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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, 30 Jul 2000 00:01:03 CDT

Subject: PUBYAC digest 207

PUBYAC Digest 207

Topics covered in this issue include:

1) Re: autobiographies

by Jeani Littrell-Kwik <jeankwik@kcls.org>

2) Re: Filtering Internet

by Lisa Hughes <lhughes@scinet.co.santa-clara.ca.us>

3) YA Program evaluation

by "Cathy Norman" <csn71650@hotmail.com>

4) Re: Phone number alert

by Maria Wegscheid <mwegsche@libby.rbls.lib.il.us>

5) Re: Harry Potter and sad story

by Beth Walker <bwalker@will.state.wy.us>

6) selection policies, also some Christian materials

by "Kathleen Baxter" <kathyb@anoka.lib.mn.us>

7) Harry Potter Potions Class Activity

by Susan Novak <snovak@scfl.lib.ca.us>

8) Redecorating YA area

by Sarah Cofer <SCofer@worthington.lib.oh.us>

9) Re: Phone number alert

by "\"Marion \\\"Meb\\\" Ingold\"" <ingoldm@sls.lib.il.us>

10) Re: Sleep-over success stories needed

by Karen McNulty <kmcnulty@crlc.org>

11) Re: fantasy vs. science fiction

by "S. Fichtelberg" <sfichtel@infolink.org>

12) Re: fantasy vs. science fiction

by "Elizabeth Buono" <ebuono73@hotmail.com>

13) Re: CDROM suppliers

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

14) Stumper thanks....and a second query...

by "Barbara Scott" <barbarascott@hotmail.com>

15) Name for Program

by "Valerie Dawson" <dawsonssmpl@hotmail.com>

16) web sites with library clip art

by "S. Fichtelberg" <sfichtel@infolink.org>

17) RE: book collections for preschools & daycares

by "Jill Olson" <jilolson@kcls.org>

18) Re: hippo fingerplays

by Mary Ryan <mryan@noblenet.org>

19) Re: hippo fingerplays

by theresa robinett <theresart@yahoo.com>

20) Filtering Mandates Removed From Appropriations Bill

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

21) Poems to fit a mystery program

by "Bender Sandy" <bendersan40@hotmail.com>

22) Children's Librarian Position - West Palm Beach, FL

by "meredith cotter" <meredithannec@hotmail.com>

23) Revised: The Freedom to Read Statement

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

24) Re: hippo fingerplays

by "Lisa Cole" <lcole@ald.lib.co.us>

25) Great Job--Chicago Area

by Catherine Mau <cmau@bal.alibrary.com>

26) Children's Libn. Position-Oregon

by "DAHLGREEN MaryKay" <DAHLGREEN_MaryKay@oslmac.osl.state.or.us>

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

From: Jeani Littrell-Kwik <jeankwik@kcls.org>

To: Kristin Hawksworth <khawksworth@roselle.lib.il.us>

Subject: Re: autobiographies

MIME-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 00:57:53 CDT

Hi,

Do take a look at the autobiographies lists at Maggi Rohde's "Booklists

for Young Adults on the Web" site: www.seemore.mi.org/booklists

Look under "Biographies" for the Nassau Library System and you'll actually

find a long list of autobiographies. Also look under Nonfiction, Specific

Topics and scroll down to Biographies/Autobiographies.

Jeani

Jeani Littrell-Kwik

YA Librarian

Newport Way Library

King County Library System

Bellevue, Washington, U.S.A.

e-mail: jeankwik@kcls.org

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

From: Lisa Hughes <lhughes@scinet.co.santa-clara.ca.us>

To: Sally Warburton <swarburton@pc-va.org>

Subject: Re: Filtering Internet

MIME-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:06:05 CDT

We have two filtered internet computers in the children's area, one

exclusively for children 8th grade and under. The terminals in

the adult department have a "consent page" which explains filtering, and

then gives patrons a choice of filtered or unfiltered access. Children

may use the adult terminals. We have had very little trouble with patrons

accessing inappropriate sites.

Lisa Mead Hughes, Children's Services

Campbell Public Library

77 Harrison Avenue, Campbell CA 95008-1499

voice: (866-1991) fax: (408) 866-1433

lhughes@scinet.co.santa-clara.ca.us

*** All standard disclaimers apply ***

On Tue, 18 Jul 2000, Sally Warburton wrote:

> At this time we have filtered internet computers for the use of children

> under 12 years old. All others use our nonfiltered machines. All juveniles

> under the age of 18 require a parent's permission to use the internet. We

> put a little sticker on the children's cards who have signed permission to

> use the internet and they "check out" the computers with their card at the

> front desk.

