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From: "PUBYAC: PUBlic librarians serving Young Adults & Children" <pubyac@prairienet.org>

To: "PUBYAC: PUBlic librarians serving Young Adults & Children" <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Date: Sun, 18 Jun 2000 00:01:37 CDT

Subject: PUBYAC digest 164

PUBYAC Digest 164

Topics covered in this issue include:

1) Target: Ideas for HP costume

by "Mary J. Soucie" <mjsoucie@htls.lib.il.us>

2) RE: Braille study

by Jan Wall <janw@norby.latah.lib.id.us>

3) RE: You may have already won!

by "Tatar, Becky" <bltata@aurora.lib.il.us>

4) Braille Instruction

by "Jenifer Wagner" <jwagner@dakota.lib.mn.us>

5) Looking at YA Magazines

by Colleen Swider <cswider@ci.keene.nh.us>

6) Re: What works with teen girls

by Lisa Myron <lmyron@mail.slcpl.lib.ut.us>

7) Re: cocoon-into-butterfly stumper

by "M. Mills" <mmills@stic.lib.tx.us>

8) YA Magazine usage

by Diane Casey <caseyd@pls.lib.ca.us>

9) Re: What works with teen girls

by Rosalie Olds <rolds@kcls.org>

10) Braille books source

by Kami Krenz <kkrenz@dlapr.lib.az.us>

11) Re: Storytime for 1-3 graders

by Paulalef@aol.com

12) RE: Cute Kitty Kat Craft

by "AnnaMarie Job, Kinnelon Public Library" <JOB@main.morris.org>

13) Using musical instruments in storytimes.

by Christina Johnson <marionthelibrarian@yahoo.com>

14) Re: Harry Potter events

by Suzanne <suzie_q_40011@yahoo.com>

15) teen magazines for YA collection

by "Chapman, Jan" <jchapman@ascpl.lib.oh.us>

16) Re: Flannel Board Stories (Homemade)

by "Shilo Halfen" <shilojmh@hotmail.com>

17) modern Librarian's theme song

by "Lorie O'Donnell" <odonnell@borg.com>

18) Re: Puppet troupes

by saleena davidson <sdavidsn@lmxac.org>

19) Re:Online Safety Poster:

by Denise Weir <pepsi@mb.sympatico.ca>

20) STUMPER--Time travel in a subway tunnel

by Farida Shapiro <fshapiro@kcls.org>

21) Stumper: Halloween Ghost - Answered

by "Candice Morris" <cmorris@mtlib.org>

22) Top 100 Banned or Challenged Books of 1990-1999

by "Don Wood" <dwood@ala.org>

23) Maine's SIRS Intellectual Freedom Award

by "Don Wood" <dwood@ala.org>

24) Penguin stumper

by rebecca stutzman <rastutzman@yahoo.com>

25) BATH STUMPER SOLVED

by "Denise I. Matulka" <dimatulka@alltel.net>

26) STUMPER: FAVORITE DOLL BOOK

by "Rebecca Friedmann" <rfriedmann@hotmail.com>

----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: "Mary J. Soucie" <mjsoucie@htls.lib.il.us>

To: PUBYAC <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Target: Ideas for HP costume

Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 12:09:56 CDT

Hi all,

I'm doing a Harry program with one of my librarians. I found out recently

she will be dressing in a robe, which is being made for herby a friend.

Does anyone have any ideas for a "quick" and/or "easy" way to dress as a

character from HP, other than jeans/shirt/glasses? I appreciate any input

I get. Please reply to me and I'll post if there's interest.

TIA,

Mary

--

Mary J. Soucie

Youth Services Consultant

Heritage Trail Library System

405 Earl Road

Shorewood IL 60431

815-729-3345 x110

815-725-0930 Fax

mailto:mjsoucie@htls.lib.il.us

------------------------------

From: Jan Wall <janw@norby.latah.lib.id.us>

To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org

Subject: RE: Braille study

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 12:23:41 CDT

I don't know where NPR gets its info, but the Idaho State School for the

Deaf and Blind is definitely teaching Braille to young children! In fact, I

am told, many visually impaired people do not feel totally literate unless

they know Braille. But maybe that is an older generation who feels that way.

The (cataloged) Braille books that we have are more for the enlightenment

of the seeing. Most people who read Braille have other (better, I might

add) sources for their reading.

