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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
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        <p>North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
          <lb />The Formula for<lb />Library Automation Success<lb /><lb />239.50 Server and Client modules<lb />+ 32-bit client/server<lb /><lb />+ Windows functionality<lb /><lb />+ Vear 2000 safe<lb />+ 2h-hr., 7-day tech. support<lb /><lb />We wiped the slate clean and built a Windows® NT library automation system<lb />that adds up. M3 features the latest technology " Z39.50 (version 3); 32-bit<lb />client/server; a true MARC record engine; year 2000 compliancy; plus flexibility,<lb />scaleability and unsurpassed technical support " all at an affordable price.<lb />SIRS Mandarin M3�"� equals the formula for library automation success.<lb /><lb />To learn more about SIRS Mandarin M3, speak with a library automation<lb />specialist today at 1-800-232-SIRS or e-mail mandarin@sirs.com.<lb /><lb />SIRS MANDARIN<lb /><lb />&amp;<lb />SIRS Mandarin, Inc. SIRS CANADA<lb />PO. Box 2348 9630 Route Trans Canadienne<lb />Boca Raton, FL 33427-2348 Montréal, Québec H4S 1V9<lb />1-800-232-SIRS * www.sirs.com MANDARIN.. 1-800-361-1407 * wwwsirs.com<lb /></p>
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        <p>Volume 96, Number 4<lb />ISSN 0029-2540<lb /><lb />ORTH.<lb />ROLINA<lb /><lb />Libraries<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS SERVICES<lb />Beth Hutchison and Mel Burton, Guest Editors<lb /><lb />Winter 1998<lb /><lb />141 Looking Up: The Image of Youth Services Librarians, Patricia E. Feehan<lb />and Jill E. Buie<lb /><lb />145 Charlotte Public Library Speaks Espanol: Approaching the Hispanic Community<lb />through Storytelling, Irania Macias Patterson<lb /><lb />148 | smart Start: One Public LibraryTs Experience, Hannah Owen<lb /><lb />CM: 00/0 0: SPREE Re rong ee rae a are RRR CTT RS<lb />140 From the President<lb /><lb />152 Between Us: ChildrenTs Librarians: Management Gurus of Librarianship?,<lb />Mel Burton<lb /><lb />153 Lagniappe: Kids Traveling Through Cyberspace: ItTs a Family Affair<lb />Trilby Meeks<lb /><lb />155 And in edition ...: The Relationship Between SuperiorsT Self-Disclosure, Offers of<lb />Help, Offers of Cooperation, Frequency of Contact, Trust, and SubordinatesT<lb />Job Satisfaction, Chrystal Bartlett<lb /><lb />147 About the Authors<lb /><lb />158 North Carolina Books<lb /><lb />165 Wired to the World: Webcelerator, Ralph Lee Scott<lb />166 NCLA Minutes<lb /><lb />173 Index to North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Advertisers: Broadfoot's, 161;<lb />Brodart, 154;<lb /><lb />Checkpoint, 147;<lb /><lb />Current Editions, 151;<lb /><lb />Ebsco, 164;<lb />Mumford Books, 144;<lb />Phibig, 169 Cover: Original art by Jackie Laine, Gastonia, NC.<lb />Quality Books, 157;<lb />SIRS, front cover; North Carolina Libraries is the official publication of the North Carolina Library Association.<lb /><lb />UNC Press, back cover. Art direction and design by Pat Weathersbee of TeamMedia, Greenville, NC.<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>From the President<lb /><lb />Beverley Gass, President<lb /><lb />140 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />hange is not much fun for anyone, I see now. Change brings loss and, if not grieving,<lb /><lb />a sadness or nostalgia for the way things used to be. Did I really mean it all those<lb /><lb />times in the past when I said that I liked change? Or were those bold words only an<lb /><lb />attempt to reassure myself? ITm sure I meant it when I said that change is difficult.<lb />Now, however, it may be that I understand those words in a new way. Maybe the personal<lb />experience of change is the means for understanding the impact of change within the<lb />workplace or the profession.<lb /><lb />Change is everywhere and is essential even in writing an essay. An authorTs ability to<lb />create smooth transitions and imaginative segues so that the reader is not consciously aware<lb />of a change in thought or having moved into the future of the essay is a good way to measure<lb />a writerTs skill. The ability to move to another part of the essay comes with practice, they say.<lb />Skill in writing comes also with sitting back and letting the words and ideas flow.<lb /><lb />Is this flow the same kind of flow that we seem to be experiencing now in NCLA? I<lb />suppose that each NCLA president wants to make a difference and wants to move the organi-<lb />zation forward during the brief two years of the presidency. Needless to say, I want to be sure<lb />that at the next biennial conference, I can feel a sense of accomplishment. From all indica-<lb />tions, this sense may be mine given the things that others are doing.<lb /><lb />At the October NCLA Executive Board meeting, we heard about several workshops. They<lb />are typical of the kinds of events that keep NCLA strong and a vital source of continuing<lb />education programming during the non-conference year. The list of workshops included the<lb />ChildrenTs Service Section oReading Renaissance Retreat�, the College and University<lb />SectionTs, TFulfilling the Promise of the Millennium,� the Documents SectionTs workshop<lb />entitled oWeb vs. CD-ROM: Access to Electronic Information�, the NCLA Leadership Institute,<lb />RASSTs oNC LIVE: Taking it to the Limit�, and a TNT workshop.<lb /><lb />Al Jones announced that the theme of the 1999 NCLA Biennial Conference is oImagine<lb />the Future.� Surely you have already noted in your calendars that that event is scheduled for<lb />Winston-Salem and the Benton Convention Center on September 21-24.<lb /><lb />The NCLA Development Committee recommendation to establish an endowment fund<lb />through the North Carolina Community Foundation was approved by the Executive Board.<lb />Ross HoltTs work as chair of this committee promises NCLA a new means for supporting the<lb />organization and meeting the needs of members.<lb /><lb />Several other projects are underway within the association. Expect to hear more about<lb />them within the next weeks and months. Look for news from Ben Speller and the new<lb />Continuing Education Committee and Dave FergussonTs Non-Conference Year Planning<lb />Committee. Keep watch, too, for the first edition of NCLA E-News, our upcoming electronic<lb />newsletter edited by Pam Burton.<lb /><lb />Our print journal, North Carolina Libraries, signed an agreement with H.W. Wilson that<lb />allows the journal to be accessed through their full-text online products. Royalties will be<lb />paid to the journal based on the number of hits. Congratulations, Frances Bradburn and<lb />Editorial Board members.<lb /><lb />Have you seen the new tabletop exhibit for NC LIVE that NCLA funded? It is quite<lb />handsome. It is available through Janet Freeman, chair of the Publicity Advisory Committee<lb />of NC LIVE, for the use of libraries and groups across the state.<lb /><lb />I am pleased to announce that NCLA has a new friend and advocate. We nominated<lb />Marcus Trathen, an attorney with the firm of Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey &amp;<lb />Leonard of Raleigh and Greensboro to attend the ALA/ABA sponsored institute oLawyers for<lb />Libraries.� Marcus attended the Chicago conference where he, along with several other attor-<lb />neys, was trained in the applicability of First Amendment to library policies, procedures and<lb />problems, particularly those relating to the use of the Internet in libraries. He joins the cadre<lb />of lawyers who make themselves available to assist librarians in defending the freedom to<lb />read. He reported that he learned lots at the Institute and is willing to assist librarians in their<lb />battles in these arenas. We look forward to hearing about the institute when he attends the<lb />next Executive Board meeting. We also look forward to hearing from you. Write, call, or post<lb /><lb />it to NCLA-L!<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Looking Up:<lb /><lb />The Image of Youth Services Librarians<lb /><lb />by Patricia E. Feehan and Jill E. Buie<lb /><lb />oYes?� The librarian did not bother to look up.<lb />oCould you recommend a good book for a girl?�<lb /><lb />oHow old?�<lb />oShe is eleven.�<lb /><lb />Each week Francie made the same request and each week the librarian asked the same<lb />question. A name on a card meant nothing to her, and since she never looked up into a<lb />childTs face, she never did get to know the little girl who took a book out every day and two<lb />on Saturday. A smile would have meant a lot to Francie and a friendly comment would have<lb />made her so happy. She loved the library and was anxious to worship the lady in charge. But<lb />the librarian had other things on her mind. She hated children anyhow.'<lb /><lb />he year was 1966 and I was 21<lb />years old when I read this pas-<lb />sage from A Tree Grows in Brook-<lb />lyn by Betty Smith. It was my<lb />first foray into literature for<lb />young adults, and I was preparing<lb />myself to become a high school<lb />English teacher. As I read about<lb />FrancieTs visit to the library, the room<lb />began to spin around me and I had to<lb />momentarily put the book down. I was<lb />in total anguish for this little girl who<lb />was so anxious oto worship the lady in<lb />charge� who never looked up! It was dur-<lb />ing this dizzying and exquisitely (not to<lb />mention satisfyingly dramatic) moment<lb />that I decided to become a childrenTs li-<lb />brarian.<lb /><lb />oT would look up!� I vowed. oI<lb />would get to know all of the Francies<lb />and Frankies that walked through the<lb />door of my library! I would be worthy<lb />of their patronage and strive to be able<lb />to recommend good books to them.�<lb /><lb />And so, because of a negative por-<lb />trayal of a librarian in a minor role in a<lb />well-known and beloved novel, I did be-<lb />come a childrenTs librarian, and I<lb />worked against that negative image for<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />17 years before entering the Ph.D. pro-<lb />gram at the University of North Caro-<lb />lina at Chapel Hill. Today, I am a<lb />teacher of childrenTs librarians, and I<lb />feel as strongly today about FrancieTs ex-<lb />perience as I did 21 years ago.<lb /><lb />We all know the negative physical<lb />image of the librarian " an uptight old<lb />maid with her hair in a bun and glasses<lb />perched on the end of her nose who<lb />shushes patrons.<lb /><lb />oThe stereotype may not have<lb />originated in the books that we read<lb />and the shows that we watch, but these<lb />are some of the vehicles for perpetuat-<lb />ing it,� writes Gregg Sapp in his article,<lb />oThe Librarian as Main Character: A<lb />Professional Sampler.�� Sapp includes a<lb />litany of negative characteristics de-<lb />scribing the stereotypical librarian: or-<lb />derliness, introversion, unattractive-<lb />ness, naiveté, etc.<lb /><lb />According to Helene Woodhams,<lb />the typical literary librarians are oof a<lb />~certainT age, i.e., rarely young; they are<lb />single; they are conservative in dress<lb />and manner; they are obsessively tidy in<lb />practice and in appearance (physical<lb />beauty is uncommon, unexpected, and<lb /><lb />jarring when it exists ...)�3 Also, part of<lb />the stereotype is the fact that the librar-<lb />ian is almost always female.*<lb /><lb />I was a mature college student<lb />when I happened upon the hapless fe-<lb />male librarian character with the bad at-<lb />titude. I have no memory of literary<lb />influence preceding this incident. How<lb />often do young people come across a<lb />negative portrayal of a librarian in their<lb />literature? The question begged for<lb />some research.<lb /><lb />The Heylman Study<lb /><lb />Katherine M. Heylman, a school librar-<lb />ian, was the first to address the issue in<lb />an article for School Library Journal in<lb />which she posed this question, oCould<lb />(awful thought) the books we are pur-<lb />veying daily to the new generation be<lb />helping to perpetuate the negative im-<lb />age of ~librarianT we so deeply hate?�®<lb />While much has been written about the<lb />portrayal of the librarian in literature<lb />and films, the image of the librarian in<lb />childrenTs literature is an area that has<lb />gone unexplored. HeylmanTs study of<lb />oLibrarians in Juvenile Literature� was<lb />published in 1975. She analyzed the<lb /><lb />Winter1998 " 141<lb /></p>
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          <lb />image of the librarian in childrenTs fic-<lb />tion, both picture books and chapter<lb />books, and found an opposite stereo-<lb />type of the typically negative character.<lb />Heylman makes an interesting point.<lb /><lb />Ask anyone to describe Marian<lb />the Librarian, and see how many<lb />of these words crop up: glasses,<lb />old maid, dowdy, prim, narrow-<lb />minded, fussy. In point of fact,<lb />none of these words typify<lb />Meredith WilsonTs original<lb />Marian, who is not only pretty,<lb />but has a lot of zip and is trying<lb />desperately but unsuccessfully to<lb />wake up the rest of River City to<lb />newer and broader<lb />viewpoints ... From whence<lb />comes our readiness to lay so<lb />many negative qualities on<lb />Marian? Could we have ingested<lb />any part of it with our early diet<lb />of reading?®<lb /><lb />HeylmanTs study analyzed 22<lb />childrenTs books published between<lb />1932 and 1975. These books included<lb />25 portraits of librarians. The study<lb />scored the characteristics of age, mari-<lb />tal status, appearance, attitude toward<lb />patrons, and the general image left by<lb />the book. Heylman found that the li-<lb />brarian in childrenTs books is female (24<lb />to 1), young (11 to 6), either married or<lb />likely to become so (10 to S), attractive<lb />(13 to 3), has a positive attitude toward<lb />patrons (22 to 3), and presents a gener-<lb />ally positive image (19 to 2).T<lb /><lb />The Buie Study<lb /><lb />In 1997, Jill E. Buie, a school librarian<lb />in Grover, North Carolina, conducted<lb />a study replicating, in part, the<lb />Heylman research. The scope of BuieTs<lb />study® covered childrenTs books, not<lb />young adult books, published after<lb />1975 and hypothesized that the image<lb />of the librarian in childrenTs literature<lb />has remained the same " that is, the<lb />image has remained a positive one.<lb />Buie consulted professional re-<lb />sources such as the Subject Guide to<lb />ChildrenTs Books in Print; A to Zoo: Sub-<lb />ject Access to ChildrenTs Picture Books;<lb />Play, Learn and Grow: An Annotated<lb />Guide to the Best Books and Materials for<lb />Very Young Children; Best Books for Chil-<lb />dren: Preschool through Grade 6; and The<lb />Best in ChildrenTs Books: The University of<lb />Chicago Guide to ChildrenTs Literature to<lb />identify books in which a librarian ap-<lb />pears. Eighteen titles were analyzed. Of<lb />the 18 books, 11 were picture books<lb />and 7 were chapter books. HeylmanTs<lb />characteristics of the librarian were<lb />considered. Again, these included age,<lb /><lb />142 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />marital status, appearance, attitude to-<lb />ward patrons, and the general image<lb />left by the book. Illustrations, dialogue,<lb />and narration were analyzed.<lb /><lb />The Findings by Category<lb /><lb />Age<lb /><lb />Whereas Heylman found 11 representa-<lb />tions of a young librarian and 6 of a<lb />middle-aged to old librarian, the Buie<lb />study found 7 and 10 respectively.<lb />Characters were placed in the oyoung�<lb />group if they were described or ap-<lb />peared as youthful and fit. This seems to<lb />bea oflip flop� of what Heylman found<lb />20 years ago.<lb /><lb />Marital Status<lb /><lb />Heylman found 4 single librarians, 10<lb />married or marriageable librarians, and<lb />5 oprobable old maids.� Buie found 2<lb />single librarians, 5 married or marriage-<lb />able librarians and 2 oprobable old<lb />maids.� This conclusion was based on<lb />placing the youthful librarians called<lb />oMiss� in the single group; the librar-<lb />ians called oMrs.,� or who had boy-<lb />friends or children, in the married and<lb />marriageable group; and those who<lb />were older and lived alone in the oprob-<lb />able old maid� group. In both studies,<lb />the majority of librarians were married<lb />or marriageable.<lb /><lb />Appearance<lb /><lb />Regarding appearance, Heylman found<lb />13 cases of attractive librarians and 12<lb />cases of average to unattractive librar-<lb />ians. Buie found 8 instances of attrac-<lb />tive librarians and 8 instances of aver-<lb />age to unattractive librarians. This was<lb />a highly subjective category. Buie placed<lb />librarians in the attractive category if<lb />they were described as physically attrac-<lb />tive or if they seemed youthful and did<lb />not wear glasses.<lb /><lb />Attitude toward Patrons<lb /><lb />Heylman found 22 occurrences of the<lb />librarian possessing a positive attitude<lb />toward patrons and 3 occurrences of a<lb />librarian exhibiting a negative attitude<lb />toward patrons. The Buie study found<lb />all 19 portrayals of the librarianTs atti-<lb />tude to be positive, and none being<lb />negative. Positive was defined as the li-<lb />brarian being helpful and nice, if not in<lb />the beginning, then at least by the end<lb />of the story.<lb /><lb />General Image Left by Book<lb /><lb />The previous category, attitude toward<lb />patrons, carried the most weight in de-<lb />termining the librarian characterTs<lb />placement in the final category.<lb />Heylman found 19 instances of a posi-<lb />tive general image, 2 instances of a<lb />negative general image, and 1 instance<lb />of a neutral image. The Buie study<lb />found 17 occurrences of a positive gen-<lb />eral image, none that were negative,<lb />and 2 that were neutral. Buie placed two<lb />cases in the neutral group because the<lb />librarianTs appearance in the story was<lb />not memorable.<lb /><lb />BuieTs observations were very simi-<lb />lar to the Heylman study, matching in<lb />the categories of appearance, attitude<lb />toward patrons, and the general image<lb />left by the book. Buie ran chi-square<lb />tests on the categories of age and mari-<lb />tal status. She started with the null hy-<lb />pothesis that time has had no effect on<lb />the portrayal of the librarianTs age and<lb />marital status in childrenTs literature.<lb />The chi-square tests did not reject the<lb />hypothesis. Thus it can be concluded<lb />that the portrayal of librarian characters<lb />in childrenTs literature in terms of age<lb />and marital status has not changed.<lb /><lb />Despite the fact that 27 years have<lb />passed since Heylman conducted her<lb />study of the image of the librarian in<lb />childrenTs literature, an examination of<lb />childrenTs literature published after<lb />1975 to the present reveals that the<lb />positive image that Heylman found has<lb />not significantly changed, although in<lb />regard to age, the librarian more often<lb />appears to be middle-aged or older.<lb /><lb />Heylman offered several explana-<lb />tions for the reversal of the usual librar-<lb />ian stereotype. One explanation was<lb />that editors and authors may be sub-<lb />consciously obuttering up� those who<lb />buy most of the childrenTs trade books.<lb />Another explanation was that othe pre-<lb />ponderance of good-image librarians<lb />results from the fact that people who<lb />write books in general, and particularly<lb />those who write for children, have had<lb />more positive experiences with librar-<lb />ians than negative as they were growing<lb />up.