>

> Our library board has decided to place both filtered and unfiltered machines

> in the YA area so students may have a choice. We are rewriting our

> permission form to reflect this change.

>

> How are other libraries handling this? Do your parents sign permission for

> either or both filtered or unfiltered machines and how do you keep up with

> their requests? (We do not have the computers that accept library cards as

> ids.) Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.

>

> Sally

> swarburton@pc-va.org

>

>

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

From: "Cathy Norman" <csn71650@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: YA Program evaluation

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:07:12 CDT

I am the Youth Services Librarian for a small village Library in Northeast

Ohio. Thus I provide programming for children from birth through high

school. Let's talk age range here! Anyway...I always do an evaluation of

any program I provide. For one shot deals - Teen Read Week, for instance,

which occurs once a year - the effectiveness of the program fro those

served, whether it was 1 or 100 is what matters in these instances. How did

the childre/students/young adults involved react? Did they enjoy it? Did

it bring them back to the library (probably the most important question)?

For on-going programs such as story hours and read alouds for teens,

however, the evaluation process is somewhat different. Numbers do matter

here because of the time it takes to design and run an on-going program.

Last year, when we began our first (!) evening story hour program in a long

time, we (my director and I) decided that 5 participants was the number that

would make or break the program. But we also have learned, through

workshops and experience, that to determine the quantitative value of any

on-going program you have to be willing to commit to a three year plan of

all out selling and marketting before you throw any program in the trash.

And that's what we do here.

 

Cathy Norman

Youth Services Librarian

Fairport Harbor

Public Library (OH)

csn71650@hotmail.com

________________________________________________________________________

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

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

From: Maria Wegscheid <mwegsche@libby.rbls.lib.il.us>

To: Sally Goodroe <sgoodroe@hcpl.net>

Subject: Re: Phone number alert

MIME-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:08:22 CDT

On Wed, 26 Jul 2000, Sally Goodroe wrote:

> Dear PUBYACers,

> Our library system office has informed us that in the book, PLAYING IT

> SMART: What to do when you're on your own, by Tova Navarra (Barrons,

> 1989), there is a problem. On page 43, the book recommends an 800

> number to call if someone touches you in in appropriate ways and adults

> won't listen to you. Hopefully this number wasn't always a sex line,

> but now it is! We are advising all our branches who still own the book

> to delete this phone number. I understand there is another book that

> she wrote that may have the same problem. (We don't own it, so I

> couldn't check.) The rest of the book is still perfectly fine, as far

> as I know.

> --Sally

 

Thanks to Sally for pointing this out. I immediately went and checked our

copy of On My Own : Helping Kids Help themselves, also by Tova Navarra.

This is a later edition of Playing It Safe. It also has the incorrect

phone. Please, people, pull these books ASAP! and either get rid of them

or fix them! In the abstract, it's an ironic situation, in reality, I

can't bear to think what it could do to a kid!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Maria J. Wegscheid

Bettendorf (IA) Public Library

2950 Learning Campus Dr

Bettendorf IA 52722

319-344-4188

mwegsche@libby.rbls.lib.il.us

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily represent those of the

Bettendorf Public Library.

 

 

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

From: Beth Walker <bwalker@will.state.wy.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Harry Potter and sad story

MIME-version: 1.0

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Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:10:03 CDT

Esther Lewenstein wrote:

I've been reading people's responses to the story of

> the young boy who was denied finishing Goblet of Fire

> because of a four letter word. ...> The parent is NOT slapping the kid around or denying his spiritual needs. In fact, according to this parent's beliefs, damn is not appropriate for his nine-year-old. Maybe he hears it on the playground... But the pa

rent is doing the best he knows how. I hope the parent read the book before forcing the child to return it, but it is really not up to us to judge. And it bothers me that comments like, people who don't know how to be parents should try to be parents. W

ell, I wish that more parents took the interest in what their kids were doing and reading. Maybe we wouldn't have the problem.

I agree with you totally. My personal (as a mother) and professional

(as both an English teacher and children's librarian) has been "the

parent has the final say" when it comes to child. In the long term, the

parent has the final responsibility and accountability for the well

being of a child. In ten years, I will no longer be a part of the child

patron's life, but his/her parents will be. If a parent says "no" to a

particular book, as a librarian, I still have over 10,000 others to

offer that child. When parents question the quality of a book, I try to

suggest they read the book first and then use it as a discussion tool

during family time. As for the child who wasn't able to finish HP,

someday he'll turn 21 and decide then whether or not to finish it.

