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From: "PUBYAC: PUBlic librarians serving Young Adults and Children" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
To: "PUBYAC: PUBlic librarians serving Young Adults and Children" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2002 11:01 PM
Subject: PUBYAC digest 855


    PUBYAC Digest 855

Topics covered in this issue include:

  1) Stumper answered
by "Kathy Graham" <grahamka@SLS.LIB.IL.US>
  2) thanks for lemony snicket
by "Kathleen Gasi" <kzalargasi2@hotmail.com>
  3) Stumper- Acorn people
by CVanderbrink <cvanderbrink@toledolibrary.org>
  4) Film stumper
by loueen.mccann@kalamunda.wa.gov.au
  5) Re: Franklin
by "Georgia Jones" <georgiajones@ifls.lib.wi.us>
  6) The Law And Lawyers For YAs
by Jeffrey Fisher <fisherje@oplin.lib.oh.us>
  7) Internet Policies
by Jennifer Parker <jmpwel@yahoo.com>
  8) Magic TreeHouse Party
by Robin Darland <rd13145@cedarnet.org>
  9) YA magazine suggestion
by "Henegar, Sharon" <SLHenegar@ocpl.org>
 10) Re: Clip art
by Toni Reese <treese@monarch.papillion.ne.us>
 11) Stumper:  taps with rootbear
by "Coppell, Anne" <Anne.Coppell@AUCKLANDCITY.GOVT.NZ>
 12) Re: Clip art
by <lamonea@scils.rutgers.edu>
 13) RE: Indoor Survival games
by "Keener, Lesa" <LKeener@acmail.aclink.org>
 14) (no subject)
by "Lane, Kristin" <klane@lib.sbcounty.gov>
 15) Re: Stumper - Science Videos
by Mary Colleli <dutchgirl58@yahoo.com>
 16) Re: scavenger hunts--grade 4 (fwd)
by <bjbrooks@rcn.com>
 17) Sad stories compiled
by "Lorie O'Donnell" <odonnell@midyork.lib.ny.us>
 18) RE: Clip art
by "Denise P. Stout" <dpstout@ccls.org>

----------------------------------------------------------------------
From: "Kathy Graham" <grahamka@SLS.LIB.IL.US>
To: "pubyac" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Subject: Stumper answered
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:51:52 CDT

Thanks to Sheilah O'Connor for answering my stumper about the little boy =
coloring a tree.  The answer was "Flowers are red" by Harry Chapin. ( =
Tree, flowers---they're both plants!)  For anyone who is interested, the =
lyrics can be found at www.littlejason.com/chapin/songs/flowers.htm
Pubyac is a wonderful resource!
Kathy

------------------------------
From: "Kathleen Gasi" <kzalargasi2@hotmail.com>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: thanks for lemony snicket
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:00 CDT


Many thanks to all of you who forwarded Lemony Snicket ideas to me after
mine were lost!

Kathy Gasi
Children's Department
Madison Public Library
Madison, Ohio


_________________________________________________________________
Join the world's largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail.
http://www.hotmail.com

------------------------------
From: CVanderbrink <cvanderbrink@toledolibrary.org>
To: "'PUBYAC@prairienet.org'" <PUBYAC@prairienet.org>
Subject: Stumper- Acorn people
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:07 CDT

Hi all-

One of our patrons is looking for a book about acorn people.  She believes
it was published in the 50's or 60's.  She believes the characters had stick
bodies and acorn heads.  We have searched World/Cat, A to Zoo, and the
internet.  Thanks in advance!

Cindy Vanderbrink
Children's Library
Toledo/Lucas County Public Library, Ohio
cvanderbrink@toledolibrary.org

------------------------------
From: loueen.mccann@kalamunda.wa.gov.au
To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Subject: Film stumper
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:14 CDT

Greetings from Perth, West Australia!

