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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: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:21:32 CDT

Subject: PUBYAC digest 195

PUBYAC Digest 195

Topics covered in this issue include:

1) Re: Harry Potter

by Kim Heikkinen <kim.heikkinen@mcfls.org>

2) Re: Harry Potter

by Paulalef@aol.com

3) RE: harry potter editorial

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

4) ALA

by Sara Jane Boyers <sjzb@earthlink.net>

5) RE: patrons and rest rooms, etc.

by Cindy Price <cprice@fmarion.edu>

6) Re: over crowded programs

by magee@AXP.WINNEFOX.ORG

7) Re: over crowded programs

 

by "Jean Nichols" <jean@clarksville.org>

8) Harry in Braille

by Julie Ann Rines <jrines@ocln.org>

9) RE: [Fwd: Christian Fiction or propaganda]

by HFL_LISA@stls.org

10) RE: Harry Potter

by Theyer Hillary <HTheyer@TORRNET.COM>

11) Re: Harry Potter

by HFL_LISA@stls.org

12) RE: over crowded programs

by Sue Ridnour <SRidnour@flower-mound.com>

13) Harry Potter avalibility

by Diane_Tuccillo@ci.mesa.az.us

14) Re: [Fwd: Christian Fiction or propaganda]

by Lesley Knieriem <lknierie@suffolk.lib.ny.us>

15) Sister Libraries.

by carmel <carmel@ulysses.sebridge.org>

16) RE: Harry Potter

by vmenor <vmenor@is2.dal.ca>

17) Re: Christian Fiction or propaganda - related question

by "Mary Johnson (amk)" <mjohnson@wls.lib.ny.us>

18) Re: Harry Potter

by "andrea " <juvserv@dialup.customnet.com>

19) braille Harry Potter

by Tom Stuart <tstuart@wls.lib.ny.us>

20) Re: Harry Potter

by "Karen Holz" <easternlibrary@smithville.net>

21) summer reading prizes--a happy story

by "Ruhama J. Kordatzky" <rkordatz@burlington.lib.wi.us>

22) RE: over crowded programs

by Andrea Johnson <ajohnson@cooklib.org>

23) Home schoolers

by Carol Hoke <hoke@crpl.cedar-rapids.lib.ia.us>

24) Re: patrons and rest rooms, etc.

by "Sarah Prielipp" <seprielipp@hotmail.com>

25) Harry Potter numbers

by Anne Coppell <acoppell@auckland-library.govt.nz>

26) Janway media bags

by Julie Ann Rines <jrines@ocln.org>

27) FW: JOB OPENING

by Carolyn Eckert <CarolynE@ci.fullerton.ca.us>

28) STUMPER SOLVED: Ducks named Alice, Emma, and Uncle Wesley (fwd)

by Lu Benke <lubenke@libsys.ci.fort-collins.co.us>

29) Request for titles

by "Sarah Prielipp" <seprielipp@hotmail.com>

30) praetorian guard

by Belinda Sakowski <sakowski@grayson.edu>

31) Misinformation Given About COPPA At ALA Annual Conference

by "Tracey Firestone" <tfiresto@suffolk.lib.ny.us>

32) a stumper...Albert Ames

by Marcia Schaffer <schaffma@oplin.lib.oh.us>

33) RE: Ref Q: 6th Gr. Horror Books

by "Peggy Hagen" <phagen@mcls.rochester.lib.ny.us>

34) Stumper

by "Margaret Taylor" <margot12@hotmail.com>

35) Stumper - Boy's Diary

by Zaklina Gallagher <zgallagh@dcc.govt.nz>

36) BIB: 6th Grade Horror Results

by "Jackie Corinth" <Corinth@robert-morris.edu>

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

From: Kim Heikkinen <kim.heikkinen@mcfls.org>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Harry Potter

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:07:52 CDT

We have definitely had more people putting holds on HP 1-3. Also a few

asking for books "like Harry Potter".

Kim

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

Kim Heikkinen kim.heikkinen@mcfls.org

Youth Services Librarian

Franklin Public Library

Franklin, WI 53132 (414) 425-8214

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

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

From: Paulalef@aol.com

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Harry Potter

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:25:26 CDT

Yes, primarily from adults who are curious about the hype in the papers.