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

From: "Kathleen Baxter" <kathyb@anoka.lib.mn.us>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: selection policies, also some Christian materials

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain;

charset="iso-8859-1"

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:11:17 CDT

I am interested in looking at selection policies for children's materials

from other public libraries, particularly if they are available on the web,

but also if you have copies you would be willing to share or that could be

purchased.

One problem with which we are dealing now is a proliferation of at least

suggestions that we purchase such Christian materials as A CHILD'S HISTORY

OF THE WORLD, and also the Victorian G.A. Henty series. Are other public

libraries purchasing these? Are you getting requests? We have purchased

some Christian materials solely because home schooling parents are asking

for them, but where do you draw the line? DO you draw the line?

As you are well aware, many of the requests we get for these materials come

solely because of advertisements that the patrons received.

Any help would be most greatly appreciated.

Kathleen Baxter

Anoka County Library

707 Highway 10 NE

Blaine MN 55434

Fax 763-717-3262

kathyb@anoka.lib.mn.us

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

From: Susan Novak <snovak@scfl.lib.ca.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Harry Potter Potions Class Activity

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Content-Type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1"

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:12:27 CDT

Our Harry Potter parties are next week and our potion isn't brewing.

We suspect Snape!

Could someone share a successful potions class activity to do with

9 to 13 year olds? Please reply to me at:

snovak@scfl.lib.ca.us

Thanks so much!

Susan Novak

Stanislaus County Library

Modesto, CA 95354

209-558-7811

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

From: Sarah Cofer <SCofer@worthington.lib.oh.us>

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

Subject: Redecorating YA area

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain;

charset="iso-8859-1"

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:13:38 CDT

Hello Pubyacers!

I am getting ready to redecorate the YA area and was wondering if anyone has

any advice on what works and what doesn't. I have had a suggestion box in

the YA area attempting to get suggestions from the teens themsleves. I have

received lots of requests for bean bag chairs, butterfly chairs, and

inflatable chairs. Has anyone purchased bean bag chairs for their YA area?

How do they hold up against wear and tear? What other types of furnishings

have worked really well in your YA areas? You can respond to me off the

list.

Thanks in advance for any advice, tips, warnings, etc you all have to offer!

Sarah Cofer

Young Adult Librarian

Northwest Library

scofer@worthington.lib.oh.us

 

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

From: "\"Marion \\\"Meb\\\" Ingold\"" <ingoldm@sls.lib.il.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Phone number alert

MIME-Version: 1.0

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

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:14:50 CDT

Hello, Pubyac --

I just checked Tova Navarra's other book - On My Own: Helping Kids

Help Themselves.

On page 43, the same number is given. So everyone should check them both

and black out that number or withdraw the titles.

Meb Ingold, Children's Services Director

La Grange Park Public Library

La Grange Park, IL

Sally Goodroe wrote:

> Dear PUBYACers,

> Our library system office has informed us that in the book, PLAYING IT

> SMART: What to do when you're on your own, by Tova Navarra (Barrons,

> 1989), there is a problem. On page 43, the book recommends an 800

> number to call if someone touches you in in appropriate ways and adults

> won't listen to you. Hopefully this number wasn't always a sex line,

> but now it is! We are advising all our branches who still own the book

> to delete this phone number. I understand there is another book that

> she wrote that may have the same problem. (We don't own it, so I

> couldn't check.) The rest of the book is still perfectly fine, as far

> as I know.

> --Sally

>

> --

> Sally Goodroe, Children's Specialist

> Harris County Public Library, Houston

> 8080 El Rio Street, Houston, TX 77054

> 713-749-9031 FAX 713-749-9090

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

From: Karen McNulty <kmcnulty@crlc.org>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: Sleep-over success stories needed

Mime-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:16:12 CDT

We have done it but, because of heavy advance publicity, worried ALL night

that some idiot would heave Molotov cocktails through the windows! Be sure

your local police dept. is aware (and will assist supervising your

grounds?). --KM (P.S. Nothing happened).

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

From: "S. Fichtelberg" <sfichtel@infolink.org>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: Re: fantasy vs. science fiction

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:17:22 CDT

We also have all of our fiction shelved together, with spine labels:

historical fiction, mystery, fantasy, science fiction, and short stories.

