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The e-newsletter of the American Library Association | June 20, 2007
Contents
U.S. & World News [#usworld]
ALA News [#alanews]
AL Focus [#alfocus]
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/Newsevents/Events/event_2007_ala.php]
[http://www.sirsidynix.com]
U.S. & World News
====================================================================================================
New York City budget provides for service six days a week
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/nybudget.cfm]
In a $59-billion budget agreement announced June 12, New York City public libraries will be funded
for six-day-a-week service for the first time in six years. Based on a record $4.4-billion
surplus, the budget will also reduce property taxes by 7% and provide some sales tax relief on
clothing and shoe purchases of over $110....
Providence Public Library approves city contract
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/providencedeal.cfm]
Trustees of the Providence (R.I.) Public Library voted June 13 to accept a one-year municipal
contract that increases the city’s funding of the library by $300,000 and establishes an
advisory committee to oversee PPL’s budget. The agreement ends a dispute over the level of
city financing, governance of the branch libraries, staffing levels, and hours that began in July
2004 when the library cut staff and services in response to several years of level funding by the
city and state....
Fearing radicals, prisons remove religious books
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/prisons.cfm]
Officials at the federal prison in Otisville, New York, removed hundreds of books from the chapel
library on Memorial Day, mostly titles of a religious nature. The action was part of a belated
response to an April 2004 Department of Justice review of the way prisons choose providers of
Muslim religious services that resulted in a federal directive designed to prevent violent inmates
from access to radical Islamic religious texts....
Supreme Court asked to repeal library worship ban
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/june2007/worshipban.cfm]
The Alliance Defense Fund, a law firm representing the Faith Center Church Evangelistic
Ministries, asked the U.S. Supreme Court June 7 to overturn a September 20 federal appeals court
ban on conducting worship services at the Contra Costa County (Calif.) Library’s Antioch
branch....
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[http://www.hwwilson.com]
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ALA News
====================================================================================================
Former FISA Court judge to speak at Annual Conference
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160309]
Former Chief Judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court Royce Lamberth will speak in an
open session at Annual Conference about the inner workings of the secretive court and how it has
changed since passage of the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001. Lamberth will talk on Saturday, June 23,
from 8-10:15 AM in Room 143-B of the Washington Convention Center, 801 Mount Vernon Place, NW,
Washington, D.C....
ALA files comments on three telecom issues
[http://blogs.ala.org/districtdispatch.php?title=ala_files_comments_to_fcc_on_three_telec&more=1&c=1
&tb=1&pb=1]
ALA recently filed comments with the Federal Communications Commission in relation to several key
telecommunications policy issues and how they relate to America’s libraries: deployment of
broadband to public libraries, subscriptions to broadband services, and net neutrality....
District Dispatch blog, June 19
Loriene Roy on health information issues
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160086]
ALA President-Elect Loriene Roy will address health information issues and library resources for
Hispanics and Latinos at the 2007 Trejo Foster Foundation Institute, July 13, 7 p.m., at the
University of Arizona in Tucson. The TFF Institute brings together leaders, practitioners, and
students in the library and information fields to discuss and advocate for issues, policies, and
practices that affect Hispanic and Latino communities and individuals....
Parade of Bookmobiles
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160162]
The Office for Literacy and Outreach Services will hold a Parade of Bookmobiles during ALA Annual
Conference on Tuesday, June 26. The event will feature bookmobiles making their way from the
Washington Convention Center to Franklin Square at Eye and 13th Streets. Once at Franklin Square,
the bookmobiles will be open to the public for pictures and tours from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m....
ALA welcomes two new Library Champions
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160033]
The Development Office has announced two new ALA Library Champions: Innovative Interfaces
[http://www.iii.com/] and Mirrorstone. [http://ww2.wizards.com/Books/Mirrorstone/Home.aspx]
Corporate Library Champions demonstrate the importance and value of libraries as dynamic, modern
community centers for learning, information, and entertainment. Visit Innovative Interfaces at
booths 4132 and 3205, and Mirrorstone at booth 2947 at ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C....
Picturing America grant recipients
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=159761]
The ALA Public Programs Office, in collaboration with the National Endowment for the Humanities,
has selected more than 1,500 schools to receive Picturing America, a new grant opportunity for
schools and school libraries. Picturing America will provide a collection of 40 large-scale
reproductions of American artworks and related materials to promote the teaching, study, and
understanding of American history and culture....
Executive Board recognizes Spectrum Scholarship Program
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160004]
In action taken at their spring meeting held April 12–15 in Chicago, the ALA Executive Board
formally recognized the outstanding achievements of the Spectrum Scholarship Program on the
occasion of its 10th anniversary. Established in 1997, the Spectrum Scholarship Program is ALA’s
national diversity and recruitment effort....
AL Focus
====================================================================================================
article, from beginning to end [http://alfocus.ala.org/videos/one-article-beginning-end]
What kind of work goes into producing a single column in American Libraries magazine? More than
you imagine. See every drop of blood, sweat, and tears in this fast-paced, high-powered,
behind-the-scenes look (5:40) at AL’s daily grind. (A higher-res Quicktime version
[http://www.blip.tv/file/271431?filename=Alfocus-OneArticleFromBeginningToEnd548.mov] that takes a
bit longer to load reduces the distortion created by fast camera tracking in the low-res Flash
version on our website.)...