Paula Lefkowitz

Parsippany (NJ) PL

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

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

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

Subject: RE: harry potter editorial

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:30:42 CDT

Our local paper carried a very interesting editorial on Harry Potter

becoming a business. It was in the paper on 7/11/00 under Opinions. Here

is the address. http://www.copleynewspapers.com/BeaconNews/opinions/. The

gist was that here is this neat phenomenon that has basically been carried

through by kids. However, adults will eventually ruin it with sidelines,

merchandise, and the like.

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

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

From: Sara Jane Boyers <sjzb@earthlink.net>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: ALA

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:36:47 CDT

Thank you to all librarians whose posts on teens and their libraries have

been so helpful to me as I prepared my presentation on teen advocacy for

ALA yesterday on how librarians can make their libraries places of value

to libraries and then turn the teens into advocates for the libraries'

needs, part of the joint AASL, YALSA, ALSC legislative committee session.

My research in the last few months has been eye opening to me - neither a

librarian nor an educator, only an author - and I was not aware of the

multitude issues which so threaten this great system of libraries we have

and I hope that talking to some of you yesterday at ALA helped your fight

for funding, books, facilities a little more.

It was great fun to be among all of you at ALA and to be able to lurk a

little on this list and I thank you all for it.

 

 

 

Sara Jane Boyers

sjzb@earthlink.net

www.teenpowerpolitics.com (launching July 2000)

"Teen Power Politics: Make Yourself Heard"

A Millbrook Press/Twenty-First Century Book, September 2000

"Life Doesn't Frighten Me" Stewart, Tabori & Chang

A Publisher's Weekly "Best Book" of the Year, NYPL "Best Books for

Teens", ALA "Book for Reluctant Readers", AIGA "50 Best Designed

Books"

"O Beautiful For Spacious Skies" Chronicle Books

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

From: Cindy Price <cprice@fmarion.edu>

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

Subject: RE: patrons and rest rooms, etc.

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:42:15 CDT

I work in an academic library and there are lots of out-of-the way =

restrooms, so yes we do have these sort of problems and worse. Speaking =

of smearing the bathroom with unmentionables...we've had walls and art =

books that were soiled--in the men's room. I don't know what all the =

janitor's have discovered.

Cindy Price

cprice@fmarion.edu

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

From: magee@AXP.WINNEFOX.ORG

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

Subject: Re: over crowded programs

MIME-version: 1.0

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:43:54 CDT

We have nice meeting rooms space but the fire code limits attendance to

135. We hand out free tickets about a week before(time frame is

advertised) explaining that the number is based on the fire code

regulations. We do factor in a percentage for no-shows which happens. we

also have performers that draw 300+. Those are scheduled for the Grand

Opera house or a space in the local shopping center/office complex.

Having it somewhere else does affect circ, but many parents combine a

visit to the library since they are downtown already. Actually our

attendance has grown significantly this year and we will be looking for

new venues as well for next summer. We are doing collaborative programs

with the Paine Art Center, the Boys and Girls Club and a middle school day

camp which reach a different population than our regular users. Laurie

Magee

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

Laurie Magee | Email: Magee@winnefox.org

Oshkosh Public Library | Phone: (920)236-5207

Oshkosh, WI 54901-4985 | Fax: (920)236-5228

_________________________________________________________________________

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

From: "Jean Nichols" <jean@clarksville.org>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: over crowded programs

 

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:45:31 CDT

We have increased the number of programs to seven per week, including an

evening program. This has helped space the people out some.

We also let only the children in the room first, NO MOMS and infants until

all children have been seated. Then, and only then, do moms come into the

room. Also, no strollers are allowed into the room as they are bulky and no

one can see around them.

All in all, look at this problem as job security!!! You are doing something

right!

Jean Nichols

CMC-Public Library

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

From: Julie Ann Rines <jrines@ocln.org>

To: pubyac <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Harry in Braille

MIME-Version: 1.0

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:46:43 CDT

I noticed someone mentioning having Harry Potter in large type and various

audio formats but does anyone have it in Braille? I was on the National

Braille Press web site and noticed they had the first three and were

expecting to release 4 ASAP. They also mentioned something called a

PortaBook for use with a portable braille reader.

Julie Rines

jrines@ocln.org

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

From: HFL_LISA@stls.org

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: RE: [Fwd: Christian Fiction or propaganda]

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:48:11 CDT

It seems to me in this discussion we keep forgetting the fact that

we do actually make decisions all the time about what we provide

to patrons. Do any of you provide Klu Klux Klan material-because I

am sure they have plenty of printed material including books available.

