhighway, but 75-year-old Sigbritt Lothberg is now
cruising the internet with a dizzying speed. Lothberg’s 40 gigabits-per-second fiber-optic
connection in Karlstad is believed to be the fastest residential uplink in the world. In less than
2 seconds, Lothberg can download a full-length movie on her home computer....
Associated Press, July 19
12 ways to use Facebook professionally
[http://webworkerdaily.com/2007/07/24/12-ways-to-use-facebook-professionally/]
Judi Sohn writes: “Facebook has to be the most talked about, and the most misunderstood, web
service/platform right now. Think of Facebook as a professional tool, and that’s what it is.
It doesn’t matter how millions of high school and college students are using Facebook to get
out of doing homework. You can make it into whatever you want, even your own personal media
broadcasting channel.”...
Web Worker Daily, July 24
Technorati and Craigslist, where did you go? [http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-9749445-7.html]
A power outage [http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/07/24/BAG9NR67253.DTL&tsp=1] hit
downtown San Francisco the afternoon of July 24, leaving thousands of residents without power and
knocking popular websites such as Craigslist, GameSpot, Yelp, Technorati, TypePad, and Netflix
offline for a few hours. The power failure—caused by an explosion under a manhole cover on Mission
Street—apparently hit 365 Main, a 227,000-square-foot data center in downtown San Francisco,
particularly hard. The data colocation center’s client list includes Craigslist and C|net
networks’ GameSpot, a sister site of News.com....
C|Net NewsBlog , July 24
UK study: Cell phone tower sickness all in the mind [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/6914492.stm]
Cell phone relay towers are not responsible for the symptoms of ill health some blame them for, a
major UK study says. Dozens of people who believed the masts triggered symptoms such as anxiety,
nausea, and tiredness could not detect if signals were on or off in trials. However, the
Environmental Health Perspectives study stressed people were nonetheless suffering “real
symptoms.”...
BBC News, July 25
Google bristles over search criticism
[http://www.informationweek.com/research/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=201200922]
Google Enterprise Product Management Director Matt Glotzbach threw down the gauntlet July 24 and
accused Autonomy, an enterprise search company, of lying about Google’s search technology to scare
potential customers. At issue is an Autonomy white paper that describes Google’s enterprise search
technology using, as Glotzbach put it, “[i]naccuracies about our enterprise ranking algorithms,
and downright fabrications about our security and access control capabilities.”...
Information Week, July 25
Actions & Answers
====================================================================================================
show goes to Harry Potter Square
[http://jetsetshow.com/2007/07/sharing_jetset_live_miro_harry.html]
Jetset—an online pop culture show for young adults that features cool, weird, fun, geeky,
underground, true-to-life, curious, quirky things and people found online and off—visits the crowd
waiting in line for the first Deathly Hallows books at Scholastic’s Harry Potter Square (starting
at about 2:53). An earlier episode
[http://jetsetshow.com/2007/07/top_5_iphone_games_harry_potte.html] featured Scholastic’s Knight
Bus visiting the Los Angeles Public Library (starting at 2:20)....
Jetset, July 16, 23
Harry Potter celebrations [http://www.ilovelibraries.org/news/topstories/harrypotter.cfm]
ILoveLibraries.org is collecting examples of library events around the country surrounding the
release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows—parties, late-night festivities, and read-a-thons.
If you want to share your library’s events, visit ILoveLibraries “Libraries in the
News” blog [http://www.ilovelibraries.ala.org/news/] and add your event to the comments....
ILoveLibraries.org
Roy on the future of library science [http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2007/07/25/roy]
In this podcast, ALA President Loriene Roy discusses the evolution of library science programs
(including for some the evolution away from the “library name”), the role of LIS professors
within ALA, and the increased need for library programs in training paraprofessionals who are
taking on more responsibilities in the workplace....
Inside Higher Ed, July 25
The games people play—in libraries
[http://www.techsource.ala.org/blog/2007/07/oh-the-games-people-play-now-in-libraries.html]
Tom Peters writes: “On the first day of the first-ever ALA TechSource Gaming, Learning, and
Libraries Symposium [http://gaming.techsource.ala.org/index.php/Main_Page] in Chicago July 22,
Scott Nicholson from the Syracuse University Library Game Lab released a report on ‘The Role of
Gaming in Libraries: Taking the Pulse’ (PDF file [http://boardgameswithscott.com/pulse2007.pdf]).