ALA Wheel of Confusion #2 [http://alfocus.ala.org/videos/wheel-confusion-2]
If you thought the last episode was a brain-buster, brace yourself as ALA Librarian Karen Muller
tells host John Chrastka about the longest acronym in ALA history. Will it be seven letters long?
Ten? Not even close! It takes a 1:26 video to just say what the acronym stands for....
Beth Yoke on YALSA [http://alfocus.ala.org/videos/beth-yoke-executive-director-yalsa]
In this episode (6:30) of “ALA in Focus,” ALA Manager for Membership Services John Chrastka chats
with Beth Yoke, executive director of YALSA, about the events, meetings, and parties at the 2007
Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. Yoke also talks about the 10th anniversary of Teen Read
Week, how to establish YALSA discussion and interest groups, and the multiple hats she tried on in
West Virginia....
Featured review: Adult books
[http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=2076098]
Waas, Murray, and Jeff Lomonaco (editors). The United States v. I. Lewis Libby. June 2007. 584p.
Sterling/Union Square, paperback (978-1-4027-5259-9).
Some pundits have claimed that the Scooter Libby case was merely an inside-the-Beltway story,
given that no one was prosecuted for the actual crime of leaking the name of CIA agent Valerie
Plame. Longtime investigative journalist Waas begs to differ. In a fascinating introduction, he
takes readers through the events that led up to the Libby prosecution. The rest of the text in
this thick volume is primarily a history of the trial, complete with a transcript, various time
lines, and an extensive cast of characters. Throughout it all, Waas injects short, incisive
explanations and commentary that not only show how Washington works but also reveal the lengths to
which the Bush administration (and, one suspects, any administration) will go to see that its will
is not thwarted....
editors march on Washington
[http://blog.booklistonline.com/2007/06/14/booklist-editors-march-on-washington/]
With Annual Conference in Washington, D.C., fast approaching, Keir Graff put together this handy
guide to the programs and events where attendees will find Booklist and Booklist Online editors.
Come by the Booklist booth (#2517) to meet the editors, share ideas, and pick up a free Booklist
desk calendar....
@ Visit Booklist Online [http://www.booklistonline.com/] for other reviews and much more....
D.C. Update
====================================================================================================
Conference Center 411 [http://wikis.ala.org/annual2007/index.php/Conference_Center_411]
See this wiki for directions on getting to the Washington Convention Center from airports, by
Metro or MARC trains, as well as other useful convention center information (e.g., parking,
business center services)....
The Library of Congress at Annual Conference [http://www.loc.gov/blog/?p=142]
On Monday, June 25, at 4 p.m. in the Library’s Coolidge Auditorium, ALA members and LC staff
are invited to attend a conversation between Librarian of Congress James Billington and Brian Lamb
of C-SPAN on issues of importance to libraries. LC staff will be conducting several tours and
programs [http://www.loc.gov/ala/tours/index.html], as well as staging a full schedule of
programming at the LC booth (#1741) at the Convention Center....
Library of Congress blog, June 19
Division News
====================================================================================================
YALSA to celebrate 50 years at President’s Program
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160015]
YALSA will present its 50th Anniversary President’s Program, “A Day in the Life of a
Teenager: Five Decades with YALSA,” on June 25 at the ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C.
The program will also feature a panel discussion. moderated by Michael Cart (right), on the past
five decades of young adult literature with an eye toward future trends....
Social networking for teens
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160227]
In honor of National Internet Safety Month, YALSA has released a brochure to assist librarians in
educating teens about safe use of online social networking software, including sites like
Facebook, MySpace, Flickr, YouTube, and LiveJournal. Social Networking: A Guide for Teens is
available as a downloadable PDF file [http://www.ala.org/Source/teen_sn_brochure.pdf] on
YALSA’s website....
Intellectual freedom for kids
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=159988]
ALSC has just released Kids, Know Your Rights! A Young Person’s Guide to Intellectual
Freedom. This four-page, full-color, PDF brochure
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alsc/alscpubs/KidsKnowYourRights.pdf] is free to download and speaks
directly to kids in grades 5 and up, using simplified, kid-friendly language to tackle such
difficult, abstract ideas as challenges to the First Amendment, how censorship affects children,
and how they can defend their right to read, privacy and confidentiality, and respecting the
opinions of others....
Special collections in children’s literature
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=159997]
An ALSC committee has created a Special Collections in Children’s Literature Wikiography
[http://wikis.ala.org/alsc/index.php/SPECIAL_COLLECTIONS_IN_CHILDREN%27S_LITERATURE_WIKIOGRAPHY]
to provide an easily accessible clearinghouse with helpful information about 14 special
collections that are used by researchers studying children or their literature....