Do we carry some of the more virulent books with racist and anti-

semitic materials? We don't carry Playboy in our magazine section etc.

The objection some of the librarians seem to be making is not the

quality of the writing but the fact that the Left Behind books strike

some as a particular kind of religious propaganda disguised as

books. It is one thing to say we do not judge the material provide

based on it's content-when in fact we do all the time. One would

hope not to find material in libraries espousing the 'goodness'

of one group of people over another. However when it is couched in

religious terms we do not seem very comfortable in saying no. If

the Left Behind books were written exactly as they are but replace

the religious aspect with RACE would we be so comfortable with them

on our shelves? I think we would all be having a different discussion

if the books said all all Italians would be left behind or all black

people. I guess there is no answer that would please everyone in

a discussion like this.

L.Dowling

Horseheads Free Library

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

From: Theyer Hillary <HTheyer@TORRNET.COM>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: RE: Harry Potter

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charset="windows-1252"

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:49:36 CDT

Having read until 2:30 this morning, I can say that the humor from

the first three is still there. I was alone in the living room reading on

the sofa and laughing out loud to myself several times. I literally

couldn’t put it down until I simply couldn’t hold my eyes open any longer.

The good sense of getting some sleep because I had to work today didn’t play

any part in my decision to stop reading (on page 370).

Label your spoiler messages please. I still don’t know what is

going to happen, though the introduction of several new characters leaves

open many exciting possibilities!

Hillary

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

From: HFL_LISA@stls.org

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Harry Potter

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:50:44 CDT

Has anyone noticed how the hype is really NOT there. There are no

HP dolls, toys, video games, t shirts or hats! Of course Rowling

has

interviewed alot-she wrote a best selling book. The mainstream press

picked up on the sales and wrote about it. That was basically the hype..

children reading the book and spreading the word. I don't consider

that to much when you can walk into any local Walmart and buy your

own Cat In the HAt pants, shirts and matching caps! The merchandise

that will come out when the movie arrives is another issue all together.

But if you know here my 11 yr. old can get a HP tee shirt let me know!

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

From: Sue Ridnour <SRidnour@flower-mound.com>

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

Subject: RE: over crowded programs

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:51:54 CDT

Do you, Scott, or does anyone have some tips for maintaining quality and

safety in these "all ages/no signups/everyone welcome" storytime sessions?

Please, lets not debate whether this is the best way to conduct a storytime.

But for those of us who for whatever reason can't or choose not to limit or

pre-register our storytimes, would those who have been able to conduct large

ones successfully share their secrets? For example, does using a microphone

help, or dies it just raise the overall noise level and destroy the intimacy

of storytime?

Signed,

A hoarse storytime presenter

Sue Ridnour

Children's Services Librarian

Flower Mound Public Library

Flower Mound, TX

972.691.0059

 

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

From: Diane_Tuccillo@ci.mesa.az.us

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Harry Potter avalibility

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:53:03 CDT

We have had an incredible increase in requests for the first three books,

and have long hold lists once again on them. I found it interesting that

bookstores were open late and people were waiting on line here for the new

book, as in many other places, while most of our grocery stores had the

book bright and early Saturday morning, in quantity, with a discount!

I am so thrilled that kids are actually reading, and excited about it. I

personally think the Harry books are really YA, even though children and

adults are also reading them, and though they are being promoted to the

"9-12" age group. The writing style, plot lines, twists and turns all seem

much more teen oriented to me. As the series progresses, I think we will

see it becoming more and more "YA." It will be interesting to see how (if)

promotions for the books and readership change as this happens.

There was a great editorial cartoon in the paper the other day. A dad was

tuned in to the tv, and a kid stood next to him holding the new Harry

Potter book, saying, "Come on, Dad, turn that thing off and do some reading

for a change!" It really is phenomenal!

Diane Tuccillo

Senior Librarian/YA Coordinator

Mesa Public Library, AZ

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

From: Lesley Knieriem <lknierie@suffolk.lib.ny.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: [Fwd: Christian Fiction or propaganda]

MIME-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:54:19 CDT

On Tue, 11 Jul 2000, Charles Schacht wrote:

>

> On the other hand, playing devil's advocate, every time you use the taxpayer's

> money to buy a book you are encouraging the author/publisher to keep more of the

> same coming.<snip> The fact that we should be prepared to defend the

> presentation of a very wide spectrum of ideas in our collections does not mean

> that we need to accomodate the worst sorts of appeals to emotions/hormonal

> impulses, no matter how hateful, harmful or crass.

