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May 30, 2007
Contents
U.S. & World News [#usworld]
ALA News [#alanews]
Booklist Online [#booklist]
D.C. Update [#dcupdate]
Division News [#divisionnews]
Round Table News [#roundtable]
Awards [#awards]
Seen Online [#seenonline]
Tech Talk [#techtalk]
Actions & Answers [#actionsanswers]
Calendar [#datebook]
[http://www.sirsidynixinstitute.com/seminar_page.php?sid=80]
[http://www.sirsidynix.com]
U.S. & World News
====================================================================================================
Saugus library closes indefinitely
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/may2007/saugus.cfm]
In the face of the proposed elimination of its entire budget, the Saugus (Mass.) Public Library closed indefinitely May 24. After voters rejected a $5.2-million tax override by a more than
2–1 margin April 24, Town Manager Andrew Bisignani said he would cut the library’s full $566,000 budget, as well as lay off four police officers, two firefighters, and two public
works employees, and reduce the School Department budget by $1.7 million....
Library film festival riles anti-Castro community
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/may2007/princetoncuba.cfm]
The Princeton (N.J.) Public Library came under fire in mid-May over the inclusion of two documentaries about Cuba among 14 films in its 2007 Princeton Human Rights Film Festival. The
controversy resulted in a shouting match at the May 12 screening of ¡Salud! What Puts Cuba on the Map in the Quest for Global Health, as well as accusations in the conservative blogosphere that
the library was disseminating pro-Castro propaganda....
Rochester library will change filtering policy
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/may2007/rochesterfilters.cfm]
Despite objections from the Rochester (N.Y.) Public Library board, the Monroe County Library System adopted May 23 a policy to use filtering software to block all websites deemed
pornographic, unless the site is judged to be in accordance with the library’s collection policy by a library director or “delegate” following a written request from an adult
patron....
Sacramento staffers bewail dumbing-down of collections
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/may2007/sacramento.cfm]
Staff members took their concerns over management practices to the Sacramento (Calif.) Public Library Authority Board May 24, speaking out against centralized purchasing of materials that they
claim has led to a dumbing-down of collections. The board was presented with a petition containing 600 signatures from library workers, former librarians, and patrons protesting selection practices
exemplified by the purchase of 30 DVDs of the film Jackass Number Two....
Map thief’s restitution upped to $2.3 million
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/may2007/smileyrestitution.cfm]
E. Forbes Smiley III, who was sentenced to 42 months in prison for stealing 98 rare maps from seven repositories in the United States and England, was ordered May 22 to pay $2.3 million in
restitution to his victims. At the time of his sentencing last September, he was tentatively ordered to pay $1.9 million, but the figure was revised upward following efforts to recover the
maps and assess their value....
Former librarian again sentenced to death
[http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2007/may2007/codaysentenced.cfm]
For the second time, former Broward County (Fla.) Library Supervisor William Coday received a death sentence May 23 for murdering his ex-girlfriend in 1997. Coday had been convicted
[http://www.courttv.com/trials/taped/coday/background.html] and condemned to death in 2002, but the Florida Supreme Court overturned the sentence in October, faulting Circuit Court Judge Alfred
Horowitz for rejecting testimony from six psychiatric experts who said Coday’s psychosis was triggered by rejection....
ALA News
====================================================================================================
Preliminary results from public library study
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/PublicLibraryFundingstud.htm]
Starting in June, ALA will begin sharing results from the 2007 Public Library Funding and
Technology Access Study.
[http://www.ala.org/ala/ors/publiclibraryfundingtechnologyaccessstudy/pullibfunandtechaccstudy.htm]
Preliminary data will appear in a postcard inserted in the June/July centennial issue of American Libraries, and initial findings will be presented to the study advisory committee at 9 a.m.
Saturday, June 23, at Annual Conference. Among the findings: 68% of public libraries offer online homework resources....
Diversity and Outreach Fair participants
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/2007DiversityOutreachFai.htm]
The Office for Literacy and Outreach Services Advisory Committee congratulates the librarians and library supporters selected to participate in the 2007 Diversity and Outreach Fair. This annual
event celebrates extraordinary examples of diversity and equity of access in America’s academic, public, and special libraries, library schools and associations, and other
organizations....