A customer called in today with the following stumper.  She doesn't recall
the title of the film - but does recall that it was a very interesting
story, not a documentary.  She thinks it may have been released about 10
years ago.  It was a film about climate change and how it affected the
mid-west of the USA.  Crops weren't able to be planted, the Colorado River
dried up, and  people attempted to move north to Canada, but they were not
allowed to cross the border.

Does anyone have any idea of the title of this film?  Any help will be
greatly appreciated.

Thanks!

Loueen McCann
School Community Librarian
Lesmurdie School Community Library
Reid Road
LESMURDIE  WA  6076
AUSTRALIA

loueen.mccann@kalamunda.wa.gov.au

------------------------------
From: "Georgia Jones" <georgiajones@ifls.lib.wi.us>
To: <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Subject: Re: Franklin
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:21 CDT

Hi Barb,

Thank you for all of your help with my Captain Underpants and Junie B.
parties. they were great! Now I can return the favor since I had a fun
Franklin program last summer,too.

I have to do my Toddler Tales right now but I will send all the info and
pattern to you later today.

Georgia Jones
Friday Library
New Richmond  Wi
----- Original Message -----
From: Barbara Scott <barbarascott@hotmail.com>
To: <OPLINLIST@EPICURUS.OPLIN.LIB.OH.US>; <PUBYAC@prairienet.org>
Sent: Friday, September 06, 2002 11:39 AM

> I am planning a Franklin the Turtle program for the spring. Has anyone out
> there done a Franklin party?  If so, can you share crafts, activities,
etc.
> My party will be in March, so I will post my final report to the list!
>
> Barbara Scott
> Children's Librarian, Bucyrus Public Library
> Ohio Reading Program Manual Editor
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
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------------------------------
From: Jeffrey Fisher <fisherje@oplin.lib.oh.us>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: The Law And Lawyers For YAs
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:29 CDT

Hi all!

Has anyone out there ever devised something, say, a Web page,
intended to help YAs get information on the law or get legal
representation on their own, if they need to?  I once explored this in a
workshop for Professors Carolyn Brodie and Greg Byerle, but I never got
back to it.  I'd appreciate any ideas anyone might have on the subject.
Seems apropos at this time.

Thanks in advance.

Jeff Fisher
Portage County (0hio) District Library
fisherje@oplin.lib.oh.us

------------------------------
From: Jennifer Parker <jmpwel@yahoo.com>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: Internet Policies
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:36 CDT


Hello Everyone,

I was wondering if anyone out there could help me.

I am in the process of writing an internet policy for one of my classes and
was wondering if anyone out there had an internet policy in place that
addressed staff members and the policy the library had for their use of the
internet.

If anyone would be willing to e-mail it to me or snail mail it to me at my
library I would be very greatful.

Thank You

Jennifer Parker

jmpwel@yahoo.com



or



Jennifer Parker

C/O The Tufts Library Children's Room

46 Broad Street

Weymouth, MA 02188

TIA.

Jen

------------------------------
From: Robin Darland <rd13145@cedarnet.org>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: Magic TreeHouse Party
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:43 CDT

Salutations Pubyacers,

Our library will be doing a Magic Tree House program for 1,2,3 graders
in October.  I would appreciate hearing what you have done for
activities, decorating, and crafts in the past that relate to this
series.

I will post a compilation of the ideas I receive.  Please respond with
ideas soon as our program is coming up fast.

Thanks in advance.

Robin Darland
library assistant
Cedar Falls Public Library
Cedar Falls, Iowa
rd13145@cedarnet.org
319-273-8643

------------------------------
From: "Henegar, Sharon" <SLHenegar@ocpl.org>
To: "'PUBYAC@prairienet.org'" <PUBYAC@prairienet.org>
Subject: YA magazine suggestion
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:50 CDT

We are opening a new branch soon that is expected to have high usage by
young adults. (In fact, there was a teen advisory board in place before they
broke ground for the building!) The TAB has picked out some teen magazines
of the sort you would expect, but the branch manager would like to include a
title that is more literary, more book or poetry related. I'd welcome
suggestions! Thanks for your help.