New bibliographies boast the best in children’s literature
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160298]
The ALA–Children’s Book Council Joint Committee, in cooperation with the ALSC Quicklists
Consulting Committee, has released a set of four bibliographies intended to provide guidance to
parents, grandparents, and others interested in assembling a high-quality library for children at
home. The bibliographies are available as full-color PDFs on the ALSC
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alsc/alscresources/alacbcbuildingahomelibrary/ALACBCBuildingHomeLbry.htm]
and CBC [http://www.cbcbooks.org/] websites and are free to download, copy, and distribute....
2007 LITA National Forum
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160226]
Online registration
[http://www.lita.org/ala/lita/litaevents/litanationalforum2007denver/forum2007.cfm] now is
available for the 2007 LITA National Forum, “Technology with Altitude: 10 Years of the LITA
National Forum,” to be held October 4–7, 2007, at the Marriott City Center in Denver. Jeffrey
Kiehl, National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado, will open the Forum with The
Scientific and Social Challenges of Global Warming....
C&RL News
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160019]
ACRL has appointed David Free editor-in-chief of College and Research Libraries News, effective
July 16. Free comes to ACRL from the Decatur Campus of Georgia Perimeter College, where he served
as public services librarian. He is an acknowledged pioneer in the world of academic library
podcasting....
User Services in College Libraries
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160174]
ACRL has published a new edition of User Surveys in College Libraries, compiled by Doreen
Kopycinski of Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and Kimberley Sando of DeSales
University in Center Valley, Pennsylvania. It is number 38 in ACRL’s College Libraries
Section’s CLIP Notes series. Using the CLIP Notes guidelines, the compilers developed a
survey based on that found in the 1995 edition to allow for an historical comparison....
ACRL on global evolution
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160181]
ACRL has published Global Evolution: A Chronological Annotated Bibliography of International
Students in U.S. Academic Libraries, by Kaetrena D. Davis of Georgia State University in Atlanta.
This chronological, annotated bibliography shows the evolution of the issues concerning
undergraduate and graduate international students in American academic libraries and contains many
possible guidelines and ideas for meeting the basic and advanced information needs of an
increasingly diverse patron group....
editor
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=159866]
The LITA Board of Directors has appointed Marc Truitt editor of its Information Technology and
Libraries (ITAL) journal. Truitt is associate director of information technology resources and
services at the University of Alberta Libraries....
Round Table News
====================================================================================================
SupERTuesday closing reception
[http://www.ala.org/ala/eventsandconferencesb/annual/2007a/exhibits.htm]
Don’t miss the SupERTuesday Closing Reception at Annual Conference, with food and prizes,
sponsored by Exhibits Round Table, your exhibitors, and ALA. Fill out the SupERTuesday entry form
in the ActionAd Booklet (received at Registration) or in the Tuesday edition of Cognotes and drop
it in the free drawing boxes in the exhibit hall. Drawings will be held on Tuesday, June 26, at
10:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m., and 1:00 p.m.; the Grand Prize Drawing will be held at 2:30 p.m. You must
be present to win.
EMIERT Annual Conference events
[http://www.ala.org/ala/olos/olosprograms/olosprogramsb/AC07prog.htm#emiert]
“Libraries, Immigrants, and the American Experience” is one of the Ethnic and Multicultural
Information Exchange Round Table programs at Annual Conference....
Awards
====================================================================================================
ALA and others receive $28 million in 21st Century grants
[http://www.imls.gov/news/2007/061907.shtm]
On June 19, the Institute of Museum and Library Services announced grants of almost $28 million
under the 2007 Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian Program. The program supports tuition assistance,
curriculum development, service expectations, job placement, recruitment of nontraditional library
students, and support for doctoral candidates to teach library science and research. ALA received
funds for more Spectrum Scholarships in its Reach 21 program, a support staff certification pilot
project, and the Online Resource Center for Library Cultural Programming....
Institute of Museum and Library Services, June 19
Scholastic will get the AASL Crystal Apple
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160025]
AASL President Cyndi Phillip has selected Scholastic Library Publishing as the recipient of the
2007 Crystal Apple Award. The award is given at the discretion of the AASL president to an
individual or group with a significant impact on school libraries and students. Phillip
specifically cited Scholastic’s support for the school library media field through its
production and distribution of “School Libraries Work,” a compilation of state studies
on the impact of school library media programs on student achievement....
AASL Innovative Reading Grant
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=159865]
Nancy Baumann, school library media specialist at Barnett Shoals Elementary School in Athens,
Georgia, hjas been awarded AASL’s first Innovative Reading Grant. The $2,500 grant is intended to
support the planning and implementation of a unique and innovative program that encourages reading
for children, especially those who struggle with literacy....
Roger Baldwin Medal of Liberty awarded to the four John Does
[http://www.aclu.org/about/30137prs20070615.html]
In a ceremony June 15 at its Biennial Conference in Seattle, the American Civil Liberties Union
presented the Roger N. Baldwin Medal of Liberty [http://www.aclu.org/about/28001res20070116.html]
awards to four Connecticut librarians and the president of a New York internet service provider
who stood up against the Patriot Act and refused to violate the privacy of their patrons and
clients....