He cites an industry report
[http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070623-report-video-game-spending-to-surpass-music-spending-
this-year.html] indicating that sales of games have outpaced motion picture box office sales and
should surpass music sales in the near future.”...
ALA TechSource blog, July 23
Are you a tool of the old education paradigm?
[http://acrlblog.org/2007/07/23/you-may-be-a-tool-of-the-old-education-paradigm/]
Steven Bell writes: “In an essay titled ‘Changing Paradigms’ found on the final page of the latest
issue (July-August 2007) of Educational Technology, Marc Prensky claims that teachers still
don’t get it because instead of adapting new technology and new ways of teaching with it,
they persist in using the tools of the past. What are some of the tools of the past? Oh, you know,
encyclopedias, multiplication tables, spelling rules, and libraries. Wait a minute. Did he just
say ‘libraries’?”...
ACRLog, July 23
Web Wise proceedings available [http://www.imls.gov/news/2007/071907.shtm]
The Institute of Museum and Library Services is offering the 2007 proceedings of its signature Web
Wise conference, “Stewardship in the Digital Age: Managing Museum and Library Collections for
Preservation and Use” (PDF file [http://www.imls.gov/pdf/WebWiseProceedings2007.pdf]), held
February 28–March 2 in Washington, D.C. It contains summaries of each session, keynote speeches,
project demonstrations, podcasts, and brief biographies of the speakers....
Institute of Museum and Library Services, July 19
The pros and cons of virtual meetings
[http://meredith.wolfwater.com/wordpress/index.php/2007/07/21/no-more-f2f-meetings-ever/]
Meredith Farkas writes: “There are things lost in virtual meetings. Virtual meetings start when
people come into the space and end when the formal discussion ends. They are often more focused.
Things are mentioned in passing at a face-to-face meeting that become important. A lot of times,
the casual discussions before and after meetings are actually more important than what goes on
during the meeting.”...
Information Wants to Be Free blog, July 21
New Melvyl catalog will run on WorldCat
[http://www.cdlib.org/news/uc_oclc_press_release_20070621.pdf] (PDF file)
The University of California Libraries are working in collaboration with OCLC Online Computer
Library Center to pilot a Next Generation Melvyl Catalog supported by OCLC’s WorldCat Local
system. Scheduled for launch in 2008, the catalog will offer a single search box, relevancy
ranking of search results, result sets that bring multiple versions of a work together, faceted
browsing, citation formatting options, and cover art....
California Digital Library, June 22
Where to find public records online
[http://lifehacker.com/software/technophilia/where-to-find-public-records-online-280785.php]
While our most private information can (usually) not be found online, you can track down items
like birth certificates, marriage and divorce information, obituaries, and licenses on the Web.
Wendy Boswell offers a couple dozen tips on where to find public records online....
Lifehacker, July 23
Get grandpa’s FBI file [http://www.getgrandpasfbifile.com/]
Attorney and FOIA researcher Michael J. Ravnitzky has set up an informational website that
explains how to obtain an FBI file on anyone, deceased or (with that person’s permission) alive.
Get Grandpa’s FBI File walks you through the process and creates appropriate form letters for you
to send to FBI field offices....
Get Grandpa’s FBI File
Bill could hasten demise of FCC indecency regulation
[http://blog.cdt.org/2007/07/17/bill-could-hasten-demise-of-fcc-indecency-regulation/]
In early July, Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) introduced a relatively unnoticed bill, the
Protecting Children from Indecent Programming Act (S. 1780), that effectively overturns a major
court decision in the area of free expression: Fox Television Stations v. FCC, which held that the
FCC’s assertion that a single use of a curse word on broadcast television was indecent
violated the Administrative Procedure Act. The ACLU
[http://www.aclu.org/freespeech/gen/30755prs20070718.html] says the bill is contrary to the First
Amendment, but it might force the courts to determine whether the FCC really has the
constitutional authority to regulate isolated utterances....