� And, of course, there are a number<lb />of childrenTs authors who have been<lb />childrenTs librarians themselves.�<lb /><lb />Overall, librarians in childrenTs lit-<lb />erature have fared pretty well. And<lb /><lb />... if young people have a negative impression<lb />of librarians, they are not getting it from the<lb /><lb />literature they read.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Heylman states, owhile it is unlikely<lb />that children really see us as we are so<lb />flatteringly presented in the library<lb />books, it is just as possible that they<lb />have not all formed the more usual ste-<lb />reotype in which to place us.�?°<lb /><lb />Taking Image One Step Further<lb /><lb />A psychologist acquaintance of<lb />HeylmanTs pointed out that ostereo-<lb />types do not arise from a vacuum and<lb />are originally modeled to some degree<lb />on reality.�'! We can draw one conclu-<lb />sion from the two small studies dis-<lb />cussed in this article and that is, if<lb />young people have a negative impres-<lb />sion of librarians, they are not getting<lb />it from the literature they read.<lb />Personally, I can take this one step<lb />further. I decided to become a librarian<lb />because of a negative portrayal in a<lb />book. I had decided at age 12 to be-<lb />come an English teacher because I<lb />loved to read literature. I was dissuaded<lb />nine years later when I read A Tree<lb />Grows in Brooklyn. It would be interest-<lb />ing to find out what drew other<lb />childrenTs librarians to the library pro-<lb />fession. But thatTs another article.<lb /><lb />Recruitment and Training of<lb /><lb />Youth Services Librarians<lb /><lb />I did find out, however, a little infor-<lb />mation on the status of youth services<lb />recruitment and training in schools of<lb />library and information science. In<lb />June 1998, an informal survey was sent<lb />to 179 faculty listed in the directory of<lb />the Association of Library and Informa-<lb />tion Science Education. The directory<lb />indicated faculty whose research and<lb />teaching were in the area of program-<lb />ming and services to children and<lb />young adults in school and public li-<lb />braries. The informal survey asked ten<lb />short questions covering enrollment,<lb />coursework, the image of youth ser-<lb />vices, reasons that students choose<lb />youth services professions, and the<lb />facultyTs opinion on the strength and<lb />vitality of the area of youth services in<lb />general. I discovered that the oincred-<lb />ible, shrinking� childrenTs librarian<lb />written about in Mary SomervilleTs ar-<lb />ticle oFacing the Shortage of ChildrenTs<lb />Librarians�? in the ~80s, has not disap-<lb />peared altogether.<lb /><lb />There were only 28 respondents,<lb />but they represented half of the ALA-<lb />accredited schools of library and infor-<lb />mation science. Thirteen respondents<lb />felt that more people were entering the<lb />field of youth services. Adding my own<lb />opinion to the responses, based on ten<lb />years of working as a faculty member in<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />this area, I would say that the number<lb />of graduate students in youth services<lb />enrolled in the College of Library and<lb />Information Science at the University<lb />of South Carolina basically has been<lb />stable. The number of students in<lb />youth services has consistently made<lb />up half of the overall student body.<lb />More graduates are entering the school<lb />library media program, fewer in public<lb />library youth services.<lb /><lb />Technology has had the biggest im-<lb />pact on libraries, library schools, and<lb />on the youth services curriculum.<lb />While some faculty feel there is not<lb />time for onecessary electives that pro-<lb />duce well-prepared youth services li-<lb />brarians,� others are developing and<lb />adding innovative courses that inte-<lb />grate electronic resources, multimedia<lb />materials, and computer applications.<lb />The coursework has definitely changed<lb />in both content and teaching methods<lb />that reflect the new technologies (e.g.,<lb />distance education via telecommunica-<lb />tions), and are in keeping with current<lb />professional issues and theories.<lb /><lb />While the majority of respondents<lb />said that there was no longer an em-<lb />phasis on traditional storytelling and<lb />programming, many new areas were<lb />being addressed in youth services<lb />courses. These areas include adminis-<lb />tration and management, strategic<lb />planning, advocacy for youth, assess-<lb />ment information, multiculturalism in<lb />literature, a focus on family services,<lb />and collaborative program planning<lb />among others. The image of the youth<lb />services librarian ten years ago may<lb />have been someone sharing a picture<lb />book with a group of preschoolers or<lb />booktalking to a high school class. To-<lb />day ~s image includes that of a techni-<lb />cally skilled cybrarian drafting budgets,<lb />facilitating focus groups, and learning<lb />to assess not only materials collections,<lb />but also community needs, both inter-<lb />nally and externally.<lb /><lb />The majority of respondents feel<lb />that the image of youth services has<lb />stayed the same in the past 15 years. As<lb /><lb />one respondent put it, onaturally being<lb />a feminized area and more devoted to<lb />children diminishes its status but it is<lb />still well regarded in a minor status.�<lb />There is a critical need for childrenTs li-<lb />brarians, especially in school library<lb />media centers, and they are doing well<lb />by the communities they serve. Other<lb />respondents feel the image has been<lb />strengthened by technology while re-<lb />maining true to concerns with litera-<lb />ture, reading, and literacy. If there have<lb />been changes in recruitment at all, it is<lb />because once students enter a graduate<lb />program, they are exposed to what<lb />some call the oautomation glitz,�<lb />which becomes a stronger calling. The<lb />increase in corporate or special librar-<lb />ies is also a factor.<lb /><lb />Graduate students in youth ser-<lb />vices are practical as well as philosophi-<lb />cal. They love children and childrenTs<lb />literature, and they want to make a dif-<lb />ference. They enjoy public service and<lb />are interested in advancing literacy.<lb />They are choosing school libraries be-<lb />cause of (1) the pay; (2) the critical<lb />needs in schools that produce lots of<lb />job opportunities; and (3) a work<lb />schedule that leaves them time for<lb />their families and the summers off. It is<lb />a change for teachers who wish to re-<lb />main in a learning environment and<lb />build on their teaching backgrounds.<lb />The application of technology also is<lb />attractive to some.<lb /><lb />Those choosing the public library<lb />environment relish variety, autonomy,<lb />freedom, and having fewer regulations<lb />than in schools.<lb /><lb />Respondents generally feel there is<lb />a positive and energetic feeling in the<lb />field. The image in library literature is<lb />that of the ooverworked and underval-<lb />ued� librarian, but in general those re-<lb />cruited into youth services are among<lb />the best and the brightest and the most<lb />dedicated. One respondent added a<lb />note that an ALA advisement employ-<lb />ment center head had told her that a<lb />childrenTs specialist could name any<lb />state and find a job there.<lb /><lb />The image of the youth services librarian ten years<lb />ago may have been someone sharing a picture<lb />book with a group of preschoolers or booktalking to<lb />a high school class. Today ~s image includes that of<lb />a technically skilled cybrarian ...<lb /><lb />Winter1998 " 143<lb /></p>
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        <p>My personal take on many of the<lb />responses I received was that vital youth<lb />services programs in our library schools<lb />may exist because of faculty who feel<lb />that owe need to put the kids first�; fac-<lb />ulty who feel that othe opportunity for<lb />creative renewal and revisioning of<lb />youth services in our ~information ageT<lb />is there�; faculty who oworry about the<lb />perception by todayTs library students<lb />that public library youth services posi-<lb />tions are overworked and underpaid, as<lb />well as underappreciated,� but who<lb />counteract that perception on a daily<lb />basis as enthusiastic and positive role<lb />models who feel that it is still a ogrow-<lb />ing, vibrant, promising aspect of the<lb />profession.�<lb /><lb />In the past ten years, six of eight<lb />presidents of the American Library As-<lb />sociation have put a great deal of em-<lb />phasis on serving youth. One respon-<lb />dent expressed the opinion that the<lb />area is strong and could be getting<lb />stronger.<lb /><lb />It is a time of great opportunity to<lb />make the oimage� more attractive and<lb />timely. We can start them out with the<lb />positive image of librarians in childrenTs<lb />literature, continue to set a positive ex-<lb />ample as practitioners in our schools<lb />and in public libraries, and recruit them<lb />into a field for which there is great hope<lb />and passion.<lb /><lb />Picture Books Analyzed in the Buie<lb /><lb />Study<lb /><lb />Alexander, Martha. How My Library<lb />Grew, by Dinah. New York: H.W. Wil-<lb />son Co., 1983.<lb /><lb />Best, Cari. Red Light, Green Light, Mama<lb />and Me. New York: Orchard Books,<lb />1995.<lb /><lb />Deedy, Carmen Agra. The Library<lb />Dragon. Atlanta: Peachtree, 1994.<lb /><lb />Green, John F. Alice and the Birthday<lb />Giant. New York: Scholastic, 1989.<lb /><lb />Houghton, Eric. WalterTs Magic Wand.<lb /><lb />New York: Orchard Books, 1989.<lb /><lb />Hulbert, Jay and Sid Kantor. Armando<lb />Asked oWhy?� Milwaukee: Raintree<lb />Publishers, 1990.<lb /><lb />Kimmel, Eric A. I Took My Frog to the<lb />Library. New York: Viking Penguin,<lb />1990.<lb /><lb />Pinkwater, Daniel. Aunt Lulu. New York:<lb />Macmillan, 1988<lb /><lb />Porte, Barbara Ann. Harry in Trouble.<lb />New York: Greenwillow, 1989.<lb /><lb />Radlauer, Ruth Shaw. Molly at the<lb />Library. New York: Simon &amp; Schuster,<lb />1988.<lb /><lb />West, Dan. The Day the TV Blew Up.<lb />Niles, Illinois: Albert Whitman &amp; Co.,<lb />1988.<lb /><lb />Chapter Books<lb /><lb />Cleary, Beverly. Dear Mr. Henshaw. New<lb />York: Morrow, 1983.<lb /><lb />Clifford, Eth. Help! ITm a Prisoner in the<lb />Library. Boston: Houghton Mifflin,<lb />1979.<lb /><lb />Dahl, Roald. Matilda. New York: Viking<lb />Kestrel, 1988.<lb /><lb />Greenwald Sheila. The Mariah Delany<lb />Lending Library Disaster. Boston:<lb />Houghton Mifflin, 1977.<lb /><lb />MacLachlan, Patricia. Baby. New York:<lb />Delacorte Press, 1993.<lb /><lb />Mahy, Margaret. The Great Piratical<lb />Rumbustification and the Librarian and<lb />the Robbers. Boston: David R. Godine,<lb />1978.<lb /><lb />Miles, Betty. Maudie and Me and the Dirty<lb />Book. New York: Avon Books, 1980.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />' Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brook-<lb />lyn (New York: Harper &amp; Row, 1943,<lb />1947; Perennial Library edition, 1968):<lb />24-25.<lb /><lb />2 Gregg Sapp, oThe Librarian as<lb />Main Character: A Professional Sam-<lb />pler� Wilson Library Bulletin (January<lb />HOSAE2o:<lb /><lb />3 Helene Woodhams, oTo Know<lb />What People Think about the Public<lb />Library ... Read a Novel!� Public Librar-<lb />ies 35 (November/December 1996):<lb />354.<lb /><lb />* Melvin K. Burton, oWhose Mom Is<lb />a Librarian? Or Does Gender Make a<lb />Difference in ChildrenTs Librarianship?�<lb />North Carolina Libraries (Summer 1993):<lb />72-74.<lb /><lb />* Katherine M. Heylman, oLibrarians<lb />in Juvenile Literature,� School Library<lb />Journal (May 1975): 25.<lb /><lb />Selbidyi2s-<lb /><lb />7 Ibid.<lb /><lb />8 jill E. Buie, The Image of the Librar-<lb />ian in ChildrenTs Literature, Graduate Re-<lb />search Project, College of Library and<lb />Information Science, University of<lb />South Carolina, 1997.<lb /><lb />° Heylman, 25.<lb /><lb />10 Tbid., 25-26.<lb /><lb />elbidii26:<lb /><lb />% Virginia Van Vliet, oGreat Expecta-<lb />tions: the Role of the Professional<lb />ChildrenTs Librarian,� Emergency Librar-<lb />ian 17 (May/June 1990): 28-31.<lb /><lb />Errata!<lb /><lb />At the time of the writing of Dr. Kenneth Shearer's article, oReadersT<lb />Advisory Services: New Attention to a Core Business of the Public<lb />Library,� (Fall 1998), the number of items in NoveList was 62,000 not<lb />34,000. We apologize for the error.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />¢ 19 Years of Service<lb /><lb />¢ oHands On� Selection<lb /><lb />¢ Pre-School Through Adult<lb /><lb />¢ Discounts up to 70% Off<lb /><lb />¢ Now Two Adjacent Warehouses<lb />* Sturdy Library Bindings<lb /><lb />* 100% Fill<lb /><lb />* Cataloging/Processing Available<lb /><lb />(904) 737-2649<lb /><lb />144 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />¢ Over 21,000 Current &amp; Backlist Titles<lb /><lb />~Nothing like seeing<lb />for yourself.�<lb /><lb />MUMFORD LIBRARY BOOKS, SOUTHEAST, INC.<lb />7847 Bayberry Road ¢ Jacksonville, Florida 32256<lb /><lb />FAX: (904) 730-8913<lb /><lb />MUMFORD<lb /><lb />RELIABLE WHOLESALER SINCE 1977<lb /><lb />North Carolina Representative " Phil May<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />1-800-367-3927<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Charlotte Public Library Speaks Espafiol:<lb /><lb />Approaching the Hispanic Comm Te ioe<lb /><lb />through Storytelling<lb /><lb />by /rania Macias Patterson<lb /><lb />e In 1998, 12 million Hispanic children live in America, up from 9.8 million in 1990. That<lb />compares with 50.8 million non-Hispanic whites and 11.4 million non-Hispanic blacks.<lb /><lb />e Hispanics are the second-largest group of U.S children.<lb /><lb />¢ Hispanic children are more likely than whites or blacks to lack health insurance, more than<lb />twice as likely as whites to drop out school, and more likely than blacks or whites to live in<lb />poverty when someone in the household works, federal statistics show.<lb /><lb />* In North Carolina, public schools struggle to cope with a steady stream of Hispanic immi-<lb />grants whose children speak little or no English.<lb /><lb />¢ State officials say public school enrollment of Latinos grew 285 percent from 1990-91 to<lb />1997-98, with Mecklenburg (jumping from 740 students to 2,813), Cumberland (from 1,328<lb />to 2,454), and Onslow (from 457 to 822), the fastest growing counties.<lb /><lb />e The 1990 Census showed that there were 6,061 Hispanics in the Charlotte Mecklenburg<lb />area; today there are approximately 60,000 Hispanics, a figure that still probably is underes-<lb /><lb />timated.<lb /><lb />e Hispanics are arriving in Charlotte at a rate of 12 per day.<lb /><lb />e English as a Second Language Programs have 1,478 students speaking 48 different languages<lb />in ESL classes, with Spanish as one of the most common languages.<lb /><lb />" The Charlotte Observer, July 2, 1996, 1A.<lb /><lb />he increase in the Hispanic<lb />population, as seen in the<lb /><lb />above statistics, has been an<lb />unexpected factor in the<lb />economy of Charlotte, a city that<lb /><lb />offers Hispanics a welcoming en-<lb />vironment. Recognizing the need<lb /><lb />to improve the literacy skills and the<lb />accessibility to bilingual materials to<lb />this community, the Public Library of<lb />Charlotte and Mecklenburg County<lb />hired a bilingual childrenTs specialist.<lb />In October 1997, the library began its<lb />Early Intervention Reading Program for<lb />Hispanic/Latino families funded in part<lb />by the Foundation of the Carolinas<lb />through their new Building A Better<lb />Future grant program. The libraryTs<lb />Early Intervention program primarily<lb />provides low-income Hispanic children<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />(18 months through 4 years) and their<lb />families with reading readiness and lan-<lb />guage experiences in both Spanish and<lb />English. To achieve this goal, I was<lb />hired as a bilingual storyteller to serve<lb />as a liaison between the library and the<lb />Hispanic community. I worked closely<lb />with Pat Siegfried, director of Youth<lb />Services Department, in developing the<lb />program.<lb /><lb />Objectives<lb /><lb />I work with parents to achieve the fol-<lb />lowing objectives:<lb /><lb />¢ Provide strategies for sharing<lb />literature with their children and<lb />expand their childrenTs pre-reading<lb />skills.<lb /><lb />e Expose these parents to library<lb /><lb />services and help them become self-<lb />sufficient.<lb /><lb />e Teach adult family members com-<lb />puter search strategies as well as<lb />facilitate word processing, basic<lb /><lb />computer techniques, and Internet<lb />skills.<lb /><lb />e Listen to family needs and refer the<lb />families to appropriate community<lb />services (Health Department,<lb />Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools,<lb />Spanish language media, etc).<lb /><lb />e Provide workshops for teachers and<lb />library staff to overcome the<lb />language barrier and help Latinos<lb />access resources.<lb /><lb />The Program<lb />My first question was how to begin. Al-<lb /><lb />WinteR1998 " 145<lb /></p>