Now this is a very fair point. But I think it's something that we have to

be extremely careful in applying. I myself tend to be much more lenient

with viewpoints I find distasteful as a whole (such as gangsta rap) than

with viewpoints I hold some sympathy for (such as sexually explicit

romances). This is because I am not sure I can evaluate the former as

fairly as I can the latter.

And here is one of those places a Teen Advisory Board can be such an

ENORMOUS help! (plug plug) I do bring a lot of patron requests for music,

videos, and books before them, especially when I am not unfamiliar with or

dislike the work in question. We have talked a good deal about our

selection criteria, and I must say the teens take this responsibility VERY

seriously. We have talked about the LEFT BEHIND books, and they tell me

that most kids are approaching them as just another supernatural thriller

series, a la L. J. Smith. But they have also told me that a certain

rap artists is popular just for "shock value", and does not belong in the

library.

I am *so glad* I have these guys to help me out!

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

From: carmel <carmel@ulysses.sebridge.org>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Sister Libraries.

Mime-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:55:29 CDT

We need some HELP. Our library has been designated as a White House

Millennium Project Sister Library. Our proposal was to establish email

penpals and an exchange of letters, scrapbooks and other little projects

produced by a group of 8 to 10 year olds, with a similar group in another

country. Our original Ukranian "sister" has not responded. We thought

we had established a connection with a library in NZ, but we have not

heard from them again, either. Our program is now in full swing with 8

children busily taking photos and writing stories about life in their

community, but they have no one to send all this good stuff to. Would

someone like to partner with us? This is a neat summer program (or

winter program down under) for children (ours are about 8 to 11 years

old) to learn about another community. You do not need to be a Sister

Library, just willing to have some kids send some stuff and respond to

our kids! It does not need to be out of the US either. Please respond

posthaste to

Marilyn Schlansky

Reed Memorial Library

1733 Route 6

Carmel, NY 10512

845 225-2439

carmel@sebridge.org

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

From: vmenor <vmenor@is2.dal.ca>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: RE: Harry Potter

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:56:42 CDT

Has anyone had any luck with the "If you liked Harry Potter, you might like

these books" lists? I have tried making a display using a variety of lists,

but haven't had much selling it to those who have heard the Harry hype. It

breaks my heart when someone comes in looking for harry potter, and when they

find out how long the wait is leave empty handed. Any suggestions?

Unfortunately, buying more copies of each of the Potter books isn't really an

option.

Vanessa Menor

Children's Librarian

Whitchuch-Stouffville Public Library

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

From: "Mary Johnson (amk)" <mjohnson@wls.lib.ny.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Christian Fiction or propaganda - related question

MIME-Version: 1.0

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

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 10:59:34 CDT

Hillary, my feeling is that a book which is *overtly* didactic is bad

literature, no matter what it's trying to teach. Just my two cents -

Mary Johnson, YA librarian, NOrth Castle Library, Armonk, NY

mjohnson@wls.lib.ny.us

On Tue, 11 Jul 2000, Theyer Hillary wrote:

> This issue couldn’t have come up at a better time for me, I have a related

> question. I just read a book by Silver Ravenwolf, author of books on Wicca

> for teens, and a Wicca herself. This was a novel, but it seemed to defend

> Wicca every couple of chapters. For example, the characters stop the action

> to discuss amongst themselves how unfairly Wiccans are treated and how Wicca

> isn’t what people think it is, and how Wicca is about this and that.

> Essentially, lessons on Wicca are buried into the story.

>

> What do you all think? Propaganda? Would that ruin the novel for you?

>

> Hillary Theyer

>

>

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

From: "andrea " <juvserv@dialup.customnet.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Harry Potter

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 11:01:38 CDT

Someone had written in that their husband finally read the 1st HP as the 4th came out...I brought #1 home for my boyfriend (I managed to snag it between holds) and he read it in one night. By the time I brought it back this morning, there was another hold on it!

What a wonderful thing J.K. Rowling has done for our libraries!