When I first came (13 years ago) science fiction and fantasy were both

labeled with sci/fi labels for adult and children's because the people

responsible refused to separate them. But times change and in children's we

changed it first and now in adult they use fantasy labels too. Personally,

as a fantasy reader, I prefer that they be separate (at least labeled

separately). It makes is much easier to find what interests you when your

just browsing.

Susan

sfichtel@infolink.org

Woodbridge Public Library

Woodbridge, NJ

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

From: "Elizabeth Buono" <ebuono73@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: fantasy vs. science fiction

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:18:40 CDT

Debra--

We interfile our fantasy and science fiction, but we put separate genre

spine labels on fantasy and science fiction (as well as mystery and

historical fiction), so the kids can spot them as they browse the

collection.

Hope this helps!

Elizabeth Buono

The Ferguson Library

One Public Library Plaza

Stamford, CT 06904

<ebuono73@hotmail.com>

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

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

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: CDROM suppliers

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; x-mac-type="54455854"; x-mac-creator="4D4F5353"

Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:19:46 CDT

 

I have had terrible luck with Edutainment since the takeover. It seems like

80-90% of the titles I order from the catalog are out of stock or on

backorder. The service isn't as fast (really slow, actually) and not as

consumer friendly either.

Lorie

Maureen Lok wrote:

>

>

> Edutainment Catalog (recently purchased by Mattel & don't know if selection

> is as broad as it used to be, but have have very good service.)

> 1700 Progress Drive

> Hiawatha, IA 52233

> 1-800-338-3844

> www.edutainco.com

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

Dream deep, for every dream precedes the goal.

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

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

From: "Barbara Scott" <barbarascott@hotmail.com>

To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org

Subject: Stumper thanks....and a second query...

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:20:52 CDT

Many, many things for all those of you who replied to my stumper. The book

is Call Me Anighito by Pam Conrad.

My patron was thrilled with the fast reponse time and we have the book on

interlibrary loan for her!

On a completely different note, have any of you ever tried a craft using old

CDs and making clocks out of them? I did a quick search on the net today,

but didn't come up with any type of instructions.

If you have successfully done this craft and would be willing to share your

instructions, etc., please reply to me at barbarascott@hotmail.com

Thanks!

Barbara Scott

Children's Librarian

Bucyrus Public Library, Bucyrus, OH

________________________________________________________________________

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

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

From: "Valerie Dawson" <dawsonssmpl@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Name for Program

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:22:01 CDT

We are starting a weekly drop-in evening program for young children and

their parents. There will be stories, songs, fingerplays, flannel board

nursery rhymes and puppets for 25 to 30 minutes. It is designed to reach

children and parents who cannot come to daytime storytimes. I would

appreciate getting suggestions for names for the program. Some ideas we

already have are Sleepytime Stories, Pajama Stories, and Family Evening

Storytime.

If you have an idea, please send it to the listserv or email me directly.

Thanks is advance,

Valerie Dawson

Assistant Director

Sault Ste. Marie Public Library

Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada

dawsonssmpl@hotmail.com

________________________________________________________________________

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

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

From: "S. Fichtelberg" <sfichtel@infolink.org>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: web sites with library clip art

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:23:16 CDT

I was wondering if any one any good web sites with library or book =

related clip are (children reading would be good too). Email me and I =

will compile the results.

Thanks.

Susan

sfichtel@infolink.org

Woodbridge Public Library

Woodbridge, NJ

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

From: "Jill Olson" <jilolson@kcls.org>

To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>

Subject: RE: book collections for preschools & daycares

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charset="iso-8859-1"

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:24:28 CDT

At King County Library System we have two programs that checkout materials

to child care providers. Books to Grow On (preschool theme kits) check out

through our library circulation system and are subject to the same fees as

other library materials.

KidReach are book tubs delivered to or picked up by child care providers.

Deliveries by J librarians:

Each librarian visits the center on a schedule. If the books aren't ready

to pick up when they come, they either collect the books themselves, or

arrange to come back again. This is probably one of the biggest headaches,

but fortunately is not the "norm".

We are pretty forgiving about lost and damaged materials, mostly because

all the books in the tubs are paperbacks, and we expect some damage over a

2-month checkout period. We have only billed one person in the last 9

years, because she lost over 80 books and one of the delivery tubs as well.

We charge $5.00 per book (paperback) and the cost of the tub. We suspend

delivery when materials were identified as lost and not just overdue.

Child care staff pickup.