Sharon Henegar, Coordinator of Children's Services
Orange County Public Library
slhenegar@ocpl.org

------------------------------
From: Toni Reese <treese@monarch.papillion.ne.us>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: Re: Clip art
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:52:58 CDT

I really like:  http://best-of-web.com/computer/clipart_all.shtml

Toni

Toni Reese
Youth Services Librarian
Sump Memorial Library
Papillion NE 68046
treese@monarch.papillion.ne.us

laanders@bellsouth.net wrote:

> I have been searching the Internet for a source of good clip art for young
> children, and haven't found anything that I like.  I need it for some
> programs I'm making for my Baby and Me Storytime.  Does anyone know of a
> good web site?
>
> I also need the instructions for subscribing to PUBYAC for a friend at
work.
>
> Thanks for your help.
>
> Linda Anderson, Nashville Public Library

------------------------------
From: "Coppell, Anne" <Anne.Coppell@AUCKLANDCITY.GOVT.NZ>
To: "Pubyac (E-mail)" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Subject: Stumper:  taps with rootbear
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:53:05 CDT

Hi - can anyone help?
We have had a customer in who is looking for a book she read as a child. She
is in her mid thirties. The story is about a couple of kids who get a
plumber in and the taps in their house run rootbeer instead of water. Any
clues? She says it's kind of fish out of waterish.

Anne Coppell
Teenage Services Librarian
Auckland City Libraries - Tamaki Pataka Korero
PO Box 4138
Auckland 1
NEW ZEALAND
Website:  www.aucklandcitylibraries.com
Ph. 64-9-377 0209

This e-mail is confidential.  If it is not intended for you please do not
read, distribute or copy it or any attachments.  Please notify the sender by
return e-mail and delete the original message and any attachments.

Any views expressed in this e-mail may be those of the individual sender and
may not necessarily reflect the views of Auckland City Libraries - Tamaki
Pataka Korero.

------------------------------
From: <lamonea@scils.rutgers.edu>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: Re: Clip art
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:53:11 CDT

Linda

Have you tried this site yet?: http://school.discovery.com/clipart

To answer your 2nd question, I got this from the PUBYAC welcome message.  To
join the list and receive the mailings from PUBYAC.  Send a message like the
following (no subject necessary):

To: listproc@prairienet.org
Message: subscribe pubyac

Hope this helps,

Steven Lamonea

>
> From: <laanders@bellsouth.net>
> Date: 2002/09/09 Mon AM 11:17:35 EDT
> To: pubyac@prairienet.org
> Subject: Clip art
>
> I have been searching the Internet for a source of good clip art for young
> children, and haven't found anything that I like.  I need it for some
> programs I'm making for my Baby and Me Storytime.  Does anyone know of a
> good web site?
>
> I also need the instructions for subscribing to PUBYAC for a friend at
work.
>
> Thanks for your help.
>
> Linda Anderson, Nashville Public Library
>
>

------------------------------
From: "Keener, Lesa" <LKeener@acmail.aclink.org>
To: "'pubyac@prairienet.org'" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Subject: RE: Indoor Survival games
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:53:18 CDT

We put slips of paper with survival needs in a hurricane. For example
bottled water and flashlights. We threw the bottles in a pile and they could
grab ten. They opened them and needed one of each type. There was 7. It was
too much of a free for all fpr us.

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-pubyac@prairienet.org [mailto:owner-pubyac@prairienet.org]On
Behalf Of Bryce, Richard
Sent: Monday, September 09, 2002 11:19 AM
To: 'pubyac@prairienet.org'
Subject: Indoor Survival games


Hi!  The theme for my winter (December-February) book discussion is
Survival! and instead of the usual fare of word games I wanted to do some
fun indoor cooperative (?) survival games.  Any ideas?