The Braille books that I was asking about were for PRIZES for summer

reading for those who have specifically told me that is the skill they are

currently working on, and the Braille books that we have for them to read

are on loan for the summer only.

Just a clarification and information for further thought. This question of

visual impairment has really opened my eyes (no pun intended!) to how our

programs are structured for those who have disabilities or impairments of

any kind...

Jan Wall

Youth Services Librarian

Latah County Library District

110 South Jefferson Street

Moscow ID 83843

fax: 208-882-5098

janw@norby.latah.lib.id.us

------------------------------

From: "Tatar, Becky" <bltata@aurora.lib.il.us>

To: "'pubyac@prairienet.org'" <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: RE: You may have already won!

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain

Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 12:30:16 CDT

 

 

 

> Victoria I tried to send this directly to you, but kept

> getting the message bounced back. Sorry, list. This hasn't happened with

> us, but in the April 96 issue of VOYA, Cathi MacRae wrote about the

> Renfrew District Library in Scotland, which opened a teen center/library

> in a separate building from the main library. It was a great article.

> VOYA, vol. 19, #1; April 96, "A Library Where Silence is

> Banned," Cathi Dunn MacRae, p. 7 - 12. Hope this helps, and good luck!

>

> Becky Tatar

> Unit Head, Periodicals/Audiovisual

> Aurora Public Library

> 1 E. Benton Street

> Aurora, IL 60505

> Phone: 630/264-4100

> FAX: 630/896-3209

> e-mail: bltata@aurora.lib.il.us

> www.aurora.lib.il.us

>

>

>

> I would like

> the new building to be turned over to the YA's of the community,

> since the

> kids of the community really need a place to hang out. It used to

> be a rec

> center, so it has a basketball court and other recreational space.

> Now, of

> course I don't expect the whole building to be a teen space. The

> rest of it

> could be rented out to other organizations or businesses.

>

>

> My question is, have any libraries out there been in similar

> situations, or

> do any of you know of libraries that have their young adult area in

> a

> totally separate building?

>

> Additionally, I need to know how large these libraries are, and how

> well the

> arrangement has worked.

>

>

------------------------------

From: "Jenifer Wagner" <jwagner@dakota.lib.mn.us>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Braille Instruction

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 12:37:31 CDT

Braille is alive and well and being taught to visually handicapped children

throughout the nation. For more information on Braille use and instruction

in specific states, contact your local chapter of the National Federation of

the Blind or your state department of education.

The major resurgence in Braille instruction began nearly ten years ago and

now the majority of blind children are receiving instruction. Of course,

the usefulness of Braille books in any library's collection is dependent on

the needs of the local population.

Jenifer Wagner, Librarian II

Dakota County Library, Heritage

20085 Heritage Drive

Lakeville, MN 55044

Phone: (651) 365-3219

e-mail: jwagner@dakota.lib.mn.us

fax: (651) 365-3209

------------------------------

From: Colleen Swider <cswider@ci.keene.nh.us>

To: "'pubyac@prairienet.org'" <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Looking at YA Magazines

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 12:44:28 CDT

I'm looking at adding a few new titles to our current Young Adult Magazine

collection. What I'm hearing from the our local kids is that they want

video gaming magazines and skateboarding titles. Can you please let me

know what you carry in your collection? We've thought about "Transworld

Skateboarding" and

"Tips & Tricks." Is there any library out there that has experience, good

or bad, with these two? Thanks!

Colleen M Swider

Keene Public Library

60 Winter Street

Keene NH 03431

(603) 352-0157

Fax: (603) 352-1101

email: cswider@ci.keene.nh.us

------------------------------

From: Lisa Myron <lmyron@mail.slcpl.lib.ut.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: What works with teen girls

Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 12:51:29 CDT

Dance workshops - Salsa and Swing

Tie Dye

Cartooning

Kick-boxing

Mehndi

Tarot Cards - the history and the mystery

------------------------------

From: "M. Mills" <mmills@stic.lib.tx.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: cocoon-into-butterfly stumper

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 12:58:24 CDT

I noticed these three references in internet:

http://sln.fi.edu/tfi/units/life/forums/birds_journal/0806972157.htm

http://www.wwb.co.uk/

& http://entowww.tamu.edu/academic/ucourses/ento489/lessons/lesson36.html

Patron questions will be answered in logical way using these URLs to find

info.

