Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Tue. Jun. 19

Questions:

  1. Restroom?
  2. Check out?
  3. Restroom?
  4. Sign in computer?
  5. Paper?
  6. Fodor's the U.S. and British Virgin Islands Travel Guide? (Hold CPK)
  7. The audacity of hope : thoughts on reclaiming the American dream / Barack Obama? (Hold CPK)
  8. Restroom?

What I'm Reading:

  • Beauty School of Kabul by Deborah Rodriguez
  • Everything's Eventual by Stephen King

Monday, June 18, 2007

Mon. Jun. 18

Questions:

  1. DOWN AND OUT IN PARIS AND LONDON / ORWELL? (Hold WEE)
  2. Sign up computer?
  3. Stapler?
  4. Stapler?
  5. Rickles' book / Don Rickles? (Hold TEN)

Actions:

  • Swank.com for movies
  • All the World's a Stage Film Club - 33 people

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Sat. Jun. 16

Questions:
  1. Sweden Travel Guides?
  2. PRAXIS?
  3. Information on this (a paper with an address)?
  4. Len Bias?
  5. Decision making?
  6. Huey Newton?
  7. Language Section?
  8. Ireland Travel Guide?

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Thurs. Jun. 14

Questions:

  1. Tape?
  2. South America Travel Guides?
  3. Argentina Travel Guides?
  4. What does F.B.V. stand for? (actual letters F.B.A.)
  5. Sign up computer?
  6. Sign up computer?
  7. Tape?
  8. Math book?
  9. Sign up computer?
  10. Library card?
  11. Restroom?
  12. Sign up computer?
  13. Books on Iraq?
  14. Visual books on Iraq?
  15. Trees in California that have been cut through and people drive through?
  16. Where is my book club book?

Actions:

  • Started weeding Europe 914

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Wed. Jun. 13

Questions:

  1. Sheriff's phone number in Beaufort county South Carolina?
  2. Highway patrol phone number in South Carolina?
  3. Nathalie Dupree's Stuffed Catfish recipe?
  4. Annapurna, first conquest of an 8000-meter peak /Maurice Herzog?
  5. The African-American odyssey vol.2 / Darlene Clark Hine?
  6. The African-American odyssey vol.2 / Darlene Clark Hine? (Hold LAN)
  7. Is the writer Peter Sacks an American citizen?
  8. Does Peter Sacks have any children?
  9. Information on Barbara Kassel?

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Tue. Jun. 12

Questions:

  1. Northwestern US Travel Guides?
  2. Norway Travel Guide?
  3. Copier?
  4. Sign in computer?
  5. Pencil?
  6. Should I keep checking the computer sign up?
  7. Golden Bees? (Hold Pick-up)
  8. Piece of Cake by Brown?
  9. Black Studies?
  10. Sociology?
  11. Bitter is the New Black? (Hold Pick up)

Actions:

  • Called in monitor problem Ticket# 248367
  • 12 Labels

Monday, June 11, 2007

Mon. Jun. 11

Questions:

  1. Transportation services?
  2. Eddie Kendricks?
  3. Hilary Clinton?
  4. National Yellow Pages?
  5. Tupac?
  6. Biblical Atlas?
  7. Map of Atlanta?
  8. Map of Philadelphia?
  9. Magnifying glass?
  10. Computer Classes?
  11. Tape?
  12. Map of Virginia?
  13. Canada Travel Guides?
  14. Toronto Travel Guides?
  15. Running with Scissors?
  16. Abortion?

Actions:

  • Vend Card reader out of service #247754

Friday, June 08, 2007

Fri. Jun. 8

Questions:

  1. Poland History?
  2. Dutch?
  3. Europe Travel Guides?
  4. Spain Travel Guides?
  5. O J Simpson?

Actions:

  • Labels - 6
  • Weeded 929 section

What I'm reading Now:

  • Bookseller of Kabul

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Thurs. Jun. 7

Questions:

  1. Mediterranean Travel Guides?
  2. The pursuit of happyness / Chris Gardner?
  3. Booker T. Washington Vol. 2 (Wizard of Tuskegee, 1901-1915) / Louis R. Harlan
  4. Dictionary of Catholic people?
  5. Confessions of a video vixen / Steffans, Karrine?
  6. Sign up computer?
  7. Restroom?
  8. Art Show?
  9. Restroom?
  10. London Travel Guide?
  11. The last Mughal : the fall of a dynasty : Delhi, 1857 / William Dalrymple. (Missing)

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Wed. Jun. 6

Questions:

  1. Restroom?
  2. Britannica?
  3. Copier?
  4. Philosophy?
  5. Newest edition of Britannica? (LIT)
  6. Biblical atlas?
  7. Life is not a fairy tale / Fantasia? (Missing, Borders yes)
  8. How late is the library open?
  9. Mailbox?

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Tues. Jun. 5

Questions:
  1. 92 p sections?
  2. Don't let's go to the dogs tonight : an African childhood / Alexandra Fuller. (Hold CPK)
  3. Prophet : the life and times of Kahlil Gibran / Robin Waterfield. (Hold CPK)
  4. Roman Letters
  5. House the the Declaration of Independence was signed in?
  6. Poet named Donavan, not the singer possibly lived in the 17th century?
  7. Las Vegas travel guide?
  8. Century by Peter Jennings (NOS, No TS3, no Borders)
  9. Can you list for me all the presidents of the US, starting with G. W. Bush and working backwards?

Monday, June 04, 2007

Mon. Jun. 4

Questions:
  1. Pencil?
  2. Phone book?
  3. Tape?
  4. Scissors?
  5. Civil Rights?
  6. Terrorism?

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Sat. Jun. 2

Questions:


  1. Of consuming interests : the style of life in the eighteenth century / edited by Cary Carson. (Hold SOW)
  2. Book Club Book?
  3. Where do you check out books?
  4. 917 section?
  5. Rosa Parks?
  6. Map of Alabama?
  7. Where is Lexington on this map?
  8. Where is Langston on this map?
  9. Is there a payphone outside?
  10. Where do I check out?
  11. Where are your Bibliographies?
  12. Can I have a poster advertising the book club?
  13. Where would I get other pictures to check out?
  14. Sign up computer?
  15. Children's Room?

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Thurs. May 31

Questions:
  1. Tape?
  2. Sign up computer?
  3. Help with sign up computer?
  4. Capitalism
  5. Communism?
  6. Constitution?
  7. Progressive era?
  8. Psychology?

In Class Visit - Friendship-Edison School - 22 students

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Wed. May 30

Questions:
  1. Stapler?
  2. Map of Mekong River?
  3. The confident hope of a miracle : the true history of the Spanish Armada / Neil Hanson?
  4. Alex Hailey?
  5. Do you work here? (What a knee-slapper, that one never gets old!)
  6. Where do you check out books?

What I'm Reading:

  • Still: Turning Angel

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Tues. May 29

Questions:
  1. Voter registration cards? (in WASH)
  2. Ancient Egypt?
  3. Ancient Rome?
  4. Hunter / Gathers?
  5. Computer list?
  6. Ralph Ellison?
  7. Check out books?
  8. Where do I check out?
  9. FDR timeline?

What I'm Reading:

  • Turning Angel by Greg Iles. Good so far, needed something light after Caesar and Cicero and before Bookseller of Kabul.

Actions/Thoughts:

LAST DAY OF FRENCH CLASS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


Thursday, May 24, 2007

Thurs. May 24

Questions:

  1. Jamestown Narratives: Eyewitness Accounts of the Virginia Colony: The First Decade: 1607-1617 by Edward Wright Haile? (Not in TS3 either)
  2. The first 17 years / Hatch?
  3. Vol. 104 of Virginia Magazine of History & Biography?
  4. Quarterly Bulletin of Virginia Archeology?
  5. Printing going to save as? (Okay, from the menu bar select Print, then change the printer from there to Xerox doc center and whatever designation they give I think it stars with 4)
  6. Where are the Zip codes in the commercial atlas?
  7. Renew books?
  8. African Americans who were first / Potter, Joan?
  9. Rabble rousers : 20 women who made a difference / Cheryl Harness?
  10. Black women activists / Karin S. Coddon? (Hold called ANA go to WTD)
  11. State of a Union / Oppenheimer? (Hold Wash post)
  12. Tranfer to AV?
  13. Trasfer to MUS?
  14. Enrico Dandolo & the rise of Venice / Thomas F. Madden? (Hold pick up)
  15. The Pope, his banker, and Venice / Felix Gilbert? (Hold pick up)

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Wed. May 23

Questions:
  1. Restrooms?
  2. 15 minute computers?
  3. Erica Wagner bio info?
  4. What books do you have by Erica Wagner?
  5. Street map of DC?
  6. Immigration?
  7. Japan Travel Guide?
  8. South America Travel Guide?
  9. Thomas Woodrow Wilson, twenty-eighth President of the United States; a psychological study, by Sigmund Freud and William C. Bullitt? (Hold Wash post)
  10. Medieval life /Andrew Langley?
  11. Discarded legacy : politics and poetics in the life of Frances E.W. Harper, 1825-1911 / Melba Joyce Boyd. (Hold TPK pick up)

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Tue. May 22

Questions:

  1. Is there a "Housing Expo" at the Library?
  2. Why can't I put my change in the covered up change slot?
  3. I uncovered the covered change slot and can still not put my change in, why?

What I'm Reading:

  • Caesar by Goldsworthly
  • Just One Look - Harlan Coben (Darn you Coben, I was up till 3 am just to finish it!!!!!!)

Monday, May 21, 2007

Mon. May 21

Questions:
  1. Where do I leave Ref books?
  2. Can I sign up twice on the computer?
  3. From where I sit : Merv Griffin's book of people / by Merv Griffin?
  4. Map of Fairfax Co.?
  5. How do I change the paper size on the copier?
  6. Eric / Lund, Doris Herold?
  7. A heartbreaking work of staggering genius / Eggers, Dave?
  8. Coming of age in Mississippi / Moody, Anne?
  9. Life and death in Shanghai / Cheng, Nien?
  10. Vietnam War?