Advocacy at Annual Conference [http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/airegonline.htm]
Advance online registration
[http://www.ala.org/ala/eventsandconferencesb/annual/2007a/registration.htm#how] for the Advocacy Institute during ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C., is still available. The full-day
institute, which will be held Friday, June 22, at the Renaissance Washington Hotel, begins with advocacy basics, such as goal setting, message development, and coalition-building techniques....
Booklist Online
====================================================================================================
Featured review: Books for youth
[http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=1938189]
Ehrenberg, Pamela. Ethan, Suspended. March 2007. 265p. Eerdmans, hardcover (978-0-8028-5324-0).
Grades 7–10.
After Ethan is suspended from his suburban Philadelphia junior high, his soon-to-be-divorced mother sends him to the grandparents he barely knows in an inner-city neighborhood in Washington,
D.C. Suddenly the white, privileged kid finds that he is the “cracker” freak in an almost entirely black and Latino school. He feels as if he is in a time warp—no IM, cable,
or malls. And he feels alone, often eating lunch by himself at school....
@ Visit Booklist Online [http://www.booklistonline.com/] for other reviews and much more....
D.C. Update
====================================================================================================
Art Museum of the Americas [http://www.museum.oas.org/]
Enjoy this unique collection of 20th-century Latin American and Caribbean art in the intimate atmosphere of this Spanish colonial-style structure at 201 18th Street, N.W. The permanent
collection includes art by Carlos Cruz-Diez, Amelia Pelaez, Hector Poleo, and Joaquín Torres-García....
Art Museum of the Americas
NDIIPP offers programs [http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/news/index.html]
On June 25, the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program will hold several informative and thought-provoking events at the Library of Congress in Washington. The
events are timed to coincide with ALA Annual Conference. All events are in the Library’s Mumford Room, which is on the sixth floor of the James Madison Building, 101 Independence Ave.
S.E....
Library of Congress
International Monetary Fund [http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/center/index.htm]
Could you pass up an exhibit called “Money Matters”? This is the permanent exhibit at the International Monetary Fund. You can also see a video on the work of the IMF and enjoy a
self-guided tour of the facility in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood at 720 19th Street, N.W. The IMF also sponsors special exhibits on the history of money and trade....
International Monetary Fund
Division News
====================================================================================================
YALSA gets connected [http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/YALSAGetConnected.htm]
Get Connected: Tech Programs for Teens, written by RoseMary Honnold for YALSA and published by Neal-Schuman, will be released June 13. Borrowing its title from the Teen Tech Week theme, Get
Connected offers tried-and-true, practical tips for young adult library workers seeking to incorporate technology into their programs and services. Honnold, who has been young adult
services coordinator at the Coshocton (Ohio) Public Library since 1998, speaks extensively on YA services....
Sign up for PLA Results Boot Camp 3
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/PLABookCamp3.htm]
Applications are being accepted for PLA’s intensive library management training, Results Boot Camp 3, to be held October 29–November 2 in Salt Lake City. This week-long, interactive workshop
will include both individual and group activities, and will focus on current library issues using case studies describing real library situations....
PLA to present PLDS demo [http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/PLDSDatabasedemo.htm]
PLA will present two live demonstrations of its new Public Library Data Service Statistical Report Online Database at ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. Demonstrations will take place
Saturday, June 23, at the PLA Booth—part of the ALA Membership Pavilion in the Exhibits Hall—from 2 to 3 p.m., and at the Grand Hyatt Washington in the Roosevelt/Wilson Room from 4 to 5:30 p.m....
Round Table News
====================================================================================================
Careers in federal libraries [http://www.ala.org/Source/ACF7C3D.pdf] (PDF file)
Have you ever thought about working as a federal librarian? Join the Federal and Armed Forces Libraries Round Table on Friday, June 22, for “Careers in Federal Libraries,” an informative
session and webcast at the Library of Congress during ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. A panel of librarians representing 11 agencies will describe the diverse opportunities available....