American Civil Liberties Union, June 15
Seen Online
====================================================================================================
Knox County branch move runs afoul of civil rights
[http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/local_news/article/0,1406,KNS_347_5593755,00.html]
Tennessee officials say the Knox County government violated the federal Civil Rights Act by
deciding to move its Burlington branch library farther from the center of East Knoxville’s black
population before getting public input. As a result, Tennessee Secretary of State Riley Darnell
has frozen grant funding for the library system until the federal Institute of Museum and Library
Services determines whether to refer the matter to the U.S. Department of Justice....
Knoxville (Tenn.) News Sentinel, June 20
Bowling Green closes a branch
[http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_action=doc&p_docid=119E02AD1E709E28&p_docnum=5]
In the wake of budget cuts from Warren County, the Bowling Green (Ky.) Public Library board of
directors voted June 18 to close the Smiths Grove library branch, effective September 1. To recoup
a $225,000 total loss, the board decided to close the branch and eliminate Sunday hours at all
branches effective July 1....
Bowling Green (Ky.) Daily News, June 19
Life after Harry Potter? [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19035151/]
July 21 is the release date for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh and final
chapter in J. K. Rowling’s popular saga. But without Harry Potter, will teens keep reading?
The answer is an emphatic yes. Books for teens are in a period of unprecedented growth, with its
success beginning with the boy wizard himself. (This article is adapted in part from a chapter in
the third edition of YALSA’s Best Books for Young Adults, edited by Holly Koelling.)...
Today Show (NBC), June 13
Schwarzman helps NYPL raise $2.2 million
[http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=a6QGlRJU3F4s]
Blackstone Group Chairman Stephen A. Schwarzman, whose buyout fund is about to go public, raised
money for another cause June 18—the New York Public Library. Schwarzman, a member of the library’s
board, was honored at a dinner that brought in $2.2 million to modernize the 13 million-volume
collection....
Bloomberg, June 19
UIUC grad to catalog Abbey’s incunabula [http://www.news.uiuc.edu/news/07/0612cook.html]
Although he’s not yet 25, Christopher Cook already is regarded as an expert in his trade.
Cook is off to London on June 24 to begin cataloging the Westmionster Abbey library’s
collection of incunabula, or early printed books. The recent GSLIS graduate and new rare book
cataloging project manager at the Rare Book and Manuscript Library at the University of Illinois
hopes, he said, to “provide a descriptive bibliography of the Abbey’s collection of
15th-century imprints, shedding light on book distribution, collecting habits, and binding
practices in early modern England.”...
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, June 12
Sacramento library probes maintenance firm [http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/231946.html]
The Sacramento (Calif.) Public Library has launched an internal investigation into a company that
paid a contractor to replace light bulbs and paint curbs, then as much as tripled some prices to
the library. A May 21 Public Records Act request to examine invoices billed by Hagginwood Services
Inc. revealed bills of $410 to unplug a toilet, $411 to fix a leaking water fountain and $2,423
for repairing lights in one room....
Sacramento (Calif.) Bee, June 20
Jackie’s story [http://www.sptimes.com/2007/06/08/Floridian/Jackie_s_story.shtml]
Jackie Ramseur sits outside the Clearwater (Fla.) Public Library on a park bench, her bags at her
feet, smoking roll-your-own cigarettes. She’s homeless, but in her bag, she has library books.
There’s Valley of Silence, a Nora Roberts romance novel about Celtic vampires. She has Stargirl, a
young adult novel about teenagers confronting high school cliques. And Second Wave: Acorna’s
Children, a sci-fi novel she picked up off a library display because it had a cat on the cover,
and she loves animals....
St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times, June 8
Oak Park builds a transgender resource collection
[http://blogs.chicagotribune.com/news_columnists_ezorn/2007/06/another_tourism.html]
Oak Park (Ill.) Public Library has received a $3,000 LSTA grant to create the first focused
transgender resource collection in a U.S. public library. The library is purchasing materials that
will serve, reflect, and welcome transgender people. The collection will also increase public
awareness and understanding of gender identity and gender expression issues....
Chicago Tribune, June 18
Putin creates a Yeltsin Presidential Library
[http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=11639928&PageNum=0]
Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree creating a Presidential Library named after
former President Boris Yeltsin. The library will be located in the Synod building in St.
Petersburg and will have branches in all regions of the Russian Federation....
Itar-TASS, June 19
Swindon Library closes its loo
[http://www.swindonadvertiser.co.uk/search/display.var.1477876.0.drugusers_force_closure_of_library_
toilets.php]
The main library in Swindon, England, has shut its toilets for good after drug addicts left them
in a disgusting state. Library staff and visitors were regularly confronted with a mess and
vandalism, so the council decided to close them permanently. With the new £9-million central
library in Regent Circus not due to open until next summer, the town’s main reading rooms will be
without any toilets until then....