What I'm Reading:

  • Cicero by Everitt
  • Caeser by Goldsworthy

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Sun. May 20

Questions:
  1. Jamaica History?
  2. POP?
  3. Chart of Wars?
  4. Sign in to computer?
  5. Genealogy sources?
  6. Census records?
  7. Thurgood Marshall?
  8. Venezuela History
  9. Lower reading levels?
  10. Belize Travel Guides?
  11. Sign in to computer?

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Sat. May 19

Questions:

  1. Night by Weisel
  2. Who was the female lead in "It Happened One Night"
  3. The condition, elevation, emigration, and destiny of the colored people of the United States?
  4. The African dream : Martin R. Delany and the emergence of pan-African thought / Cyril E. Griffith. ?
  5. Any place that offer translations for tourists?
  6. 92 section?
  7. 927 section?
  8. 700 section?
  9. Anthony Burns?

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Thur. May 17

Questions:
  1. Vacuuming is disturbing me, could you ask her to stop?
  2. klu klux klan?
  3. Sign up computer?
  4. Robert Benchley, a biography / Benchley, Nathaniel? (Hold CPK)
  5. ALEXANDER WOOLCOTT, HIS LIFE AND WORLD / ADAMS, SAMUEL HOPKINS? (Hold CPK)
  6. Sign up computers?
  7. Are the sign up computers down?
  8. Can I use the red marker in that desk?
  9. What was Dr. King's daught who just died full name?
  10. Where did Yolanda Denise King go to school?
  11. When did Dr. King die?
  12. ROGER KEYES / ASPINALL-OGLANDER? (Hold CPK)
  13. Restroom?
  14. Black Georgetown remembered : a history of its black community from the founding of "The Town of George" in 1751 to the present day / Kathleen M. Lesko, general editor & contributing author ; Valerie Babb and Carroll R. Gibbs, contributing authors. (Missing)
  15. [Among the Russians] Where nights are longest : travels by car through western
    Russia / Colin Thubron.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Wed. May 16

Questions:

  1. Sign up for computer?
  2. Elvisworld?
  3. Is this a print card for DC?
  4. ADC Map of DC?
  5. ADC Map of PG County?
  6. Commercial Atlas?
  7. Magnifying Glass?
  8. Zip Code directory?
  9. Zip Code binder?
  10. Restroom?
  11. Computer sign up problem
  12. Where are your computers?
  13. Do you page people?
  14. Contemporary Authors?
  15. Pencil?
  16. Is that the right time?
  17. Are you sure that's the right time?
  18. That dosen't seem like the right time, are you sure?
  19. SOC?
  20. John Brown?
  21. Wendell Phillips?
  22. Leaving Mother Lake : a girlhood at the edge of the world / Yang Erche Namu and Christine Mathieu. (Hold CPK))
  23. Why no printing?
  24. Any free place for computer use?
  25. Does DC have a State College?
  26. Al Capone?
  27. 962 section?

Action:

  • Phoned in OCTO, Pharos Reggie Ticket #241213

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Tue. May 15

Questions:
  1. Copier Help
  2. Spain Travel Guide?
  3. Computer won't print?
  4. Italy encyclopedia entry?
  5. Travel Insurance info?
  6. Encyclopedia of Stateless Nations?
  7. How late are you open?
  8. The flight of the Falcon / Lindsey, Robert? (Hold CPK)

Monday, May 14, 2007

Mon. May 14

Questions:

  1. Secrets of a sparrow?
  2. WiFi trouble?
  3. Death penalty?
  4. Nancy Reagan : the unauthorized biography / Kelley, Kitty? (Hold CCH)
  5. What is the film tonight?
  6. War torn : stories of war from the women reporters who covered Vietnam / Tad Bartimus (Hold Wash post)
  7. Mother Teresa?
  8. California Travel Guide?
  9. New York Travel Guide?
  10. Angelina Weld? (Grimke)

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Sun. May 13

Questions:
  1. Do you look up the book, or do I?
  2. Trotsky for beginners / Ali, Tariq? (Missing in TS3 NIS, Alibris)
  3. How do I use the Catalog?
  4. Pencil?
  5. Pencil sharpener?
  6. Secrets of a sparrow : memoirs / Ross, Diana? (Missing in TS3 NIS, Alibris)
  7. James Watson?
  8. My library card name says oscar55 can you change it?
  9. Card catalog?
  10. Government division?
  11. Restroom?

Actions:

  • Fliers

Thoughts:

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Sat. May 12

Questions:
  1. Eat, Pray, Love?
  2. Kurds?
  3. Pencil?
  4. Does the copier make change?
  5. Nigeria display?
  6. China History?
  7. India History?
  8. Ibn Battuta?
  9. Ibn Khaldun?
  10. Indonesia Travel Guide?
  11. Drama section?
  12. Pencil sharpener?

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Thurs. May 10

Questions:

  1. Resume help?
  2. Marie Antoinette?
  3. Huey Newton?
  4. Picasso?
  5. Mother Teresa?
  6. History of Schools?
  7. La bella figura : a field guide to the Italian mind / Beppe Severgnini?
  8. Jamestown films?
  9. Sikhs?
  10. Indian Elephants?
  11. India school history?
  12. Check out limit?
  13. Sign up computer?
  14. Computer?
  15. Fidel Castro?
  16. Che Guevara?
  17. George Bush Jr?
  18. William Wells Brown?
  19. 92 b section?

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Wed. May 9

Questions:

  1. Who's Who? (Just Who's Who)
  2. The audacity of hope : thoughts on reclaiming the American dream / Barack Obama?
  3. The Muqaddimah : an introduction to history / Ibn Khald*un?
  4. True tales from another Mexico : the Lynch Mob, the Popsicle Kings, Chalino, and the Bronx / Sam Quinones? (Hold CCH)
  5. Ghosts of Spain? (Hold CPK)
  6. Who was who?
  7. Magnifying Glass?
  8. History of New Orleans?
  9. Stapler?
  10. Restroom?
  11. Gabriel Prosser?
  12. Come, tell me how you live / Christie, Agatha?
  13. Biography of Agatha Christie?

Actions:

  • SWW - 21 Students
  • Proquest Training

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Tues. May 8

Questions:

  1. Langston Hughes books?
  2. The Clinton enigma / David Maraniss?
  3. Check out?
  4. Diary of Anne Frank?
  5. From the hood to the hill : a story of overcoming / Black, Barry?
  6. A long way gone : memoirs of a boy soldier / Beah, Ishmael?
  7. Computer?
  8. Restroom?
  9. Quotes from Harriet Tubman?
  10. When was Harriet Tubman born?
  11. When was Harriet Tubman active during the Civil War?

Monday, May 07, 2007

Mon. May 7

Questions:

  1. God Grew Tired Of Us: A Memoir by John Bul Dau
  2. Augustus by Everitt?
  3. Frommer's California Travel guide? (Hold CCH)
  4. ROMANTIC EGOISTS / BRUCCOLI?
  5. Henri Cartier-Bresson scrapbook : photographs 1932-1946 / Henri Cartier-Bresson? (NYrec)
  6. Washingtoniania?
  7. City of magnificent intentions : a history of the District of Columbia / by Keith Melder with Melinda Young Stuart (Missing)
  8. Tape?
  9. Copier?
  10. Does your copier make change?
  11. History of Nursing?
  12. Sojourner Truth?
  13. Angelina Weld Grimke?
  14. Sojourner Truth?
  15. Harriet Tubman?
  16. Richard Allen?
  17. Primary Sources on Sojourner Truth?
  18. Encyclopedia African-American Culture and History?
  19. "Great Events from History: North America Series"?
  20. Primary Sources on Harriet Beecher Stowe?
  21. Whitney Houston?
  22. Oprah Winfrey?
  23. Tyra Banks?
  24. Eleanor Holmes Norton?
  25. Angelina Grimke : voice of abolition / Todras, Ellen H?
  26. GED?

Actions:

  • Weeded 3 shelves 913 section

Saturday, May 05, 2007

Sat. May 5

Tut Lecture!
Lecturer: Bob Brier

Book recommended:
Kings and Queens of Ancient Egypt by Brunon

Friday, May 04, 2007

Fri. May. 4

Questions:

  1. Rage to survive : the Etta James story / James, Etta? (Hold pick-up)
  2. Arizona travel guide?
  3. Hostels in Phoenix?
  4. Pictures of Commodore Matthew Perry?
  5. Sign me in to the computer?
  6. How do I work the photocopier?
  7. Book written by Rowell?
  8. How do I work the photocopier?
  9. Ice floes and flaming water; a true adventure in Melville Bay. Translated from the Norwegian by Johan Hambro. Freuchen, Peter. (Missing)
  10. The Peter Freuchen reader; a selection by Dagmar Freuchen. (Missing)
  11. Men of the frozen North. Freuchen, Peter, Edited and with a pref. by Dagmar
    Freuchen. (Hold NOE)
  12. Photocopier?
  13. Books on tape?
  14. Sign-up station?
  15. Condelezza Rice?
  16. Oprah Winfrey?
  17. Women in Music?
  18. Books on tape?
  19. Henry Highland Garnet?
  20. Lady Sings the Blues?
  21. CD's?
  22. Restroom?
  23. Books on Tape?
  24. 155 section?

Actions:

  • Weeded 2 shelves - 913 section
  • 9 labels

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Thurs. May 3

Questions:

  1. Escape on the pearl? (Hold pick-up)
  2. What time do you close?
  3. Where are you located?
  4. Madame C J Walker?
  5. Vicksburg : the campaign that opened the Mississippi / Michael B. Ballard? (Hold pick-up)
  6. Restroom?
  7. SOC?
  8. GOV?
  9. 923 section?
  10. 92 R section?