Center for Democracy & Technology, PolicyBeta blog, July 17; ACLU, July 18
Books Across America grants [http://www.neafoundation.org/programs/BAA_2007.htm]
The National Education Association Foundation is making grants of $1,000 to public schools serving
economically disadvantaged students to purchase books for school libraries. The applicant must be
a practicing preK–12 school librarian, teacher, or education-support professional in a U.S. public
school. At least 70% of the students in the school must be eligible for the free or reduced-price
lunch program. Deadline for applications is November 12....
NEA Foundation
Creating a YA blog [http://www.yalibrarian.com/wordpress/2007/07/creating-a-ya-blog/]
Josh Bernstein, of the Capital Area District Library in Lansing, Michigan, writes: “Recently my
library system decided to start a YA blog. [http://www.cadl.org/blogs/teen/] Previously we did not
have much of an online presence for our teens and this will hopefully mark a change in the right
direction. I wanted to share some of our goals and thoughts behind the blog so they might aid
other librarians, but also so those of you who already have one can advise us on what will and
won’t work. So let the comments fly.”...
Alternative Teen Services blog, July 19
Amsterdam’s new public library is the largest in Europe
[http://www.oba.nl/index.cfm/t/The_new_Central_Library_opened_on_07_07_07__/objectid/D9763FAA-FE7C-E
54D-09382E37332CFE15/vid/4966C44C-B589-189D-4709FECEC75C8BB0/containerid/666415AA-C09F-296A-61DB6694
27684CB2/displaymethod/display_news]
Princess Laurentien of the Netherlands opened the new Amsterdam Central Library to the public at a
special July 7 ceremony. Novelist Hella Haasse read her Ode to the Amsterdam Public Library,
written for the occasion, and the princess read a fairy tale, specially written by author Sieb
Posthuma, to a group of 7-year olds. Designed by Dutch architect Jo Coenen, the
28,000-square-meter building is the largest public library in Europe....
Openbare Bibliotheek Amsterdam, July 18
Canadian Library Association moves to open access
[http://cla.informz.net/cla/archives/archive_155065.html]
The CLA Executive Council has approved some recommendations from its Open Access Task Force that
move the association towards providing virtually all of its intellectual property free of charge
online, free of most copyright and licensing restrictions, with the exception of Feliciter and its
monographs....
CLA Digest, June 29
Find a book to match your mood [http://www.whichbook.net/default.aspx]
Whichbook gives readers an enjoyable way to find books to match their mood. You can either choose
types of characters, plots, or settings; or select from sliding scales of moods (happy/sad,
optimistic/bleak, no sex/sex). This web application is run by Opening the Book Ltd. in the UK,
which gives it an international flavor of choices....
Whichbook.net
Houghton Mifflin buys a piece of Reed Elsevier
[http://www.hmco.com/company/investors/invest/ir_release_071607.html]
Houghton Mifflin Company has signed an agreement to acquire the Harcourt Education, Harcourt
Trade, and Greenwood-Heinemann divisions of Reed Elsevier for $4 billion. The move makes it the
owner of such familiar imprints as Libraries Unlimited, Greenwood Press, Praeger, Raintree, and
Holt Rinehart and Winston. Analysts
[http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/07/22/business/publish23.php] say private equity has been
attracted to the educational business by steady cash flows, a relative lack of competition, and
expectations that spending will increase in coming years as big states like California step up
textbook-replacement programs....
Houghton Mifflin, July 16; International Herald Tribune, July 22
[http://www.techsoup.org/go/libald]
====================================================================================================
[http://www.alastore.ala.org/SiteSolution.taf?_sn=catalog2&_pn=product_detail&_op=2249]
Essential facts, advice, lists, documents, guidelines, lore, wit, and wisdom: Along with fun and
irreverence, it’s what readers have come to expect from the “Whole Library”
series. Diane Kresh edits The Whole Digital Library Handbook
[http://www.alastore.ala.org/SiteSolution.taf?_sn=catalog2&_pn=product_detail&_op=2249]—an
encyclopedic overview of digital libraries. NEW! From ALA Editions.
[http://cs.ala.org/ra/speakers/]
Foreign book dealers directory.
[http://www.ala.org/CFApps/bookdealers/index.cfm?CFID=11313872&CFTOKEN=59782366] Find suppliers of
library materials from many parts of the world with searchable lists of vendors regularly used by
university libraries in the United States. Created by a subcommittee of the ALCTS Acquisitions
Section’s Publications Committee.