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        <p>though we had searched for program<lb />models, our particular approach seemed<lb />to be unique. First, it was very impor-<lb />tant to understand the characteristics of<lb />the Hispanic population in Charlotte,<lb />which is composed primarily of new im-<lb />migrants. I knew the majority of the<lb />community was Mexican and I thought<lb />that being a Venezuelan could be a bar-<lb />tier; however, I quickly learned that if I<lb />showed them my true desire to help<lb />them improve their lives, and~used my<lb />sense of humor to break the ice, there<lb />would be no barriers.<lb /><lb />In some countries in Latin America,<lb />it is not common to have storytellers in<lb />the library, and my title was Narradora<lb />de Cuentos or Storyteller. At first the His-<lb />panic parents thought: o;Una Narradora<lb />de cuentos? Well, I do not need that. I<lb />need a job first, or health assistance.�<lb />They did not see the purpose of having<lb />a storyteller until I explained to them<lb />what it meant. For some low income<lb />families, education is not a need. For<lb />them, health services or job opportuni-<lb />ties are their priorities. My job was to<lb />open their eyes and make them under-<lb />stand that education should be a big<lb />need in their lives .<lb /><lb />I had to make parents and<lb />preschoolers fall in love with reading,<lb />but storytelling was a concept they did<lb />not understand. These parents were<lb />never read to before as children, so why<lb />are they going to read to their children<lb />now? It was like telling someone who<lb />has never tried a mango to eat one just<lb />because it tastes good! I knew that until<lb />they understood what I was talking<lb />about, they would neither get involved<lb />in the program nor come to the library.<lb />I took hundreds of flyers advertising the<lb />program to health fairs, festivals,<lb />schools, churches, and organizations<lb />that target Hispanics. I went on radio<lb />programs and wrote several articles in<lb />La Noticia, a local Hispanic newspaper.<lb />I found that personal contact was the<lb />best way to reach the population.<lb /><lb />I contacted three mothers who<lb />lived in the most concentrated Hispanic<lb />areas of the county. They were assigned<lb />to be the leaders of their apartment<lb />complex and spread the word, and they<lb />became known as the oMom Leaders.�<lb />We started in their homes with three<lb />children in each, and after a month, we<lb />had approximately eight per home.<lb />Then one mother told another mother<lb />in a different area of the city, and the<lb />phone began to ring. More and more<lb />parents were wondering what was go-<lb />ing on in their friendsT homes and were<lb />inviting me to start a new group in their<lb /><lb />146 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />neighborhoods. I never said oNo;� in-<lb />stead, I went to their houses and gath-<lb />ered the people in the surrounding<lb />homes to form bigger groups. Three<lb />months later, I had five regular pro-<lb />grams being conducted in homes and<lb />two programs in libraries.<lb /><lb />By the time I had 13 children in one<lb />of the Mom LeadersT homes and only<lb />three parents with transportation, I<lb />knew it was time to move them into the<lb />library. The home was small and did not<lb />offer the quality setting that a story time<lb />required"the telephone rang, a child<lb />wanted to pick up his toy under the<lb />sofa, the room was too cold or hot, a<lb />mother needed to cook because her<lb />husband was coming home soon. These<lb />were all problems I needed to resolve<lb />soon, but I was not sure how. Finally, I<lb />suggested that we all take the bus to the<lb />library and we did.<lb /><lb />It was and still is very hard to tell a<lb />mother who does not speak English,<lb />depends on her husband for everything,<lb />and who has two or three babies to take<lb />a bus. It was an educational campaign<lb />that required a lot of psychology. Gradu-<lb />ally, the mothers understood the signifi-<lb />cance of their childrenTs educations and<lb />the little sacrifices they needed to make.<lb /><lb />To help the communication be-<lb />tween the staff and the Hispanic com-<lb />munity, I translated into Spanish some<lb />library forms such as the application<lb />card, the library procedures and policies,<lb />the childrenTs program listings, and<lb />other brochures. This still was not<lb />enough, so I prepared two workshops<lb />for the librarians titled oExcellence to<lb />Hispanics.� This workshop covered<lb />some cultural issues as well as vocabu-<lb />lary necessary to use with Hispanic pa-<lb />trons in a library environment.<lb /><lb />Evaluation<lb /><lb />We developed several forms to evaluate<lb />childrenTs progress, tours, and work-<lb />shops. We also created a log to track re-<lb />quests from the public, referrals made,<lb />and sources of information about the<lb />program. Every three months we met<lb />with the families at their homes where<lb />we discussed their childrenTs develop-<lb />ment in such areas as book and print<lb />awareness, word recognition, language<lb />comprehension in both languages, re-<lb />sponses to text, social and personal skills,<lb />and knowledge of general concepts.<lb /><lb />Computer Skills<lb /><lb />In addition to storytelling, we began a<lb />program to help Hispanic framilies use<lb />computers to search for materials for<lb />themselves. I had found that many or-<lb />ganizations that assist low income His-<lb /><lb />panics are resolving their emergency<lb />problems, but forget that they also need<lb />to become self-sufficient. I taught them<lb />how to use library computers to find<lb />books of interest to them and gave them<lb />a bibliography of bilingual and Span-<lb />ish books. I also recruited four volun-<lb />teers to teach Microsoft Word and the<lb />Internet in Spanish to this community.<lb />At first we offered the computer classes<lb />to the families already involved in story<lb />time. In less than a month, however,<lb />demand was so great that we extended<lb />the classes to the community in gen-<lb />eral. After attending four consecutive<lb />classes, participants received a odiploma<lb />of participation� which gave them a<lb />sense of accomplishment. We also cre-<lb />ated a Spanish computer guide for this<lb />course.<lb /><lb />Some Problems<lb /><lb />Some English speaking parents want<lb />their children to learn Spanish through<lb />storytelling, but this is not our current<lb />objective. Also some Hispanic parents<lb />want their school-age children to attend<lb />the storytelling session and, although<lb />the program is designed for pre-<lb />schoolers, we have made it clear that<lb />everyone is welcome.<lb /><lb />In some home day cares, I work<lb />with Vietnamese, Cambodian, His-<lb />panic, Russian, or Chinese children.<lb />What language am I going to use if they<lb />do not speak English or Spanish? At<lb />these moments I feel frustrated, but I<lb />am always prepared with many books,<lb />ideas, and games. It is fascinating to see<lb />children who do not speak the same<lb />language participating and listening to<lb />the storytelling.<lb /><lb />Teaching English<lb /><lb />I use an ESL approach as part of my<lb />storytelling sessions. Storytelling is an<lb />excellent way to teach any language,<lb />especially when the story is highly pre-<lb />dictable, includes vocabulary from the<lb />home and school environment, is re-<lb />petitive, and makes use of patterns (like<lb />those found in Brown Bear, Brown Bear,<lb />What Do You See?), and lends itself to<lb />the use of visuals to illustrate its con-<lb />tent and progress. If the children do not<lb />speak English, I tell the story in Span-<lb />ish first and, later, in English. Sometimes<lb />the visuals are so good that it is not<lb />necessary to use Spanish at all.<lb /><lb />Results<lb /><lb />Our program has grown significantly in<lb />seven months. The following are some<lb />indicators of our success:<lb /><lb />¢ We have accumulated approxi-<lb />mately 165 volunteers hours.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>¢ Ninety percent of the families who<lb />were in the program for at least<lb />three months have library cards.<lb /><lb />¢ At this point, 80% of the children<lb />who were in the program for 6<lb />months showed improvement.<lb /><lb />e Five groups of families have deposit<lb />collections of at least ten books in<lb />both languages.<lb /><lb />¢ More than 18 library promotional<lb />and informational materials have<lb />been translated into Spanish.<lb /><lb />¢ Fifteen percent of the families are<lb />using library materials and the<lb />computer system independently.<lb /><lb />e At least ten families involved in the<lb />program have registered their<lb />children in the new preschool<lb />program, and they are ready to start<lb />school.<lb /><lb />¢ Each week the library receives calls<lb />requesting programs for older<lb />children, not just Hispanics, but<lb />children in general.<lb /><lb />A Final Thought: Who Am I?<lb /><lb />I often ask myself: am I a librarian or a<lb />social worker? Am I a storyteller or a<lb />teacher? Am I a Venezuelan or a His-<lb />panic in the US? Am I an executive or<lb />an actress? Am J a referral agency or a<lb />translator? In order to be successful in<lb />this exciting and challenging role, I<lb />have had to be prepared for every con-<lb />tingency. This program is a result of<lb />collaborative work between Pat Siegfried<lb />and me. Our communication about the<lb />progress and limitations of the program,<lb />as well as our genuine desire to serve<lb />this community, have been important<lb />factors for this project as it continues<lb />to grow and challenge us.<lb /><lb />Favorite books to built English vo-<lb />cabulary:<lb />(In general Tana Hoban books are good<lb /><lb />to teach concepts).<lb />Carle, Eric. Do You Want To Be My Friend?<lb /><lb />Crowell, 1971<lb /><lb />Carle, Eric. The Very Hungry Caterpillar.<lb />Philomel Books, 1987<lb /><lb />Charles, N.N. What Am I? Blue Sky<lb />Press, 1994.<lb /><lb />Ehlert, Lois. Color Farm. Lippincot, 1990.<lb /><lb />Fox, Men. Hattie and the Fox. Bradbury<lb />Press, 1987.<lb /><lb />Martin, Bill. Brown Bear, Brown Bear<lb />What Do You See? Holt, Rinehart, Win-<lb />ston, 1983.<lb /><lb />Morgan, Pier. The Turnip. Philomel<lb />Books, 1990.<lb /><lb />Shaw, Charles. It Looked Like Spilt Milk.<lb />Harper Row, 1947.<lb /><lb />Walter, Virginia. Hi, Pizza Man!<lb />Goembel, Ponder, 1995.<lb /><lb />Wise Brown, Margaret. Good Night,<lb />Moon. Harper Trophy, 1947/1997.<lb /><lb />Some Spanish and bilingual books<lb /><lb />parents like to use for pre-school<lb /><lb />children:<lb /><lb />Ada, Alma Flor. The Christmas Tree.<lb />Hyperion Books For Children, 1997.<lb /><lb />Bang, Molly. Diez Nueve, Ocho. Green-<lb />willow Books, 1997.<lb /><lb />Barbot, Daniel. Rosaura En Bicicleta.<lb />Ediciones Ekare, 1997.<lb /><lb />Carlson, Nancy. Me Gusto Como Soy.<lb />Viking, 1997.<lb /><lb />Freeman, Don. Corduroy. Puffin Books,<lb />1990.<lb /><lb />Gonzalez/Delacre. The Bossy Gallito/El<lb />Gallo de Bodas. Scholastic, 1994.<lb /><lb />Guarino, Deborah. Tu Mamd Es Una<lb />Llama. Scholastic, 1993.<lb /><lb />Haggerty, Mary Elizabeth. Una Grieta En<lb />La Pared. Lee &amp; Low Books, Inc, 1993.<lb /><lb />Kleven, Elisa. Viva Pifiata. Dutton<lb />ChildrenTs Books, 1996.<lb /><lb />Kraus, Robert. Leo El Capullo Tardio.<lb />Windmill Books, 1997.<lb /><lb />Roe, Eileen. Con Mi Hermano/With My<lb />Brother. Bradbury Press, 1991.<lb /><lb />Rosen/Oxenbury. Vamos A Cazar un Oso.<lb />Ediciones Ekare,1993.<lb /><lb />oTortillas Para Mama and Other Nursery<lb />Rhymes. Holt/Rinehart/Winston,1981.<lb /><lb />Wells, Rosemary. oNora La Revoltosa.<lb />Dial Books for Young Readers, 1997.<lb /><lb />Note: Wordless picture books are good for par-<lb />ents who do not read English because they can<lb />create the words.<lb /><lb />Be<lb />ABOUT THE AUTHORS ...<lb />Mel Burton<lb /><lb />Jill E. Buie<lb /><lb />Patricia E. Freehan<lb /><lb />South Carolina<lb />Trilby Meeks<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., University of Delaware; M.L.I.S., University of South Carolina<lb />Position: Information Services Manager, Mint Hill Library.<lb /><lb />Hannah Owen<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., University of Maryland; M.L.S., UNC-Greensboro<lb />Position: Youth Services Librarian, Hickory Public Library<lb /><lb />Irania Macias Patterson<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Universidad Catolica Andres Bello, Caracas<lb /><lb />Education: B.A., Central Methodist College; M.A.L.S. University of Missouri-Columbia<lb />Position: ChildrenTs Information Specialist, North County Regional Library, Public Library of<lb />Charlotte and Mecklenburg County<lb /><lb />Education: M.L.I.S., University of South Carolina<lb />Position: Media Specialist, Grover Elementary School, Grover, NC<lb /><lb />Education: M.L.S., Western Michigan University; Ph.D., UNC-Chapel Hill<lb />Position: Associate Professor, College of Library and Information Science, University of<lb /><lb />Position: Bilingual Children Specialist, Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg SOueoi<lb /><lb />Tired of making opermanent loans?�<lb /><lb />Ralph M. Davis, Sales Representative<lb />P.O. Box 144<lb /><lb />Rockingham, NC 28379<lb /><lb />| 1-800-545-2714<lb /><lb />i CheckpointT<lb /><lb />Tomorrow's Technology for TodayTs Libraries�"�<lb /><lb />550 Grove Road « P.O. Box 188 * Thorofare, New Jersey 08086<lb />(800) 257-5540 * TELEX: 84-5396 * FAX: (609) 848-0937<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries WinteR1998 " 147<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Smart Start:<lb /><lb />One Public Library's Experience<lb /><lb />n August of 1998, I attended the<lb />annual membership meeting of<lb />the Catawba County Partnership<lb />for Children (Smart Start).! The<lb />outgoing director of the board for<lb />this program reflected on the<lb />PartnershipTs accomplishments over<lb />the past four years. She pointed to<lb />many areas in which Smart Start has im-<lb />proved the quality of childrenTs lives in<lb />this county. She particularly mentioned<lb />the libraryTs Smart Start project, a coop-<lb />erative venture of the Hickory Public<lb />and the Catawba County Public Library.<lb />Our oBooks to Go� outreach service was<lb />well received by local childcare centers.<lb />We all had the warm feeling that you<lb />get when you feel you have done a good<lb />job and have been recognized for it.<lb /><lb />Recently on a youth services sur-<lb />vey, I named Smart Start as North<lb />CarolinaTs greatest strength in provid-<lb />ing library service to youth. Smart Start<lb />has helped our local libraries meet the<lb />changing needs of North Carolina chil-<lb />dren and families by funding new li-<lb />brary programs that would not exist<lb />otherwise. Smart Start has produced<lb />other, less tangible benefits, including<lb />the networking of those who provide<lb />services to young children. Four years<lb />ago, however, I certainly felt not the<lb />least bit of warmth toward that un-<lb />known and frustrating organization<lb />called Smart Start!<lb /><lb />Catawba County was awarded<lb />funding in year two of the stateTs Smart<lb />Start initiative. In 1994, putting to-<lb />gether any type of grant had been a<lb />seemingly unattainable goal. The li-<lb />brary and other potential grantees suf-<lb />fered through mountains of paperwork;<lb />meetings at 7:00 a.m., noon, and 5:00<lb /><lb />148 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />by Hannah Owen<lb /><lb />p-m., an ever-changing cast of local<lb />characters and changing application<lb />procedures; and blatant personal agen-<lb />das, hidden agendas, sometimes no dis-<lb />cernible agendas at all. For several of us,<lb />it became a joke to find out when and<lb />where meetings were being held. Some<lb />of us were positive that there were other<lb />meetings to which we were not invited<lb />where presumably the really important<lb />issues were being decided. Surely, some-<lb />one somewhere had a better handle on<lb />the situation. A low point was reached<lb />when one fellow meeting junkie turned<lb />to me and asked, oWhat are YOU doing<lb />here? What does the PUBLIC LIBRARY<lb />have to do with little kids?� If this per-<lb />son, an educated parent of two small<lb />children, did not know that any ran-<lb />dom childrenTs librarian sees more little<lb />children than any other person in any<lb />county, it was obvious that we had<lb />more problems to resolve than the issue<lb />of a Smart Start grant.<lb /><lb />In 1998, we have a highly regarded<lb />and visible array of childrenTs services<lb />funded by Smart Start. All of our pro-<lb />grams are working very well. Every ser-<lb />vice we conceived and implemented is<lb />still going strong. How did we reach this<lb />point after such a disastrous beginning?<lb /><lb />One big obstacle to success was the<lb /><lb />shaky beginning of our local Smart Start<lb />office. The first executive director died<lb />tragically. Then the next director left<lb />quickly in a cloud of general ill will. It<lb />was difficult to get information, and of-<lb />ten no one even answered the phone.<lb />Our local office is now very organized,<lb />helpful, and staffed by people who<lb />know their way around the non-profit<lb />business: not an oxymoron. Now you<lb />can find plenty of information includ-<lb />ing the history, services, and phone<lb />numbers from the state Smart Start Web<lb />site.? Also, in October 1997, Andrew<lb />Pates and Steve Sumerford published a<lb />manual outlining the history, current<lb />projects, and resources for implement-<lb />ing Smart Start library programs.? While<lb />obviously out-of-date the minute it was<lb />published, this manual is still a valuable<lb />document and would be immensely<lb />helpful to individuals just beginning to<lb />put together a grant.<lb /><lb />Our early difficulties were exacer-<lb />bated by the fact that Catawba County<lb />is blessed with not only three public<lb />school systems, but also two public li-<lb />brary systems with separate budgets,<lb />governing bodies, directors, and agen-<lb />das as well. After many attempts to pro-<lb />duce a single grant that would satisfy<lb />every component of the two systems,<lb /><lb />Smart Start has helped our local libraries meet the<lb />changing needs of North Carolina children and<lb />families by funding new library programs that<lb /><lb />would not exist otherwise.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0013" />
        <p>we decided to ask for separate funding.<lb />After presenting our separate, very dis-<lb />parate proposals, however, state officials<lb />told us we had to work together to pro-<lb />duce one grant, regardless of politics or<lb />anyoneTs agenda. This required many<lb />more meetings, of course.<lb /><lb />Throughout this process, the<lb />county system was without a youth ser-<lb />vices librarian for a year, and the city<lb />system had three different directors in<lb />a four-year period. Working with other<lb />childrenTs librarians has always been a<lb />pleasure, and this would prove to be<lb />true when the county finally hired one.<lb />At the beginning, however, I was thrust<lb />into grant writing with no knowledge<lb />of the budget or political process or<lb />even the operations of the county<lb />youth services department, and the<lb />county director at the time was stand-<lb />ing tight beside me with no knowledge<lb />of childrenTs services.<lb /><lb />My library was also in the middle<lb />of automating in a 50-year-old building<lb />with two-foot thick solid brick walls. It<lb />was hard to think what life could be like<lb />with some cash when you were wearing<lb />earplugs and plaster dust was falling in<lb />your hair. Along the way we also en-<lb />joyed The Great Asbestos Scare. We<lb />came to work one day in the middle of<lb />our summer reading program and<lb />found the childrenTs department totally<lb />sealed off. During this week-long pe-<lb />riod, not only were all of our important<lb />papers unavailable, but we anticipated<lb />that quite possibly our entire childrenTs<lb />collection might be declared toxic.<lb />Thankfully, testing revealed no asbestos<lb />problem and life at the library and the<lb />wall-drilling went on.<lb /><lb />Dealing with two finance depart-<lb /><lb />ments was especially tricky. There were<lb />many false starts. Coming right down<lb />to the wire (the grant deadline), the<lb />City of Hickory agreed to be the fiscal<lb />agent for the project.<lb /><lb />The North Carolina Department of<lb />Human Resources now mandates that<lb />the public library is to be represented on<lb />every local Smart Start partnership<lb />board. The library directors who lobbied<lb />to make this happen deserve much<lb />credit. In 1994 there was no official rec-<lb />ognition of the libraryTs importance to<lb />young children and families.* In fact,<lb />several groups in my area proposed<lb />funding projects that duplicated ser-<lb />vices that libraries already had or could<lb />much more easily house. After all, we<lb />are already here " neighborhood-based<lb />and open 70 hours a week. We as librar-<lb />ians all know how wonderful libraries<lb />are and that even the most under-<lb />funded library can be a preschoolerTs<lb />door to learning. We have apparently<lb />failed in a big way, however, to broad-<lb />cast this to many people outside the li-<lb />brary. In our defense, often we are so<lb />busy serving the people who come in<lb />the door, we have no opportunity to fig-<lb />ure out how to serve those who are not<lb />using the library.<lb /><lb />There were, in fact, many benefits<lb />from this whole awful experience. We<lb />got to know our community very well;<lb />we got to know the other agencies that<lb />serve young children well; and we had<lb />the opportunity to tell everyone about<lb />the library. We particularly got to know<lb />our day care providers and conse-<lb />quently changed the way we met their<lb />needs.<lb /><lb />We learned about our community<lb />by attending those official meetings<lb /><lb />Smart Start coordinator, Debbie Oldenbury, at Valley Hills Mall with display.<lb /><lb />and every other gathering in the world<lb />that had anything to do with children:<lb />the day care association, the half-day as-<lb />sociation, and the home day care asso-<lb />ciation. We participated in any and all<lb />events that had to do with small chil-<lb />dren: local community college training,<lb />any kind of child care provider training,<lb />family day events, and back to school<lb />days.<lb /><lb />Along the way we learned that<lb />Catawba County is a relatively wealthy<lb />county, but that the wealth is the result<lb />of our state of full employment and two<lb />wage earners in a family. While no one<lb />seems to be able to produce the exact<lb />numbers, we often are pointed to as a<lb />county with one of the highest percent-<lb />age of working mothers in the nation.<lb />As we got to know our day care provid-<lb />ers (all those meetings), we became<lb />aware of several significant factors: the<lb />large number of small children in full-<lb />time day care,° the huge barriers to qual-<lb />ity day care, and the growing diversity<lb />of the families that all public institu-<lb />tions are trying to serve. It was~clear<lb />from surveys that child care centers<lb />were greatly in need of books,<lb />storytimes, basic training in using<lb />books, and a way of getting these ser-<lb />vices to them during the regular work<lb />day.T It was apparent that both librar-<lb />ies were serving the centers that came<lb />into the libraries fairly well. The county<lb />already had a book-baggers program,<lb />and the city had pre-assembled crates of<lb />books on various popular themes to<lb />loan. Both libraries had very well at-<lb />tended in-house storytimes. In fact, if<lb />you stood in the middle of any library,<lb />you would think we were doing a good<lb />job. After all, storytimes were packed<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Winter1998 " 149<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0014" />