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Wed. May. 2

Questions:

  1. Geno : the life and mission of Geno Baroni / Lawrence M. O'Rourke? (in transit)
  2. Nat Geo June 2003?
  3. Harold Vokes?
  4. Picture of Dick Cheney?
  5. Stapler?
  6. People Mag?
  7. Stapler?
  8. Berlin after the War, before reunification?
  9. Mail history?
  10. Empire of Songhai?
  11. Yuctan travel guide (Lonely Planet)?
  12. Hours of the Library of Congress?
  13. Victorian England?
  14. Richard Wright?

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Tue. May 1

Questions:
  1. Brazil Travel Books?
  2. Reading people : how to understand people and predict their behavior-- anytime, anyplace / Jo-Ellan Dimitrius and Mark Mazzarella. (Hold WEE)
  3. Resurrection / Malarkey, Tucker? (Missing)

Monday, April 30, 2007

Mon. Apr. 30

Questions:


  1. Bob Marley?
  2. Baby Showers?
  3. Help with copier?
  4. Makeba : my story / Makeba, Miriam?
  5. Do you know anyone who work at GEO that I could talk to about the response to the fire?
  6. New York Yakees?
  7. Count Folke Bernadotte : his life and work / Hewins, Ralph? (Hold -CCH)
  8. Murder's Row?
  9. Janice Dickinson?
  10. Tyra Banks?

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Sun. Apr. 29

Questions:

  1. Outlet for laptop?
  2. Pen or Pencil?
  3. A savage kingdom: The true story of Jamestown, 1607, and the settlement of America. Woolley Benjamin?
  4. Sign me up for a computer?
  5. Could you put me in the queue?
  6. Where is this section?
  7. Blank paper?
  8. Statue of Liberty?
  9. Meeting room?
  10. Dictionary of saints?
  11. Dictionary of popes?
  12. Who's who book?
  13. Does your machine take dollar bills?
  14. Log me in to the computer?

Saturday, April 28, 2007

Sat. Apr. 28

Questions:

  1. Restroom?
  2. People Magazine?
  3. Pencil sharpener?
  4. Pencil?
  5. Croatia Travel Guide?
  6. Where do I change my e-mail?
  7. Unfinished journey / Yehudi Menuhin. (Hold SOW)
  8. The bride of science : romance, reason, and Byron's daughter / Benjamin Woolley?
  9. Stairs?
  10. Check out here?
  11. Kenya?
  12. Where are the periodicals now?
  13. What is the number I call to renew books?

Actions / Thoughts:

  • Weeding 913 - 2 shelves

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Thurs. Apr. 26

Questions:


  1. New Jersey Travel Guides?
  2. Bill Bryson Books?
  3. Paulo Coelho Books?
  4. Color of Water (3 copies)? (Hold Pick-up)
  5. Biographies or autobiographies Rimsky-Korsakov?
  6. Golden Stone? (missing, not in TS3)
  7. Who's Who in American Women?
  8. Infidel?
  9. Renaissance?
  10. What is the "Pugwash conference on World Peace"?
  11. Essence 1977?
  12. Sepia 1976?
  13. Books on DC that you can check out?
  14. Restroom?
  15. Meeting rooms to use?
  16. Can you check the books out over there?
  17. FRANZ BIEBL?
  18. History of the Twin Towers?

Actions / Thoughts:

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Wed. Apr. 25

Questions:
  1. St. Augustine?
  2. How many CD's can you borrow?
  3. British rule in the Middle East?

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Tue. Apr. 24

Questions:

  1. Charles Drew?
  2. Chained together : Mandela, De Klerk, and the struggle to remake South Africa / David
    Ottaway. (Hold pick-up)
  3. South Africa : the rise and fall of apartheid / Nancy L. Clark and William H. Worger. (Hold pick-up)
  4. Mamphela Ramphele : challenging apartheid in South Africa / Judith Harlan. (Hold pick-up)
  5. Encyclopedia of Japan?
  6. Would you consider a journal article accessed from the Internet still a paper source?
  7. Maya Angelou?
  8. Boy : tales of childhood / Dahl, Roald. (Missing)
  9. Books by Phyllis Tickle?
  10. Books by Katharine Butler Hathaway?

Monday, April 23, 2007

Mon. Apr. 23

Questions:

  1. Maps of Turkey?
  2. Maps of Morocco?
  3. ALPHONSE MUCHA / MUCHA ? (Hold pick-up)
  4. Travel Guide on Great Britain? (Hold pick-up)
  5. Travel Guide on Scotland? (Hold pick-up)
  6. Travel Guide on England? (Hold pick-up)
  7. Travel guide Spain?
  8. Stapler?
  9. People magazine?
  10. Angela's Ashes?
  11. Cold War?
  12. World War 2?
  13. War of 1812?
  14. Autobiography?

Actions / Thoughts:

  • Database for Periodicals: entering 2007 data

What I'm reading:

  • Cabinet of Curiosities by Preston & Child
  • Just finished: Pretty Bad by Shirley Jump

Friday, April 13, 2007

Fri. Apr. 13

Questions:
  1. Alger Hiss? (Hold - Nat. Geo. pick-up)
  2. Sign up computer?
  3. 726?
  4. 92 e section?
  5. Their eyes were watching God?
  6. Clive Barker : the dark fantastic / Winter, Douglas?
  7. Bibliographies?
  8. El Salvador?
  9. Mexico?
  10. Western Union Address?
  11. The only living witness / Michaud, Stephen?
  12. Trade and conflict in Angola : the Mbundu and their neighbours under the influence of the
    Portuguese, 1483-1790 / by David Birmingham? (Hold CPK)

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Thurs. Apr. 12

Questions:
  1. Copier?
  2. 973 section?
  3. What does "pogrom" mean?

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Wed. Apr. 11

Questions:
  1. Tape
  2. The radical and the Republican : Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and the triumph of antislavery politics / James Oakes? (Hold SOW)
  3. The President's counselor : the rise to power of Alberto Gonzales / Bill Minutaglio? (Hold SOE-SOE)
  4. Naval History of the Civil War? (Missing)
  5. Infidel by Hirsi Ali, Ayaan? (NOS)

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Tue. Apr. 10

Questions:
  1. Ear Phones?
  2. AV?
  3. 916 section?
  4. 92 section?
  5. Paper?

Monday, April 09, 2007

Mon. Apr. 9

Questions:
  1. Bible section?
  2. Magnifying glass?
  3. Tape?
  4. Galileo?
  5. J P Morgan?
  6. Esto the explorer, in Florida, Spanish revolution, with Columbus?
  7. Wagadugu people? (Wagadu)
  8. Ancient Mali?
  9. 92 P section?
  10. Soninke kingdom? (Same as the Wagadu)
  11. Tape?

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Sat. Apr. 7

Questions:
  1. The Black man in slavery and freedom in colonial Brazil / A. J.R. Russell-Wood.? (Missing?)
  2. Navajo Indians?
  3. Alfred Cralle? (ice cream scoop inventor)
  4. T. Elkins? (refrigeration system inventor)
  5. George Toliver? (Propeller inventor)
  6. Address for Dan Beck?
  7. 92 R section?
  8. Mornings on horseback / McCullough, David G.?
  9. GEORGIA HIST IN OUTLINE? (Missing)
  10. Georgia, a short history? (Hold Pick-up)
  11. AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A COLONY? (Hold Pick up)
  12. A History of Georgia? (Missing)
  13. What language is this brochure in? (Amharic)
  14. Gerald Ford?
  15. Churchill's Folly? (In TS3)
  16. Map of the 50 states?

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Wed. Apr. 4

Questions:
  1. Looming Tower? (Hold pick-up)
  2. Please send book club book to TPK? (e-mail question)
  3. Washington books?
Thoughts/ Actions:
  • Discovered desensitizing machine in processing

What I'm reading:

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Tue. Apr. 3

Questions:
  1. SOC/GOV?
  2. AV?

Monday, April 02, 2007

Mon. Apr. 2

Questions:
  1. Foreign language books?
  2. 979.9461? (is there even such a call #?)
  3. Coretta Scott King?
  4. Are those books reference?
  5. I live in Chicago, but work here, can I get a library card?
  6. Has Leontyne Price written a recent autobiography?
  7. Any information on Leontyne Price?
  8. OED?
  9. The Romanov family album / Vyrubova, Anna Aleksandrovna? (missing)
  10. Herbert Hoover?


Thoughts / Actions:

De-cluttering continues! removed dead links on tutorial site.

  • Paris display installed
  • Renewed ALA membership.

What I'm reading:

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Sun. Apr. 1 - 400th POST!

Questions:

  1. Copier help?
  2. 200 section?
  3. Computer to look up books?
  4. How is the History section arranged?
  5. Where do my print jobs come out?
  6. Children's room?
  7. DVD's?
  8. 929 section?
  9. Hurston bio?
  10. Where do I check out?
  11. How do I get a library card?
  12. Citizen Cohn / Von Hoffman, Nicholas? (Hold SOE)
  13. Florida Map?
  14. Virgina Map?
  15. In spite of the gods : the strange rise of modern India? (Many holds! Borders!)
  16. Show business : a novel / Tharoor, Shashi?
  17. The great Indian novel / Tharoor, Shashi?
  18. Istanbul by Pamuk? (Hold for CPK??????)

Thoughts / Actions:

Well, today is the 400th post. Actually, it's not. I just merged 3 blogs (kind of a virtual de-cluttering!) I thought I'd give a more rounded vision of what I blog. The occasional article, link, tip, what I'm reading, etc. ...

What I'm reading:

Fatal Purity by Ruth Scurr - It' quite good, it's for the book club. I would love to give it a little more attention.