 

------------------------------

From: Diane Casey <caseyd@pls.lib.ca.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: YA Magazine usage

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 13:05:57 CDT

We have a small YA room with about 15 YA magazines. Due to past misuse we

have pared down the processing to a minimum. Still we have lots of damage

and vandalism. My collection development team is more concerned than I.

We can't add any more staff to that area than we already have. My feeling

is that this is the nature of YA magazines. But perhaps I'm wrong. I

need justification that we are doing all that we can. And of course we

will still have YA magazines because they are one of the most popular

reading materials for teens. Do other YA magazine collections have

similar problems?

Diane Casey, Young Adult Librarian

email: caseyd@pls.lib.ca.us Redwood City Library

voice: 650-780-7035 1044 Middlefield Road

fax: 650-780-7069 Redwood City, CA 94063-1868

For a companion

on my walking

trip...perhaps

a little butterfly Shiki

------------------------------

From: Rosalie Olds <rolds@kcls.org>

To: "PUBYAC: PUBlic librarians serving Young Adults & Children" <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Re: What works with teen girls

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII

Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 13:12:36 CDT

Katie,

We've had a Best Books group for teens that brings in more girls than

guys. They evaluate currently published books and give input as to

whether books should be nominated for "Best Books for Young Adults".

Rosalie

 

Rosalie Olds, Young Adult Librarian

King County Library System

Fairwood Library

Renton, WA

Life's too short to read bad books or drink bad wine!

 

------------------------------

From: Kami Krenz <kkrenz@dlapr.lib.az.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Braille books source

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 13:19:44 CDT

 

There is something strange here. Basically, most schools for young

children are teaching Braille; they did neglect it for many years and a

whole generation of people grew up without it but this situation has

changed in recent years in most places.Schools, foundations for blind

children, etc all teach Braille to children now and there are a large

number of users of Braille through the Library of Congress. It is true

that it is more difficult for adults to learn it than children, partly due

to the sensitivity of our fingers which grows less as we age. I did not

hear this story but something seems missing. It may depend on the area in

which your library is located how much call you have for the books.

Braille books in a general collection areactually often more for the

quality@classmates.comenlightenment of sighted children to see how the book

is written, as Braille readers go through the Library for the Blind for

their materials usually.The books are quite expensive and bulky so no

public library is going to be a true source of check out materials in

Braille. If they sit on the shelves it may also be because the Braille is

actually damaged from heat or cold and is unreadable to a Braille reader!

They can still be used to show other children as a display, or given as

gifts if they are new to the Braille user. Just my thoughts on this, hope

it helps.

------------------------------

From: Paulalef@aol.com

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Storytime for 1-3 graders

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 13:27:06 CDT

We've been doing such a program for years. We call it Chapter Club. We start

with a riddle or a joke from each child (we tell them that that is their

admission ticket), use tongue twisters and share such books for them to take

home. We then do a chapter or two of a chapter book such as Osborne's Magic

Tree House or something on a similar level. The kids have no problem

remembering from week to week; in fact they remember better than I do. The

wait between chapters doesn't seem to be a problem either. Many years ago

kids used to go to the movies on Saturdays for a chapter of a serial. From

what I gather that worked too.

Anyway, once the chapter book part is done we do things like the "HI, My

Name is So" or some other fairly silly and/or active thing we used to do in

girl scouts. One of the favorites is "The Cow Kicked Nellie in the Belly in

the Barn." We make a very big deal out of closing the door to the program

room so the noise doesn't bother the adults. Then we start singing it very

quietly, repeating until we're all screaming. (The words are in Schwartz's

Green Grass Grows All Around, along with a lot of other great stuff.) The

kids adore it.

Next we do some longer chapter books and folk tales from various

cultures. I bring a pile of 5 or 6 and we vote each time for the next book.

After I read a book it goes to the first kid who raises his/her hand for it

and any leftover books go the same way. No kid gets more than one book from

this pile, although I have perhaps two or three books per child on tables

around the room for them to choose. The excitement of the competition is

catching and nearly all kids take books home.

We don't do a craft with this group, although some people do. The

program this way lasts about 45 minutes, which is plenty, and the kids really

seem to enjoy it.

Hope this helps.