In this issue
August 2007
A Library 2.0 Manifesto
Library Stamps of 1982
The Ventriloquist Who Changed the World
Annual Conference Roundup
Career Leads from
[http://joblist.ala.org/]
Children’s Librarian.
[http://joblist.ala.org/modules/jobseeker/controller.cfm?scr=jobdetail&jobid=7240] The County of
Henrico Public Library System, Richmond, Virginia, is accepting applications for three
Children’s Librarian I positions. Provides information services, programming, collection
development, and outreach to Henrico citizens, primarily serving children from birth to grade 6.
@ More jobs [http://joblist.ala.org/]...
[http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlpubs/choice/home.htm]
Choice Editor Irv Rockwood reminisces about the magazine’s past 10 years of reviewing websites.
[http://www.ala.org/choicetemplate.cfm?section=choice&template=/ala/choicebucket/auged07.htm]
[http://www.capwiz.com/ala/home/]
Despite an authorization level of $250 million, the Improving Literacy Through School Libraries
program received only $19 million in FY2007. Eight states— Delaware, the District of Columbia,
Hawaii, Nevada, New Hampshire, Vermont, Utah and Wyoming—have never received funding under this
program. Congress is currently considering funding levels for FY2008. The House Labor, Health and
Human Services, and Education FY2008 Appropriations bill provides $19.486 million for the program
and the Senate Appropriations Committee recommended $23 million for the program. Contact your
Members of Congress [http://www.capwiz.com/ala/home/] and tell them to provide additional funding
for the Improving Literacy Through School Libraries program.
Public Perception
How the World
Sees Us
“When I was living in Washington, the Library of Congress became crucial to my work. In those
days, readers who wanted to use it on a daily basis were given a carrel in the dome. This was one
of the most astonishing interiors I have known —attics around a sphere entirely scaffolded with
shelving and interspersed among this Piranesi-like colonnade, battered wooden tables and chairs
facing a small bookcase all of one’s own on which 100 titles could be kept.
“We were cellular —larval—creatures up there in the shadowy, mote-filled light; close to the
vertiginous multitude of the books as the shelves bent away round the curving space. Every book
has its own smell, its grain, its weight under the fingers, its creep and gait of printed
characters, its air and speech and style of rustle. In the dome, I came to know the life of books
as beings animate through time, acquiring unmistakable individuality.”
?British writer Marina Warner, from a speech given at the British Library’s annual dinner, The
Times, July 21.
Ask the ALA Librarian
Q. Does the American Library Association have a division to help those of us working with prison
libraries?
A. Yes, both a division and an office! The Association of Specialized and Cooperative Library
Agencies [http://www.ala.org/ala/ascla/ascla.htm] (ASCLA) represents state library agencies,
specialized library agencies, multitype library cooperatives, and independent librarians.
Specialized library agencies are those organizations that provide materials and services to meet
the information needs of persons whose access to library services and materials is limited because
of confinement, sensory, mental, physical, health, or behavioral conditions. The Libraries Serving
Special Populations Section [http://www.ala.org/LSSPSTemplate.cfm?Section=LSSPS] (LSSPS) is the
section that represents members with interests in this area. Interface, the online newsletter for
ASCLA, has published (and collected into a single page) articles on prison libraries.
[http://www.ala.org/ala/ascla/asclapubs/interface/archives/contentlistingbykey/prisonlib/prisonlibra
ries.htm]
ALA’s Office for Literacy and Outreach Services [http://www.ala.org/ala/olos/literacyoutreach.htm]
(OLOS) supports, serves, and promotes adult literacy and equity of information access initiatives
for traditionally underserved populations through training, information resources, and technical
assistance. There are resources
[http://www.ala.org/ala/olos/outreachresource/servicesincarcerated.htm] for library services to
incarcerated people and ex-offenders, including “Behind the Walls @ Your Library,”
[http://www.ala.org/ala/olos/outreachresource/btwarchive.htm] a regular online column. See the ALA
Professional Tips wiki [http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php/Prison_Library_Support]
for further assistance.
The ALA Librarian [mailto:AskTheLibrarian@ala.org] welcomes your questions.