Friday, March 30, 2007

Fri. Mar. 30

Questions:
  1. The Lobotomist: A Maverick Medical Genius and His Tragic Quest to Rid the World of Mental Illness: by Jack El-Hai? (Not owned)
  2. The lost son : a life in pursuit of justice / Kerik, Bernard B? (Hold pick-up Wash Post)
  3. Check out?
  4. Hotels in Virgina?
  5. Miles from Washington to St. Louis?
  6. Bruce Lee : the tao of the dragon warrior / Chunovic, Louis? (Missing in cart TS3)
  7. Muammar Qadhafi
  8. People?
  9. Stapler?
  10. Popular Literature?
  11. Copier help

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Thurs. Mar. 29

Questions:

  1. The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys / Goodwin, Doris Kearns. (Hold pick-up NPR)
  2. The Kennedy women : the saga of an American family / Leamer, Laurence (Hold pick-up NPR)
  3. Jamestown Narratives: Eyewitness Accounts of the Virginia Colony: The First Decade: 1607-1617 by Edward Wright Haile?
  4. From a Native Daughter: Colonialism and Sovereignty in Hawai'I (Paperback) by Haunani-Kay. (put in TS3 cart)
  5. Love and hate in Jamestown : John Smith, Pocahontas, and the heart of a new nation / David A. Price. (Hold from GEO to NOE, FGR to PAL)
  6. The President's counselor : the rise to power of Alberto Gonzales / Bill Minutaglio? (Not Owned)
  7. Do you have Marquis Who's Who online?
  8. Do you have Marquis Who's Who latest edition?
  9. What are these books?
  10. Is your WiFi down?
  11. Stapler?
  12. Restroom?
  13. The way to rainy mountain / Momaday, N. Scott? (Hold Pick-up)
  14. Eastern Europe Travel Guide?

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Wed. Mar. 28

Questions:
  1. 444 days : the hostages remember / Wells, Tim.
  2. Civil War Stats?

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Tue. Mar. 27

Questions:
  1. Imperial reckoning : the untold story of Britain's gulag in Kenya / Caroline Elkins.
  2. King Leopold's ghost : a story of greed, terror, and heroism in Colonial Africa / Adam Hochschild.
  3. Where do I look up books?
  4. No disrespect / Souljah, Sister?
  5. Do you know how to wrap this in tissue paper?
  6. Music?
  7. Change?
  8. Jazz?
  9. Caesar?

Monday, March 26, 2007

Mon. Mar. 26

Questions:
  1. Tape?
  2. Stapler?
  3. Return books?
  4. I liked "Video Vixen", can you suggest any others?
  5. Things my mother never told me / Morrison, Blake? (Hold WEE)
  6. Wifi?
  7. Can I charge my notebook here?

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Sun. Mar. 25

Questions:
  1. Uganda?
  2. Ida Amin?
  3. 940 section?
  4. Gšdel, Escher, Bach : an eternal golden braid / Hofstadter?
  5. Beyond the sky and the earth : a journey into Bhutan / Jamie Zeppa. ?
  6. My Kind of Place?
  7. Christianity in Ethopia?
  8. Mexico Travel Guide?
  9. Frommer's Mexico Travel Guide?
  10. The Munich massacre 1972 Summer Olympics?
  11. Marie Antoinette?
  12. Map of Arlington?
  13. Map of the US?
  14. Restroom?

Friday, March 23, 2007

Fri. Mar. 23

Questions:


  1. Restroom?
  2. Restroom?
  3. Movies?
  4. Videos?
  5. Wheeling and dealing : confessions of a Capitol Hill operator / by Bobby Baker, with Larry L. King?
  6. Meaning of the name "Marie"?
  7. Copier?

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Thurs. Mar. 22

Questions:
  1. Saving graces : finding solace and strength from friends and strangers / Elizabeth Edwards. (Hold pick up Wash Post)
  2. Restroom?
  3. Pantheon?
  4. Falling Water?
  5. Tower of Pisa?
  6. Sydney Opera House?
  7. Colosseum?
  8. Taj Mahal?
  9. Eiffel Tower?
  10. Washington Monument?
  11. Parthenon?
  12. Guggenheim Museum?
  13. Charlie Parker?
  14. Puerto Rico Travel Guide?

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Wed. Mar. 21

Questions:

  1. LDS Book?
  2. Copier help?
  3. Hitler?
  4. Eva Braun?
  5. Helen Keller?
  6. Government Division?
  7. On the shoulders of giants : my personal journey through the Harlem Renaissance / Kareem Abdul-Jabbar with Raymond Obstfeld?
  8. Copier Help?
  9. Copier Help?
  10. What is "Let nobody turn us around : voices of resistance, reform, and renewal : an African American anthology / editors, Manning Marable, Leith Mullings" about?
  11. African Americans : opposing viewpoints / William Dudley, book editor?
  12. The power of pride : stylemakers and rulebreakers of the Harlem Renaissance / Carole Marks and Diana Edkins?
  13. Extraordinary people of the Harlem Renaissance / P. Stephen Hardy & Sheila Jackson Hardy?
  14. WiFi Down?
  15. Any other place for connection?
  16. Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia : two Protestant ethics and the spirit of class authority and leadership / E. Digby Baltzell? (Missing)
  17. Articles on Cornel West? (e-mail question)
  18. The Harlem Renaissance / Koopmans, Andy? (Hold pick-up)
  19. Books on architecture?

School Without Walls - 21 students

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Tues. Mar. 20

Questions:
  1. A book by Sun Tzu?
  2. Art of war?
  3. Life and Def by Simmons? (Borders)?
  4. The Personal Touch?
  5. Do you have a nickel?
  6. Copier ate my money?
  7. Ellington's jazz influence?

Public Cat down 8 pm

Monday, March 19, 2007

Mon. Mar. 19

Questions:

  1. Name of the former slave who had a best selling book in Europe in the 1700's, and name begins with O? (Olaudah Equiano)
  2. The Gettysburg Gospel: The Lincoln Speech That Nobody Knows by Gabor Boritt? (Not owned)
  3. Rough Guide to New England?
  4. New England Travel Guide?
  5. 618 section?
  6. Are your computers numbered?
  7. People magazine?
  8. Inter library Loans?
  9. Sri Lanka history?
  10. House of incest by Nin?
  11. Elsa Schiaparelli biography?
  12. Where do you sign up for the computer?
  13. Check out?
  14. Does it cost money for a library card?

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Sat. Mar. 17

Questions:


  1. Can you print out pictures for free?
  2. Chicago immigration?
  3. Can you give me 3 dollars?
  4. Assassination! : Kennedy, King, Kennedy / Goode, Stephen. 973.92 G647? (Missing)
  5. Italy Travel guide?
  6. Map of Northern Virgina?
  7. Chicago history?
  8. Dawn of the Middle Ages / Grant, Michael?
  9. I think I messed up the monitor, can you fix it?
  10. Michael Vick?
  11. Michael Jordan?
  12. Will Smith?
  13. What are those files in the back, and where did they come from?
  14. Emancipation proclamation?
  15. Outlet?
  16. Restroom?
  17. How would you ask an industrialist for money?
  18. Would you ask for one million dollars?

Actions:

  • Ticket # for locked voice mail 224124 from 'Phil'
  • Huff and Sigh patron, incident report

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Thurs. Mar. 15

Questions:


  1. Copier help?
  2. South Carolina Genealogy?
  3. Ramage in south Italy : the nooks and by-ways of Italy : wanderings in search of its ancient remains and modern superstitions / by Craufurd Tait Ramage ; abridged and
    edited by Edit Clay? (Missing? Borders?)
  4. Georgetown History?
  5. Europe?
  6. Benjamin Banneker?
  7. Eastern Europe Travel Guides?
  8. Blog or wiki? What would work best?
  9. New news out of Africa : uncovering Africa's renaissance / Charlayne Hunter-Gault?

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Wed. Mar. 14

Questions:

  1. Computer trouble?
  2. Computer trouble?
  3. Birthday of Louis VIX?
  4. Caribbean Travel guide?
  5. Bermuda Travel guide?
  6. Western expansion?
  7. What's the title and author of the large biography book with an entry for Henry Box Brown on page 109?

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Tue. Mar. 13

Questions:

  1. Ancient Egypt?
  2. Copier help?
  3. Copier help?
  4. Pen?
  5. Caribbean travel guide?
  6. Check out?
  7. "How the Irish Saved Civilization"? (Hold Excut. Off. Pres)
  8. Restroom?
  9. Hold this book til tomorrow?
  10. Neolithic?
  11. Primates?
  12. Reference Ancient Egypt?
  13. Ella Fitzgerald?
  14. Lena Horne?
  15. Lil' Kim?
  16. Letters of E.B. White / White, E. B. ? (Hold CCH)
  17. Book Club Book?
  18. What is DC Emancipation Day?
  19. Check out here?

Monday, March 12, 2007

Mon. Mar. 12

Questions:
  1. The complete works of Captain John Smith? (Hold CPK)
  2. Jack Johnson inventor?
  3. James Forten Inventor?
  4. The Voices of Morebath: Reformation and Rebellion in an English Village: Books: Eamon Duffy
  5. 92 section?
  6. 923 section?
  7. When is daylight savings time?
  8. Where is Sociology?
  9. Greek ways : how the Greeks created western civilization / Bruce Thornton? (Hold pick-up)
  10. Riding the bus with my sister : a true life journey / Rachel Simon? (Hold CCH)
  11. George Herbert Walker Bush / Wicker, Tom?
  12. Pen?
  13. "Little Phil"?
  14. "General Philip Sheridan"?
  15. Citizen Sherman : a life of William Tecumseh Sherman / Michael Fellman?
  16. Sheridan : the life and wars of General Phil Sheridan / Morris, Roy?
  17. Audio video?

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Sun. Mar. 11

Questions:
  1. Computer Sign in?
  2. Computer Sign in?
  3. Computer Sign in?
  4. Computer Sign in?
  5. Pictures of Africa?
  6. Computer Sign in?
  7. Funny Women pick up?
  8. Al Gore contact info?
  9. Environmental groups?
  10. Address for Washington Post, New York Times, Seattle Times, Sacramento Bee, Chicago Tribune,
  11. HISTORY OF THE STATE OF INDIANA / Smith, W.? (Hold GEO)
  12. Wrestlers?
  13. 92 F section?
  14. Notebooks of Tennessee Williams?
  15. Books on why the ancient civilazations fell?
  16. Gladiators?