Awards
====================================================================================================
We the People Bookshelf awards
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/WethePeopleBookshelfawar.htm]
Two thousand school and public libraries throughout the United States will receive a collection of 15 classic books from the We the People Bookshelf project,
[http://www.ala.org/ala/ppo/currentprograms/wethepeople/wepeople.htm] a joint initiative of the National Endowment for the Humanities and ALA. The theme of this year’s Bookshelf is the
“Pursuit of Happiness.” The We the People initiative supports projects that strengthen the teaching, study, and understanding of American history and culture....
2008 National Library Week grant
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/2008nlwgrant.htm]
Libraries across the United States are invited to apply for the $5,000 Scholastic Library Publishing National Library Week Grant, which will be awarded to a single library for the best
public-awareness campaign incorporating the 2008 National Library Week theme, “Join the circle of knowledge @ your library.” This year’s deadline is October 1....
ASCLA Century Scholarship
[http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/may2007/ASCLACenturyScholarship.htm]
Cynthia Nugent, a student at the University of Southern Mississippi School of Library and Information Science, has been awarded the 2007 ASCLA Century Scholarship. The scholarship is a
diversity initiative aimed at the development of a representative workforce that reflects the communities served by all libraries....
Librarian wins “Read to Us” contest
[http://thefacts.com/story.lasso?ewcd=4591307ddc070960]
E. Raymond Wells, a librarian at Jane Long Elementary School in Freeport, Texas, was one of three national winners of the Scholastic Book Club's “Read to Us
[http://www.scholastic.com/aboutscholastic/news/press_05172007_CP1.htm]” contest. Wells’s winning entry was reading The Whipping Boy by Sid Fleischman and Peter Sis. He used
varied voices to keep kids interested, and that caught the attention of judges....
Scholastic, May 17; Brazosport (Tex.) Facts, May 24
Seen Online
====================================================================================================
Harry Potter books upheld again [http://www.11alive.com/news/article_news.aspx?storyid=97735]
A Gwinnett County, Georgia, mother who fought to have books in the Harry Potter series removed from school libraries lost her latest fight before a state court judge May 29. Superior Court
Judge Ronnie Batchelor ruled in favor of the Gwinnett County School Board, which, in May 2006, rejected Laura Mallory’s efforts to have the books banned. In December, the state Board of
Education upheld the county’s decision....
WXIA-TV, Atlanta, May 29
Illinois filters hit snag
[http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-filter_30may30,1,4239185.story?coll=chi-newslocal-hed]
Opponents of a bill that would require filters on public library computers to block objectionable images on the internet may have won a reprieve, as the proposal appears stalled in the Illinois
Senate. But library officials worry that the legislation, proposed several times before in different forms, could still be revived or return next session in a new bill....
Chicago Tribune, May 30
Tiny border town worries feds [http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/05/26/border.quirk.ap/index.html]
Step through the front door of the Haskell Library and you’re in Derby Line, Vermont. Walk across the carpeted floor to the circulation desk and you’re in Stanstead, Quebec. The 106-year-old
Romanesque building, which straddles the international border, has enjoyed a kind of informal immunity from border restrictions through the years. But a U.S. Border Patrol crackdown focusing
on three unguarded streets could soon change that....
CNN, May 26
Google deal to bring U.S. scrutiny [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/29/technology/29antitrust.html]
The Federal Trade Commission has opened a preliminary antitrust investigation into Google’s planned $3.1-billion purchase of the online advertising company DoubleClick. Privacy groups have
noted that Google collects the search histories of its users, while DoubleClick tracks what websites people visit. The merger, a complaint reads, would “give one company access to more
information about the Internet activities of consumers than any other company in the world.”...
New York Times, May 29
Web registration tool digitizes books
[http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/05/29/blather.to.books.ap/index.html]
A few simple keystrokes may soon turn blather into books. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have discovered a way to enlist people across the globe to help digitize books every
time they solve the simple distorted word puzzles commonly used to register at websites or buy things online. Instead of wasting time typing in random letters and numbers, Carnegie Mellon
researchers have come up with a way for people to type in snippets of books to put their time to good use, confirm they’re not machines, and help speed up the process of getting searchable texts
online....