Paula Lefkowitz

Parsippany (NJ) PL

------------------------------

From: "AnnaMarie Job, Kinnelon Public Library" <JOB@main.morris.org>

To: pubyac@prairienet.ORG

Subject: RE: Cute Kitty Kat Craft

Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 13:34:05 CDT

once did a kitten hunt craft. we hid cut out photo copies of kittens around the room which the children searched for. They then glued the kittens on a picture of a Mama cat and colored it. It went over very well, and was simple to prepare.

------------------------------

From: Christina Johnson <marionthelibrarian@yahoo.com>

To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org

Subject: Using musical instruments in storytimes.

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 13:41:21 CDT

Through the generosity of our 'Friends of the Library'

group, I have recently acquired a collection of small

musical instruments (jingle bells, rhythm sticks,

castanets on a stick). I am looking for ideas on how

to incorporate these items into storytime.

Do any of you know of any good books that would go

well with these instruments, or have any other ideas?

(these are for the children to use)

Thanks for any help!

Christina Johnson

Children's Librarian

Lebanon Public Library

Lebanon, Indiana

marionthelibrarian@yahoo.com

__________________________________________________

Do You Yahoo!?

Send instant messages with Yahoo! Messenger.

http://im.yahoo.com/

------------------------------

From: Suzanne <suzie_q_40011@yahoo.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Harry Potter events

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 13:48:18 CDT

I to am planning a Harry Potter Party with a limited

ammount of space. The Meeting Room at the HEnry

County Library has a capicity of 100. The most I've

ever had in there is about 58. It was so hot and

crowded. I barely got the kids in a circle to play a

game. Some of the things we're going to do is sing

the school song. If you plan to divide into houses,

then maybe you could make it a contest between your

houses. We are also going to use Professor Snape's

logic puzzle. Someone else sent me the idea. You

line five bottles ona table. Four are to have plain

water and one vinegar and water. The kids have to

read the rhyme from the book, choose a bottle, and

pour a little into a plastic cup containing baking

soda. If it fizzes, there right. I thought I might

get two kids from each house to do that and then the

house gets so many points. I also highly reccomend

you visit

www.geocities.com/harrypotterfans

They have Harry Potter Bookmarks, worksheets, and I

even printed out a list of Bertie Bott's Every Flavor

Beans to share with the kids. I can't wait to ask

them is they would eat a dryer lint flavored bean, or

kitty litter. YUCK!

I hope you find these ideas helpful. Good luck with

your program!

Suzanne Kirk

Henry County Public Library

172 Eminence Terrace

Eminence KY 40050

502-845-5682

__________________________________________________

Do You Yahoo!?

Send instant messages with Yahoo! Messenger.

http://im.yahoo.com/

------------------------------

From: "Chapman, Jan" <jchapman@ascpl.lib.oh.us>

To: "'pubyac@prairienet.org'" <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: teen magazines for YA collection

MIME-Version: 1.0

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charset="iso-8859-1"

Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 13:54:51 CDT

Hi there:

Several PUBYACers asked if I would compile the suggestions re: a teen

magazine collection for YA's.

Jump was recommended by several librarians. The focus of the magazine is

health and a more sensible approach to weight and beauty. It also is less

focused on the "fashion model" stereotype and seems more down to earth and

about real girls. The new CosmoGirl, is, predictably, on the opposite end

of Jump, but many of my teen patrons have requested it.

Re: magazines for boys, I was looking for a replacement for Thrasher, which

often has offensive language and an over the top "attitude." As I am the

mother of two male extreme sports fans, I am well acquainted with this

attitude! However, I liked the Transworld publications, Transworld

Skateboarding and Warp. Warp was mentioned as being more comprehensive in

that it covers several of the X-treme sports, such as snowboarding, etc.

I looked at several suggested "card game/comics/roleplaying" magazines, such

as Wizard and Top Deck. I think we will go with Wizard.

Other suggested magazines included:

Jane

Teen Celebrity

New Moon

Teen People

YM

Electronic Gaming Monthly

Spin

Slap

Seventeen (the grandmammy of teen mags)

Wahine

Teen

React

Mad or Cracked

Hope this is helpful for those of you who are looking at new magazine

selections for your collection.