Friday, March 09, 2007

Fri. Mar. 9

Questions:
  1. Stapler?
  2. Photocopy key?
  3. West Indian Genealogy?
  4. Room 226?
  5. What is 020.92 Call Number?
  6. U-2 Affair and Francis Gary Francis Powers?
  7. I'm lost, I started off in the Art section, where am I now? (The Art Section)
  8. Soldiers of the Sea? (Not Owned)
  9. The Confederate War / Gallagher, Gary W.? (Hold Wash. Post)
  10. Audio Visual?
  11. Bob Withers address?
  12. The life of John Milton / Wilson, A. N? (Hold- Missing)
  13. Domino theory?

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Thurs. Mar. 8

Questions:
  1. Transcripts of Charlie Rose show?
  2. 973 section?
  3. Travel Guide to Adirondacks?
  4. Scrap paper?
  5. Pencil sharpener?
  6. El Salvador History?
  7. Indonesia History?
  8. The Occult and Nazis?

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Wed. Mar. 7

Questions:
  1. Problem with printing?
  2. Restroom?
  3. Restroom?
  4. Excel formula question.
  5. Season of blood : a Rwandan journey / Keane, Fergal. (returned?)
  6. The Rwanda crisis : history of a genocide / Prunier, Girard. (returned?)
  7. The Pact?
  8. How the Great Pyramids Where Built?
  9. Where can I check out?
  10. Where do I put these books?

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Tues. Mar. 6

Question:

  1. Peru Lonely Planet (Borders purchase?)
  2. Mailing address of the White House?
  3. Peter Pouncey?
  4. I need to find the book called "The republic" The allegory of the cave? (e-mail question)
  5. Angela Davis? (e-mail question)
  6. Cornel West? (e-mail question)
  7. Howard Thurman? (e-mail question)
  8. Mein kampf / Hitler?

Monday, March 05, 2007

Mon. Mar. 5

Questions:
  1. Restroom?
  2. Washington DC Travel Guide?
  3. Internet computers?
  4. Can I use my computer in this room?
  5. Address for Michael Jackson?
  6. Modern History of Japan by Beasley?
  7. Wrestling Books?
  8. Shawn Michael's book?
  9. The Rock?
  10. Born on a Blue day

Friday, March 02, 2007

Fri. Mar. 2

Questions:

  1. Map of Arlington?
  2. What county is Manassas in?
  3. Ray Charles?
  4. Brazil Travel Guide?
  5. Water fountain?
  6. Water fountain?

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Thurs. Mar. 1

Questions:

  1. Oops : twenty life lessons from the fiascos that shaped America : with handy recipes for
    disaster / Martin J. Smith and Patrick J. Kiger. (Hold CPK)
  2. 92 l section?
  3. 973 section?
  4. Syria Travel Guide?
  5. Stapler?
  6. Pencil?
  7. Seductress : women who ravished the world and their lost art of love / Betsy Prioleau. (Hold from MTP)
  8. What is FDR's birthday?
  9. What year did FDR's "Birthday Balls" start?
  10. Pen?
  11. Copier Help?
  12. John Quincy Adams / Remini, Robert Vincent? (Hold pick-up)

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Wed. Feb. 28

Questions:

  1. R A Butler?
  2. Alan Anderson?
  3. O J Simpson?
  4. Before night falls / Arenas, Reinaldo? (Hold CPK)
  5. A distant mirror : the calamitous 14th century / Barbara W. Tuchman. (Hold CCH)
  6. Dorothy Dandridge : a biography / Bogle, Donald
  7. How many books can I check out?
  8. Pen?
  9. Where do I check out?
  10. San Francisco Travel Guide?
  11. SeinLanguage / Seinfeld, Jerry? (Hold from WOD)

SWW 18 students

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Tue. Feb. 27

Questions:


  1. The Treaty of Versailles?
  2. Check out books here?
  3. Check out books here?
  4. 917 section?
  5. 92 section?

Monday, February 26, 2007

Mon. Feb. 26

Questions:

  1. Why is February "Black History Month"?
  2. The hidden children : the secret survivors of the Holocaust / Jane Marks. (missing)
  3. Geography?
  4. Geography of Africa?
  5. Zinn's A people's History of the United States?
  6. South Africa?
  7. Costa Rica Travel Guide?
  8. What floor are you on?

All the world's a stage book club meeting - 7 people

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Sun. Feb 25

Closed due to Snow

Friday, February 23, 2007

Fri. Feb. 23

Questions:
  1. Tony Blakely from the New York Times birthday? (Tony Blankley from the Washington Times?)
  2. Magnifying glass?
  3. From slavery to freedom?

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Thurs. Feb. 22

Questions:

  1. Personal memoirs of U.S. Grant? (Hold CCH)
  2. Change?
  3. A traveller's history of the Caribbean / James Ferguson ; line drawings, John Hoste? (missing)
  4. Charles the Second?
  5. Time period of Charles the Second?
  6. Five Germanys I have known / Stern, Fritz Richard? (Not REC)
  7. Dreamgirl ; & Supreme faith : my life as a Supreme / Wilson, Mary? (Hold pick-up)
  8. Created equal : the lives and ideas of Black American innovators / James Michael Brodie. (Missing)
  9. Genghis Khan?

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Wed. Feb. 21

Questions:

  1. African American Business women?
  2. Ida B. Wells?
  3. Madam CJ Walker?
  4. 92 M?
  5. Stapler?
  6. Lonely Planet Argentina Travel Guide? (Hold WEE)
  7. Rough Guide Argentina Travel Guide? (Hold WEE)
  8. Cherokee Genealogy?

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Tues. Feb. 20

Questions:

  1. The audacity of hope : thoughts on reclaiming the American dream / Barack Obama
  2. Shadow play : the murder of Robert F. Kennedy, the trial of Sirhan Sirhan, and the failure of American justice / William Klaber and Philip H. Melanson. (SOC)
  3. Drew Scott case? (Correct name is Dred Scott Case SOC)
  4. Georgia Travel guides?
  5. Guyana Travel Guide?
  6. Mayflower madam : the secret life of Sydney Biddle Barrows / by Sydney Barrows with William Novak.
  7. Restroom?
  8. Mauritania?
  9. 970?
  10. 92 w?
  11. Restroom?

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Sat. Feb. 17

Questions:
  1. Rayful Edmund?
  2. Audio Visual?
  3. Computer?
  4. Stapler?
  5. Riots?
  6. 1940's
  7. Swing music?
  8. What is the opposite of: Balance, opposition, absolute, solitude?
  9. Biography section?
  10. Books on tape?
  11. Cleopatra?

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Tues. Feb. 13

Questions:
  1. I love you, Ronnie : the letters of Ronald Reagan to Nancy Reagan. (Hold WEE)
  2. The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys / Goodwin, Doris Kearns (Hold NPR)
  3. Who were the "people of Heth"? (After The Flood, the Hittites originated from Noah's great-grandson Heth, through Ham and Canaan, and were sometimes referred-to as the "sons of Heth" (Genesis 23:3 KJV) or "daughters of Heth" (Genesis 27:46 KJV))
  4. Mysterious skin : a novel / Scott Heim.?
  5. Martin Delany?

Monday, February 12, 2007

Mon. Feb. 12

Questions:
  1. National Geographic March 2002?
  2. Friedensreich Hundertwasser by Harry Rand?
  3. Sarge : the life and times of Sargent Shriver / Stossel, Scott (Hold NPR)
  4. The Vietnam Wars, 1945-1990 / Young, Marilyn Blatt. (Hold CCH)
  5. Aruba Travel guide? (Borders)
  6. The cave paintings of Baja California : discovering the great murals of an unknown people /written and photographed by Harry W. Crosby ; additional photographs by Enrique Hambleton? (Missing)
  7. Lonely Planet Baja Travel guide? (Hold SOW)
  8. The hidden heart of Baja / Gardner, Erle Stanley (Hold SOW)
  9. Dust tracks on a road : an autobiography / Hurston, Zora Neale.
  10. WiFi not working?
  11. Crusade for justice : the autobiography of Ida B. Wells / edited by Alfreda M. Duster?
  12. Can you look up three citations for me?

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Sun. Feb. 11

Questions:
  1. Before the Legend: Bob Marley?
  2. Running with scissors : a memoir / Burroughs, Augusten? (Hold NOE)
  3. Encyclopedia book of the year 1972?
  4. The lives and times of the great composers / Steen, Michael. ? (Returned? 927.8 S814)
  5. CHOPIN / MURDOCH?
  6. Ramses the second?
  7. Mary McLeod Bethune?
  8. Fatal voyage : the sinking of the USS Indianapolis / Kurzman, Dan. (Hold CPK)
  9. Contemporary Authors "D"?
  10. The Pact?
  11. Vietnam : a war on two fronts / Lens, Sidney. (Missing)

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Sat. Feb 10

Questions:

  1. Susan B. Anthony dates and a little information.
  2. Dates of Dr. Thomas Wyatt Turner?
  3. Al Pacino?
  4. John Gotti?
  5. T D Jakes book written by Coretta Scott King?
  6. Where is A2? (It's the gallery)
  7. Lincoln : a life of purpose and power / Carwardine, Richard? (Hold SOE)
  8. Can you transfer my call to TEN?
  9. Who was the star of It Happened one Night?
  10. Star of Gigi?
  11. The diary of Anne Frank/ Frank, Anne
  12. Berlin travel guide?
  13. Check out CD's?
  14. Check out books?
  15. Carter G. Woodson?
  16. How do get a job application for Home Depot?
  17. Why does the computer not give you enough time to fill out an application?

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Thurs. Feb. 8

Question:

  1. Scrap paper?
  2. Autobiography of Malcolm X?
  3. Gifted Hands?
  4. Frommer's Florida 2006?
  5. Chechnya?
  6. Information on Anna Nicole Smith?
  7. ILL information? (How many? - No limit! Search for where? - Only US)

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

33 Reasons Why Libraries and Librarians are Still Extremely Important

Published on Tuesday January 30th , 2007

33 Reasons Why Libraries and Librarians are Still Extremely Important
by: Will Sherman

Many predict that the digital age will wipe public bookshelves clean, and permanently end the centuries-old era of libraries. Technology’s baffling prowess and progress even has one librarian predicting the institution’s demise.
He could be right.