Swindon (UK) Advertiser, June 18
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[http://www.maintainitproject.org/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=banner&utm_content=AL%2BDirect]
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Tech Talk
====================================================================================================
13 book hacks for bibliophiles
[http://lifehacker.com/software/hack-attack/13-book-hacks-for-the-library-crowd-269953.php]
Adam Pash writes: “From your local library to the classroom to the bookstore, there are a lot of
tools available to help you save time and money when it comes to the bound world of information.
Today, in the interest of lifehacking your bookshelf, I’m rounding up my favorite 13 ‘book hacks’
for getting the most from your bound literature. The first three hacks provide ways to integrate
your computer with your local library, from a web-based notification tool to a Firefox extension
to a killer Mac-only menu bar app.”...
Lifehacker, June 19
National Fiber to the Library initiative [http://www.prweb.com/releases/2007/6/prweb532855.htm]
The Community TeleStructure Initiative has announced plans for a series of workshops on a National
Fiber to the Library effort with the goal of connecting every library in the United States with
fiber-speed internet by 2010. The first workshop will be held in Sausalito, California, on July 2,
and will include broadband policy and market leaders in California joined by key national policy
leaders from the American Library Association, the Fiber to the Home Council, and the FCC....
Community TeleStructure Initiative, June 13
Geotag your flickr photos [http://infodoodads.com/?p=106]
You may have recently noticed an extra option available when viewing the detail on your own flickr
photos. Under additional information there is an option to place this photo on a map. This is a
mash-up between flickr and Yahoo Maps—only fitting since they share the same mother company.
On your main flickr page, under the You menu, you can select My Map to begin. From here there is a
search box to navigate to a specific location and another toolbar to choose which photos you want
to play with....
Infodoodads blog, June 13
Meredith Farkas’s top tech trends
[http://litablog.org/2007/06/15/meredith-farkas-top-technology-trends/]
Meredith Farkas writes: “Unfortunately, I’m set to speak at another session [at Annual
Conference] that is at the exact same time as the Technology Trends panel, but I thought I’d
contribute my trends virtually. So, in addition to the text version of my trends (which contain
links to examples), I created a Flash movie (screencast) of my trends with narration. I figured it
would be the closest thing to actually being there and you can actually see the applications
I’m talking about.”...
LITA Blog, June 15
Welcome to the Twitterverse [http://showcase.litablog.org/index.php/David_Free]
Soon-to-be C&RL News Editor David Free explains the essence of the social networking tool Twitter.
He advises: “Of course, if you don’t just want to be talking to yourself, you will need to add
friends to Twitter.” Free shows you how....
Bigwig Social Software Showcase
NISO programs get a boost from Mellon Foundation
[http://www.niso.org/news/releases/pr-NISO-mellon-6-07.html]
The National Information Standards Organization has received a $196,000 grant from the Andrew W.
Mellon Foundation under its Scholarly Communications Program. The award will be used to transform
and invigorate the standards process by supporting the adoption of technology tools for
collaboration and the incubation of new community initiatives via a series of Thought Leader
meetings....
National Information Standards Organization, June 18
EBSCO acquires two ABC-CLIO databases
[http://www.econtentmag.com/Articles/ArticleReader.aspx?ArticleID=36702]
Publisher ABC-CLIO and EBSCO Publishing announced a new alliance June 15 designed to benefit
history scholars, teachers, and students. As part of the undertaking, EBSCO has acquired two of
ABC-CLIO’s databases, Historical Abstracts and America: History and Life. ABC-CLIO editorial
staff will continue producing content for the databases and the two databases will be made
available via EBSCOhost....
EContent, June 19
Bacteria and keyboards [http://kraftylibrarian.com/2007/06/bacteria-and-keyboards.html]
The Krafty Librarian writes: “Don’t do it, don’t look at your keyboard too closely. Ignorance is
bliss in this instance, trust me. I looked and I am horrified to say my keyboard looks worse than
the dirt catching crevices of my car. So what is a person to do? First inclination is to run
screaming for the hand sanitizer and call hazmat to dispose of the thing. But the folks at NPR had
an idea.”...
The Krafty Librarian, June 14
Actions & Answers
====================================================================================================
What book got you hooked? [http://www2.firstbook.org/whatbook/]
Was it The Cat in the Hat? Or Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are? Or was it Daddy’s Roommate? From
now until July 31, Idearc Media and First Book want you to let them know what book got you hooked
on reading and why. In August, First Book will post a list of the top 50 children’s books with the
most votes....
First Book
Librarians in popular culture [http://www.librarian-image.net/img07/]
Ruth A. Kneale offers a synopsis of her talk at the 2007 Special Libraries Association Annual
Conference on how librarians are portrayed in the movies, in music (such as this speed-metal band
from Seattle, Blöödhag), on TV, in books and comics, with some toys and t-shirts thrown in....
Librarian-image.net
The siren song of the internet
[http://blogs.britannica.com/blog/main/2007/06/the-siren-song-of-the-internet-part-ii/]
Michael Gorman continues his blogging on Web 2.0: “A common feature of call-in talk shows and even
blogs is the person claiming to have ‘done research’ into the topic under discussion. What
invariably follows is a torrent of half-baked ideas, urban myths, and political vituperation, the
former two being attributed to ‘the internet.’ Research, properly used, signifies complete and
critical investigation of, or experimentation in, a particular subject resulting in new
conclusions or discoveries. To many, it now means a few minutes noodling around to see which
shards of data a search engine can retrieve and, worse, a delusion that one is now in possession
of all pertinent facts.”...