        <p>with groups from day cares, and<lb />childrenTs circulation was increasing<lb />yearly.<lb /><lb />It was also clear that many centers<lb />that had no transportation would ben-<lb />efit greatly if we could figure out a way<lb />to deliver books and storytimes to<lb />them. Many teachers did not think of<lb />using the library as a resource or did not<lb />want to take the time after work to get<lb />books. Even if they did, neither library<lb />had enough quality picture books to<lb />serve all the centers in the area.<lb /><lb />In order to produce an outreach<lb />program that would be acceptable to<lb />both libraries and the local Smart Start<lb />board, and would still meet the needs of<lb />children, I made many frantic phone<lb />calls to Marion Lytle in Rowan County,<lb />Peggy Carter in Caldwell County, and<lb />Erwin Byrd in Asheville-Buncombe. I<lb />am very grateful for their patient and<lb />practical suggestions. I like to think<lb />of what we came up with as the<lb />Ford model of outreach, not an ex-<lb />pensive bookmobile or resource<lb />center, but something that works<lb />and yet would not give our conser-<lb />vative board members fiscal hives.<lb /><lb />With our first grants, we as-<lb />sembled themed crates of books<lb />and bought two Ford Astro vans to<lb />transport books and storytimes to<lb />centers and day care homes. The<lb />milk crates contain 20-25 books, a<lb />puppet, a teacher resource book, a<lb />sheet of fingerplays and songs, and<lb />a musical tape. It took a year of in-<lb />tense physical and mental toil to<lb />assemble these crates. Those of you<lb />who still work under similar cir-<lb />cumstances can imagine buying,<lb />sorting, cataloging, and distribut-<lb />ing $60,000 worth of<lb />picture books. The<lb />books first had to be<lb />carried up a flight of<lb />stairs to an un-<lb />airconditioned sec-<lb />ond floor of an old<lb />house that served as<lb />the childrenTs work<lb />area. Because we were<lb />told quite adamantly<lb />that that we could<lb />not pay salaries with<lb />Smart Start money,<lb />we did not hire any-<lb />one to help imple-<lb />ment our program.<lb />So, who carried the<lb />books up the stairs?<lb />Did we even have<lb /><lb />enough book carts?<lb />The Hickory child-<lb /><lb />190 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />renTs staff hauled the books and mate-<lb /><lb />rials up those stairs and piled the books<lb />in heaps (orderly heaps) on the floor be-<lb />cause, no, we did not have enough<lb />book carts.<lb /><lb />By 1996, however, we received ap-<lb />proval and the money to hire three<lb />part-time storytellers. By the fall of 1997<lb />we received money to hire a coordina-<lb />tor of the program because it had be-<lb />come impossible to run the program in<lb />two different library systems without<lb />someone to oversee it. The required<lb />quarterly report alone was enough to<lb />turn your hair gray. The coordinator<lb />was one of the original storytellers and<lb />has done an excellent job of both see-<lb />ing the big picture and attending to the<lb />minutiae of our programs.<lb /><lb />Clearly, one of our tasks was to<lb />make preschool teachers aware of what<lb />was already available in each library. We<lb /><lb />embarked upon a systematic marketing<lb />campaign of library services. We started<lb />a regular library newspaper column,<lb />regular news releases, surveys, hand-<lb />outs, brochures, radio announcements,<lb />and TV spots. We responded quickly<lb />when a teacher voiced a need that we<lb />knew we could fill. We called people<lb />and offered them services they didnTt<lb />know they could get. While we still find<lb />people who say, oI didnTt know the li-<lb />brary had (fill in the blank) storytime,<lb />boardbooks, teacher resources, baby<lb />storytimes,� there is no doubt that the<lb />visibility of our libraries has improved.<lb /><lb />Our outreach storytelling and book<lb />delivery program, oBooks to Go,� cur-<lb />rently serves 79 facilities with a total of<lb />3,780 children. We participate in well-<lb />regarded training for child-care workers<lb />in conjunction with the ChildrenTs Re-<lb />source Center, another contractor. We<lb /><lb />have been able to solve a constant<lb /><lb />Smart Start Storytellers, Janet Sanders (top) and Karen Gehagen (bottom),<lb />prepare for another presentation.<lb /><lb />complaint of childrenTs depart-<lb />ments: not enough copies of the<lb />most in-demand titles. Our staff<lb />shelves have grown to include fre-<lb />quently used storytime titles, pup-<lb />pets, big books, and bells and<lb />whistles like storytime aprons,<lb />mitts, and musical tapes. All of our<lb />bright and shiny programs that we<lb />are so proud of may seem old-hat to<lb />many of you, but for those of us<lb />who have operated in a cash-starved<lb />situation for many years, it was a bo-<lb />nanza.<lb /><lb />Likewise, books and videos have<lb />enriched our Parent-Teacher Re-<lb />source shelves. We have bought<lb />many titles especially for child care<lb />providers. We run a oBooks for Ba-<lb />bies� program at our two local hos-<lb />pitals that gives ev-<lb />ery newborn a book<lb />and as well as infor-<lb />mation about re-<lb />sources at the public<lb />library. Another pop-<lb />ular service is our<lb />oBooks to Stay�<lb />project. We buy qual-<lb />ity picture books<lb />and musical tapes<lb />for each child care<lb />CElikels = LO Ree p.<lb />While no child care<lb />center could hope to<lb />own the rich diver-<lb />sity of titles any<lb />childrenTs library<lb />owns, there are cer-<lb />tain titles that every<lb />child should hear<lb />again and again. We<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0015" />
        <p>currently are buying a collection of<lb />holiday titles for all the participating<lb />centers.<lb /><lb />We also purchased computers ex-<lb />clusively for the use of preschool chil-<lb />dren. Each library in the county has a<lb />computer with a large screen, little<lb />chairs and tables, and developmentally<lb />appropriate software. In 1994, none of<lb />our libraries had any computers for the<lb />use of any child. While we are now<lb />awash with computers at Hickory Pub-<lb />lic LibraryTs two new buildings (35 com-<lb />puters with preschool games and links<lb />to appropriate Web sites), those first<lb />computers were a much-needed intro-<lb />duction to quality software for many<lb />families. The publicity associated with<lb />those purchases drew many new cus-<lb />tomers to our childrenTs departments.<lb /><lb />Our latest project is oEnglish Com-<lb />ing and Going.� We recognize the grow-<lb />ing diversity of our communities and<lb />want to help very young children and<lb />their families learn English, become<lb />part of our communities, and yet re-<lb />spect their cultural backgrounds. Our<lb />two main libraries have multicultural<lb />centers with childrenTs books and tapes<lb />in ten languages. Both systems also<lb />have kits to loan with bilingual books,<lb />audiotapes, and electronic phonics<lb />games designed to help the whole fam-<lb />ily learn English.<lb /><lb />Do we have any major problems<lb />now? Of course, we still have the prob-<lb />lem of meeting the needs of two sepa-<lb />rate library systems. There is some grip-<lb />ing and sniping with the City of<lb />Hickory who are doing the accounting,<lb />but in general it has proved to be a sat-<lb />isfactory arrangement. The latest trau-<lb />matic problem was the Hickory Public<lb />LibraryTs move to a much anticipated<lb />new state-of-the-art facility where there<lb />was no planning for several new func-<lb />tions including " guess what " the<lb />Smart Start program. There was nothing<lb />wrong that a few meetings couldnTt<lb /><lb />858 Manor Street<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Lancaster, PA 17603<lb /><lb />solve, however.<lb /><lb />The biggest ongoing difficulty has<lb />been evaluating outcomes. The state of<lb />North Carolina is very much interested<lb />in showing ever-increasing numbers,<lb />particularly ounduplicated� numbers.<lb />One state official actually suggested<lb />that we collect and record social secu-<lb />rity numbers from each child in every<lb />storytime to determine if a child was<lb />receiving more than one service. Al-<lb />though we can survey childcare centers<lb />to find out if they are satisfied with our<lb />services, how do you measure the im-<lb />pact of services on a particular child?®<lb />Also, we now have many people want-<lb />ing our services, and our storytellers are<lb />stretched to their limits. We have some<lb />decisions to make. Another problem<lb />we have is finding and keeping part-<lb />time storytellers. Burnout is obviously<lb />a factor.<lb /><lb />The best outcome for us is the in-<lb />creased use of the library by a variety of<lb />families. There is no doubt that the vis-<lb />ibility of the libraries has increased.<lb />There has been increased networking<lb />with all of those who serve children. We<lb />think we are doing a good job of serv-<lb />ing the large number of children who<lb />are in childcare in our county by con-<lb />necting them with books and stories.<lb />We think we are doing a good job of<lb />training and providing resources to our<lb />childcare workers and other persons<lb />serving children. Has Smart Start been<lb />an asset to the library? Yes: I hope no<lb />one ever has the occasion again to ask,<lb />oWhat does the public library have to do<lb />with little kids?�<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />! The annual Board of Directors<lb />Meeting of the Catawba County Part-<lb />nership for Children was held on Au-<lb />gust 17, 1998, at the Mosteller Estate.<lb />Outgoing President and former County<lb />Commissioner Gretchen Peed presided.<lb /><lb />2 The Web site of the North Carolina<lb /><lb />WHOLESALERS<lb /><lb />TO LIBRARIES<lb /><lb />Partnership for Children is http://<lb />www.smartstart-nc.org.<lb /><lb />3 Andrew Pates and Steve Sumerford,<lb />Smart Start In Our Libraries. A Reference<lb />Manual Based On The Experiences of Pub-<lb />lic Libraries In North CarolinaTs Smart<lb />Start Initiative (Greensboro, NC: Greens-<lb />boro Public Library, 1997).<lb /><lb />* The original authorizing legislation<lb />for the Smart Start initiative can be<lb />found on the state Smart Start Web site.<lb />There is no mention of library officials.<lb />No one at the state Smart Start office<lb />could find either the date or the actual<lb />legislation that required library direc-<lb />tors to be on the local board.<lb /><lb />5 According to the U.S. Census Bu-<lb />reau, nationally 69.2% of women with<lb />children under the age of six are in the<lb />workforce. No one seems to be able to<lb />produce this figure for either North<lb />Carolina or Catawba County. However,<lb />the Census Bureau does report that<lb />47.4% of the total Catawba County<lb />workforce is female. According to Marta<lb />Koesling, Director of the ChildrenTs Re-<lb />source Center, the Bureau does report<lb />that as of 1990 the figures for working<lb />single mothers is 63% in the USS.,<lb />66.8% in the state, and 76.6% in<lb />Catawba County.<lb /><lb />Pees ACCOLGING. tO. Lhe<lb />ChildrenTs Resource Center, there were<lb />8,529 children ages 0-4 in Catawba<lb />County and 3,095 were in licensed full-<lb />day centers. This does not include day-<lb />care homes or unlicensed care.<lb /><lb />7 Regular, early reading to children is<lb />one of the most important activities to<lb />prepare young children for school ac-<lb />cording to the National Education<lb />Goals Panel in Special Early Childhood<lb />Report 1997 (Washington, DC, 1997).<lb /><lb />8 On a survey mailed July 1, 1998,<lb />100% of the childcare centers who re-<lb />sponded were overy satisfied� with the<lb />Books to Go program and wanted it to<lb />continue.<lb /><lb />CURRENT EDITIONS, INC.<lb /><lb />1-800-959-1672<lb /><lb />1-800-487-2278 (FAX)<lb />"Support North Carolina Libraries"<lb /><lb />WinterR1998 " 151<lb /></p>
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        <p>eh Ce ee ee<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Librarians:<lb />-Management Gurus of Librarianship?<lb /><lb />dead-end job is how some have referred to<lb /><lb />childrenTs librarianship because the perception is<lb /><lb />that those working in that area donTt have much<lb />skill in management. Will Manley in his March 1998<lb />column in American Libraries stated that there is a strong<lb />feeling that ochildrenTs services are a ticket to oblivion. This<lb />is based upon the assumption that those who choose to<lb />work with children do so because they themselves are<lb />children and simply could not deal with the stressful<lb />demands of management.�! I experienced the lack of faith<lb />in the management skills of childrenTs librarians when I<lb />investigated an available library directorTs job some years<lb />back and was told by the acting director that candidates<lb />with a strong childrenTs services background would not be<lb />seriously considered. While, of course, the status of<lb />childrenTs librarianship varies from one location to another,<lb />there seems to be some validity to the opinion of some<lb />library administrations that childrenTs services staff are not<lb />the management equal of other<lb />department staffs within the<lb />library.<lb /><lb />The irony of the less-than-<lb />impressive evaluations of the<lb />management ability of childrenTs<lb />services staff is that fulfilling the<lb />job requirements should provide<lb />these librarians with the skills to<lb />adopt many cutting-edge manage-<lb />ment ideas. Manley states that<lb />there is no better preparation for<lb />management than serving chil-<lb />dren; oif you can manage kids, you<lb />can manage anything.� Other job<lb />requirements also well prepare<lb /><lb />Being active or energetic and<lb />communicating with other<lb />employees prepares a person<lb />to fulfill an idea proposed in<lb />In Search of Excellence:<lb />MBWA, or management by<lb />wandering around.<lb /><lb />by Mel Burton<lb /><lb />employees informed, and itTs fun.<lb /><lb />Storytelling has long been associated with the job of<lb />childrenTs librarian. The storyteller draws the audience into<lb />an intriguing plot with well-described scenes and lively<lb />characters. Storytelling is used to lead children to books<lb />and reading and in many areas of the world to pass on the<lb />culture of the community. If storytelling has been effective<lb />in passing on mores of various peoples, then storytelling<lb />can also be effective in passing on the corporate culture.<lb />David Armstrong promotes this use of storytelling in his<lb />1992 publication, Managing by Storying Around.* Armstrong<lb />believes that storytelling is the best form of training, gives<lb />recognition by including employee names in the stories,<lb />empowers people, is more memorable, and is fun. If you<lb />want to let a new employee know the preferred conduct,<lb />tell the person a story about how another employee gave<lb />great service to a customer.<lb /><lb />Some recent management literature has stressed<lb />empowerment or being a self<lb />starter. ChildrenTs librarians have<lb />to change what they are doing<lb />continually, often in midstream, to<lb />do what will work best. They also<lb />envision and implement new<lb />projects. Taking charge when<lb />needed and starting new programs<lb />is second nature to many<lb />childrenTs librarians.<lb /><lb />If the job that childrenTs<lb />librarians do is examined thor-<lb />oughly, I believe it would be<lb />concluded that childrenTs librar-<lb />ians are well suited to being<lb />managers. Will those with an<lb /><lb />childrenTs librarians for manage-<lb />ment positions. Ads for childrenTs<lb />librarian positions request traits or<lb />abilities such as creativity, energy, exuberance, ability to<lb />work with various ages, sense of humor, capacity to plan<lb />and enact programs, written and oral communication skills,<lb />and storytelling. These abilities common to childrenTs<lb />librarians are also sought for management positions.<lb /><lb />Being active or energetic and communicating with<lb />other employees prepares a person to fulfill an idea pro-<lb />posed in In Search of Excellence: MBWA, or management by<lb />wandering around.� This means simply moving around and<lb />talking to people. The authors state that the value of MBWA<lb />is that you're accessible and there to listen, it helps keep<lb /><lb />152 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />opposing view take the time to<lb />study the skills of childrenTs<lb />librarians and notice that match<lb />with what is required of managers? Only time will tell, but<lb />mistaken stereotypes die hard.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />!Manley, Will. oTheories on the Disappearance of<lb />ChildrenTs Librarians,� American Libraries, 29, 3 (March<lb />ioe Warsi.