But if he is, then the loss will be irreplaceable. As libraries’ relevance comes into question, they face an existential crisis at a time they are perhaps needed the most. Despite their perceived obsoleteness in the digital age both libraries – and librarians – are irreplaceable for many reasons. 33, in fact. We've listed them here:

1. Not everything is available on the internetThe amazing amount of useful information on the web has, for some, engendered the false assumption everything can be found online. It’s simply not true.

Google Book Search recognizes this. That’s why they’re taking on the monolith task of digitizing millions of books from the World’s largest libraries. But even if Google does successfully digitize the sum of human knowledge, it is unlikely that the sum of contemporary authors and publishers will not allow their works to be freely accessible over the internet. It is already prohibited by law to make copyrighted books fully accessible through Google Book Search; only snippets. And it’ll be a long time before that must-read New York Times bestseller gets put up for free on the internet: current copyright law protects works for 70 years beyond the death of the author.

Even some public domain works are off limits. If an out-of-copyright copy includes prefaces, introductions, or appendices that are still in copyright, the whole work falls under copyrighted status.

2. Digital libraries are not the internetA fundamental understanding of what the internet is – and what it isn’t – can help more clearly define what a library is, and why libraries are still extremely important.

The Elmer E. Rasmuson Library at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks clearly spells out the difference between “Online Collections” and the “Internet or Web Sources”. The internet, this site explains, is a mass of largely unpublished materials produced by organizations, businesses, individuals, experimental projects, entrepreneurial webmasters, etc.

“Online Collections”, however, are different. They are typically provided by libraries and include materials that have been published via rigorous editorial processes. Works selected for inclusion in a library catalogue undergo vetting from qualified staff. Types of materials include books, journals, documents, newspapers, magazines and reports which are digitized, stored and indexed through a limited-access database.

While one might use the internet or a search engine to find these databases, deeper access to them requires registration. You are still online, but you are no longer on the internet. You are in a library.

3. The internet isn’t freeWhile Project Gutenberg boasts 20,000 free, downloadable eBooks on its homepage, we are promptly reminded that these books are only accessible because they are no longer in copyright.

And books are just the tip of the iceberg. Numerous academic research papers, journals and other important materials are virtually inaccessible to someone seeking to pull them off the web for free. Rather, access is restricted to expensive subscription accounts, which are typically paid for by libraries. Visiting the library in person, or logging in to the library through your member account, is therefore the only way to affordably access necessary archived resources.

4. The internet complements libraries, but it doesn’t replace themTo guide people in finding information, the Long Island University provides a helpful explanation of what types of resources can be accessed through the library. These include news, journals, books and other resources.

Interestingly, the World Wide web is among these resources as yet another approach to finding information. But it’s not a replacement. The page goes on to differentiate and explain the advantages of libraries over the internet for research. It does cite the benefits of the internet, including “sampling public opinion”, gathering “quick facts” and “a wide range of ideas”. Overall, the point is well made: libraries are completely different institutions from the web. In this light, to talk about one replacing the other begins to seem absurd.

5. School Libraries and Librarians Improve Student Test ScoresA 2005 study of the Illinois
School Libraries shows that students who frequently visit well-stocked and well-staffed school libraries end up with higher ACT scores and perform better on reading and writing exams.
Interestingly, the study points out that access digital technology plays a strong role in test results, noting that “high schools with computers that connect to library catalogs and databases average 6.2% improvement on ACT scores”.
View the press release here.

6. Digitization Doesn’t Mean DestructionThe eagerness with which libraries have jumped into partnership with Google Book Search is not the work of a lemming mentality. Libraries including Oxford University, University of Michigan, Harvard, the Complutense University in Madrid, the New York Public Library, the University of Texas, the University of California and many others have teamed up with the Google’s project, not eschewed it.
In return for opening up their stacks, these libraries will have all their books electronically available for their own members. While it can be expected that fully out-of-copyright books will, on many occasions, be made fully accessible to the public, copyrighted materials – including subscription journals – will still be kept under restricted access.

The reason for this is in part because Google Book Search’s indemnity clauses don’t reach that far; Google Book Search won’t shield libraries from any liability that they might incur for overstepping the bounds of copyright. And there’s a real cause for caution – Google Book Search is currently facing two major lawsuits from authors and publishers.

7. In fact, digitization means survivalDaniel Greenstein of the University of California cites a very practical reason for digitizing books: in electronic form, books aren’t vulnerable to natural disasters or pulverization that comes with age. He even cites the libraries destroyed by Hurricane Katrina as an important reminder of the vulnerability of “cultural memory”.
8. Digitization is going to take a while. A long while.While book search has developed the air of an unstoppable movement rapidly breaking down library walls and exposing untouched treasure troves, it is breathtakingly far from reaching its goal. With an estimated 100 million books in print since the invention of movable type , the process has hardly made headway. Digitizing is expensive and complicated, and so far Google’s million books digitized is just a drop in the bucket. “The majority of Information”, said Jens Redmer, Google Book Search’s European director, “lies outside the internet”.

But how long will it take to index the world’s knowledge? In 2002, Larry Page boasted that Google could digitize approximately seven million books in six years. Since 2004 Google Book Search has been plugging along through a series of fits and starts. By 2007, they have managed to index a million books. So, at the rate of approximately half a million books per year, digitizing 100 million books would take about…200 years. Assuming Google could shake off the legal and logistical challenges and crank out 7 million books every 6 years, the earliest possible completion date would still be 2092.

In the meantime, a larger user base will rely on local libraries, or online collections of what have been digitized. Dumping physical libraries before digitization is complete would leave library patrons in the lurch.

9. Libraries aren’t just booksTechnology is integrating itself into the library system, not bulldozing it. Pushing this trend to its logical extreme (although it’s likely not to happen), we could eventually see libraries’ entire stacks relegated to databases, and have books only accessible digitally. So where does that leave librarians? Are they being overtaken by technology, the timeless enemy of labor?

Technology is integrating itself into the library system, not bulldozing it. Pushing this trend to its logical extreme (although it’s likely not go this far), we could eventually see libraries’ entire stacks relegated to databases, and only be able to access books digitally.
So where does that leave librarians? Are they being overtaken by technology, the timeless enemy of labor?

Not this time. In fact, technology is revealing that the real work of librarians is not just placing books on bookshelves. Rather, their work involves guiding and educating visitors on how to find information, regardless of whether it is in book or digital form. Technology provides better access to information, but it is a more complex tool, often requiring specialized know-how. This is a librarian’s specialty, as they dedicate themselves to learning the most advanced techniques to help visitors access information effectively. It’s in their job description.

10. Mobile devices aren’t the end of books, or librariesPredictions of the End of the Book are a predictable response to digitization and other technologies, and the crystal ball of some in the pro-paper crowd seems to also reveal a concomitant crumbling of civilization.
One of the latest dark threats to paper (and society) seems to be Google’s plan to make e-books downloadable to mobile devices. The iPod version of the novel is here. Google has already scanned a million books. Japanese train commuters are reading entire bestsellers on their cell phones. The end is near.

But if the mobile e-book is a hit and a lasting phenomenon, it’s unlikely that they will be an all-consuming transition for readers. Radio lives on despite TV, film is still in high demand despite video, people still talk on the telephone despite email. People who like paper books will continue to read paper books…even if mobile downloads prompt the majority of publishers to release e-books instead of paper. After all, an immense backlog of printed books will still be accessible to readers.

Where do libraries fit in supposing that mobile e-books actually do completely overtake printed books, the presence of the digital library will continue to be extremely important, whether it’s paper or electronically based.

11. The hype might really just be hypePaper books aren’t exactly doomed, even years after the invention of the e-book. In fact, by contrasting the merits of the e-book to those of the paper book, one could argue that paper books are actually a better product.
It would be premature to write off libraries and their freely accessible books amidst predictions of e-books’ impending prominence. Society could lose valuable access to a trusted medium – even if e-books do take off.

12. Library attendance isn’t falling – it’s just more virtual nowWith approximately 50,000 visitors a year, attendance at the American History Archives at Wisconsin Historical Society has dropped 40% since 1987. This statistic, when set alone, may prove sufficient for anybody casually predicting the Collapse of the Library. But it is only half the story. The archives have also been digitized and placed online. Every year the library receives 85,000 unique online visitors. The number of online schools offering online degrees is constantly on the rise as well. Many of these schools are improving their virtual libraries by the day.

13. Like businesses, digital libraries still need human staffingEven online businesses rely on quality support for better sales and customer satisfaction. The availability of email, phone and live chat services improve the experience of people seeking goods and services. The same goes for people seeking information.
In return for paying taxes or library fees packaged with University tuition, library members should expect reliable “customer support” in exchange for their dues.
Librarians are indeed very important in servicing their visitors. And still today there is no equivalent replacement to the library, which provides access to mountains of content that is not available through search engines or even Google Books Search, which only provides snippets and links to retailers where books can be bought.

14. We just can’t count on physical libraries disappearingPhysical libraries won’t ever go away. Even as Google Book Search picks up the pace and libraries finance their own digitization projects, the future of physical library space continues to be necessary.
This is because many libraries aren’t digitizing yet and many may never digitize. There’s a good reason: it’s expensive. At a low estimate of $10 per book (and probably much more for older, more delicate works), digitizing an entire library of, say, more than 10,000 books – well, it adds up. And for many library users, they still depend on this traditional, effective approach to pinpointing information with onsite computers or librarians available to assist them.