Britannica Blog, June 19
I’m no antidigitalist
[http://www.davidleeking.com/2007/06/18/im-no-antidigitalist-a-song-about-gormangate/]
David Lee King has composed a song based on Michael Gorman’s recent posts
[http://blogs.britannica.com/blog/main/2007/06/web-20-the-sleep-of-reason-part-ii/] on the
Britannica Blog. He writes: “Last week, as I was reading everyone’s responses to Michael
Gorman’s blog posts, I re-read a couple of the posts myself . . . and this phrase from his
earlier ‘blog people’ article started running through my head . . . and wouldn’t leave. So I
did what any self-respecting closet musician would do on his day off—I wrote a song!”...
David Lee King’s blog, June 18
The Peloponnesian War and research libraries
[http://www.guild2910.org/Peloponnesian%20War%20June%2013%202007.pdf] (PDF file)
LC Reference Librarian Thomas Mann writes about the differences between scholarship and quick
information seeking: “A single reference question on ‘tribute payments in the Peloponnesian War’
may indeed be trifling in the grand scheme of things, but when we take it apart and look at its
implications for the future of both scholarship and librarianship, it takes on quite a bit more
significance. We must not yield to the temptations to let either the technologies themselves or
transient fashions constrict our vision of what needs to be done to promote scholarship of the
highest possible quality.”...
Library of Congress Professional Guild (AFSCME 2910), June 13
Use WorldCat to make lists [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/help/en/lists/default.htm]
WorldCat now has a list-making capability. You can group library-owned items you have found while
using WorldCat, keep track of items of interest and refer back to them whenever you want to, or
share lists with friends and colleagues. Some ideas for lists are books to recommend, secondary
research sources, or movies to check out....
WorldCat
Helping the world use digital resources
[http://www.researchinformation.info/features/feature.php?feature_id=136]
Siân Harris writes: “Retired University of Florida librarian Lenny Rhine (right) has been spending
much of his time travelling the world. He’s not in search of a great sun tan, though; his
aim is to train librarians in the developing world how to use digital resources. Rhine runs
training courses to teach medical librarians and health workers how to use the massive array of
resources that have now become available to them through UN programs.”...
Research Information, June/July
Chronicling America offers 310,000 newspaper pages [http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2007/07-132.html]
Approximately 310,000 digitized newspaper pages, dating from 1900 to 1910, are now accessible
through the Chronicling America [http://www.loc.gov/chroniclingamerica/] website. The site is a
project of the National Digital Newspaper Program, a partnership between the Library of Congress
and the National Endowment for the Humanities....
Library of Congress, June 15
Readex enhances access to historical maps
[http://www.econtentmag.com/Articles/ArticleReader.aspx?ArticleID=36705]
Readex, a division of NewsBank, will provide customers with access to the more than 50,000 maps
within its digital edition of the U.S. Congressional Serial Set, 1817–1980. The company is adding
cartographic records monthly and will continue until every Serial Set map carries a record.
Renowned works include the American Civil War Atlas, maps delineating the boundary between the
United States and Mexico, and John C. Fremont’s Oregon map (above)....
EContent, June 14
Welcoming Google into the reference interview
[http://www.webpages.uidaho.edu/~mbolin/cirasella.htm]
Jill Cirasella, Brooklyn College Library reference librarian, writes: “Google is famously
user-friendly, and its output doesn’t require distillation or translation. As a result, the
reference interview has evolved from a mediated dialogue into a three-way exchange with
information moving in all directions: between librarian and patron, between librarian and Google,
and between patron and Google.”...
Library Philosophy and Practice (2007)
The 2007 Tehran Book Fair
[http://persianmirror.com/Article_det.cfm?id=1450&getArticleCategory=41&getArticleSubCategory=3]
Iranian-American Ali A. Parsa sheds some light on Persian humor after a visit to the Tehran Book
Fair. He writes: “There are many bookstores in Tehran and the annual Tehran Book fair, a huge feat
lasting several days, is worth visiting. It draws a huge crowd, mostly the young who seem to come
with the double purpose of watching each other and purchasing books.” ALA also had a presence
(above) at the fair, thanks to Homan Sharif with Medcom Information Services, who told us that the
Stephen Hawking READ poster got the most comments....
Persian Mirror; Homan Sharif
Camels as bookmobiles in Kenya [http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/006893.html]
In order to address illiteracy while working within the limitations of the region, a small group
of Kenyans started a mobile book-lending service that delivers books to 3,500 villagers and nomads
around Garissa. On each visit they bring 200 books, lending each for a period of two weeks and
then retrieving them to share with the next community. This short video
[http://www.rocketboom.com/stories/rb_07_jun_13] documents the library’s mission and activities....