Jan Chapman

Akron-Summit Co Public Library

jchapman@ascpl.lib.oh.us

------------------------------

From: "Shilo Halfen" <shilojmh@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Flannel Board Stories (Homemade)

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 14:01:59 CDT

Martin-

Several that I have done myself are:

Looks Like Spilt Milk

The Carrot Seed

Brown Bear, Brown Bear What Do You See

Three Little Pigs

The Enormous Turnip

Three Little Kittens

Shilo Halfen

Children's Librarian - Blackstone Branch

Chicago Public Library

________________________________________________________________________

Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com

------------------------------

From: "Lorie O'Donnell" <odonnell@borg.com>

Subject: modern Librarian's theme song

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 14:08:36 CDT

I am on the Stumpers list and this came through this afternoon. I

thought I'd pass it on. It's very cute and too true. Everyone enjoy

and have a great weekend!

Lorie

--

Since it's been a slow week, I thought I'd post this (with apologies to

Gilbert and Sullivan):

I am the Very Model of Computerized Librarian

Based on the song "I Am The Very Model of a Modern Major-General" from

Gilbert and Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance.

I am the very model of computerized Librarian,

I seek out information zoologic to agrarian,

I know each subject that is found in an encyclopedia

I handle every AV tool and every type of media;

My online databases can locate each journal article,

In physics texts, I can define each elemental particle,

In atlases and online maps, I find the way to Timbuktu,

Identify each capital from Bogota to Katmandu.

I navigate the Internet with speed and perspicacity;

Evaluate each web site for its content and veracity:

In fact, in finding information, most utilitarian,

I am the very model of computerized librarian.

I quickly search the Internet or grab the right book off the shelf;

Then give the patron answers or I teach him how to search himself,

I speed through every database like Galenet, ProQuest, Dialog,

My records are all organized, just try my on-line catalog;

My home page is a marvel of well documented, helpful links,

It points to sites on modern jazz, hang gliding and old Egypt's Sphinx!

I know just how to catalog in Dewey and in L. of C.,

I know the best books you should buy and those you wouldn't want for

free.

I get you quotes on hot new stocks and find addresses in a trice,

The latest news, a star's birthday, song lyrics or a cure for lice:

In fact, in finding information, most utilitarian,

I am the very model of computerized librarian.

When I can look up online all ephemeral material,

When I can get full text of every page in every serial,

When my computer translates every language and each dialect,

From Hindu texts in Sanskrit to Confucius with each analect,

When every book is digitized and indexed in my database,

When I'm the first librarian to travel into outer space -

And when I've indexed every site on every chromosome and gene,

You'll say a more computerized librarian has never been.

I'm working on an interface directly to the human mind,

So I can capture concepts that have not yet even been defined;

In fact, in finding information, most utilitarian,

I am the very model of computerized librarian.

> Lyrics by Diane M. O'Keefe, M.S.L.S. and Janet T. O'Keefe, , M.L.S.

--

-- Reach high, for stars lie hidden in your soul.

Dream deep, for every dream precedes the goal.

**************Ralph Vaull Starr*************

------------------------------

From: saleena davidson <sdavidsn@lmxac.org>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Puppet troupes

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 14:15:21 CDT

My library is in South Brunswick, New Jersey and we started a puppet group for

children grades 5 and up in March, 2000. We started it simply by advertising

the group in the schools and at the library and had a pretty good turn out.

(Mostly kids in Middle School ages, the High School kids were either too busy or

too sophiticated). One of the highlights was telling them that they would get

to perform for the little kids (ages 2 and up), so that they could be as silly

as they liked. Another important fact that we stressed was that we wanted the

group to be run democratically, so that the two librarians in charge were

basically directors and not commanders. As far as puppets, we had some on hand

that we have used, rather nice ones purchased in years past. The plays I wrote

based on simple folk or fairy tales and a few picture books. The kids chose the

stories, based on samples that we provided, and I wrote the plays, expanding the

stories and changing to fit the number of characters needed. We used an old

(VERY old) puppet stage for performing and are hoping to convince the Friends to

purchase a new one in the future. We recently had our first performance after

months of practice and it was a huge hit, both with the audience and the

puppeteers.

Good luck with your venture, you'll probably have an easier time as you have

much more help with materials. It's lots of work but it's worth it!