15. Google Book Search “don’t work”If a Google-style indexing of all the world’s books were to mirror the company’s well-known search service, one might have that much more fodder for the argument against keeping libraries around. After all, Google has great technology for searching the web, right? Couldn’t we just bypass libraries?
But experts point out that Google Book Search is far off from such user-friendliness as experienced with the company’s internet search service. The lofty ideals of information-for-everybody are hindered not only by copyright lawsuits, but by the Google’s own desire to be top dog. They’re not about to hand over their index to other competitors, like Microsoft, Yahoo!, Amazon and other non-partnered digitizing projects. The user loses out by not being able to access everything through his or her preferred book search service.
By not giving up digital archives to their competitors, companies that take this competitive, corporate approach to digitization risk veering off the map, away from the philosophy of the public library. In the meantime, libraries should remain in tact and available to the general public.

16. Physical libraries can adapt to cultural changeThe U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science (NCLIS) is just one among countless groups that study and debate the evolving role of the physical library in the digital age. In a 2006 symposium the NCLIS created a report that calls for a refining of what physical library space is. Less like “warehouses”, was one of the conclusions, and more like “intellectual crossroads for working, learning, teaching, and new types of programs.”

17. Physical libraries are adapting to cultural changeAnyone subscribing to the theories of 20th century thinker Marshal McLuhan might say that along with changed life patterns brought on by electronic technology, knowledge that was once encased in books and compartmentalized by subject area is now being liberally disseminated in an explosion of democracy, rendering obsolete the austerity of the lonely, echoing corridors of the Library. Interestingly McLuhan, who died in 1980, once even said: “the future of the book is the blurb”.
Indeed, this cultural change predates widespread use of the internet, as well as Google Book Search. For decades society has been seeking a more holistic understanding of the world, and increased access to information. The search for new methods of organizing educational structures (including libraries) has long been active. And while libraries might not be on many peoples’ “Top Ten Cutting Edge List”, they have been adapting.
Washington State University director of libraries Virginia Steel, for example, is a proponent of maximizing the social and interactive nature of physical library space. Group study, art exhibits, food and coffee – talking, not whispering; this is the new library. It’s not obsolete, it’s just changing.

18. Eliminating libraries would cut short an important process of cultural evolutionThe library that we are most familiar with today – a public or academic institution that lends out books for free – is a product of the democratization of knowledge. In the old days, books weren’t always so affordable, and private libraries, or book clubs, were a privilege of the rich. This started changing during the 1800’s, with more public libraries popping up and the invention of the Dewey Decimal Classification system to standardize the catalogues and indexes.
Libraries began blossoming under the watch of President Franklin Roosevelt, in part as a tool to differentiate the United States from book-burning Nazis. This increased interest in building a more perfect, liberal society culminated in 1956 with the Library Services Act, which introduced federal funding for the first time. Today there are tens of thousands public libraries in the United States. (More info on the history of libraries here).

19. The internet isn’t DIYIt could be said that the internet has endowed society with a giddy sense of independence. Access to all the world’s information – and free search engines to browse it with – calls into question the need for a librarians, moderators or other such middlemen; the web, it might seem, is a do-it-yourself medium.
But a quick look at the driving forces of today’s internet shows us something different. The internet is intensely social and interactive, and has created communities of users that are often remarkably as tight-knit as they are large. The internet is serving as a tool for humans to fulfill their natural community building instincts – sharing, interacting and doing business.
The online economy is driven in large part by the web 2.0 philosophy of human interaction, peer review and the democratization of knowledge and analysis. Search engines rank web pages based on their popularity, social networking platforms pull in millions of visitors daily and the internet’s most popular encyclopedia is written by the same people who read it.
Like Wikipedia, the most popular online meeting grounds are often the best moderated. Since riff-raff and spammers are an inevitable part of any society (whether physical or virtual), quality control helps contribute to the best online experiences. Good citizenship among online communities (intelligently contributing to the discussion, not spamming) is a surefire way to bolster your reputation as a helpful member of the group. In order to be fostered, this type of environment must be moderated.

Interestingly, the role of the moderator very much parallels the role of the librarian: to safeguard an environment in which knowledge can be accessed and ideas can be shared.
The notion that libraries are a thing of the past and that humankind has sprouted wings and flown into a new era of self-guided Truth is nothing short of farcical. Unfortunately, it’s this same notion that could lead to the dismemberment of libraries as stuffy and out-of-date. In reality, the quality of the web depends on guidance from the academic, library model. While moderators do have brush to clear in the new and savage cyber-scape, librarians have trail blazed significant parts of the journey.

20. Wisdom of crowds is untrustworthy, because of the tipping pointThe high visibility of certain viewpoints, analysis and even facts found online through social networking sites and wikis is engineered – ideally – to be the result of objective group consensus. Google’s algorithm also hinges on this collective principle: rather than an in-house “expert” arbitrarily deciding what resource is the most authoritative, let the web decide. Sites with higher link popularity tend to rank higher in the search engines. The algorithm is based on the principle that group consensus reveals a better, more accurate analysis of reality than a single expert ever could. Writer James Surowiecki calls this phenomenon “the wisdom of crowds.”
In a vacuum, crowds probably are very wise. But all too often we see the caveat to James Surowiecki’s crowd wisdom in Malcom Gladwell’s “tipping point”, which, in this context, explains that groups are easily influenced by their vanguard – those who are the first to do something and who automatically have extra influence, even if what they are doing is not necessarily the best idea.

The highly social nature of the web therefore makes it highly susceptible to, for example, sensationalized, low-quality information with the sole merit of being popular. Libraries, in contrast, provide quality control in the form of a stopgap. Only information that is carefully vetted is allowed in. Libraries are likely to stay separate from the internet, even if they can be found online. Therefore, it is extremely important that libraries remain alive and well, as a counterpoint to the fragile populism of the web.

21. Librarians are the irreplaceable counterparts to web moderatorsIndividuals who voluntarily devote their time to moderating online forums and wikis are playing a similar role to librarians who oversee the stacks – and those who visit the stacks.
The chief difference between librarians and moderators is that while the former guides users through a collection of highly authoritative, published works, the moderator is responsible for taking the helm as consensus is created. While the roles are distinct, each is evolving along with the fast paced growth of the internet and the evolving nature of libraries. Both moderators and librarians will have a lot to learn from each other, so it is important that they both stick around.

22. Unlike moderators, librarians must straddle the line between libraries and the internetAdmittedly, libraries are no longer both the beginning and ending point of all scholarly research. The internet is effectively pulling students away from the stacks and revealing a wealth of information, especially to one who is equipped with the tools to find it. Indeed, the dream of cutting out the middleman is possible to attain. But at what price?
Media literacy, although an extremely important asset for scholars and researchers, is far from universal. Who is going to teach media literacy? Many argue that librarians are the best fit to educate people about the web.

After all, web moderators are concerned primarily with the environment which they oversee and less so with teaching web skills to strangers. Teachers and professors are busy with their subjects and specializations. Librarians, therefore, must be the ones who cross over into the internet to make information more easily accessible. Instead of eliminating the need for librarians, technology is reinforcing their validity.

23. The internet is a messAs one pro-librarian website puts it, “The internet in very few ways resembles a library. A library provides a clear, standardized set of easily retrievable resources".
Despite the slightly combative nature of this one-liner, its premise is essentially correct. Despite improvements in search technology and the creation of amazingly comprehensive sites like Wikipedia, the internet is still, in many ways, a free-for-all. Flooded with sites from all sorts of sources that inexplicably languish about or jockey for top positions in the rankings, the web is like an overpopulated Wild West. Many have taken confronted this chaos with grass-roots social networking sites or large, complex and highly successful efforts to organized information (Google, Wikipedia, et al). But despite these efforts, a morass of questionable pages still tends to be served up in many search results, and the credibility of each source accessed must inherently come into question.

Not that that’s a bad thing. The oceans of information, uncertainty and spontaneity on the web can provide an exciting, enriching experience. But if you need to limit your search to logically indexed resources that have been published and then vetted by a professional staff, then the library is still your best bet.

24. The internet is subject to manipulationAs long as the bright minds behind Google are coming up with a better search algorithm, the bright minds of search engine optimizers will continue to crack it. This could involve conforming to Google’s quality standards or, in many cases, skirting around them. It is important for the user to keep in mind the limitations of Google. In many cases the search giant succeeds in serving up good information. But in many cases it still falls short.

In contrast, it is extremely hard to enter into libraries’ indexes. Books, journals and other resources must be nothing less than high caliber, published material. If they’re not, they simply don’t get in.

Furthermore, the economic incentive to manipulate library collections is much less fierce than on the internet. It is estimated that only 4% of book titles are being monetized.
Meanwhile, Google alone is experiencing incredible earnings through online advertising, not to mention everyone else positioning for a piece of the Internet pie.
But libraries simply aren’t facing this kind of pressure. Their way of providing information, therefore, will inherently be less influenced by corporate interests.

25. Libraries’ collections employ a well-formulated system of citationBooks and journals found in libraries will have been published under rigorous guidelines of citation and accuracy and are thereby allowed into libraries’ collections.
These standards are simply not imposed on websites. They can show up in search results whether or not they provide citation. With enough research, the accuracy of web resources often can be determined. But it’s very time consuming. Libraries make research much more efficient.

26. It can be hard to isolate concise information on the internetCertain subject areas like medical conditions or financial advice are very well mapped on the web. Quality sites for more marginal subject areas, however, are less easy to find through web search. One would have to know which site to go to, and Google isn’t necessarily going to serve you exactly what you are looking for.
Wikipedia, which ranks well for a wide variety of specialized subject areas, is improving web concision. But Wikepedia is just one site, that anyone can edit, and its veracity is not guaranteed. Libraries retain a much more comprehensive and concisely indexed collection off research materials.

27. Libraries can preserve the book experienceConsuming 900 pages on the intellectual history of Russia is an experience unique to the book. In general, the book provides a focused, yet comprehensive study that summarizes years of research by an author – or team of authors – who have devoted their academic to a particular subject area.
Through Google Book Search, the internet can be a tool to find where to buy a book. Normal search results also reveal a variety of book resellers, academic courses or upcoming web projects.