WorldChanging, June 14; Rocketboom, June 13
Is online freedom of speech dying? [http://p2pnet.net/story/12531]
Jon Newton writes: “In 2007, anybody with more dollars than sense now feels free to sue websites
for the slightest slight. That’s bad enough, but things have now reached ridiculous extremes. If
the Net is about anything, it’s about freedom of speech and hyperlinking—directly connecting
stories, data, and information—is absolutely integral to it. Now, however, it’s being claimed that
merely linking to something someone somewhere doesn’t like is sufficient grounds for a civil
complaint.”...
People to People Net, June 18
Dexter’s Library [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqJFTIjIdUA]
Dexter, the star of the Cartoon Network’s Dexter’s Laboratory, is asked by the school librarian to
“keep an eye on things” while she is at a staff meeting. This gives him an opportunity to enforce
the rules as never before, with the help of War of the Worlds–like spaceships. The episode first
aired April 25, 2003....
You Tube
[http://www.ala.org/ala/eventsandconferencesb/annual/2007a/geninfo.htm]
As of June 8, a total of 13,852 have registered for Annual Conference (not including exhibitor
personnel). This compares with 8,498 for New Orleans in 2006 (at a comparable time two weeks
before the event), 13,371 for Chicago in 2005, and 10,033 for Orlando in 2004.
====================================================================================================
450 international librarians from 87 countries will be attending ALA Annual Conference this year.
Please say “hello” and welcome them when you see them.
====================================================================================================
Join the American Libraries editors and columnists for 100th birthday cake at the ALA Pavilion,
Saturday, June 23, 12:15–1:15 p.m., and Tuesday, June 26, 10:30–11:30 a.m.
[http://www.alastore.ala.org/SiteSolution.taf?_sn=catalog&_pn=product_detail&_op=1294]
[http://www.alastore.ala.org/SiteSolution.taf?_sn=catalog2&_pn=product_detail&_op=2250]
[http://www.alastore.ala.org/SiteSolution.taf?_sn=catalog&_pn=product_detail&_op=489]
Toddlers will be ready for reading action with this 100% cotton Born to Read t-shirt.
[http://www.alastore.ala.org/SiteSolution.taf?_sn=catalog&_pn=product_detail&_op=489] A classic!
From ALA Graphics.
[http://www.ala.org/ala/ourassociation/governanceb/electioninfo/alaelectioninfo.htm]
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alctscontent/alctslrts50/alctslrts50.htm]
[http://www.ala.org/ala/aasl/conferencesandevents/national/pressoffice/registrationopen.htm]
[http://www.ala-apa.org/salaries/confprograms.html]
[http://www.ala.org/ala/lita/litaevents/litanationalforum2007denver/forum2007.cfm]
[http://www.ifla.org/IV/ifla73/registration-en.htm]
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pio/campaign/whatsnew/annual2007.htm]
Registration
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=159763] will be available onsite at Annual Conference for the June 22 Advocacy Institute.
In this issue
June/July 2007
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/tableofcontents/2007contents/june2007.cfm]
Timeline [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/resources/selectedarticles/0607_feature_timelin.pdf]
ALA Presidents Speak across a Century
Ken Burns Archives America
Librarians of Congress
Conference Preview
Career Leads from
[http://joblist.ala.org/]
Chief of Bibliographic Services,
[http://joblist.ala.org/modules/jobseeker/controller.cfm?scr=jobdetail&jobid=6735] Baltimore
County Public Library, Towson, Maryland.
Responsible for the bibliographic records for the BCPL catalog. Works with Integrated Library
Systems, Information Services, and Collection Development departments as well as branches to
provide catalog access to BCPL resources....
@ More jobs [http://joblist.ala.org/]...
[http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlpubs/crlnews/backissues2007/jun07/jun07.htm]
[http://www.techsource.ala.org/ltr/open-source-software-for-libraries.html]
Don’t miss this year’s Book Cart Drill Team World Championship, sponsored once again by Demco. It
will be held Sunday, June 24, from 4 to 5:30 p.m.
[http://www.ala.org/ala/washoff/washevents/woannual/dayonthehill/dayonthehill.cfm?CFID=11313872&CFTO
KEN=59782366]
Be at Washington Convention Center Hall D at 7:30 p.m. on June 22 for the world premiere of The
Hollywood Librarian,
[http://www.ala.org/ala/eventsandconferencesb/annual/2007a/specialevents.htm#hollywood] a film by
writer and director Ann Seidl that focuses on the work and lives of librarians in the entertaining
and appealing context of American movies.
Public Perception
How the World
Sees Us
“The library does some absolutely wonderful things for regular people.”
?Billionaire Blackstone Group Chairman and New York Public Library Trustee Stephen A. Schwarzman,
in remarks at a June 18 fundraising dinner that earned $2.2 million for the library, Wall Street
Journal, June 19.
From the CentenniAL Blog
[http://www.flickr.com/photos/americanlibraries/570528678/]
Meet Me in St. Louis.