I would need them to be about 10-15 minutes in length.  It can be something
like "You're trapped in an earthquake and have fallen down a hole.  Now get
out" kind of thing or it could just be like the challenges that they have on
the Survivor TV show.

I would appreciate any and all ideas.  BTW, the calamities that strike the
characters involve an earthquake, a shipwreck, and a flood.

I'll post a compilation next week.  Please send ideas to:
bryce@palsplus.org.

Thanks!!

Richard Bryce :O)

------------------------------
From: "Lane, Kristin" <klane@lib.sbcounty.gov>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:53:25 CDT


I have a question regarding graphic novels. Are there any libraries out
there that rebind these when the original bindings give up?  We've heard
that some libraries use a spiral binding machine.  We are trying to justify
the purchase of one of these to our Director. Please share your experience
with us. Did it lengthen the circulation life of the graphic novels? How did
the spiral binding hold up? Does it take much time to rebind these? Are
there other methods besides spiral bound that work? We've just recently
begun building collection of graphic novels at our 28 branches and our
budget for these isn't much, so we obviously want them to last as long as
possible, since there is such demand for them.  Any info you have to share
would be much appreciated.  Need to hear the positive and the negative.

send replies to klane@lib.sbcounty.gov.  I will post the summary of
information I receive to share with others with same concern. Thanks!

Kristin Lane/Library Associate
Youth Services
San Bernardino County Library
104 W. 4th St.
San Bernardino, CA  92415-0035
(909) 387-5737; fax: (909) 387-5736
klane@lib.sbcounty.gov

------------------------------
From: Mary Colleli <dutchgirl58@yahoo.com>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: Re: Stumper - Science Videos
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:53:32 CDT

This sounds like Beakman's World. It used to be on cable TV on Saturday
mornings, and there was a column in our Sunday comics. We recorded the show
and still have video tapes of it, but I didn't know it was on pre-recorded
video - I hope so! It's a cool, funny, and informative show. There are a
couple of other folks on besides Beakman himself, who is a really crazy but
smart guy, such as a crazy kind of girl (there have been two or three in the
show's run), and a guy who plays both Beakman's lab rat Lester, and a
scientist. Hope this helps!
Mary Helen Colleli
P.S. I've posted the following on PUBYAC, and haven't gotten but one hit,
and that really surprised me. Could you give it a look, and see if you know
what it could be?I'd really appreciate it!
Juvenile fiction chapter book, possibly 1970's Scholastic Book Club, about a
husband (Avram) and wife (Dorothy?) who immigrated to US from Russia, their
two daughters, a grandmother, and an Uncle Max who comes to join them. The
story tells about their struggles to feel at home in their new country.

The older daughter takes piano lessons from a Miss Michaels, and hates them.
She also has a rag doll, which figures prominently in the story. When Uncle
Max comes to stay with them, he embarrasses the older daughter with his
funny accent, strange clothes and 'foreign' behavior. Uncle Max becomes a
hero later on when he does a traditional Russian dance for her classmates.
The daughters celebrate their mother's May birthday by making fragile May
Baskets and filling them with flowers, for her.

 Sincerely,
Mary Helen Colleli (dutchgirl58@yahoo.com)

M Cinnella/Gulf Beaches Library wrote: Good Monday to everyone! I have a
stumper and I hope that someone on the list will be able to help me. I have
a patron who is looking for videos
about science by a specific person. She says the videos star a man and
he's like Bill Nye the Science Guy, but it's not Bill Nye. When I questioned
her further I asked if she knew for sure that videos are available and she
said "no" but she was certain that there's a least a program on one of the
TV channels (TV channel unknown though). If anyone has any ideas, please let
me know.