Julia Schneider discusses a survey of California prisons,
[http://www.ala.org/ala/ascla/asclapubs/interface/archives/contentlistingby/volume29a/surveyofcalifo
rniaprisonlibrarians/califprisons.htm] sent out recently to gauge the opinions of the state’s
prison librarians on their work and work conditions, in the Summer issue of ASCLA’s Interface.
Calendar
Sept. 19–
Oct. 31:
Newberry Library, [http://www.newberry.org/programs/SemFall2007.html#literature] Chicago. Seven
Wednesday sessions. “Danger Ahead! Banned Books As Art and Controversy.” Seminar on the literary
value and controversies surrounding The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Of Mice and Men, Catch-22,
The Catcher in the Rye, and To Kill a Mockingbird. Contact: Newberry Library Seminars
[mailto:pubprog@newberry.org].
Sept. 24–25:
National Information Standards Organization, [http://www.niso.org/news/events_workshops/erm07/]
E-Resource Management Forum, Magnolia Hotel, Denver, Colorado. “The What, Why, and How for
Managing E-Resources.” Contact: NISO. [mailto:nisohq@niso.org]
Sept. 28:
Authors As Experts Web Seminar. [http://www.raabassociates.com/webinars.htm] “A Practical Guide to
Fantasy,” featuring Mirrorstone Editor Nina Hess. Contact: Raab Associates,
[mailto:info@raabassociates.com] 914-241-2117.
Sept. 29–Oct. 6:
Banned Books Week. [http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/bannedbooksweek/bannedbooksweek.htm] Contact: ALA
Office for Intellectual Freedom. [mailto:oif@ala.org]
Oct. 7–11:
International Association of Aquatic and Marine Science Libraries and Information Centers,
[http://www.iamslic.org/index.php?section=150] Annual Conference, Sarasota, Florida. “Changes on
the Horizon.” Contact: Barb Butler. [mailto:butler@uoregon.edu]
Oct. 12–13:
Oregon Association of School Libraries, [http://www.oema.net/conferences/2007/index.htm] Annual
Conference, Seaside, Oregon. “Making Waves: Sneaker, Surfing, and Tsunami Ideas.”
Contact: OASL. [mailto:oaslmembership@comcast.net]
Oct. 14–16:
New England Library Association, [http://www.nelib.org/conference/2007/] Annual Conference,
Sturbridge, Massachusetts. “NELA Stars in Sturbridge.” Contact: NELA.
[mailto:marupert@pobox.com]
Oct. 17–20:
Northeast Regional Law Libraries Meeting [http://www.librarieswithoutborders.net], Toronto
Marriott Downtown Eaton Centre. “Libraries Without Borders II.” Contact: Steven Weiter
[mailto:sweiter@courts.state.ny.us].
Oct. 21–27:
National Friends of Libraries Week. [http://www.folusa.org/sharing/national-friends-week.php]
Contact: FOLUSA. [mailto:friends@folusa.org]
Oct. 22:
International School Library Day. [http://www.iasl-online.org/events/isld/] “Learning: Powered by
Your School Library.” Contact: International Association of School Libraries.
[mailto:iasl@kb.com.au]
Oct. 22–26:
Triangle Research Libraries Network, [http://www.trln.org/committee/academy/academyagenda.pdf]
Friday Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “Management Academy: The Business of
Libraries.” Attendance is limited to 15 participants from TRLN Libraries and 15 from the wider
academic library community. Contact: TRLN, [http://www.trln.org/] 919-962-8022.
Oct. 24–26:
International Cultural Heritage Informatics Meeting [http://www.archimuse.com/ichim07/],
[http://www.archimuse.com/ichim07/] Toronto, Ontario. Contact: ICHIM07.
[mailto:ichim07@archimuse.com]
Nov. 2–4:
United States Board on Books for Young People, [http://www.usbby.org/] Regional Conference,
Westward Look Resort, Tucson, Arizona. “Children Between Worlds: Intercultural Relations in
Books for Children and Young Adults.” Contact: USBBY. [mailto:usbby@reading.org]
Nov. 7–10:
XXVII Charleston Conference, [http://www.katina.info/conference/] Issues in Book and Serial
Acquisition, Charleston, South Carolina. “What Tangled Webs We Weave.” Contact: Beth
Bernhardt. [mailto:beth_bernhardt@uncg.edu]
@ 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 %>]