Andrea Terry

Libby Memorial Library

Old Orchard Beach, ME

juvserv@customnet.com

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

From: Tom Stuart <tstuart@wls.lib.ny.us>

To: Pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: braille Harry Potter

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 11:02:47 CDT

Just wondering if libraries and library systems which are ordering

hundreds of copies are also acquiring at least one copy of the

braille edition - scheduled to be out by the end of the month.

Tom Stuart <tstuart@wls.lib.ny.us>

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

From: "Karen Holz" <easternlibrary@smithville.net>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Re: Harry Potter

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 11:04:06 CDT

I only buy one of each book, as I serve a population of 6,000, so I have

holds on books 1 - 3 as well as saying that book 4 can be held now that it

has come in.

----- Original Message -----

From: David Serchay <a013213t@bc.seflin.org>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2000 8:53 AM

Subject: Re: Harry Potter

 

> Has anyone else noticed a rise in the holds for books 1-3?

>

> David

>

>

> David Serchay

> a013213t@bc.seflin.org

>

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

From: "Ruhama J. Kordatzky" <rkordatz@burlington.lib.wi.us>

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

Subject: summer reading prizes--a happy story

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Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 11:17:57 CDT

Hi everyone--

I just had to share: for reading 50 books, kids get to pick out a book of

their own for my SRP. These books are donations that we don't need to add

to the collection, and are in nice shape, so I have all kinds of titles and

genres (mostly Goosebumps and Boxcar children). To get this prize, kids

have to come into my office, where I have them scattered all over the floor

(for lack of a better space), and today one kid came in, saw all the books

and his eyes got really big. Then he began repeating, "This is so cool!

We get to pick out our own book!" He was quite impressed with this prize,

and I was glad to see such excitement over getting to pick out a book.

:) ruhama

Ruhama Kordatzky

Youth Services Librarian

Burlington Public Library

Burlington, WI

rkordatz@burlington.lib.wi.us

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

From: Andrea Johnson <ajohnson@cooklib.org>

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

Subject: RE: over crowded programs

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 11:33:31 CDT

We do "card" -- for every registered program (which is almost all of

them). We are a popular library in our area -- residents of several

surrounding communities prefer to use our library rather than their "home"

libraries. Maybe it goes both ways; I don't know. I do know that with our

extremely limited space, many of our taxpayers would end up being excluded

from the expensive programs they paid for if we allowed in those who do not

hold cards from our library. Our programs quite often fill up and even have

waiting lists -- since our demand is greater than the space allows.

We do have a few programs we don't card for -- we always have one

weekly storytime (out of 3-5 sessions) that is a drop-in. Walk-ins are

welcome if they are the appropriate age. We also periodically set up a

craft table with a make it/take it kind of project, and anyone who walks in

is welcome to that.

Andrea Johnson

ajohnson@cooklib.org

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

From: Carol Hoke <hoke@crpl.cedar-rapids.lib.ia.us>

To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org

Subject: Home schoolers

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Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed"

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 11:47:04 CDT

Our library has been attempting to develop a library orientation for

home schoolers for two years. We have not been successful in

attracting people to these sessions even though we have involved the

people in the schools who work with these families in the planning.

So I would like to ask those of you who work successfully with home schoolers:

1. do you provide a library orientation to home schoolers? If so,

what do you do?

2. do you provide child care or story time for younger siblings

while the orientation is taking place?

3. when do you do the orientation? (month, time of day)

4. do you offer multiple sessions of the orientation/program and/or

repeat it during the year?

5. do you provide some other programming in addition or in place of

an orientation?

6. is the training directed at the parents, the children or both?

7. how do your home schooling families find out about your

orientation/program?

We evaluating what we do and need to make a decision in the next week

or so. Please respond to me at the address below.

Thanks for your help.

--

Carol Hoke

Children's Services Manager

Cedar Rapids Public Library

500 First St SE

Cedar Rapids IA 52401

398-5145, ext. 259

fax 319-398-0746

Hoke@crpl.cedar-rapids.lib.ia.us

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

From: "Sarah Prielipp" <seprielipp@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: patrons and rest rooms, etc.

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 12:01:07 CDT

We had such problems in our restrooms that we had to end up locking them up.

Patrons must ask for a key from the desk in order to use them. Problems

have become very few now.