Thanks!
Maggie Cinnella
Youth Services Librarian
Gulf Beaches Public Library
200 Municipal Drive
Madeira Beach, Florida 33708
727-391-2828 x202 (phone)
727-399-2840 (fax)

------------------------------
From: <bjbrooks@rcn.com>
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: Re: scavenger hunts--grade 4 (fwd)
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:53:40 CDT

Greetings!  i have no suggestions, but am writing because i am subbing in an
elementary school library, and came up with the notion of developing a
scavenger hunt to orient them to the library.  i would actually appreciate
any suggestions you could give me.  Thank you!

Beth Brooks
>
> From: "A. Creech" <ak454@chebucto.ns.ca>
> Date: 2002/09/09 Mon AM 11:20:29 EDT
> To: PUBYAC@prairienet.org
> Subject: scavenger hunts--grade 4 (fwd)
>
>
>
>
> We're currently working on a model for grade 4 library orientations.  In
> the past, many of the branches in our system have included scavenger
> hunts.  We have a model of ascavenger hunt that works quite well, within
> our confines of space, time, noise level etc (these are happening while
> the library is open to the public, and generally include either 30 or 60
> kids, one or two classes!)
>
> What I am trying to find are other ideas than scavenger hunts for fun
> activities to do with this age group where they will also learn something
> about the libray while they are participating.
>
> Any suggestions or examples would be appreciated!
>
> Thanks
>
> Alison
>
>
>
>
****************************************************************************
> ***
> This has been an electronic owl from
>   ,_,
>  (*v*)     Alison Creech
>  [`-']     Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
>  -"-"-     ak454@chebucto.ns.ca
>
>
****************************************************************************
> ***
>
>
>
>
>

------------------------------
From: "Lorie O'Donnell" <odonnell@midyork.lib.ny.us>
To: "pubyac@prairienet.org" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Subject: Sad stories compiled
Mime-version: 1.0
Content-type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1"
Content-transfer-encoding: quoted-printable
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:53:47 CDT

Thanks to everyone who added to my list of sad stories.  As promised, here
are the replies I received:

---

How about Faithful Elephants by Yukio Tsuchiya? Or the Velveteen Rabbit?
Hope that helps!
--


Lorie,
=20
        In my children's literature class, I did a project on explaining
death and dying to children.  Here are some "sad" books that I used that
might fit the bill here:
=20
        =20

Carrick, Carol.  The Accident.  New York: The Seabury Press, 1976.
Christopher and his dog Bodger go down the road to meet his parents at the
lake.  On the way, Bodger is hit by a car. Chris is very upset and at first
blames the driver, then himself.  His father suggests they find a stone to
mark Bodger=B9s grave.  Finding the very best stone and sharing a memory
help=
s
ease Christopher=B9s pain.

=20

=20

Miles, Miska.  Annie and the Old One.  Boston: Little, Brown, and Company,
1971.  When Annie=B9s grandmother announces that she will die when the rug
that Annie=B9s mother is weaving on the loom, the rug becomes Annie=B9s
enemy.
She must find a way to keep the rug from being finished.  When her
grandmother catches her taking the rug apart, she explains to Annie the
Navajo belief about life and how each living thing is a part of the Earth.
Annie not only tells about the fear of losing someone, but it=B9s message is
multicultural in scope, also.

=20

        Hope this helps some!

=20

Amy Long

--
Sad story suggestions,

The Hundred Dresses by Eleanor Estes
The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams Bianco

HTH
Jackie Marquardt, YS Librarian I

--

This is a picture book, but I just sobbed- even though
I was at work!  It's called Desser, the Best Cat Ever
by Maggie Smith.  It's the story of a girl's cat, from
its arrival to its death.  Very good.
Jennifer Fay

--
How about Stone Fox by John Reynolds Gardiner.  A little longish but I've
read it aloud in one setting--about 40 minutes, I think. - jeri

--

Hi Lorie,
   Have they tried Lurlene McDaniel's books?