<lb /><lb />? Peters, Thomas. In Search of Excellence. NY: Warner<lb />Books, 1993.<lb /><lb />3 Armstrong, David M. Managing by Storying Around.<lb />Three Rivers, MI: D.M. Armstrong, 1992.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />compiled by Plummer Alston Jones, Jr.<lb /><lb />Kids Traveling Through Cyberspace:<lb />ItTs a Family Affair<lb /><lb />by Trilby Meeks<lb /><lb />he Internet, World Wide Web, Information<lb />: Highway, and Cyberspace are all terms used to<lb /><lb />describe the most exciting learning tool of this<lb />century. Thanks to these new technologies, not only<lb />can children children read about volcanoes, they can<lb />see one erupt as well. They can visit great museums<lb />and libraries around the world at the touch of the<lb />keyboard. The benefits of this new technology make it<lb />possible for families to:<lb /><lb />¢ find educational resources<lb /><lb />e get help with homework<lb /><lb />¢ increase reading and cognitive skills<lb /><lb />¢ improve technology and information skills<lb />¢ connect with places around the world<lb /><lb />¢ locate parenting information<lb /><lb />e learn and have fun together<lb /><lb />It is important for parents to educate themselves<lb />about this new technology and the opportunities for<lb />fun and learning that it offers. Just as you monitor and<lb />help your children make selections from the many<lb />cable channels, teaching them to make wise use of this<lb />new medium is one of the most important things a<lb />parent can do. Remember, itTs not the technology but<lb />how it is used.<lb /><lb />Working in ChildrenTs Services at the Public<lb />Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County, I have<lb />reviewed and evaluated appropriate Web sites for<lb />children for many years. The PLCMC does recommend<lb />interesting and useful sites and resources for children<lb />and families to explore. The library does not monitor<lb />and has no control over materials obtained on the<lb />Internet, however, and cannot be held responsible for<lb />its content. Therefore, children twelve years and under<lb />must be accompanied by a parent to access the<lb />Internet. For this reason, I have chosen to focus on<lb />this age group. The following are my recommenda-<lb />tions of oTwenty-plus Great Cybersites� for children<lb />age three to twelve years old and their families.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />For Children 3-5 Years Old<lb /><lb />The Animal Alphabet<lb /><lb />http://www.mrtc.org/~twright/animals/english/alphabet.htm<lb />When you click on a picture, you will learn more about<lb />the animal while learning the alphabet.<lb /><lb />Barney<lb /><lb />http://barneyonline.com<lb />Preschool children and their care giver can join BarneyTs<lb />fan club, visit the green and purple fun page, sing-a-long<lb />songs, and do counting activities.<lb /><lb />The Berenstain Bears Page<lb />http://www.berenstainbears.com<lb />Create your own coloring book, read an interactive book,<lb />dress up the Berenstain bears, plus seasonal fun activities.<lb /><lb />CarlosT Coloring Book<lb /><lb />http://www.coloring.com/<lb />CarlosT coloring page lets your preschooler become a<lb />computer artist.<lb /><lb />Random House for Kids (includes Arthur and Friends<lb /><lb />and Seussville)<lb /><lb />www.randomhouse.com/kids/arthur<lb />This site contains games, books, and activities related to<lb />Marc BrownTs popular character Arthur, plus games,<lb />information, and fun from the publisher of Dr. Seuss<lb />books.<lb /><lb />The Sesame Street Web Site<lb />http://www.sesamestreet.com<lb />Explore your childTs favorite street as you visit the<lb />preschool playground, and learn the Alphabet at Sesame<lb />Street Central. Parents improve their skills at the Parent<lb />Toolbox.<lb /><lb />For Children 6-9<lb /><lb />Ask Dr. Math<lb />http://forum.swarthmore.edu/dr.math/<lb />Ask Dr. Math will help when youTre stumped by math<lb />problems. Good math history resource, too.<lb /><lb />Winter1998 " 153<lb /></p>
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        <p>Flags of the World<lb />http://155.187.10.12/flags/nation-flags.html<lb /><lb />Color pictures of flags of most of the countries of the<lb /><lb />world.<lb /><lb />The History Channel<lb />http://www.historychannel.com/today<lb />This site looks at the many interesting events happen-<lb />ing on a specific day of the year in history.<lb /><lb />The Magic School Bus Page<lb />http://scholastic.com/magicschoolbus<lb />This site encourages activities related to many of the<lb />Magic School Bus adventures.<lb /><lb />The San Diego Zoo<lb />http://www.sandiegozoo.org/Zoo/zoo.html<lb />Take a tour of the San Diego zoo, send postcards, and<lb />play games.<lb /><lb />The White House for Kids<lb />http://www.whitehouse.gov/WH/kids/html/home.html<lb />Socks, the Clinton family cat, takes kids on a tour of<lb /><lb />the White House.<lb /><lb />For Children 10-12<lb /><lb />African American Cyber Gateway<lb />http://www.aawc.com/aawc.html<lb />Links to information about all parts of African Ameri-<lb />can culture.<lb /><lb />American Girl Series<lb />http://www.americangirl.com/ag/ag.cgi<lb />This site expands on the stories in the series and has<lb />a club for fans of American Girl.<lb /><lb />Collection Development Services<lb /><lb />A Custom Tailored Service<lb />for New Title Selection<lb /><lb />Make your new title selection process easier and more productive<lb /><lb />with BrodartTs TIPS * (Title Information Preview Service).<lb />Through nearly 60 years of serving the library community, weTve<lb />learned that saving time is crucial for our library partners.<lb /><lb />KO)<lb />DART<lb /><lb />Brodart Book Services<lb />Collection Development + Cataloging &amp; Processing * Electronic Ordering<lb />500 Arch Street, Williamsport, PA 17705<lb />800-233-8467 * Fax 800-999-6799<lb />Brodart Ltd., 109 Roy Blvd., Brantford, Ontario N3R 7K1<lb />Fax 800-363-0483 * www.brodart.com<lb /><lb />Your partner in creating innovative solutions for libraries.<lb /><lb />134 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />The ASL Dictionary<lb />http://www.deafworldweb.org/asl<lb />Using American Sign Language, learn to count, learn<lb />the alphabet, and learn to tell a story.<lb /><lb />B. J. PinchbeckTs Homework Helper<lb />http://tristate.pgh.net/~pinch13<lb />History, math, science biographies and more.<lb /><lb />Bill Nye the Science Guy<lb />http://nyelabs.kcts.org<lb />This is the online lab for the popular TV show.<lb /><lb />Cells Alive<lb />http://www.cellsalive.com<lb />All the facts on cells, including pictures.<lb /><lb />Countries of the World<lb /><lb />http://www.tradeport.org/ts/countries/<lb />Information and maps can be found about the<lb />countries of the world.<lb /><lb />The Franklin Institute of Science Museum<lb />http://sln.fi.edu/tfi/welcome.html<lb />Education and museum tours available from this<lb />Philadelphia museum.<lb /><lb />The Nine Planets<lb /><lb />http://www.seds.org/billa/tnp/<lb />An overview of the history, mythology, and<lb />current scientific knowledge of the planets and<lb />their moons. Most provide references to additional<lb />information.<lb /><lb />Virtual Visits<lb />http://iti.dpi.state.nc.us/virtualvisits<lb />North Carolina Department of Public Instruction<lb />Project that provides virtual tours of government<lb />buildings and landmarks in North Carolina.<lb /><lb />Volcano World Museum<lb />http://volcano.und.nodak.edu<lb />Great satellite and aerial images and interactive<lb />experiments that supplement other volcano informa-<lb />tion resources.<lb /><lb />For All Ages<lb /><lb />Bonus for Kids<lb /><lb />http://www.bonus.com<lb />A virtual playground and educational resource for<lb />children of all ages.<lb /><lb />The vast majority of Internet sites are perfectly safe.<lb />But like the real world, the virtual world contains some<lb />sites that may not be appropriate for children. Different<lb />families have different standards; therefore, it is impor-<lb />tant to establish clear guidelines for your childTs Internet<lb />use. The best way to ensure your childTs safety on the<lb />Internet is to be there. Of course, that is not always<lb />possible. Just as you teach your child rules about dealing<lb />with strangers outside the home, you must provide rules<lb />for communicating online. Spending time with your<lb />child online is one of the best ways to learn and teach<lb />them responsibility, good conduct, and values that are<lb />important to you. Ask them to share their favorite Web<lb />sites and what they like about them. Help them discover<lb />Web sites that can help them with their homework,<lb />hobbies, and other special interests.<lb /><lb />Happy traveling through cyberspace... oand may the<lb />force be with you!�<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>Spee a<lb /><lb />The Relationship Between<lb />SuperiorsT Self-Disclosure, Offers of Help,<lb />Offers of Cooperation,<lb />Frequency of Contact, Trust, and<lb />SubordinatesT Job Satisfaction<lb /><lb />by Chrystal Bartlett<lb /><lb />Editor's Note: The following research was based on a masterTs thesis at NCSU. In March of 1998,<lb />the staff of the Wake County Public Library System were surveyed as part of a graduate thesis<lb />study at North Carolina State University. The goal of the study was to determine what<lb />influence, if any, five communication behaviors that may be received from immediate<lb />superiors have on subordinate job satisfaction. The five communication behaviors tested were:<lb />self-disclosure, offers of help, offers of cooperation, frequency of contact, and trust. With the<lb />exception of self-disclosure, the communication behaviors were shown to be related to<lb /><lb />subordinatesT job satisfaction levels.<lb /><lb />Literature Review<lb /><lb />The past 10 to 20 years have dramatically changed the opsy-<lb />chological contract� between workers and their employers.<lb />After two decades of employee layoffs, workersT trust and loy-<lb />alty have fallen to record low levels. Studies show todayTs<lb />employees are much more inclined to change jobs in the fu-<lb />ture,! but population changes demand that organizations<lb />must increasingly compete for their services.<lb /><lb />The high costs of turnover, absenteeism, and lack of loy-<lb />alty have led companies to experiment with signing bonuses,<lb />401k matches, on-site daycare, and other equally high-priced<lb />programs to secure their employee assets. These programs<lb />have successfully increased satisfaction, but todayTs volatile<lb />market almost guarantees these programs will be cut when<lb />profits decline. The search for an alternative solution that<lb />both increases subordinate satisfaction without incurring<lb />long-term overhead costs led this researcher to the job satis-<lb />faction antecedents uncovered in 1969 by Smith, Kendall &amp;<lb />Hulin. The antecedents are: the work itself, pay, promotions,<lb />co-workers, and supervision.�<lb /><lb />Many jobs can not be significantly changed, and eco-<lb />nomic imperatives eliminate significant pay and promotion<lb />changes. Changing co-workers, while possible, presents a lo-<lb />gistical nightmare. Supervisors, then, with their heavy impact<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />on employeeTs perceptions and their position as subordinatesT<lb />preferred information source,T present the greatest possibility<lb />for change. Further, supervisorsT communication strongly<lb />influences employee satisfaction.~<lb /><lb />This study examines five superiorsT communication be-<lb />haviors to examine their impact on subordinatesT job satisfac-<lb />tion. Offers of help and offers of cooperation were chosen for<lb />their role in team structures; trust was examined because of<lb />its precipitous drop in recent years.~ Self-disclosure influences<lb />trust-building,® and reflects Generation X communication<lb />styles. Contact frequency touches on the changes technology<lb />and telecommuting have brought to workplace communica-<lb />tion. At the Wake County Public Library System (WCPL), con-<lb />tact frequency relates to shift work, which inhibits workersT<lb />contact with immediate superiors.<lb /><lb />Methodology<lb /><lb />The survey was pretested with 25 employees of the Forsyth<lb />County Library System in 1997. The response rate was 76 %,<lb />and the results showed reliable internal consistency levels.<lb />The survey questions addressed the five communication<lb />behaviors with a five-point scale of responses: strongly agree,<lb />agree, undecided, disagree, and strongly disagree. Job satisfac-<lb /><lb />WinteR1998 " 155<lb /></p>
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          <lb />tion antecedents were used to establish the dependent vari-<lb />able. The return rate was 53.6 with an average satisfaction<lb />score of 7.7021 on a scale ranging from five to fifteen. This<lb />finding indicates WCPL employees enjoy an overall high level<lb />of satisfaction.<lb /><lb />Findings<lb /><lb />Four of this studyTs five hypotheses were proven. The fifth,<lb />self-disclosure, yielded an interesting response pattern. Self-<lb />disclosure has been described as being two-dimensional when<lb />defined by content.T Task-focused self-disclosure is limited to<lb />work and co-worker topics, but personal self-disclosure cov-<lb />ers a wider range.® Task-focused self-disclosure was found to<lb />be substantially related to subordinatesT job satisfaction.<lb /><lb />The trust questions recalled the most commonly cited<lb />aspects of trustworthy behavior: reliability, keeping promises,<lb />and truth-telling. Every trust question was found to be sub-<lb />stantially related to subordinate job satisfaction.<lb /><lb />Helping behavior is defined as actions that have no ben-<lb />efit for the aid-giver.T? The survey questions reflect subordi-<lb />natesT tension when requesting help.'° Some fear perceptions<lb />of incompetence or laziness; the inherent power imbalance<lb />between superior and subordinate creates a reluctance to ask<lb />" despite requests to do so.'' Offers of help were substantially<lb />related to employee satisfaction, except where immediate<lb />superiors offered frequently. Possibly, subordinates perceived<lb />these offers as implications of incompetence.<lb /><lb />Unlike helping behavior, cooperative behavior benefits<lb />both parties.'? Survey questions addressed superiorsT past be-<lb />havior, willingness, and availability to cooperate. Every aspect<lb />tested was substantially related to subordinatesT job satisfac-<lb />tion levels.<lb /><lb />One contact frequency question asked whether subordi-<lb />nates saw their immediate superiors daily; the other measured<lb />employeesT comfort level when contacting their immediate<lb />superiors. Both questions were found to be substantially re-<lb />lated to subordinatesT job satisfaction levels.<lb /><lb />One additional statistical measure explored supervisorsT<lb />general influence on subordinatesT job satisfaction levels. As<lb />a multi-unit organization, WCPL offers standard work, pay<lb />and promotion. Branch hired co-workers vie for promotions<lb />system-wide, creating a similar co-worker pool. The only sat-<lb />isfaction antecedent that varies from branch to branch is the<lb />supervision.<lb /><lb />Satisfaction level variations were noted in the branch-by-<lb />branch analysis. Assigning all causality solely to supervisorsT<lb />is simplistic; job satisfaction does not operate in a vacuum.<lb />But given the literature, it would be negligent to dismiss the<lb />findings. They are most useful for pointing out intervention<lb />opportunities for administration.<lb /><lb />Discussion<lb /><lb />Organization-wide measures for satisfaction show that the<lb />WCPL staff enjoy a high satisfaction level. Recently, WCPLTs<lb />hierarchical boundaries have been flattened. Reduced staff<lb />levels and upper management training in team management<lb />skills have empowered lower staff levels to make decisions<lb />formerly reserved for supervisors. Characterized by democratic<lb />problem solving and idea generation, team management<lb />structures are most effective when accompanied by cross-hi-<lb />erarchy efforts at helping and cooperating.<lb /><lb />These efforts must initially come from immediate supe-<lb />riors. The literature is quite clear: the inherent power imbal-<lb />ance demands that the party with the least risk makes the first<lb />move. Reciprocity may not occur until several efforts are<lb /><lb />156 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />made, but research shows these supervisors are subsequently<lb />held in more positive regard by their subordinates.<lb /><lb />Like cooperation and helping, trust is reciprocal in nature;<lb />the behavior must be initiated by the party taking the least<lb />risk. Keeping promises and speaking the truth are contagious<lb />" but the epidemic must begin at the top. Employees who<lb />feel trusted have higher satisfaction levels than those who do<lb />not.'* Beyond layoffs, trust also operates on the levels of per-<lb />formance appraisals, task assignments, and promotions. Sub-<lb />ordinates who do not feel trusted may be more inclined to<lb />leave. All organizations experience turnover costs; boosting<lb />trust levels may positively impact turnover levels.<lb /><lb />Self-disclosure may still have a role to play. Its division<lb />by content into task and personal matters appears significant.<lb />At WCPL, employees receiving task-related information from<lb />their immediate superiors reported higher satisfaction levels.<lb />Self-disclosureTs role in trust-building should not be dismissed;<lb />superiors risking task-related self-disclosure may be investing<lb />in higher trust levels.<lb /><lb />Frequent contact is a relatively new topic. The few<lb />telecommuter studies available show that contact frequency<lb />does impact job satisfaction, but no quantitative measures<lb />have been established to date. Anecdotal evidence points to<lb />a minimum once-weekly interval.' Additionally, studies on<lb />exclusive e-mail contact have shown it to be insufficient and<lb />frustrating. Face-to-face contact has repeatedly been shown<lb />to be the preferred medium for most subordinates.'®<lb /><lb />In general, WCPLTs satisfaction level appear enviable.<lb />Additional work may be undertaken to increase cross-shift<lb />contact, and to continue team management training. Inter-<lb />ventions may be taken on a branch-by-branch basis, but.ad-<lb />ministrators should be aware that once satisfaction programs<lb />are begun, employees are highly aware of whether or not the<lb />promised changes occur. When promised but not delivered,<lb />satisfaction levels have dropped to lower than baseline mea-<lb />sures. Any changes considered should be planned with the full<lb />knowledge and participation of all involved. This decreases<lb />organizationsT chances of moving in well-intentioned but<lb />misguided directions. It also increases the level of buy-in<lb />employees experience before, during, and after any organiza-<lb />tional development program.<lb /><lb />References<lb /><lb />1 Susan B. Gould, Kerry Weiner, and Barbara R. Levin, Free<lb />Agents: People and Organizations Creating a New Working Com-<lb />munity (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1997), xvii.<lb /><lb />2 Patricia Cain Smith, Lorne M. Kendall, and Charles L.