Saleena Davidson

South Brunswick Public Library

Monmouth Junction, NJ

------------------------------

From: Denise Weir <pepsi@mb.sympatico.ca>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re:Online Safety Poster:

Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 14:23:31 CDT

I'm not sure of a place to get online safety posters, but there is a very good site that may

be useful to you. It is the Canadian media awareness site at www. webawareness.org.

Please check it out. It has useful presentations for workshops, as well as educational games

for kids on Internet safety.

Denise Weir

Library Consultant

Manitoba, Canada

------------------------------

From: Farida Shapiro <fshapiro@kcls.org>

To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org

Subject: STUMPER--Time travel in a subway tunnel

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 14:30:56 CDT

 

Greetings! A patron came in looking for a time-travel book she remembers

from 20-30 years ago. It rang a bell with me, but not a very loud one. If

any of you know the following book from the description below, the patron

(and I) will be very thankful:

Two children (maybe a brother and sister, maybe in the 1960's) go through

a New York subway tunnel and end up in the 1600's. The words "tunnel" or

"subway" may be in the title. The book is NOT The Forgotten Door by Howard

Fast.

I appreciate your help!

Farida S. T. Shapiro

Children's Librarian

Bellevue Regional Library

King County Library System

Bellevue, Washington

------------------------------

From: "Candice Morris" <cmorris@mtlib.org>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Stumper: Halloween Ghost - Answered

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 14:37:43 CDT

Stumper: A ghost in a family house decides for Halloween that he should behave like a proper ghost. He tries scaring the family and they ignore him.

Answer: Sir William and the Pumpkin Monster by Margery Cuyler

Thanks to those folks who sent in suggestions of Georgie by Robert Bright and Gus by Jane Thayer. We just got a trial subscription to Novelist and it is wonderful! I contacted the patron and she is delighted.

Novelist info:

http://novelist.epnet.com/nlwebp/Tour/subscriptionplans.htm

 

 

 

 

 

Candice Morris cmorris@mtlib.org

Lewis & Clark Library

120 S. Last Chance Gulch Helena, MT 59601

Phone 406 447-1690 x15 Fax 406 447-1687

------------------------------

From: "Don Wood" <dwood@ala.org>

Subject: Top 100 Banned or Challenged Books of 1990-1999

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Top 100 Banned or Challenged Books of 1990-1999

http://www.ala.org/alaorg/oif/top100bannedbooks.html

(Out of 5,718 challenges reported to or recorded by the Office for Intellectual Freedom, as compiled by the Office for Intellectual Freedom, American Library Association. The ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom does not claim comprehensiveness in recording challenges. Research suggests that for each challenge reported there are as many as four or five which go unreported.)

1.Daddy's Roommate by Michael Willhoite

2.Scary Story (Series) by Alvin Schwartz

3.I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou

4.The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

5.The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier

6.Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson

7.Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

8.Forever by Judy Blume

9.Heather Has Two Mommies by Leslea Newman

10.The Giver by Lois Lowry

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

100.Jumper by Steven Gould

_____________________________

See also Chocolate War author battles effort to ban book, from free!, http://www.freedomforum.org/news/2000/06/2000-06-14-01.asp

And also, Banned Books Week, http://www.ala.org/bbooks/index.html

 

 

 

 

 

_________________________

Don Wood

American Library Association

Office for Intellectual Freedom

50 East Huron Street

Chicago, IL 60611

312-280-4225

800-545-2433, ext. 4225

Fax: 312-280-4227

dwood@ala.org

http://www.ala.org/alaorg/oif/index.html

------------------------------

From: "Don Wood" <dwood@ala.org>

Subject: Maine's SIRS Intellectual Freedom Award

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PRESS RELEASE

 

The Intellectual Freedom Committee of the Maine Library Association/Maine

Educational Media Association recently announced the recipient of

Maine's SIRS Intellectual Freedom Award: Laura Johns, technology

coordinator of Brooksville Elementary School.

 

The SIRS Mandarin Intellectual Freedom Award is given annually to an

individual or individuals whose actions exemplify First Amendment

rights, particularly as they pertain to freedom of speech and press in the

pursuit of intellectual endeavors.

 

In his presentation of the award, SIRS representative Joseph Bartoli said:

"The Internet has changed the way people communicate and has given us

immediate access to worldwide information. Unfortunately this also opens

our children to the possibility of finding inappropriate and offensive

material. Herein lies the question: Do we choose to filter or censor the

information available to our children? Or, Do we take a proactive approach

and teach our children the proper use of this medium of communication?