 

Sincerely,

Sarah Prielipp

seprielipp@hotmail.com

Harrison Community Library

PO Box 380

Harrison, Michigan 48625

(517) 539-6711

(517) 539-6301 fax

________________________________________________________________________

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

From: Anne Coppell <acoppell@auckland-library.govt.nz>

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

Subject: Harry Potter numbers

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 12:15:16 CDT

Hi all

we're a public library system with 16 branches and a central library.

We've ordered 108 copies - 14 of which will be part of a Bestseller

business collection ($5 a week) the rest will be distributed around the

system. The waiting list is currently 389 long - with 21 staff out of the

first 60 people. Supplies have just arrived in the bib. services area - in

New Zealand the release date was a week after the US and UK - but was

brought forward to today. Bib. services are currently rushing them through

at the moment.

Annie Coppell

Children and Teenager's Section

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

From: Julie Ann Rines <jrines@ocln.org>

To: pubyac <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Janway media bags

MIME-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 12:29:41 CDT

I am getting ready to place our first order for the Janway style media

bags. I have a couple of questtions to ask those already using them: do

you prefer the velcro or zipper closing and do you find that you need many

of the bags with gussets.

Thanks for the help. I'm hoping these will be easier to use and more

attractive than the ones with hooks.

Julie Rinees

Thomas Crane Public Library

Quincy, MA

jrines@ocln.org

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

From: Carolyn Eckert <CarolynE@ci.fullerton.ca.us>

To: "'PUBYAC@PRAIRIENET.ORG'" <PUBYAC@PRAIRIENET.ORG>

Subject: FW: JOB OPENING

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain;

charset="iso-8859-1"

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 12:43:42 CDT

 

 

> -----Original Message-----

> From: Carolyn Eckert

> Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2000 6:25 PM

> To: 'pubyac@prairienet.com.org'

> Subject: JOB OPENING

>

> CHILDREN'S SERVICES LIBRARIAN, FULLERTON PUBLIC LIBRARY 3,042

> to $3,883 per month. Excellent benefits.

>

> Great community, great library, great staff, - we need one more great

> children's librarian!

>

> A well established city of 126,000, Fullerton is located 25 miles

> southeast of Los Angeles.

>

> The library receives strong community support and is currently completing

> a remodeling project, in addition to upgrading its computer system. The

> newly expanded (7,460 sq. ft.) Children's Division will have a full-time

> professional staff of four. Annual juvenile circulation is approximately

> 500,000.

>

> Contact City of Fullerton Personnel at 714:738-6368 or

> personnel@ci.fullerton.ca.us for application which is due August

> 11,2000.

>

> For more information carolyne@ci.fullerton.ca.us

>

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

From: Lu Benke <lubenke@libsys.ci.fort-collins.co.us>

To: PUBYAC <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: STUMPER SOLVED: Ducks named Alice, Emma, and Uncle Wesley (fwd)

Mime-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 12:57:36 CDT

 

Many thanks to Diana Norton and Nora Liederbach for their speedy responses

to the stumper below. The Freddy the Pig series by Walter Brooks

has duck characters named Alice, Emma, and Uncle Wesley. This summer on

our reading record we are asking

kids to ask grownups in their house what they read as a kid and it has

meant we are generating a lot more interest in some oldies-but-goodies.

Thanks to PUBYAC we can uncover most of them!

--Lu

Lu Benke wrote:

> Here's hoping you can help. A customer remembers reading a chapter book at

> about the age of ten in about 1965. The book included ducks named Alice,

> Emma, and Uncle Wesley and perhaps other barnyard animals. The animals do

> talk, but otherwise there was not magic in the book. We have checked what

> we could through our database, Bibliofind, the 1961 edition of Children's

> Catalog and the database of a nearby large public library and nothing

> stands out as likely (Oh, how did we ever do without searchable

> summaries!) It is not Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Farm. Does this ring a bell

> with anyone?

>

> Thanks so very much in advance for your help!

>

> Lu Benke

> Children's Services

> Fort Collins Public Library

> 201 Peterson Street phone: 970-221-6686

> Fort Collins, CO 80524 fax: 970-221-6398

> lubenke@libsys.ci.fort-collins.co.us

 

 

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

From: "Sarah Prielipp" <seprielipp@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Request for titles

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:11:59 CDT

Dear Collective Brain,

I have had many young patrons (ages 6 to 12) asking for "scary" or "horror"

books this summer, but NOT Goosebumps as they've already read all of them.