<lb />Hulin, The Measurement of Satisfaction in Work and Retirement<lb />(Chicago: Rand McNally, 1969), 30.<lb /><lb />3 Robert L. Heath, Management of Corporate Communica-<lb />tion: From Interpersonal Contacts to External Affairs (Hillsdale,<lb />NJ: L. Erlbaum, 1994), 175; Eugene Marlow and Patricia<lb />O'Connor Wilson, The Breakdown of Hierarchy: Communicat-<lb />ing in the Evolving Workplace (Boston: Butterworth-<lb />Heinemann, 1997), 871.<lb /><lb />* Raymond L. Falcione, oThe Relationship of Supervisor<lb />Credibility to Subordinate Satisfaction, � Personnel Journal 52<lb />(September 1973): 800-803; Raymond L. Falcione, James<lb />McCroskey, and John A. Daly, oJob Satisfaction as a Function<lb />of EmployeeTs Communication Apprehension, Self-Esteem,<lb />and Perceptions of Their Immediate Superiors� in Communi-<lb />cation Yearbook 1: Organizational Communication, ed. Brent D.<lb />Ruben (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 1977), 363-<lb />375; Gerald M. Goldhaber, Organizational Communication, 6th<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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          <lb />ed. (Madison, WI: Brown &amp; Benchmark, 1993), 224; Thomas<lb />E. Harris, Applied Organizational Communication: Perspectives,<lb />Principles and Pragmatics (Hillsdale, NJ: L. Erlbaum, 1993), 314;<lb />Edward W. Miles, Steven L. Patrick, and Wesley C. King Jr. oJob<lb />Level As a Systemic Variable in Predicting the Relationship Be-<lb />tween Supervisory Communication and Job Satisfaction,�<lb />Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 69, 3<lb />(1996); Smith, Kendall, and Hulin, 30; Paul E. Spector, Job Sat-<lb />isfaction: Application, Assessment, Causes, and Consequences<lb />(Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1977), 38.<lb /><lb />* Tom R. Tyler and Roderick M. Kramer, oWhither Trust�<lb />in Trust in Organizations, 8.<lb /><lb />° Sidney M. Jourard, The Transparent Self: Self-disclosure and<lb />Well-Being (Princeton: Van Nostrand, 1964), 4; Dominic A.<lb />Infante, Andrew S. Rancer, and Deanna F. Womack, Building<lb />Communication Theory 2d ed. (Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland<lb />Press, 1993), 156; Valerian J. Derlega et al; Self-Disclosure<lb />(Newbury Park, Ca: Sage Publications, 1993), 88.<lb /><lb />T Frederick G. Elias, Mark E. Johnson and Jay B. Fortman,<lb />oTask-Focused Self-Disclosure: Effects on Group Cohesiveness,<lb />Commitment to Task, and Productivity,� Small Group Behav-<lb />ior 20 (February 1989): 87-96.<lb /><lb />8 Derlega et al, 88.<lb /><lb />° Stephen W. Worchel, Frankie Y. Wong, and Karen E.<lb />Scheltema, oImproving Intergroup Relations: Comparative<lb />Effects of Anticipated Cooperation and Helping On Attrac-<lb />tion for an Aid-Giver,� Social Psychology Quarterly 52,3 (1989):<lb />2S;<lb /><lb />'© Everett M. Rogers and Dilip K. Bhowmik, oHomophily-<lb />Heterophily: Relational Concepts for Communication Re-<lb />search,� Public Opinion Quarterly 34 (Winter 1970-71): 535.<lb /><lb />1! Worchel, Wong, and Scheltema, 213.<lb /><lb />� Infante, Rancer, and Womack, 25; Jaesub Lee, oLeader-<lb />Member Exchange, The ~Pelz Effect,T and Cooperative Com-<lb />munication Between Group Members,� Management Commu-<lb />nication Quarterly 11 (November 1997): 279; Worchel, Wong,<lb />and Scheltema, 214.<lb /><lb />18 W. E. Douglas Creed and Raymond E. Miles, oTrust in Or-<lb />ganizations: A Conceptual Framework Linking Organizational<lb />Forms, Managerial Philosophies and the Opportunity Costs of<lb />Controls� in Trust in Organizations, 19, 28; William I. Gorden<lb />and Randi J. Nevins, We Mean Business: Building Communica-<lb />tion Competence in Business and Professions (New York:<lb />HarperCollins, 1993), 70; Aneil K. Mishra, oOrganizational<lb />Responses to Crisis: The Centrality of Trust� in Trust in Orga-<lb />nizations, 267; John O. Whitney, The Trust Factor: Liberating<lb />Profits and Restoring Corporate Vitality (New York: McGraw-Hill,<lb />1994), 65.<lb /><lb />�"� Falcione, 802; Raymond L. Falcione, oCredibility: Quali-<lb />fier of Subordinate Participation� in Journal of Business Com-<lb />munication 11 (Spring 1974): 43; Goldhaber, 223; Robert L.<lb />Heath and Jennings Bryant, Human Communication Theory and<lb />Research: Concepts, Contexts, and Challenges (Hillsdale, NJ: L.<lb />Erlbaum, 1992), 243, 253; Stephen J. Holoviak, Golden Rule<lb />Management: Give Respect, Get Results (Reading, MA: Addison-<lb />Wesley), 20.<lb /><lb />'S Gil E. Gordon and Marcia M. Kelly, Telecommuting: How<lb />to Make It Work for You and Your Company (Englewood Cliffs,<lb />NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1986), 130.<lb /><lb />te Alvie L. Smith, Innovative Employee Communication: New<lb />Approaches to Improving Trust, Teamwork, and Performance<lb />(Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1991), 119.<lb /><lb />John Higgins, Sales Representative<lb /><lb />P.O. Box 21011<lb />Columbia SC 29221<lb /><lb />1-800-222-9086<lb />Fax: 803-731-0320<lb /><lb />ww<lb />OXFORD<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS we QUALITY BOOKS INC.<lb /><lb />WinterR1998 " 157<lb /></p>
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          <lb />____ NORTH CAROLINA oe<lb /><lb />se<lb /><lb />Dorothy Hodder, Compiler<lb /><lb />his collection of twelve essays, which includes a foreword by noted historian<lb />John Hope Franklin, marks the centennial of the violent overthrow of local<lb />government in Wilmington in November 1898. Most of the historians who<lb />contributed these provocative essays presented their work at a symposium at<lb />the University of North Carolina at Wilmington in November 1998. Acade-<lb />micians and laymen alike responded eagerly to the ideas presented in the public<lb />forum. It is likely that this volume, too, will stimulate interest and discussion.<lb />This would please the editors, who sought not only to interpret the Wilmington<lb />race riot in the context of the socioeconomic development of North<lb />Carolina during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, but also to<lb />foster a more perfect society through frank examination of race<lb />relations.<lb />H. Leon PratherTs summary of his book about the Wilmington<lb /><lb />David S. Cecelski and Timothy B. Tyson, eds. race riot, We Have Taken A City (Associated University Presses, 1984),<lb />Democracy Betrayed: provides a framework for the rest of the essays. Prather tells how<lb /><lb />Alex Manly, the African American editor of WilmingtonTs Daily<lb /><lb />The Wilmington Race Riot of Record, ignited smoldering racial discord by publishing an editorial<lb /><lb />stating that sexual relationships between white women and African<lb /><lb />1898 and Its Leg acy. American men often were consensual. White elites, who had long<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill: University of<lb />North Carolina Press, 1998.<lb /><lb />resented the relatively high economic status of many of<lb />WilmingtonTs African Americans and their involvement in local<lb /><lb />301 pp. Paper, $18.95. ISBN 0-8078-4755-0 government, led angry mobs in destroying ManlyTs newspaper,<lb />~pre@iota $45. ISBN 0-8078-2451-8. killing innocent African Americans, and forcing the elected city<lb /><lb />Kdited by David S. Cecelski &amp; Timothy EB. Dyson<lb /><lb />j<lb /><lb />The Wilmington Race Riot of 1898 and Its Legacy<lb />i ag<lb />. a hs!<lb />T fe<lb /><lb />i!<lb />T<lb /><lb />With a Foreword by John Hope Franklin<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />198 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />officials to surrender their offices. The strife in Wilmington was the<lb />flash point of a calculated campaign by the Democratic Party in<lb />North Carolina to wrest control of state and local offices from the<lb />Fusionist coalition of Republicans and Populists by inciting fear and<lb />hatred of African Americans.<lb />The remainder of the essays cover a broad span of time, but they<lb />are linked thematically. The authors focus on how racial harmony in<lb />North Carolina often depended upon the degree of civility or<lb />deference African Americans exhibited and how whitesT fears of<lb />racial amalgamation colored their attitudes toward or treatment of<lb />African Americans. David Cecelski provides a backdrop for the<lb />Wilmington affair with his analysis of the brief career of Abraham Galloway, a<lb />former slave who became an important political leader during Reconstruction.<lb />Glenda Gilmore and LeeAnn Whites explore the relationship between sexuality<lb />and race relations. Raymond Gavins and Timothy Tyson analyze the legacy of<lb />1898 through discussions of the Jim Crow era and the impact of World War II on<lb />race relations. William ChafeTs epilogue carries the bookTs theme forward to the<lb />civil rights movement of the 1960s in Greensboro.<lb /><lb />Democracy Betrayed deserves a place in the stateTs academic, public, and high<lb />school libraries. Its flaws"factual errors in PratherTs piece, inconsistencies in<lb />footnote styles, and a tendency toward preaching in some essays"are more than<lb />offset by the underpinning of in-depth research in a broad array of primary<lb />sources and the powerful writing throughout.<lb /><lb />" Maurice C. York<lb />East Carolina University<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>eborah Knott fans will cheer this latest installment in the adventures of the feisty<lb />judge, originally introduced as the BootleggerTs Daughter. After solving crimes<lb />while circuit riding Down East (Shooting at Loons) and in High Point (Killer<lb />Market), Deborah is back home in Colleton County (somewhere near Raleigh),<lb />building a house of her own and running for re-election. As usual, family<lb />troubles distract her from these projects, as well as from her courtroom and her<lb />love life.<lb /><lb />This time itTs A.K., teenaged son of DeborahTs third brother Andrew and his third wife April,<lb />who, along with a couple of neTer-do-well friends, is in trouble for getting drunk and defacing a<lb />cemetery. The three have just been sentenced for this offense when they fall under suspicion for<lb />defacing and burning down a local Black church. Before this crime is<lb />solved, two more Black churches in the area are torched and the sexton of<lb />one of the churches dies in the blaze, turning the case into a murder<lb /><lb />Margaret Maron. 2 SEEKS rss :<lb />investigation. As usual, it is DeborahTs understanding of human nature, as<lb /><lb />Home Fires Buri ning. well as her roots in the community, that help her crack the case.<lb /><lb />New York: Mysterious Press, 1998. 288 pp.<lb />$22.00. ISBN 0-89296-655-6.<lb /><lb />Readers who have followed the whole series may feel that this episode is<lb />rather tame. Deborah does less than her usual amount of annoying law<lb />enforcement agents and terrifying her family by poking about unaccompa-<lb />nied in pursuit of the murderer, contenting herself with darting into a<lb />burning church to save the pulpit Bible. What they will enjoy is a relaxed<lb />visit with retired bootlegger Kezzie Knott, Aunt Zell, Maidie, and Dwight<lb />Bryant, as well as many of DeborahTs brothers, sisters-in-law, nieces and nephews, cousins, and<lb />friends and associates from earlier books. The author has included a family tree to help sort out<lb />Deborah's 11 brothers and their offspring.<lb /><lb />In spite of all the church picnics and family barbecues that a campaigning judge has to<lb />attend, and the nephews and nieces helping build their auntTs house and frolicking in her pond,<lb />Maron, Deborah, and the reader know that this world is not as bucolic as it looks. The author<lb />takes an honest look at racism as it intrudes in the courtrooms, the politics, the churches, and the<lb />social life of the modern South, examining the problem from both White and Black perspectives.<lb />As she has before in this series, she also comments on the development that is rapidly changing<lb />her landscape.<lb /><lb />Like all the Deborah Knott mysteries, Home Fires Burning is an intelligent, entertaining story<lb />about likeable people dealing with believable problems in present-day rural North Carolina. It will<lb />appeal most to those who have followed the series, which also includes Up Jumps the Devil and<lb />Southern Discomfort. Highly recommended for high school and public libraries.<lb /><lb />" Dorothy Hodder<lb />New Hanover County Public Library<lb /><lb />tolen Russian nuclear warheads, an angry Chechen terrorist,<lb />corrupt government officials, and an ex-CIA knight-in-<lb />shining-armor outline this somewhat predictable but essen-<lb />tially solid thriller. Hovering off the coast of North Carolina<lb />sits a trawler with five thermonuclear warheads and a crew of<lb />determined terrorists bent on bringing Washington to its knees. Tipped<lb />off by a friendly Mossad agent, the CIA calls on former operative Friar<lb />Clarke, now retired in North Carolina, to investigate. What follows is an<lb />adventure that brings the United States close to utter chaos.<lb />John S. Powell. First-time author John S. Powell has taken all the requisite characters<lb /><lb />The Nostradamus Prophecy. of a modem terrorist thriller, including a very likeable and potentially<lb /><lb />reusable hero, and put them in the caverns and backwoods of North<lb /><lb />Burlington, N.C.: Belladonna Press, 1998. | CarolinaTs Grandfather Mountain. There, working against the clock and<lb />354 pp. $23.95. ISBN 0-9661922-5-7._ an incompetent President closely controlled by a powerful and corrupt<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />National Security Advisor, the drama unfolds. While PowellTs novel does<lb />succeed at keeping the tension high and the reader anxious, those looking<lb />for more than an incidental North Carolina backdrop will have to look<lb /><lb />elsewhere. For large public libraries.<lb />" Harry Tuchmayer<lb />New Hanover County Public Library<lb /><lb />Winter 1998 " 159<lb /></p>
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        <p>t seems odd to hear the stateTs largest city, Charlotte, referred to as oan agricultural<lb /><lb />trading village,� but that is the way it started in the 1750s. Thomas W. Hanchett<lb /><lb />traces CharlotteTs roots and subsequent development in Sorting Out the New South<lb /><lb />City: Race, Class and Urban Development in Charlotte, 1875-1975. He attempts to<lb /><lb />answer questions such as what shapes a city, its neighborhoods and its businesses,<lb />and succeeds as he describes Charlotte in its preindustrial mode and beyond.<lb /><lb />In the 1870s, Charlotte residents would live in neighborhoods without regard to class<lb />distinctions, and the housing patterns reflected osalt and pepper racial mixing.� Over a<lb />short period of time, however, the housing patterns began to shift as the cityTs financially<lb />successful white men manipulated community decision making to their advantage.<lb /><lb />Thomas W. Hanchett.<lb /><lb />Sorting Out the New South City:<lb /><lb />Race, Class and Urban<lb /><lb />Development in Charlotte,<lb /><lb />1875-1975.<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,<lb />1998. xv, 380 pp. Cloth, $59.95. ISBN 0-8078-2376-7.<lb /><lb />Paper, $24.95. IBSN 0-8078-4677-5.<lb /><lb />Kaye Gibbons.<lb /><lb />Successful efforts to strip the vote from African Americans and<lb />blue-collar Whites permitted those in control to start to establish<lb />patchwork quilt types of neighborhoods. These new communi-<lb />ties were developed to house Blacks, blue-collar Whites, and<lb />white-collar Whites separately. Hanchett refers to this process as<lb />a osorting out of the city.�<lb /><lb />The author includes separate chapters devoted to the<lb />development of neighborhoods for each group. Each commu-<lb />nity development is identified by location and described in<lb />relation to its unique identity. Latter chapters focus on such<lb />topics as the downtown area, changing business industries,<lb />growing road and shopping expansions, long-range neighbor-<lb />hood planning, and the impact of federal government financial<lb />aid to the city.<lb /><lb />The book is peppered throughout with maps, tables, and<lb />photographs of homes and prominent city buildings. A detailed<lb />bibliographic reference section is included, followed by the<lb />index. Many events from the book are retold as printed in the<lb />current mainstream newspapers of the day, including the<lb />Charlotte Observer, Charlotte Democrat, and Charlotte News. Also<lb />featured is the Black-oriented newspaper Star of Zion.<lb /><lb />The book appears to be a condensed, edited version of the<lb />authorTs 1993 doctoral thesis, Sorting out the New South City:<lb />Charlotte and its Neighborhoods. He is revisiting Charlotte neigh-<lb />borhoods as a subject, having co-authored Legacy: The Myers Park<lb />Story, a book about the prominent Charlotte community.<lb />Hanchett is an assistant professor of history and coordinator of<lb />the historic preservation program at Youngstown State Univer-<lb />sity in Ohio.<lb /><lb />His well-researched new book is recommended for aca-<lb />demic, public, and high school libraries.<lb /><lb />" Lawrence D. Turner<lb />Queens College<lb /><lb />he spirit of Ellen Foster lives on in Kaye GibbonsTs newest<lb />heroine, Emma Garnet Tate Lowell. Set in nineteenth-century<lb />Virginia and Raleigh, North Carolina, EmmaTs story is a reminis-<lb />cence of her long and eventful life. Born in 1830 on a James<lb />River plantation to the monstrous self-made Samuel Tate and his<lb />well-bred wife, Emma Garnet is remarkable for her moral<lb />strength, love of leaming, and human wisdom"qualities<lb />that set her apart from most other people, then and now.<lb />She is no Scarlett OTHara. She marries a New England<lb />Lowell, a doctor; she not only assists in the local hospital<lb /><lb />On the Occasion of My Last Afternoon. during the War, she brings it into her home; and she<lb /><lb />appreciates (oloves�) the Negroes as people. Her sensibilities<lb /><lb />New York: G. P. PutnamTs Sons, 1998. 273 pp. $22.95. are unmistakably GibbonsTs own, translated to another<lb />ISBN: 0-399-14299-1. time and social class. Given the value of those sensibilities,<lb /><lb />160 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />it is a worthwhile translation"like a new jewel placed in<lb />an antique setting.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>It is clear that Gibbons strove to make the details of her setting as accurate as<lb />possible, even using an occasional term now gone from common usage. We see<lb />aspects of family life as it may well have been for a woman of means in the South<lb />before, during, and following the Late Unpleasantness. This is no small achieve-<lb />ment, but it is superseded by the creation of the three main characters: Emma,<lb />her father, and Clarice, the black freedwoman who raised them both. Sam Tate is<lb />purely dreadful in his meanness and arrogance, an imperious combination of<lb />material success and humane ignorance"the worst sort of person to have<lb />authority over (or ownership of) others. Clarice, by way of contrast, combines<lb />dignity, integrity, and strength with a keenness of mind that constitutes genuine<lb />authority. It is the Clarices of the world who hold it together and make it turn.<lb /><lb />The core of the novel is its portrayal of the best and worst of human relation-<lb />ships: nurturing and horrendous parenting, fulfilling and abusive marriages,<lb />chosen and imposed bonds between people of different origins"all of these<lb />constituting either happily or miserably shared lives. Slavery is a pervasive yet<lb />subtle metaphor throughout the book, presented in terms that make it clear that<lb />even now, a century later, legality is just one aspect of the larger condition.<lb />Whether by love or hatred, we are all bound to others.<lb /><lb />On the Occasion of My Last Afternoon is GibbonsTs sixth novel, all published<lb />since 1987, and all widely acclaimed. Her first and still best known, Ellen Foster,<lb />won several awards, including the Sue Kaufman Award for First Fiction from the<lb />Academy of Arts and Letters. Her third, A Cure for Dreams (1991), won the PEN/<lb />Revson Award for the best work of fiction published by a writer under 35 and the<lb />North Carolina Sir Walter Raleigh Award. In 1996, she was the youngest person<lb />ever to receive the Chevalier de lTOrder des Arts et des Lettres for her contribution<lb />to French literature, and just this November she received North CarolinaTs<lb />GovernorTs Award. Not at all shabby for a kid from Nash County, North Carolina.<lb /><lb />For all North Carolina libraries.<lb /><lb />" Rose Simon<lb />Salem College<lb /><lb />Broadfoot's has TWO Locations Serving Different Needs<lb /><lb />Broadfoot's<lb />of Wendell<lb /><lb />6624 Robertson Pond Road ~ Wendell, NC 27591<lb />Phone: (800) 444-6963 ~ Fax: (919) 365-6008<lb /><lb />]Broadfoot<lb />|Publishing<lb />Company<lb /><lb />SOFTWARE<lb />1907 Buena Vista Circle ~ Wilmington, NC 28405<lb /><lb />Phone: (800) 537-5243 ~ Fax: (910) 686-4379<lb /><lb />MULTICULTURAL Recent Publicati ns:<lb />SELECTIONS<lb /><lb />VISUALS The Colonial &amp; State Records of NC (30 vols.)<lb /><lb />Spring &amp; Fall Catalogs North Carolina Regiments (5 vols.)<lb />Are you on our mailing list Fi eae Roster of Confederate Troops (16 vols.)<lb /><lb />Tar Heel Treasures - 7 esi Supplement to the Official Records (100 vols.)<lb />for Ne ey<lb /><lb />natives &amp; newcomers<lb />young &amp; old<lb /><lb />Full Color Catalog (free upon request)<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries WinterR1998 " 161<lb /></p>