 

This year's honoree was chosen because of her belief in taking a proactive

approach and that enlightened and respectful use of the Internet is an

integral part of the education experience."

 

Laura explained how her school explored approaches to the Internet: "We

have never had a problem with students purposely going to inappropriate

sites. However several students, in the presence of a teacher, did

accidentally pull up some offensive material. This incident began the

conversation. There were teachers that wanted to "lock down" the

computers with filters, proxy servers, etc. The problem with these

solutions is that they are not 100% effective, they filter good

information and they do not address the true issue. We are here to

educate students and show them how to survive in what can be a pretty

offensive world. Hiding does no good."

 

The school settled on an approach which teaches children good search

techniques, guides them in their assignments, clarifies expectations,

and uses good supervision in order to best utilize the Internet at the

school.

 

SIRS Mandarin, Inc., provided the funding for the award, which consisted

of $500 to the recipient and $500 to the library of her choice--the

Brooksville Elementary School Library. SIRS Mandarin, Inc. is a

publisher and provider of library automation products.

 

 

 

 

------------------------------

From: rebecca stutzman <rastutzman@yahoo.com>

To: pubyac listserv <PUBYAC@prairienet.org>

Subject: Penguin stumper

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 14:57:42 CDT

Pubyackers,

A woman patron is looking for a picture book about

penguins. The penguins are

construction workers wearing hard hats and working in

trucks. We have checked in

A to Zoo and our DYNIX catalog. Can anyone help? I

will post the answer to the

listserv.

TIA,

Becky Stutzman

Children's Librarian

North Tonawanda Public Library

North Tonawanda, New York

__________________________________________________

Do You Yahoo!?

Send instant messages with Yahoo! Messenger.

http://im.yahoo.com/

------------------------------

From: "Denise I. Matulka" <dimatulka@alltel.net>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: BATH STUMPER SOLVED

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 15:04:44 CDT

Thanks to all who answered my won't-take-a-bath stumper. It is indeed

Mrs. Piggle Wiggle! I don't know why I had a picture book format stuck

in my mind, but I did.

And even though the title I remembered wasn't a picture book,

HarperCollins did release a few Mrs. Piggle Wiggle stories in picture

book format in 1997, 1998, and 2000. Thanks to Joanne Robinson for the

lead.

The Won't-Take-a-Bath-Cure

HarperCollins,1998--ISBN: 0-06-02763-12

Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Bad Table-Manners Cure

HarperCollins, 2000--ISBN: 0-06-02763-39

The Won't-Pick-up-Toys Cure

HarperCollins, 1998--ISBN: 0-06-02762-90Ê

Denise I. Matulka

Lincoln, Nebraska

dimatulka@alltel.net

Picturing Books: A Web Site About Picture Books

http://www.geocities.com/dimatulka

Author of "Picture This: Picture Books for Young Adults"

http://info.greenwood.com/books/0313301/0313301824.html

------------------------------

From: "Rebecca Friedmann" <rfriedmann@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: STUMPER: FAVORITE DOLL BOOK

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Date: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 15:11:38 CDT

Dear collective brain,

A patron of mine is looking for a book with the following description:

It's about a girl whose father travels, and he brings her back a doll from

each country he visits. The last doll he brings her is her favorite, and it

looks just like her. It rings a bell for me and a few co-workers, but we

can't put our finger on it. I've done various keyword searches in our Dynix

catalog, Amazon.com, BIP, and have looked through A to Zoo with no luck.

Does this sound familiar to any of you? Please reply to me off list.

Thank you :)

"A friend is someone who knows the song in your heart and

can sing it back to you when you have forgotten the words."

--unknown

"Imagination is as important as knowledge. Share yours with

others."

--unknown

"You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes.

You can steer yourself any direction you choose."

--Dr. Seuss

************************************

* Rebecca Friedmann, MLS *

* Children's Librarian *

* West Chester Library *

* 7900 Cox Rd. *

* West Chester, OH 45069 *

*(513)777-3131; (513)777-8452 [fax]*

* rfriedmann@hotmail.com *

* rfriedmann@mail.mpl.lib.oh.us *

************************************

________________________________________________________________________

Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com

------------------------------

End of PUBYAC Digest 164

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