I've given them SCARY STORIES FOR STORMY NIGHTS and MORE SCARY STORIES FOR

SLEEPOVERS by Q. L. Pearce. However, once they've read those two, they want

more . . . Here's where my request for info. comes in. What else can I give

young patrons that are "scary" but "not too scary" (Parents' request)?

Please respond off-list seprielipp@hotmail.com

I will post a compiled list.

TIA,

 

Sincerely,

Sarah Prielipp

seprielipp@hotmail.com

Harrison Community Library

PO Box 380

Harrison, Michigan 48625

(517) 539-6711

(517) 539-6301 fax

________________________________________________________________________

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

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

From: Belinda Sakowski <sakowski@grayson.edu>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: praetorian guard

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:13:39 CDT

 

Hi all,

I am sorry to post this to the list, but, the original posting got deleted

from my file somehow (gremlins at work). I believe the original posting

came from Amy (?). If you still need the article from Calliope on the

praetorian guard, I have a copy. Contact me at sakowski@grayson.edu if I

can help.

Belinda Sakowski E-Mail: sakowski@grayson.edu

Sherman Public Library Phone: (903)892-7240

421 N. Travis Fax: (903) 892-7101

Sherman, Texas 75090

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

From: "Tracey Firestone" <tfiresto@suffolk.lib.ny.us>

To: <yalsa-l@ala1.ala.org>, <yalsa-bk@ala1.ala.org>, <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Misinformation Given About COPPA At ALA Annual Conference

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:14:48 CDT

Please excuse the cross-posting!

At the YALSA President's Program, Sound Bytes, Billboards and Neon =

Lights: Marketing to Teens (Monday 2-4pm), speaker Isabel Walcott from =

Smartgirl.com briefly mentioned the Children's Online Privacy Protection =

Act (COPPA). She mistakenly said that COPPA prevents *any* web site =

from asking children for personal information, including an e-mail =

address, without a verifiable form of parental permission. This =

statement made many people around me concerned about the information =

they gather through their own library's web sites. Unfortunately, the =

program ran late and there was no time for comments so I was unable to =

point out that this restriction *only* applies to commercial web sites =

and to children under the age of 13.

The ALA Office for Information Technology Policy has created a very =

helpful web site to explain COPPA in detail, the URL is =

http://www.ala.org/oitp/privacy.html. There is also a portion of the =

site which discusses COPPA as it applies to libraries (both public and =

school) and that URL is http://www.ala.org/oitp/librarians.html.

Hope this helps clear things up a bit,

Tracey

%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%

Tracey Firestone - tfiresto@suffolk.lib.ny.us

Young Adult Specialist

Suffolk Cooperative Library System

627 N. Sunrise Service Rd

Bellport, NY 11713

**Phone: (631) 286-1600 x1352

**FAX: (631) 286-1647

**Please note the new area code for Suffolk County

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

From: Marcia Schaffer <schaffma@oplin.lib.oh.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: a stumper...Albert Ames

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:16:01 CDT

Hello! I have a patron who is looking for a book her children read...they

are all in their 40's now. In it the characters are Albert Ames and

Zachary Zwain and Albert, of course, is always first in school and Zachary

is always last. One day the teacher decides to let Zachary go first. I

have looked in A to Zoo, in Novelist with no luck. She would like to read

this to her grandson, who's name is Zane. Any help will be appreciated!!

Smiles,

Marcia ;)

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

From: "Peggy Hagen" <phagen@mcls.rochester.lib.ny.us>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: RE: Ref Q: 6th Gr. Horror Books

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain;

charset="iso-8859-1"

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:17:29 CDT

I know I'm piggy-backing on a response instead of answering the original

request, but I just had a thought.

I agree that Bellairs is more of a mystery than a horror story, but how

about The Year the Wolves Came by Rice? It is the story of a girl who

learns that her mother was a werewolf, and begins to wonder about some of

her own tendencies as she becomes a woman. Very cool!!

There is also What Happened in Hamelin by Skurzynski. It's a novel-length

version of the Pied Piper told by the crippled child that couldn't follow

the others. It's a little more sophisticated as horror, because we know

something he doesn't know...

Both are good for 6th grade, and would, at the very least, be good read for

the teacher!

Peggy

-----Original Message-----

From: owner-pubyac@prairienet.org [mailto:owner-pubyac@prairienet.org] On

Behalf Of S. Fichtelberg

Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2000 4:37 PM

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Ref Q: 6th Gr. Horror Books

I never would have thought of calling The House with a Clock in It's Walls,

horror. A mystery, maybe, but not horror.