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        <p>160 -<lb /><lb />William M. Reaves, edited by Beverly Tetterton.<lb /><lb />his book might well be regarded as a monument to the few libraries in North<lb />Carolina where the staff had the foresight years ago to collect and preserve<lb />material pertaining to their communityTs minority population. This book,<lb />published by the public library in Wilmington, is an outstanding example of<lb />the results of this acquisitions policy, although many of its hold-<lb />ings in this field came in large quantities that had been collected<lb />by individuals and presented as units. Further, it is a model of the<lb />good use of assorted sources in writing local history. A great deal of<lb />interesting and useful information has been gleaned from advertis-<lb /><lb />oStrength Through Struggle fr ing leaflets and broadsides, vanity publications, political notices,<lb /><lb />business, religious, and social announcements, newspapers of<lb /><lb />The Chr onological and Historical specific rather than general interest, and other out-of-the-ordinary<lb /><lb />Record of the African-American<lb /><lb />sources. The book is enhanced by countless photographs, pen-and-<lb />ink sketches, paintings, advertisements, and illustrations of objects.<lb /><lb />G ommunity in Wilmington ~ The text of the book is divided into eight chapters on such<lb /><lb />topics as social life, religion, education, community affairs, politics,<lb /><lb />Nor th Car olina, 1865-1950 agriculture, business, industry, and labor. There also are four<lb /><lb />Wilmington: New Hanover County Public Library,<lb />1998. xvi, 579 pp., illus., maps. $30.00. No ISBN.<lb />[Order from New Hanover County Public Library,<lb />201 Chestnut St, Wilmington, NC 28401]<lb /><lb />249 pp. $28.00. ISBN 1-55750-720-1.<lb /><lb />William P. Cumming.<lb /><lb />appendixes, and a classified bibliography. Among other useful<lb />contents there are extensive biographical sketches, rosters of<lb />military units, population statistics, a list of African American sites<lb />of interest, and a detailed index.<lb /><lb />While it is primarily designed as a work of reference, this<lb />oversized book is in large measure readable. However, it is printed<lb />on coated paper and is unusually heavy and uncomfortable to hold<lb />while reading.<lb /><lb />" William S. Powell<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />o the European explorers and colonists of the sixteenth and seventeenth<lb /><lb />centuries, the American South was a strange and wondrous place, rumored<lb /><lb />to possess great treasures, with gold and silver always just over the next<lb /><lb />hill. Tales also were told of wild beasts and indescribable monsters, of<lb /><lb />wildernesses that once entered could not be departed, and of native<lb />peoples sometimes welcoming, sometimes ferocious. Even friendly natives, however,<lb />could offer only scant information " and that in oral form " about the regionTs geogra-<lb />phy, since cartography was an art unknown to them. Europeans, accustomed as they<lb />were to trying to define the world through print and paper, quickly began to offer up<lb />maps of the region.<lb /><lb />The earliest maps were sketchy, imprecise ones, with some<lb />reasonably accurate information but also numerous errors, exag-<lb />gerations, and imaginings. Explorers had not ventured far inland,<lb />so cartographers incorporated undocumented details about the<lb /><lb />The Southeast in Ear ly Maps. regionTs physical characteristics. As European settlements became<lb /><lb />3rd ed., revised and enlarged by<lb /><lb />more widespread, however, knowledge and mapping of the region<lb /><lb />: improved.<lb />ee Louis De Vorsey, Jr. Historians can learn much about the American South by<lb />Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, studying the evolution of its maps: the misconceptions that<lb /><lb />1998. 362 pp. $90.00. ISBN 0-8078-2371-6. abounded in the earliest years of European contact, how English<lb /><lb />162 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />and Spanish settlers pushed the frontiers westward, how Native<lb /><lb />Americans shifted their territories as the newcomers took more and<lb />more land. Maps also illustrate changes in human population centers, in the location of<lb />inlets, and in the routes of rivers and streams.<lb /><lb />Because of this centrality of maps to a full knowledge of a regionTs history, few<lb />reference books have been as useful for a study of the American South as William P.<lb />CummingTs The Southeast in Early Maps. First printed by Princeton University Press in<lb />1958, it went out of print within a year. In 1962 the University of North Carolina Press<lb />brought out an updated, corrected edition. It too sold well and quickly. In the years<lb />since, countless scholars, maps enthusiasts, and librarians have bemoaned the unavail-<lb />ability of the book, except for scarce copies offered for several hundred dollars each by<lb />rare book dealers. Now, with publication by the University of North Carolina Press of a<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>SOUTHEAST<lb /><lb />f�EFARLY MAPS<lb /><lb />WILLIAM P. CUMMING<lb /><lb />third edition"revised and enlarged by the late Professor CummingTs longtime friend,<lb />Louis De Vorsey, Jr."a new audience can appreciate this classic work.<lb /><lb />The heart of the book is a chronologically arranged checklist of 450 manuscript<lb />and printed maps of the Southeast, all produced prior to 1776. The annotation for<lb />each map includes dimensions and scale; facts about the cartographer, if he is<lb />known; the book or other printed source in which the map appeared, if it was<lb />published; and a discussion of unusual details, errors, geographic exaggerations, and<lb />other distinguishing characteristics. Location of the map in any of 23 major United<lb />States and Canadian libraries and archives also is indicated.<lb /><lb />De Vorsey has left most of CummingTs research intact, but he has reorganized<lb />some material and made needed corrections. He has retained CummingTs important<lb />essay on oThe Early Maps of Southeastern North America,� while adding his own<lb />oAmerican Indians and the Early Mapping of the Southeast,� a significant contribu-<lb />tion to American cartographic studies. The 67 full-page black-and-white plates of<lb />maps that appeared in the first and second editions are included in the third. But 24<lb />color plates of additional maps have been specially prepared for the latter, strength-<lb />ening the visual appeal of the book. The final product is an improved edition of a<lb />reference work that should be on the shelves of every college and large public library<lb />in the American South and in major research libraries everywhere.<lb /><lb />" Robert G. Anthony, Jr.<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill<lb /><lb />ill McCorkleTs second book of short stories begins in oParadise,� in which a man<lb />named Adam meets a woman named Eve at a wedding reception. Adam has been<lb />to five weddings in two years, being at the age where all of his college friends are<lb />getting married, and, in his opinion, they look osomehow old and washed out,<lb />wimped out ... subdued, professional, lobotomized.� Adam and Eve start a relation-<lb />ship, despite the Adam-and-Eve jokes which erupt on a regular basis, and end up<lb />getting married at the same reception hall where they first met. A year later they<lb />have their first daughter, whom they name Sarah.<lb /><lb />Throughout the nine short stories in this book, McCorkle successfully uses irony and<lb />wit to deal with real-life issues and relationships and to entertain the reader. The stories are<lb />diverse in nature and cover male-female relationships, both good and bad; career choices;<lb />and life-changing realizations.<lb /><lb />McCorkle deals humorously with cheating husbands in oYour<lb /><lb />ee ec Husband is Cheating On Us.� Mr. Big, who has been unfaithful to his<lb /><lb />Final Vinyl Days. wife for eight years, is now cheating on both his mistress and his wife.<lb /><lb />The mistress, or test wife, as she calls herself, because ohe tries every-<lb /><lb />Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, thing out on me first,� confronts the wife and suggests that they<lb />1998. 212 pp. $18.95. ISBN 1-56512-204-6. obump him off.� The theme appears again in oLast Request,� in which<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />TinaTs father is killed when a tornado demolishes his mistressTs house.<lb /><lb />TinaTs mother goes to the scene to identify the body and is inter-<lb /><lb />viewed by the local television station. Footage of the interview is run<lb />over and over again that night. Tina tells us, oJust ten feet away from where sheTd stood<lb />with the microphone in her face was my fatherTs naked, sheet-draped body ... stretched out<lb />on the ground between a toaster oven and a fluffy piece of pink insulation.� oA Blinking,<lb />Spinning, Breathtaking World� is a darker look at infidelity: Charlotte, whose husband has<lb />left her and their six-year-old son for other women, is having a very difficult time coping<lb />with the situation. She takes her son to visit Wonderland, an indoor theme park for<lb />children, where she realizes she is afraid that her life is spinning out of control in much<lb />the same way as an endless carnival ride.<lb /><lb />McCorkleTs female characters are often hopeless, tragic figures, although they may not<lb />realize it. Mary Edna of oDysfunction 101� is one of these " married three times, she has<lb />two young daughters and still goes out every night of the week. The author describes<lb />people who have rather quirky personality traits, refuse to conform, or choose unusual<lb />career paths. The main character in the title story, for example, refuses to accept the<lb />extinction of the record album. He works in a record store called Any Old Way You Choose<lb />It, listens to bands from the ~60s, and only plays record albums.<lb /><lb />Final Vinyl Days is an insightful, entertaining piece of writing. Recommended for<lb />public and academic libraries.<lb /><lb />" Geraldine Purpur<lb />Appalachian State University<lb /><lb />WinteR1998 " 163<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />OTHER PUBLICATIONS OF INTEREST ...<lb /><lb />THE LEADER<lb /><lb />164 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />The Papers of General Nathanael Greene, Volume X: December 1781 - 6 April 1782 are now<lb />available. The volume is edited by Dennis M. Conrad, and includes a glossary of military<lb />terms, a chronology, and an index. (1998; University of North Carolina Press, P.O. Box<lb />2288, Chapel Hill, NC 27515-2288; xlvi, 663 pp.; $85.00; ISBN 0-8078-2419-4.)<lb /><lb />Michael W. Taylor has compiled To Drive the Enemy from Southern Soil: The Letters of Col.<lb />Francis Marion Parker and the History of the 30th Regiment North Carolina Troops. He traces the<lb />history of the regiment from its organization in September 1861 to Appomattox, and<lb />concludes with a brief account of ParkerTs postwar life. The volume includes maps, photo-<lb />graphs, casualty list, bibliography, and index. The author is a lawyer in private practice,<lb />and previously wrote The Cry is War, War, War, a collection of the Civil War correspondence<lb />of two lieutenants of the 34th Regiment North Carolina troops. He lives near Albemarle,<lb />North Carolina. (1998; Morningside House, Inc., 260 Oak St., Dayton, OH 45410; xi, 481<lb />pp.; $29.95; ISBN 0-89029-332-5.)<lb /><lb />Reruns include Mayberry 101: Behind the Scenes of a TV Classic, Volume 1, by Neal Brower of<lb />High Point, a serious Goober who has written a column for The Andy Griffith Show Rerun<lb />Watchers Club since 1991. Each chapter of the book focuses on an episode of the show,<lb />arranged chronologically from 1960 to 1967. Indexed. (1998; John FE. Blair, Publisher, 1406<lb />Plaza Drive, Winston-Salem, NC 27103; xvi, 507 pp.; paper, $14.95; ISBN 0-89587-218-8.)<lb /><lb />Recently reprinted by Zuckerman Cannon, Publisher, is Teen Angel and Other Stories of<lb />Wayward Love, a collection of short stories by Marianne Gingher, originally published in<lb />1988 by Atheneum. (1998; distributed by John F. Blair, Publisher, 1406 Plaza Drive, Win-<lb />ston-Salem, NC 27103; 207 pp.; paper, $14.00; ISBN 0-9664316-0-X.)<lb /><lb />And do not miss oa distinctive book about New South and Old from a writer standing at the<lb />intersection where the dirt road of the rural South meets the Information Superhighway,�<lb />poet Michael ChitwoodTs Hitting Below the Bible Belt: Baptist Voodoo, Blood Kin, GrandmaTs<lb />Teeth and Other Stories from the South. With a foreword by Lee Smith. (1998; Down Home<lb />Press, P.O.Box 4126, Asheboro, NC 27204; 142 pp.; paper, $13.95; ISBN 1-878086-67-7.)<lb /><lb />INFORMATION SERVICES<lb /><lb />IN INTEGRATED INFORMATION MANAGEMENT<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />orld<lb /><lb />by Ralph Lee Scott<lb /><lb />Webcelerator<lb /><lb />ave you recently become increasingly impatient with<lb /><lb />the oWorld Wide Wait�? Others have noticed this<lb /><lb />slowdown on the Internet and are attempting to mar-<lb />ket products to improve access to the Web. One interesting so-<lb />lution that surfaced recently is a program called oWebcelerator.�<lb />The basic idea behind this program, developed by Acceleration<lb />Software International Corporation, is a host proxy computer<lb />that can surf the Web and update frequently used Web HTML<lb />files, while you do things more useful than watching the hour-<lb />glass on your screen. oWebcelerator� can be downloaded free<lb />at http://www.webcelerator.com. There are 17 different inter-<lb />national language versions of oWebcelerator.�<lb /><lb />Installation is very simple: click on the oDownload<lb />Webcelerator� on the homepage. After downloading is com-<lb />plete, a Webcelerator icon will appear on your desktop. Double<lb />click on this icon and follow the installation instructions.<lb />oWebcelerator� will install a special acceleration icon in your<lb />Windows icon tray. System requirements for oWebcelerator�<lb />are: Pentium processor 7Smhz or above; Windows 95/98 or NT;<lb />32mb RAM; 20mb minimum install hard drive space; 14.4kbps<lb />modem or higher. You can turn oWebcelerator� on and off by<lb />clicking on the icon tray.<lb /><lb />What does oWebcelerator� do for you? Other than having<lb />the most simple installation procedure I have ever experienced,<lb />the program constantly updates Web sites you have visited. You<lb />do not have to wait a lengthy time for your browser to down-<lb />load an HTML file because it has been proviously stored on the<lb />oWebcelerator� proxy computer. You can scroll through the<lb />proxy sites in faster time because the information has been pre-<lb />cached and compressed by the foiks at Acceleration Software.<lb />If you send e-mail or access other networked files,<lb />oWebcelerator� automatically stops and turns your computer<lb />over to the other task. When the file has been transferred, the<lb />oWebcelerator� resumes its loading of the compressed and pre-<lb />cached file into your system memory. In addition, you can visit<lb />Web sites repeatedly without being online. This is an important<lb />feature if you are a person or library the pays for Web informa-<lb />tion by connect hour.<lb /><lb />My experience with this software is that it noticeably<lb />speeds up Internet downloading. It is especially useful for sites<lb />that you want to update frequently on your desktop, such as<lb />stock quotes, weather maps, or traffic cams. It is also useful for<lb />infrequently viewed sites that are not updated often. With this<lb />type of site, you do not have to waste time reloading the file;<lb />~Webcelerator� has already done it for you.<lb /><lb />Unfortunately, this neat technology comes at a price. First<lb />of all, you now have a proxy computer that knows every place<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />on the Web that you have visited. You have no control over the<lb />proxy computer information or what is done with it. Secondly,<lb />oWebcelerator� pays for its computers and the free software it<lb />gives you by selling obusiness arrangements to get other people<lb />to pay� the cost of this system. And what is this form of oar-<lb />rangement?� oWebcelerator� starts off by directing your browser<lb />when it starts up each day to a sponsor page. This means that<lb />you have to read a small ad about some service. For example,<lb />if you tried to rent a car over the Web, you might be greeted the<lb />next day with an offer from a competing car rental firm. While<lb />this might not bother some people, others are concerned about<lb />this invasion of their privacy. Advertising is becoming increas-<lb />ingly common on ofree� Web sites that host e-mail and Web<lb />page services. It is only natural that this idea would migrate to<lb />acceleration sortware.