--

"The Grannyman" by Judith Schachner gets me every time. "Cat Heaven" or "Do=
g
Heaven" by Cynthia Rylant. "Tomas and the Library Lady" by Pat Mora. All
picture books, all make ME cry!
Heather Acerro

--

Lorie,

How about Pink & Say by Patricia Polacco?  Eve Bunting has several good
titles:  The Memory String and The Wall are two that come to mind.

Cindi Carey

--
Here are a few that I find "sad:"

Leah's Pony (1996) by Elizabeth Friedrich
Let the Celebration Begin (1991) by Margaret Wild
Wilfred Gordon McDonald Partridge  (1985) by Mem Fox

I'm not sure if these are sad enough for someone wanting to cry all the
way through.  I love all three and cannot get through them without
tearing up a couple of times.  Too bad she doesn't want something a bit
longer - Mick Harte was Here is definitely a tear-jerker. Good luck,
Nancy

--
I think a lot of Hans Christian Andersen stories can be sad (Tin Soldier,
Little Mermaid [real version not Disney!], Little Fir Tree)  Don't forget
Wilde's "Selfish Giant"

 There's the illustrated version of Aida by Leotyne Price.  Wordy, but
pictures (by the Dillons) are gorgeous!

"Dove Isabeau" by Jane Yolen has a happy ending, but I always choke up
reading it.

--

Lorie,

How about "Blanche Rose" by Roberto Innocenti or "Pink and Say" by
Patricia Polacco?  Maybe some of the "Chicken Soup for the Soul" stories
might satisfy her also.  Although it isn't really sad, how about "Gift of
the Magi" by O'Henry?

I'm surprised that you have such a young girl asking for sad things.  I
didn't enter the "crying and dying" book stage until I was in my early
teens (and left it soon after). =A0

--

>How about Sally Warner's Accidental Lily (bedwetter), Orphan Train
>Children series by Joan Lowery Nixon, including Lucy's Wish, and Ballad of
>the Civil War, a Trophy Chapter book about two brothers, by Mary Stolz?

--

Hi! Lorie =20

Try "Toby" by Margaret, Wild and "The Accident" and related dog stories by
Carol Carrick.=20
 =20
Dianne Corey
--




Lorie J. O'Donnell=20
Children's Librarian
Jervis Public Library
Rome, NY   13440
odonnell@midyork.lib.ny.us

--=20
Not all who wander are lost.
               J. R. R. Tolkein

------------------------------
From: "Denise P. Stout" <dpstout@ccls.org>
To: "'pubyac@prairienet.org'" <pubyac@prairienet.org>
Subject: RE: Clip art
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2002 09:53:55 CDT

Linda, I find most of the best clipart via Microsoft's Design Gallery.  When
you are in any Microsoft office product, go under the Insert menu, select
Clip art.  This will bring up the Clipgallery.  There is an Icon there that
will bring up the Design gallery website, should you already be connected to
the web.  There is a search engine and hundreds of clip art to choose from.
check the little check boxes of the ones you like, they then should download
directly into the Clipgallery.  you can then copy or insert from there.

Denise M. Pulgino Stout
Youth Services Outreach Librarian
Chester County Library
610-280-2672
dpstout@ccls.org
Why do dragons have long tails?  They can't remember short stories!
"Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend.  Inside of a dog, it's too
dark to read."  Groucho Marx


-----Original Message-----
From: laanders@bellsouth.net [mailto:laanders@bellsouth.net]
Sent: Monday, September 09, 2002 8:18 AM
To: pubyac@prairienet.org
Subject: Clip art


I have been searching the Internet for a source of good clip art for young
children, and haven't found anything that I like.  I need it for some
programs I'm making for my Baby and Me Storytime.  Does anyone know of a
good web site?

I also need the instructions for subscribing to PUBYAC for a friend at work.

Thanks for your help.

Linda Anderson, Nashville Public Library

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

End of PUBYAC Digest 855
************************