Associated Press, May 29
A modern-day book burning [http://www.kansascity.com/115/story/125497.html]
In the 10 years Tom Wayne has operated Prospero’s Books, [http://prosperosbookstore.com/] a used bookstore in midtown Kansas City, Missouri, he has amassed thousands of books in a warehouse.
But they aren’t selling, and libraries won’t even take them for free. So on May 27, Wayne began putting them to the torch, tossing scores of books into a burning cauldron to protest what he sees
as society’s diminishing support for the printed word....
Associated Press, May 27
Library to bear name of slain librarian
[http://www.heraldnet.com/stories/07/05/24/100loc_b1library001.cfm]
Memories of Mary Cooper’s laughter have not faded in the many months since the 54-year-old school librarian was killed with her daughter near Mount Pilchuck, Washington, last July 11. At a
ceremony May 24 at Alternative Elementary School II in Seattle, the library where Cooper taught was named in her memory....
Everett (Wash.) Herald, May 24
Yucaipa-Calimesa district bucks library trend
[http://www.pe.com/localnews/sbcounty/stories/PE_News_Local_H_blibrary23.3f1f6c3.html]
At a time when some already-weakened school libraries face renewed difficulties, the Yucaipa-Calimesa (Calif.) Joint Unified School District is taking steps to bolster its libraries.
A comprehensive school library–improvement plan, which could be approved by the school board as early as June 5, seeks to augment the district’s library offerings and staffing, and enhance its
ability to teach students how to find and use information....
Riverside (Calif.) Press-Enterprise, May 23
Massachusetts libraries at risk
[http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2007/05/27/cuts_put_towns_libraries_at_risk
/]
On May 26, budget cuts and voter indifference in Northbridge, Massachusetts, finally caught up with the institution officially known as the Whitinsville Social Library (right). The town cannot
afford the $200,000 needed to keep the library fully running for another year, so it will cut back from 40 to 12 open hours per week. From Randolph to Newbury, Ashland to Wrentham, library
directors have been struggling in recent years, facing cutback after cutback....
Boston Globe, May 27
Outsource Jackson County Library?
[http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070526/NEWS/705260308]
Outsourcing library operations has the potential to knock 40% off the budget for all 15 branches in Jackson County, Oregon, says the executive director of the Jackson County Library Foundation.
Jim Olney said preliminary discussions with Library Systems and Services LLC (LSSI), a Maryland-based library management company, indicate to him the cost of operating the libraries
could be reduced from $8 million to $5 million....
Medford (Oreg.) Mail Tribune, May 26
Florida public libraries brace for cuts [http://www.tbo.com/news/metro/MGBAJDE812F.html]
Library officials have identified $2.5 million in potential cuts to deal with the budget fallout from lawmakers’ plans to reduce Florida’s property taxes. Library leaders say most of the cuts
represent cosmetic service changes, but belt-tightening still won’t cover the $4 million that would need to be trimmed under the least restrictive property-tax reform plan being pushed by
state Senate leaders....
Tampa (Fla.) Tribune, May 23
Ancestry.com puts 90 million war records online
[http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/1700AP_Genealogy_War_Records.html]
On May 23, Ancestry.com [http://www.ancestry.com/] unveiled more than 90 million U.S. war records from the first English settlement at Jamestown in 1607 through the Vietnam War’s end in 1975. The
records, which can be accessed free until June 6, came from the National Archives and Records Administration and include 37 million images, draft registration cards from both world wars,
military yearbooks, prisoner-of-war records from four wars, unit rosters from the Marine Corps from 1893 through 1958, and Civil War pension records....
Associated Press, May 24
Brits walk across U.S. to dispel stereotypes
[http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2007/may/25/british_men_walk_across_us_dispel_stereotypes/?city_local]
Two British men are walking across the United States in hopes of dispelling European stereotypes of Americans. Stuart Hamilton (right), a librarian who has worked for the International Federation
of Library Associations and Institutions in Copenhagen as a researcher into censorship for the past four years, and Dave Toolan, a former account manager from Brighton, England, quit their jobs
and then began the walk [http://www.walkingthestates.com/] about a year ago in Delaware....