Susan

sfichtel@infolink.org

Woodbridge Public Library

Woodbridge, NJ

----- Original Message -----

From: "Jackie Corinth" <Corinth@robert-morris.edu>

To: <PUBYAC@prairienet.org>

Sent: Monday, July 10, 2000 9:01 PM

Subject: Ref Q: 6th Gr. Horror Books

 

> Dear All,

>

> I'm an academic librarian who needs advice. My friend, a school teacher

> in NYC, is looking for an appropriate horror book to use in her 6th grade

> class. She is looking for something scary and on the proper reading level

> but that is also of high literary quality. She is thinking of using "The

> House with a Clock in its Walls." Any other suggestions?

>

> PLEASE respond to: Corinth@robert-morris.edu

>

> Thank you,

> Jackie Corinth

> Corinth@robert-morris.edu

> Robert Morris College

>

>

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

From: "Margaret Taylor" <margot12@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Stumper

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:19:04 CDT

A patron's mother would like to locate a book she read 30 or more years ago.

It involves a group of people in coastal Florida (possibly the east coast)

who are trapped in a store during a flood (hurricane?) If this rings a bell

with anyone please reply. TIA.

margot12@hotmail.com

________________________________________________________________________

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

From: Zaklina Gallagher <zgallagh@dcc.govt.nz>

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

Subject: Stumper - Boy's Diary

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain;

charset="iso-8859-1"

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:20:21 CDT

Please can you help a stumped Librarian with this one, be warned it has a

very vague description -

Boy aged between 10-15 years old

It is a written diary - part of it describes an Italian boy (classmate),

his teacher and his father.

Set in Europe, possibly during war time as soldiers are mentioned?

It is a children's novel with a light yellow cover!

Our customer read it in Malaysia approximately 15 years ago.

Please if you can help e-mail me directly at the below address. Thank you.

Cheers

Zak

Zaklina M. Gallagher

Young Adult Librarian

Dunedin Public Libraries

PO Box 5542, Dunedin

Ph: +64-3-4743626

Email: zgallagh@dcc.govt.nz

WWW: http://www.CityofDunedin.com

 

 

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

From: "Jackie Corinth" <Corinth@robert-morris.edu>

To: <PUBYAC@prairienet.org>

Subject: BIB: 6th Grade Horror Results

Date: Thu, 13 Jul 2000 13:21:32 CDT

Thank you everyone for your great suggestions for an appropriate 6th grade horror book for my schoolteacher friend. She has great list to look through and is very excited. I'm sure that she will find the perfect book.

I have compiled a list of the suggestions below in case anyone is interested.

Quite a few different people suggested the same books/authors.

These include:

Phyllis Reynolds Naylor's Witch Books especially "The Witch's Eye" and "Witch's Sister."

Mary Downing Hahn's "Wait Til Helen Comes"

Philip Pullman's "Clockwork" and "Ruby in the Smoke."

Avi's "Wolf Rider: A Tale of Terror" and "The Man who was Poe."

Betty Ren Wright's "The Dollhouse Murders" and "Christina's Ghost."

Willo Davis Roberts' "the Girl with the Silver Eyes" and "The View from the Cherry Tree."

Other suggestions include:

"Rats" by Paul Zindel.

Any of Bellairs' books.

Edgar Allen Poe

"There's a Dead Person Following My Sister Around" by Vivian Vande Velde;

Rosemary Sutcliff's version of Beowolf called "Dragon Slayer"

"Nightmares: Poems to trouble your sleep" by Jack Prelutsky

Lois Duncan

Annette Curtis Klause

Caroline B. Cooney.

Amazon's teen book page. They have a horror section.

"Albion's Dream: a novel of terror" by Roger Norman

"Troubling a star" by L'Engle

"The Killer's Cousin" by Nancy Werlin

"The Witches of Worm" by Zilpha Keately Snyder.

"An Enemy at Green Knowe", by L.M. Boston

Thank you again!

Sincerely,

 

Jackie Corinth

Public Services Librarian

Robert Morris College

881 Narrows Run Road

Moon Township, PA 15108

Phone: (412) 604-2548

E-mail: corinth@robert-morris.edu

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

End of PUBYAC Digest 195

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