Many of our boxes are picked up at the branch by the child care provider

(boxes are shipped from our service center to their branch). When they are

overdue I either call them or the branch children's librarian calls them.

New boxes are not shipped to them until overdues are returned.

There is alot of frustrating detail with this kind of service. On days when

I'm dealing with these, it is important for me to remember how much the

children benefit from having the books!

 

____________________________________________

Jill Olson

Children Outreach Librarian

King County Library System

960 Newport Way NW

Issaquah, Washington 98027

Phone: 425-369-3323

1-877-905-2009 ext. 3323

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

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

> Behalf Of Sally Chilson

> Sent: Tuesday, July 18, 2000 1:53 AM

> To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org

> Subject: book collections for preschools & daycares

>

>

> I wanted to ask any of you that deliver book collections to a preschool or

> daycare site how you handle sites that become difficult. What do you do

> when the books aren't ready to be picked up? How do you handle overdues?

> What about lost books? At what point do you suspend deliveries? Thanks

> for any input you have. I would gladly assemble any answers I

> receive into

> one message & post to the list if anyone is interested.

>

> Thanks!

>

> Sally Chilson - Youth Services Librarian

> Spokane Public Library - Downtown Branch

> 906 W Main

> Spokane, WA 99201

> (509) 444-5345

> schilson@spokpl.lib.wa.us

>

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

From: Mary Ryan <mryan@noblenet.org>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: hippo fingerplays

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:25:39 CDT

Hippo

Here is an animal that we know, H-I-P-P-O.(Extend arms, one on top of the

other, to form hippo mouth).

She eats a lot of vegetables,

And chews them just like so. (Open and close arms)

She's very big, her skin is gray,

She swims around in the water all day. (Make large swimming movements)

She is an animal that we know,

H-I-P-P-O.

I hope that this is he

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

From: theresa robinett <theresart@yahoo.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: hippo fingerplays

MIME-Version: 1.0

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

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:26:54 CDT

Not a fingerplay exactly, but a song to the tune of

BINGO

A little girl/boy had a pet

And Hippo was it's name oh

H-I-P-P-O, H-I-P-P-O, H-I-P-P-O

And Hippo was it's name oh.

Clap the letters out as in Bingo

(Any five letter animal can be substituted)

 

__________________________________________________

Do You Yahoo!?

Kick off your party with Yahoo! Invites.

http://invites.yahoo.com/

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

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

Subject: Filtering Mandates Removed From Appropriations Bill

Mime-Version: 1.0

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Content-Disposition: inline

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:28:01 CDT

from Center for Democracy & Technology

Filtering Mandates Removed From Appropriations Bill

http://www.cdt.org/speech/

 

"At the last minute, Internet filtering legislation was removed from the

Labor-HHS Appropriations bill H.R. 4577. A conference of members

from both chambers of Congress removed all "rider" amendments from

the Bill, including the controversial McCain and Istook amendments that

would have forced schools to use filtering software to restrict Internet

access. July 27, 2000"

 

 

_________________________

Don Wood

Program Officer/Communications

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: "Bender Sandy" <bendersan40@hotmail.com>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Poems to fit a mystery program

Mime-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed

Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:29:33 CDT

Hi All,

I didn't get many results from my last request for tellable stories that

would fit a mystery themed program. George Shannon's Stories to Solve and a

couple of other scavenger hunt ideas as well as a solve a crime at the

library program. I am now looking for some poems to fit this mystery theme.

Any ideas? Thanks in advance for your help.

 

________________________________________________________________________

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

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

From: "meredith cotter" <meredithannec@hotmail.com>

To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org

Subject: Children's Librarian Position - West Palm Beach, FL

Mime-Version: 1.0

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:30:40 CDT

Children's Librarian Position - West Palm Beach Public Library, West Palm

Beach, FL.

Picture yourself working in a wonderful children's library surrounded by

palm trees and breathtaking water views. Imagine being part of the team

that is inventing the children's library of the future. The West Palm Beach

Public Library is designing an interactive children's space to accommodate

our storytimes, programs and collections. We are looking for a risk-taker,

innovator, and creator who will guide children's library adventures.

Applicants must be dedicated to serving the information and entertainment

needs of children, have a vision of the role libraries play in children's

lives, and have an MLS from an ALA-accredited program.

Hiring Range: $27,602 - 35,412 annually. Hiring range advertised to

midpoint. Salary commensurate with experience and qualifications.

Excellent benefits. Must pass drug test, physical and FDLE check.