Lawrence (Kans.) Journal-World, May 25
March of the penguin protesters
[http://books.guardian.co.uk/departments/childrenandteens/story/0,,2086371,00.html]
And Tango Makes Three, the story of two male penguins who bring up a chick, which Justin Richardson cowrote with the playwright Peter Parnell, generated more heat than its authors perhaps
anticipated. In 2006, it shot to the top of the ALA list of most frequently challenged books. But this was not a tale: It was, in fact, inspired by a newspaper article that told how a zookeeper
noticed two of his penguins, Roy and Silo, were trying to hatch a stone....
The Guardian (U.K.), May 23
Tech Talk
====================================================================================================
The Dell XPS M1210 rocks
[http://www.theshiftedlibrarian.com/archives/2007/05/26/dell_xps_m1210_rocks.html]
Jenny Levine writes: “A couple of months ago I bought a new laptop, and I love it so much that I want to post a review for anyone searching for information about it. The Dell XPS M1210 has been
amazing, and so far I haven’t experienced any problems with it. This puppy is so powerful that I could run Second Life on it and listen to music in Rhapsody, surf the web, watch Joost, and read
email, all at the same time if I wanted to. As someone recently said to me, ‘It moves as fast as you do!’”...
The Shifted Librarian blog, May 26
Earphone and headphone glossary [http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,2114485,00.asp]
You may think that there’s not a lot to say about headphones other than what kind of sound quality they deliver. Not true. There are as many variables in picking a set of earphones as there are for
selecting a new portable player. For starters, the terms “headphones” and “earphones” aren’t really interchangeable. Check out the sonic terminology....
PC Magazine, Apr. 18
A cell phone for Boomers [http://businessweek.com/innovate/content/may2007/id20070529_644980.htm]
Arlene Harris is the mastermind behind Jitterbug, a company launched last October that combines a unique mobile phone with a suite of services designed to meet the needs of older users. When you
open a Jitterbug phone it emits—get this—a dial tone. It also has an earpiece that actually covers your ear and a microphone next to your mouth, not somewhere around your
cheekbone....
Business Week, May 29
What next? The open source ILS
[http://blogs.ala.org/pace.php?title=what_next_part_2_the_open_source_ils&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1]
Andrew Pace writes: “It’s true that I am one of the skeptics. I’ll state that up front. But, in truth, my skepticism toward building an open source integrated library system was born in optimism
that the vendors of proprietary software would be paying close attention to the landscape. Alas, I don’t think they were.”...
Hectic Pace blog, May 30
The best point-and-shoot cameras [http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,2136473,00.asp]
Point-and-shoot digital cameras have undergone big changes in the last few years. The newest models are smaller, faster, and higher resolution than ever. They are also shipping with a wider
array of features than ever before, which can be overwhelming for first-time buyers. Before you hit the store, picture the ways you will use your camera....
PC Magazine, May 29
50th anniversary of the first digital image
[http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/techbeat/tb2007_0524.htm#image]
It was a grainy image of a baby—just 5 centimeters by 5 centimeters—but it turned out to be the well from which satellite imaging, CAT scans, bar codes on packaging, desktop
publishing, digital photography, and a host of other imaging technologies sprang. In the spring of 1957, National Bureau of Standards computer pioneer Russell Kirsch asked “What would happen
if computers could look at pictures?” and helped start a revolution in information technology....
National Institute of Standards and Technology, May 24
Actions & Answers
====================================================================================================
Patterson confirmed for IMLS board [http://www.imls.gov/news/2007/052907.shtm]
The U.S. Senate confirmed University of Oklahoma SLIS Professor Lotsee Patterson as one of three presidential nominees to serve as members of the National Museum and Library Services Board May
25. The board advises the Institute of Museum and Library Services, an independent federal agency that is the primary source of federal support for the nation's museums and libraries....