[http://blogs.ala.org/AL100.php?title=meet_me_in_st_louis&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1] Imagine an ALA
Annual Conference where for six days you meet in one large room from 9:30 a.m. to only half past
noon, after which you are free to go wandering around an exhibit and amusement area 13 times the
size of Disney’s Magic Kingdom in Florida. Imagine a conference where, after listening to a
“characteristic address” by Melvil Dewey—“full of the enthusiasm of
invention and the ardor of prophecy, which never fails to kindle a responsive spark in his
audience”—you venture out to ride on the biggest Ferris Wheel in the world, eat a
new-fangled treat called an ice cream cone, watch Alexander Graham Bell participate in a
kite-flying contest, listen to rousing performances by John Philip Sousa’s band, or thrill
to reenactments of Spanish-American War naval battles and the Boer War Battle of Colenso. Read
about 1904, when ALA met at the St. Louis World’s Fair....
See the Blog [http://blogs.ala.org/AL100.php?title=meet_me_in_st_louis&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1] for
more....
[http://blogs.ala.org/AL100.php]
Ask the ALA Librarian
[http://www.alastore.ala.org/SiteSolution.taf?_sn=catalog2&_pn=product_detail&_op=1992]
Q. When did libraries start having bookmobiles? And how many libraries still have them?
A. The first bookmobile was a horse-drawn buggy at the Hagerstown (Md.) Public Library, now part
of the Washington County Free Library, in 1905 (above). In celebration of its centennial in 2005,
ALA’s Office for Library Outreach Services prepared an online “parade” or slide
show (133 PowerPoint slides
[http://www.ala.org/ala/olos/outreachresource/bookmobile_slideshow.ppt]). At the Annual Conference
there will be a parade
[http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=news&template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&Content
ID=160162] of today’s bookmobiles celebrating this form of library service. According to the
most currently available report [http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2006349] from the
National Center for Library Statistics, Public Libraries in the United States: Fiscal Year 2004,
there are 844 bookmobiles delivering library services in the U.S.
See the ALA Professional Tips wiki
[http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php/Bookmobile_History] for further assistance.
The ALA Librarian [mailto:AskTheLibrarian@ala.org] welcomes your questions.
Calendar
July 14–17:
American Association of Law Libraries, [http://www.aallnet.org/events/index.asp] Annual Meeting
and Conference, New Orleans, Louisiana. “Rise to the Challenge.”
Aug. 2–6:
Black Caucus of the ALA, [http://www.bcala.org/NCAAL_participation/index.html] National Conference
of African American Librarians, Fort Worth, Texas. “Culture Keepers VI: Preserving the Past,
Sustaining the Future.”
Aug. 8–11:
Pacific Northwest Library Association, [http://www.pnla.org/events/conference07/index.htm] Annual
Conference, Delta Edmonton, South Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. “The Boom to the Echo: The
Multigenerational Impact on Libraries.”
Aug. 14:
Library Camp NYC [http://librarycampnyc.wikispaces.org], Baruch College, New York City.
Sept. 26–28:
Association for Rural and Small Libraries, [http://jupiter.clarion.edu/~csrl/great.htm] Annual
Conference, Holiday Inn on the Lane, Columbus, Ohio.
Oct. 5–6:
Georgia Conference on Information Literacy [HTTP://ceps.georgiasouthern.edu/conted/infolit.html],
Coastal Georgia Center, Savannah.
Oct. 11–12:
Long Island Library Resources Council [http://www.lilrc.org/calendars/cont_edcalendar.php],
[http://www.lilrc.org/calendars/cont_edcalendar.php] Annual Conference on Libraries and the
Future, Dowling College, Oakdale, New York. “Engaging Environment: Creating Tomorrow’s
Library Experience.”
Oct. 18–19:
International Reading Association,
[http://www.reading.org/association/meetings/12_rockymountain.html] Rocky Mountain Regional
Conference, Billings, Montana.
Oct. 19–24:
American Society for Information Science and Technology
[http://www.asis.org/Conferences/AM07/am07cfp.html],
[http://www.asis.org/Conferences/AM07/am07cfp.html] Annual Meeting, Hyatt Regency, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin. “Joining Research and Practice: Social Computing and Information Science.”
Oct. 23–25:
Tribal Archives, Libraries, and Museums Conference [HTTP://www.tribalconference.org], Oklahoma
City. “Guardians of Language, Memory, and Lifeways.”
Oct. 24–26:
International Cultural Heritage Informatics Meeting [HTTP://www.archimuse.com/ichim07/], Toronto.
Oct. 29–30:
Internet@Schools West Conference [http://www.infotoday.com/Internet@Schools/], Monterey,
California.
Oct. 29–30:
PALINET Conference and Vendor Fair [http://www.palinet.org/newsevents_latestnews.aspx#58], Tremont
Plaza Hotel/Tremont Grand, Baltimore.
Oct. 29–31:
Internet Librarian [http://www.infotoday.com/il2007/default.shtml], Monterey, California.
@ More [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/datebook/datebook.cfm]...
Contact Us
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glandgraf@ala.org [mailto:glandgraf@ala.org]
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American Libraries: lkniffel@ala.org [mailto:lkniffel@ala.org]
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