Submit resume with social security number and a cover letter requesting a

city application to: Human Resources Department, 1000 45th Street, Suite

12, West Palm Beach, Florida 33407. Open until filled. For more

information or to download an application, visit our web site at

http://www.cityofwpb.com/employment.html

________________________________________________________________________

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

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

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

Subject: Revised: The Freedom to Read Statement

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:31:48 CDT

On July 12, 2000, the ALA Council adopted a revision to the Freedom to Read Statement:

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

The Office for Intellectual Freedom will be seeking endorsements and re-endorsements for this revised statement from various organizations.

_________________________

Don Wood

Program Officer/Communications

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: "Lisa Cole" <lcole@ald.lib.co.us>

To: pubyac@prairienet.org

Subject: Re: hippo fingerplays

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:32:55 CDT

Jennifer,

For a hippo fingerplay you could do a variation on "Five little monkeys"

Five fat hippos wading in the pond

One goes under - glub

and then there were four,

etc (until none)

Five fat hippos splash into sight

oh my they gave me a fright.

Use your fingers to count but act out going under with a big glub and

popping up with a splash.

Hope this helps,

Lisa Cole

Arapahoe Library District

lcole@ald.lib.co.us

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

From: Catherine Mau <cmau@bal.alibrary.com>

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

Subject: Great Job--Chicago Area

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:34:26 CDT

LIBRARIAN I / YOUNG PEOPLE'S SERVICES / BARRINGTON AREA LIBRARY

Full time position, 37.5 hours per week, including one evening a week and

one weekend a month. Be a part of our positive, customer service-oriented

team. Innovative, energetic individual to work as part of an eight-member

team in a busy department serving infants through eighth graders. Duties

include collection development, programming, reference and reader's

advisory service, school visits, and assisting patrons with online catalog

and Internet. Requires MLS from an ALA-accredited program, knowledge of

children's literature, reference procedures, and library programming, and

the ability to work pleasantly and effectively with children and adults.

Salary $31,305/year + benefits. Send resume to Catherine Mau, Head of

Young People's Services, Barrington Area Library, 505 N. Northwest Highway,

Barrington, IL 60010. Email: cmau@bal.alibrary.com. Visit our home page at

http://www.bal.alibrary.com. The Barrington Area Library serves a large

community of active library users in a northwest suburb of Chicago. Summer

graduates welcome to apply.

Catherine Mau

Head of Young People's Services

Barrington Area Library

505 N. Northwest Highway

Barrington, IL 60010-3399

cmau@bal.alibrary.com

http://www.bal.alibrary.com

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

From: "DAHLGREEN MaryKay" <DAHLGREEN_MaryKay@oslmac.osl.state.or.us>

To: "kids-lib" <kids-lib@sparkie.osl.state.or.us>, pnla-l@wln.com,

"PUBYAC" <PUBYAC@prairienet.org>

Subject: Children's Libn. Position-Oregon

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Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2000 01:36:23 CDT

Youth Services Librarian

Use your ability to tell stories, present children's programming, and select

children's material to develop an innovative countywide children's program

for a growing rural district in central Oregon. Work in a library where

youth services are strongly supported. Live minutes away from skiing,

hiking, fishing, and rock-climbing and enjoy 300 sunny days a year. First

class entertainment and city fun are only two hours away.

Qualifications: ALA-MLS (or equivalent) and interest/education/experience

with children's librarianship required. Willingness to work varied schedule

and to travel within district required. Good computer skills very

desirable. Strong outreach skills and abilities, enthusiasm, excellent

communication and customer service skills, imagination and dramatic flair

desirable. Bilingual Spanish/English would be a plus.

$2417-2750 per month DOE, with excellent benefits. Please request

application packet from DeRese Hall (dehall@ispchannel.com), Jefferson

County Library District, 241 SE 7th St. Madras, OR, 97741-1611.

541/475-3351. For more information, contact Melanie Lightbody

(lightbdy@teleport.com <mailto:lightbdy@teleport.com>). We may be able to

cover some small travel costs. Opening closes September 1st, 2000.

Please see these websites for further information about our community:

<http://www.madraspioneer.com/>

<http://www.madras.net/>

<http://www.palmain.com/~jccoc/>

Posted by:

MaryKay Dahlgreen

Youth Services Consultant

Oregon State Library

State Library Building

Salem, OR 97310

(503) 378-2112 ext. 239

marykay.dahlgreen@state.or.us

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

End of PUBYAC Digest 207

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