Institute of Museum and Library Services, May 29
Tomes entombed [http://youtube.com/watch?v=Z5Pb0BdT8Qo]
In 1985, Mississippi Educational Television produced Tomes and Talismans, a series of thirteen 20-minute episodes that dramatized elements of library research. The plot revolves around a group
of intrepid information scientists compiling a library of all human knowledge in a post-apocalyptic America. Ms. Bookhart (Niki Wood) awakens in a world controlled by entities
called the “Wipers.” This is the first segment (8:32) of the first episode; YouTube also has the others....
YouTube, May 12
Google Maps takes it to the streets
[http://news.com.com/Google+Earth+takes+it+to+the+streets/2100-1038_3-6187254.html]
Google launched a new feature on its mapping service May 29 that allows people to see panoramic views of streets and buildings. Google Maps [http://maps.google.com/] now offers a 360-degree view
of many streets in the San Francisco Bay Area, New York, Las Vegas, Denver, and Miami, with other cities to roll out later. Users can now zoom in on street signs, bus stops, and other details in
the Bay Area....
C|Net news.com, May 29
GeoNames: Wikipedia for geographical data
[http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/05/26/geonames-wikipedia-for-geographical-data/]
Duncan Riley writes: “The GeoNames [http://www.geonames.org] project is a free global geographical database. Its goal is to aggregate free data from various sources and make it available as a
database or via a range of web services. GeoNames answers questions such as: where is a place? what are its coordinates? which region or province does the place belong to? what city or address
is near a given GPS latitude or longitude?”...
TechCrunch blog, May 26
Group donates surprise quilt [http://www.lclshome.org/abington/news.php]
The quilting group that began quilting last fall at the Abington Community Library in Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania, recently surprised Library Director Leah Rudolph with a sample of their
work—a full-size quilt made from scraps from their original projects. Rudolph said, “It is heartwarming to see these women in action and realize how they have grown through this
opportunity.”...
Abington Community Library
Ask the ALA Librarian
====================================================================================================
Q. I’m a high school librarian, helping the kids with their research papers. Do you have any resources to help me teach about using all resources, and not just the first few hits from a
search engine?
A. Like many issues, the response can be broken up into several pieces—preparing to research, finding the information, and evaluating the information found—whether in print or online—and these
are components of “information literacy.” Information Literacy [http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php/Information_Literacy] is a key component in 21st
century literacy. Two of our divisions, ACRL and AASL, have approved standards for information literacy for the educational levels they serve. Information Literacy is also a pulic library
issue, as public libraries serve an information literate populace. We’ve assembled a few of the resources available either in print or online to provide guidance in structuring a program to help
students use the best resources available. See the ALA Professional Tips wiki [http://wikis.ala.org/professionaltips/index.php/Helping_Students_Evaluate_Information] for
further assistance.
The ALA Librarian [mailto:AskTheLibrarian@ala.org] welcomes your questions.
Calendar
====================================================================================================
Future dates
of ALA
conferences
Annual Conference, Washington, D.C.:
[http://www.ala.org/ala/eventsandconferencesb/annual/2007a/home.htm]
June 21–27, 2007.
2008 Midwinter Meeting, Philadelphia: Jan. 11–16, 2008.
2008 Annual Conference, Anaheim, Calif.:
June 26–July 2, 2008.
2009 Midwinter Meeting, Denver:
Jan. 23–28, 2009.
2009 Annual Conference, Chicago: July 9–15, 2009.
2010 Midwinter Meeting, Boston:
Jan. 15–20, 2010.
2010 Annual Conference, New York City:
June 24–30, 2010.
2011 Midwinter Meeting, San Diego, Calif.:
Jan. 7–12, 2011.
2011 Annual Conference, New Orleans:
June 23–29, 2011.
2012 Midwinter Meeting, Dallas:
Jan. 20–25, 2012.
2012 Annual Conference, Anaheim, Calif.:
June 21–27, 2012.
2013 Midwinter Meeting, Seattle:
Jan. 25–30, 2013.
2013 Annual Conference, Washington, D.C.: June 20–26, 2013.
2014 Midwinter Meeting, Philadelphia: Jan. 24–29, 2014.
2014 Annual Conference, Las Vegas, Nev.:
June 26–July 2, 2014.
@ More [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/datebook/datebook.cfm]...
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