But even when the internet does provide actual content (as in a search for the history of Russia) the information is often snack-sized or the overall experience cursory – a sort of quick-reference browsing. Knowledge can be found, but the experience of delving into a book for hundreds of pages just doesn’t happen online. The preservation of stacks, therefore, will help preserve access to this approach to learning and the more traditional form of scholarship can continue alongside the new.

28. Libraries are stable while the web is transientIn an effort to improve their service and shake out the spammers, search engines are constantly updating their algorithms. Often, however, collateral damage will knock out innocent sites including, perhaps, authoritative resources.
In addition, websites commonly go offline or their addresses change. Other sites that point to these resources (which were once good) could easily and unwittingly house a number of “broken links”. These sites can remain unedited for years.
Libraries, on the other hand, have a well-accounted-for stock of available resources and a standard indexing system that will deliver stable, reliable results consistently.
29. Libraries can be surprisingly helpful for news collections and archivesIn many ways, libraries fall short of the internet when it comes to aggregating news content. Online TV, radio and newspaper sources – not to mention an abundance of blogs referencing and commenting on daily events around the world – can often satiate anyone from the casual headline browser to the news junkie.

Meanwhile, libraries continue to subscribe and stock a certain list of newspapers, and archive the back issues. This effort may seem humble alongside the lengthy lists of online news aggregators and instantaneous access to articles published within the minute.
Nevertheless, a library’s news cataloguing can provide a number of advantages. For starters, many publications continue to exist offline. For someone seeking a specific article by a specific journalist, a library could yield better results – even if the publication had to be tracked down through inter-library loan.

Libraries often provide freely accessible issues of major periodicals that would otherwise require online subscription, like many sections of the New York Times
In addition, archives often disappear offline, or become increasingly expensive online. (Try Google’s news archive search). This can leave libraries with the only accessible copies.

30. Not everyone has access to the internetIn less developed nations or even poorer parts of the United States, library access is often the only clear-cut way for an individual to conduct serious research. There are at least two major reasons that the internet may not provide even an illusory alternative to libraries.
Firstly, online access may be much more difficult to attain than library access. A public library may have but one computer console, while other internet access points may charge someone who simply doesn’t have the means to pay.
Secondly, even if internet access is obtained, the lack of technological education in poorer areas of the world will render the technology much less useful than it would be for the person who has more experience navigating the web.

31. Not everyone can afford booksOutside of developed nations, books are more rare and often more expensive than their first-world counterparts. Compounding the problem is an incredibly low minimum wage making the real cost of books astronomical. The public library, wherever it exists, therefore becomes much more crucial to democratizing information.
Since the United States tends to be a trend leader, especially technologically, it must underscore the importance of libraries even as technology moves forward. Touting a culture of BlackBerry devices over books may jeopardize the existence of traditional libraries, leaving poor people without books or BlackBerrys.

32. Libraries are a stopgap to anti-intellectualismIt’s not that the internet is anti-intellectual; its academic roots and the immense quantity of scholarly sites certainly attest to it being a smart medium.

It’s not that the internet is anti-intellectual; its academic roots http://www.nap.edu/readingroom/books/far/ch7.html and the immense quantity of scholarly sites certainly attest to it being a smart medium.
But for some, the alluring immediacy of the internet can lead to the false impression that only immediate, interactive and on-the-spot online discussion is of value. Dusty books on tall shelves then seem to represent stagnant knowledge, and their curators (librarians), behind the times. Books and reading easily gets regarded as elitist and inactive, while blogging becomes the here-and-now.
But, as mentioned earlier, not everything is on the internet. Access to books and theories from hundreds of years of cultural history is essential to progress. Without this, technology could become the ironic tool of the sensational and retrograde cultural tendencies. Preserving libraries to store knowledge and teach the limitations of technology can help prevent the hubris and narcissism of technological novelty.

33. Old books are valuableThe idea of a library becoming a “book museum” in the age of digitization is sometimes tossed about as an apocalyptic figure of speech. It’s a real scare for librarians. The term insinuates that, rather than become contemporary and useful, libraries could turn into historical fetishes like vinyl records or typewriters. And instead of continuing on as research professionals, librarians would be forced to become like museum curators – or, more likely, they would just lose their jobs.
But if the evolution of libraries grows to become an interactive meeting place for cultural events and the exchange of ideas, the preservation and exhibition of archival literary relics could be yet another facet to their importance (and, yes, intrigue). Indeed, old books are not only monetarily valuable, but they are part of cultural, historical memory that mustn’t be lost to digitization.
ConclusionSociety is not ready to abandon the library, and it probably won’t ever be. Libraries can adapt to social and technological changes, but they can’t be replaced. While libraries are distinct from the internet, librarians are the most suited professionals to guide scholars and citizens toward a better understanding of how to find valuable information online. Indeed, a lot of information is online. But a lot is still on paper. Instead of regarding libraries as obsolete, state and federal governments should increase funding for improved staffing and technology. Rather than lope blindly through the digital age, guided only by the corporate interests of web economics, society should foster a culture of guides and guideposts. Today, more than ever, libraries and librarians are extremely important for the preservation and improvement of our culture.

Wed. Feb. 7

Questions:
  1. Obituary for William Keys?
  2. What Travel magazines do you carry?
  3. Is the Dominican Republic a US Territory? (The United States Territories are:
    American Samoa
    Baker Island -- (uninhabited, administered from Washington, DC)
    Federated States of Micronesia
    Guam
    Howland Island -- (uninhabited, administered from Washington, DC)
    Jarvis Island -- (uninhabited, administered from Washington, DC)
    Johnston Atoll -- (under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Air Force)
    Kingman Reef -- (uninhabited, under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Navy)
    Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
    Midway Islands -- (under the responsibility of the US Fish & Wildlife Service)
    Navassa Island -- (uninhabited, administered from Washington, DC)
    Palmyra Atoll -- (uninhabited, under the responsibility of the U.S. Dept. of Interior)
    Puerto Rico
    U.S. Virgin Islands
    Wake Island -- (under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Air Force) )
  4. African American Justices of the Supreme Court?
  5. List of African Americans who work for the Executive Office of the President)

SWW - Hansberry

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Tues. Feb. 6

Questions:
  1. Vietnam?
  2. WEB DuBois?
  3. Enos Slaughter?
  4. Lined paper?
  5. Sharp tipped marker?
  6. Pen?
  7. Pencil?
Actions:
  • Digital 101 training through the ReadyTalk service

Monday, February 05, 2007

Mon. Feb. 5

Questions:

  1. Richard Nixon's address in Virgina before he was president? (3426 Gunston Rd, Parkfairfax, Alexandria Virginia from October 6, 1943 until June 14, 1944)
  2. Zami, a new spelling of my name / Lorde, Audre? (Missing?)
  3. Narritive of the life of Fedrick Douglas?
  4. Autobiography of Malcom X?
  5. Where is the recreation depatment?
  6. Military History?
  7. Central America?
  8. Virgil Thomson : composer on the aisle / Anthony Tommasini. (Hold Pick up)
  9. Stapler?

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Sun. Feb. 4

Questions:
  1. Is my ladder in the office?
  2. Computer not working?
  3. Book on Aztecs?
  4. Dictionaries in other languages?
  5. Where do I check out books?
  6. 920 Section?
  7. Where do I check out books?
  8. Ancient China?
  9. Children's Room?
  10. Special moments in African-American history, 1955-1996 : the photographs of Moneta Sleet, Jr., Ebony magazine's Pulitzer Prize winner / compiled and edited by Doris E. Saunders ; with introduction by Gordon Parks, Sr. and afterword by Lerone Bennett, Jr.
  11. African American magazine articles?
  12. The diary of Anne Frank : the critical edition / Frank, Anne?
  13. Jolie Gabor? (Hold Pick up)
  14. Restroom?
  15. Pearl Harbor? (940.5426)
  16. Dorothy Dandridge?
  17. Children's Room?
  18. African American female Bowler? (Cheryl Daniels)
  19. Mary Macloud Bethune?
  20. Woody Guthrie?
  21. Desegregated schools in Louisiana?
  22. The coming of the Friars, and other historic essays / Jessopp, Augustus ?
  23. Where are your encyclopedias on R?
  24. Copier help?
  25. Copier help?

Friday, February 02, 2007

Fri. Feb. 2

Questions:
  1. Parks and Gardens in DC?
  2. Machiavelli?
  3. Tape?
  4. The creation of the American Republic, 1776-1787 / Wood, Gordon S. ?
  5. Suffrage movement?
  6. Books on the Kennedys?
  7. Water fountain?
  8. I returned a Book but, the computer says I did not, is it on the shelf?
  9. Emmett Till?
  10. Uma Thurman?
  11. American civilization?

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Thurs. Feb. 1

Questions:

  1. South to the Caribbean : how to carry out the dream of sailing your own boat to the Caribbean / Bill Robinson?
  2. Deck with a view : vacation sailing in the Caribbean / Dale Ward and Dustine Davidson?
  3. What room are you in?
  4. Al Capone?
  5. Freedom from Fear by David M. Kennedy? (Hold Pick-up)
  6. Events in History?
  7. What's going on with the Copier?
  8. Author phoned and wants to talk about the book she wrote?
  9. Where is 394?
  • FW Checked silent alarm

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Wed. Jan. 31

Questions:

  1. Founder of A Dance Theatre in Harlen?
  2. Aldous Huxley dates?
  3. Hubert Benoit dates?
  4. Who else died on November 22 1963?
  5. Manhunt / Peter Maas / Maas, Peter?
  6. I've cut myself and bled on this map, can you clean it off?
  7. What do I put for my e-mail name?
  8. What is the password for my e-mail?
  9. How do I look for biographies on celebrities?
  10. Confessions of a video vixen / Steffans, Karrine. ?
  11. Literary criticism?
  12. Poetry?
  13. Elizabeth and Robert Browning?
  14. Willie Lynch: Why African Americans Have So Many Issues by Marc Sims