<lb /><lb />An additional problem can sometimes occur when you use<lb />a proxy server such as oWebcelerator� to access IP domain-pro-<lb />tected Internet services such as NC LIVE. oWebcelerator,� if you<lb />are using its cached file, sets your homepage address to a dif-<lb />ferent one from the one NC LIVE is expecting. For example,<lb />your IP may become 127.0.0.1:24491 instead of the one as-<lb />signed by NC LIVE to your institution. Thus you will be un-<lb />able to access these IP-protected services until you go in and<lb />change the IP assigned by your network browser. This can be<lb />more than just a minor annoyance as I found out when trying<lb />out this software with NC LIVE and other Internet sites such as<lb />JSTOR and Project MUSE. Everything worked fine for a while,<lb />with information downloading faster. Then the next week, I was<lb />unable to logon to NC LIVE, because I was using a different IP<lb />address assigned by oWebcelerator.�<lb /><lb />Users seem quite happy with this productTs fast speed, so<lb />you might give it a try. The only additional warning I would<lb />give is to remember to turn off your virus protections software<lb />when you are downloading software. After the downloading is<lb />finished, run the virus software on the files. If you do not do<lb />this, you will have interesting times with the Windows install<lb />programs imbedded in this type of software.<lb /><lb />One additional note about Web surfing: fans of Netscape<lb />will be glad to know that version 4.5 is now ending beta release<lb />and will no doubt be out for general release by the time you read<lb />this. I have been using it; I find that it, too, is faster and con-<lb />tains several new features I like, such as a tray icon that indi-<lb />cates when your Internet connection has failed. With this ver-<lb />sion of Netscape Navigator, you have a clear indication that you<lb />have been dropped. The new version can be downloaded from:<lb />http://www.netscape.com/download/sul.html.<lb /><lb />WinteR1998 " 165<lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />NortTH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb />Minutes of the Executive Board<lb /><lb />October 16, 1998, West Lake Middle School<lb /><lb />Attending: Beverley Gass, Al Jones, Diane Kester, Karen Gavigan, Frances Bradburn, Liz Jackson, Eleanor Cook,<lb />Gayle Keresey, John Zika, Jackie Beach, Rhoda Channing, Dave Fergusson, Ross Holt, Carolyn Price,<lb /><lb />Shirley Gregory, Carol Freeman, Vanessa Ramseur, Liz Hamilton, Elizabeth Laney, Teresa McManus, Ann Miller,<lb />Ginny Gilbert, Nancy Kolenbrander, Gwen Jackson, Augie Beasley, Nancy Clark Fogarty, Martha Davis,<lb /><lb />Tracy Babiasz, Frances Lampley, Peggy Quinn, Maureen Costello.<lb /><lb />Corrections to minutes<lb />In the July minutes that were transmitted to<lb />the Administrative Assistant for distribution,<lb />none of the URLs reported came out cor-<lb />rectly. The URLs were transmitted properly<lb />to Frances Bradburn for publication in North<lb />Carolina Libraries. The minutes were ap-<lb />proved, as corrected. Corrections were noted.<lb />Minutes for the October Executive Board<lb />meeting will be posted to the web site.<lb /><lb />PresidentTs Report<lb /><lb />President Gass reported that she attended<lb />the NCASL Conference in Winston-Salem on<lb />September 18th, and the NCLA Develop-<lb />ment Committee Meeting on September<lb />22nd.<lb /><lb />Lawyers for Libraries: Training Institute II<lb />is sponsored by the ALA Office of Intellectual<lb />Freedom and the American Bar Association<lb />Section of Individual Rights and Responsi-<lb />bilities and will train attorneys in the appli-<lb />cability of First Amendment to library poli-<lb />cies, procedures and problems, particularly<lb />those relating to the use of the Internet in li-<lb />braries. State chapters were invited to nomi-<lb />nate local attorneys who are willing to join<lb />the cadre of lawyers who make themselves<lb />available to assist librarians in defending the<lb />freedom to read to attend this training. They<lb />will commit to being on-call to libraries and<lb />librarians. We have nominated Marcus<lb />Trathen, an attorney with the firm of Brooks,<lb />Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey &amp; Leonard.<lb /><lb />Dave Fergusson has agreed to chair a<lb />committee to plan a non-conference year<lb />event for NCLA, an objective developed at<lb />the Executive Board planning session. Dr.<lb />Ben Speller of NCCU has agreed to chair a<lb />new committee on continuing education.<lb /><lb />President Gass nominated Dr. Gene<lb />Lanier, distinguished chair of the Intellectual<lb />Freedom Committee, for the ALA Office of<lb />Intellectual Freedom and Freedom to Read<lb />Foundation 30th Anniversary Honor Roll.<lb /><lb />166 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />TreasurerTs Report<lb />Diane Kester shared the Quarterly Report,<lb />dated 30 September 1998.<lb /><lb />Conference expenses are already being<lb />made, and Leadership Institute monies are<lb />still being received.<lb /><lb />The distribution of the Wachovia CD was<lb />tracked as of January 1, 1998, June 30, 1998<lb />and October 1, 1998.<lb /><lb />The computer software being utilized<lb />will allow for tracking of monies. Diane will<lb />periodically update this information on the<lb />website.<lb /><lb />Section/Round Table Reports<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services Section<lb /><lb />At an August 31st meeting, CSS finances<lb />were discussed. A missing deposit from the<lb />1997 NCLA conference is being investigated<lb />and should get the CSS budget back on track.<lb /><lb />Discussion was held regarding upcoming<lb />conference locations, with concern being<lb />shown for the single Winston-Salem location<lb />for 1999, 2001 and 2003.<lb /><lb />Jenny Barrett will serve as the CSS co-<lb />chair of the North Carolina ChildrenTs Book<lb />Award Committee. Sue Mellott was wel-<lb />comed as the new liaison to CSS from the<lb />NCL Paraprofessional Association. Frances<lb />Lampley left that position to become chair of<lb />NCLPA.<lb /><lb />Final planning was completed for the<lb />oReading Renaissance Retreat� on October<lb />26 and 27 at the Brown Summit conference<lb />center. All fifty spots have been filled, and<lb />the group is looking forward to book discus-<lb />sions, discussions about book discussions,<lb />and learning about the ages, stages, and read-<lb />ing needs of preschoolers and teenagers.<lb /><lb />College and University Section<lb /><lb />The fail conference, oFulfilling the Promise<lb />of the Millennium,� is scheduled for Friday<lb />November 6 at the Charles W. Chesnutt Li-<lb />brary at Fayetteville State University. Dr. Ben<lb />Speller will be the keynote speaker, present-<lb /><lb />ing oEquity and Access in Education.�<lb /><lb />The next Executive Board meeting of<lb />CUS will be held Friday, January 8th, 1999 at<lb />Catawba College. The Community College<lb />Section Board has been invited to attend.<lb /><lb />Community and Junior College Section<lb />LAMS has created an interest group that will<lb />be asked to survey the library managers/di-<lb />rectors to find out what workshops manag-<lb />ers feel the paraprofessionals need. CJCLS<lb />will use the results to determine workshops<lb />to offer.<lb /><lb />The CJCLS Executive Board has been in-<lb />vited to attend the January 8 meeting of the<lb />College and University Section to begin<lb />some discussions on the pros and cons of<lb />making CJCLS a subset of the College and<lb />University Section.<lb /><lb />Documents Section<lb /><lb />Nancy Kolenbrander was introduced as the<lb />new section chair and will attend the next<lb />Executive Board meeting. The new slate of<lb />officers includes Mary Horton of Wake For-<lb />est University, running for Vice-Chair/Chair-<lb />Elect, and Catherine Shreve, running for Sec-<lb />retary/Treasurer.<lb /><lb />The Documents Section has been plan-<lb />ning the fall workshop, oWeb vs. CDROM:<lb />Access to Electronic Information,� scheduled<lb />for Friday, October 23, 1998 at the<lb />McKimmon Center at NC State University in<lb />Raleigh.<lb /><lb />Members of the Documents Section have<lb />been working hard lobbying for passage of<lb />Senate Bill 2288 oThe Wendell H. Ford Gov-<lb />ernment Publication Reform Act of 1998.�<lb />The act would revise Title 44 of the US Code<lb />to provide improved public access to US gov-<lb />ernment information and strengthen the<lb />Federal Depository Library Program.<lb /><lb />Library and Management Section<lb />Rhoda Channing reported that 76 people<lb />attended the September 24, 1998, workshop<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0031" />
        <p>on assessment jointly sponsored by RTSS and<lb />LAMS. LAMS published and mailed its news-<lb />letter to advertise the program. Informal feed-<lb />back regarding the event has been positive.<lb /><lb />A steering committee on mentoring has<lb />met once and has a second meeting scheduled<lb />to continue planning for the joint mentoring<lb />program of LAMS and NMRT.<lb /><lb />LAMS contributed $250.00 to the Leader-<lb />ship Institute to help underwrite its costs.<lb /><lb />A Special Interest Group for Personnel Li-<lb />brarians/Librarians involved with staff devel-<lb />opment is being formed by Debbie Lambert<lb />and Louvenia Summerville.<lb /><lb />The LAMS Board met at Elon College on<lb />October 10. The Assessment program and<lb />progress of the mentoring program were re-<lb />viewed. The Board discussed possible pro-<lb />grams to be held at the 1999 NCLA Confer-<lb />ence and is tentatively considering a pre-con-<lb />ference on assessment tools and a program on<lb />mentoring. A statewide conference on coop-<lb />eration is being considered focusing on edu-<lb />cational opportunities for paraprofessionals<lb />and professionals via LAMS.<lb /><lb />NC Association of School Librarians<lb />Section<lb /><lb />Karen Gavigan reported that the NCASL con-<lb />ference was very successful, with over 800 reg-<lb />istered. 88 vendors were present and 440<lb />signed up for the Friday luncheon.<lb /><lb />Membership stands at 627.<lb /><lb />Dr. Shontz has moved leaving the Re-<lb />search Committee without a chair.<lb /><lb />Jackie Pierson and Augie Beasley were cho-<lb />sen to attend the Interlibrary Cooperation<lb />Committee in Greensboro on October 7-8,<lb />1998.<lb /><lb />Claudette Weise will report back in Febru-<lb />ary on some tentative reimbursement guide-<lb />lines for travel and conferences.<lb /><lb />NC Library Paraprofessional Round<lb />Table<lb /><lb />A meeting is scheduled for November 9. Dis-<lb />cussion will take place regarding the following<lb />concerns: replacing the director for Region 2;<lb />confirming a liaison between NCLPA and CSS.<lb />The Conference Planning Committee will also<lb />meet at this time.<lb /><lb />NC Public Library Trustee Association<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />New Members Round Table<lb />The board of the NMRT has not met since the<lb />last NCLA Executive Board meeting.<lb /><lb />A steering committee composed of mem-<lb />bers of the NMRT board and the LAMS board<lb />has met to develop a mentoring program<lb />within NCLA. They have plans to meet again<lb />in the next couple of weeks, and at that time,<lb />will hopefully have a draft of a brochure de-<lb />scribing the program and including an appli-<lb /><lb />cation form.<lb />The chair of NMRTTs Students to NCLA<lb />Committee has moved. Brochures have been<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />sent to each of the library schools. Executive<lb />Board members and other colleagues can ex-<lb />pect to be contacted by the new, as yet, un-<lb />named, chair of this committee regarding<lb />occasional speaking engagements at the li-<lb />brary schools.<lb /><lb />Tracy Babiasz is working on the mentoring<lb />program. Brochures regarding this program<lb />have gone out to library schools.<lb /><lb />The NMRT board will meet in January to<lb />plan another workshop and a conference pro-<lb />gram.<lb /><lb />Public Library Section<lb />At the September 15th meeting, the section<lb />agreed to contribute $500.00 towards the<lb />NCLA Leadership Institute.<lb /><lb />Will Manly has agreed to speak at the bi-<lb />ennial conference. Options are being explored<lb />for co-sponsorship with other sections, round<lb />tables and committees. Other conference top-<lb />ics/speakers being considered: Fred Chappel,<lb />a YA program, and a session on library services<lb />to the English as a Second Language commu-<lb />nity.<lb /><lb />The AV Committee is sponsoring a Video<lb />Workshop in High Point on November 6th.<lb /><lb />John Zika will be representing this section<lb />on North Carolina libraries.<lb /><lb />Reference &amp; Adult Services Section<lb />The RASS Executive Committee met on Au-<lb />gust 7th and October 2nd to finalize plans for<lb />the November 20th workshop entitled oNC<lb />LIVE: Taking It to the Limit� being held at the<lb />Friday Center in Chapel Hill. Tim Bucknell of<lb />UNC-G will represent the NC LIVE LibrariansT<lb />Working Group to discuss where we are and<lb />where we are headed. Crit Stuart, from Geor-<lb />gia Tech, will talk about GALILEO, Georgia's<lb />virtual library, and its effect on public service.<lb />Other sessions offered will include: oFull Text<lb />and Collection Development Issues�; oDe-<lb />signing Web Pages to incorporate NC LIVE Re-<lb />sources�; oConnectivity Issues with NC LIVE�;<lb />and oDatabase Selection " Helping Users to<lb />Get to the Right Database for Their Needs�.<lb /><lb />Resources &amp; Technical Services<lb />RTSS co-sponsored with Library Administra-<lb />tion and Management Section a September<lb />24th workshop entitled, oMoving Ahead<lb />While Honoring the Past: Assessing Our Op-<lb />erations.� Speakers included: Ellen Altman,<lb />oCan You Tell Success If You DonTt Assess?�;<lb />Robert Burgin, oTool Time: An Assessment<lb />Toolkit�; and Lea Wells, oChin Up: Assess-<lb />ments Never End!�<lb /><lb />Teresa McManus will be assuming the<lb />Vice-chair/Chair elect position vacated by Lisa<lb />Smith.<lb /><lb />Round Table for Ethnic Minority<lb />Concerns<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />Round Table on Special Collections<lb />No report.<lb /><lb />Round Table on the Status of Women<lb />in Librarianship<lb /><lb />The Round TableTs Executive Board met Au-<lb />gust 28th in Greensboro, voting to contribute<lb />$100.00 to the Leadership Institute. Plans<lb />were developed for the Round TableTs program<lb />at the 1999 NCLA Conference. Laura McLamb<lb />Hamilton, motivational speaker, has agreed to<lb />address the topic: oImagine the Future"<lb />Women in Charge.�<lb /><lb />Technology &amp; Trends Round Table<lb />The Technology &amp; Trends RoundTable has<lb />been busy planning for its December 3rd<lb />workshop to be held at Guilford Technical<lb />Community College. Suzanne White will be<lb />conducting the morning session, which will<lb />address basic skills needed by new computer<lb />support staff, especially those in smaller librar-<lb />ies. The afternoon presentation will be a<lb />trends presentation by John Ulmschneider<lb />and David Stratton.<lb /><lb />TNT approved a donation of $250.00 to<lb />the NCLA Leadership Institute.<lb /><lb />Committee Reports<lb />Administrative Office and Personnel<lb />Advisory Committee<lb />The first meeting of this committee was to be<lb />held directly following the October Executive<lb />Board meeting.<lb /><lb />Archives Committee<lb /><lb />Archival materials are currently being re-<lb />ceived. A reminder was given to all Executive<lb />Board members to send records to the Ar-<lb />chives from the person previous to predeces-<lb />sors if those records have not already been<lb />sent.<lb /><lb />Conference Committee<lb /><lb />The 1999 NCLA Biennial Conference will be<lb />held September 21-24 at the Benton Conven-<lb />tion Center in Winston-Salem. The 2001 and<lb />2003 conferences will also be held in Win-<lb />ston-Salem.<lb /><lb />The full Conference Committee met on<lb />September 11, 1998 to tour both the Benton<lb />Convention and Civic Center and the AdamTs<lb />Mark Hotel. A tentative budget was prepared<lb />for the 1999 conference. The Executive Board<lb />voted to approve the budget.<lb /><lb />The theme for the 1999 conference will be<lb />oImagine the Future.� This theme will give<lb />librarians in every type of library an opportu-<lb />nity to think about how to shape the future of<lb />librarianship in the new millennium. Program<lb />planners are urged to incorporate a futurist<lb />perspective in the planning of meetings for<lb />the 1999 conference.<lb /><lb />Registration and exhibit booth fees will be<lb />determined at the October 23, 1998 meeting.<lb /><lb />Bao-Chu Chang, subcommittee chair for<lb />registration, is going to set up and maintain<lb />a web page at North Carolina State University<lb />for the 1999 conference. The page will be<lb />linked to the NCLA homepage.<lb /><lb />Any information on program planners or<lb /><lb />Winter 1998 " 167<lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />questions about the program planning pro-<lb />cess can be sent directly to Phil Barton, sub-<lb />committee chair for program planning, at<lb />bartonp@co.rowan.nc.us. He needs to know the<lb />name, address, telephone number(s), and<lb />email address of the person from each section<lb />and round table responsible for program(s) at<lb />the 1999 Biennial Conference. A meeting of<lb />all program planners for all sections and<lb />round tables has been tentatively scheduled<lb />for January 22, 1999 in Winston-Salem.<lb /><lb />For planning purposes, if there are signers<lb />for the deaf among the Board members or<lb />NCLA members at large who would like to vol-<lb />unteer to sign at the 1999 conference, please<lb />contact Al Jones at pajones@catawba.edu.<lb /><lb />Constitution, Codes and Handbook<lb />Committee<lb /><lb />Gail Keresey reported that NCLA members<lb />Rick Anderson (UNCG), Sally Ensor (State Li-<lb />brary) and Louvenia Summerford (UNCC)<lb />have joined this committee.<lb /><lb />The NCLA Handbook on disk has been<lb />received from the Administrative Assistant,<lb />which is expected to help with revisions. Ex-<lb />ecutive Board members were requested to in-<lb />form Gail of areas in the handbook which are<lb />in need of revision.<lb /><lb />A meeting will be held on Friday October<lb />16 with Sally Ensor to discuss past actions of<lb />the committee and determine direction for<lb />the handbook revision process.<lb /><lb />Continuing Education Committee<lb />Beverley Gass introduced this new committee<lb />as an outgrowth of the Executive Board plan-<lb />ning retreat in January 1998. Ben Speller will<lb />chair the committee. A major role of the com-<lb />mittee will be to facilitate communication<lb />and eliminate overlapping of programs among<lb />sections, round tables, and committees.<lb /><lb />It was brought up that one of the ideas<lb />discussed at the planning retreat was to create<lb />a continuing education award that might go<lb />to a group of libraries, round table, or section<lb />for outstanding continuing education. It was<lb />suggested that this award process might be a<lb />natural responsibility of this committee.<lb /><lb />A question arose about the recommenda-<lb />tion that each section and round table have a<lb />representative on this committee leading to a<lb />suggestion that Executive Board members ex-<lb />amine the document submitted by the com-<lb />mittee chair before the January 1999 Execu-<lb />tive Board meeting.<lb /><lb />Development Committee<lb />The NCLA Development Committee met on<lb />September 22. The purpose of this meeting<lb />was to learn about the money management<lb />services provided by the North Carolina Com-<lb />munity Foundation (NCCF) and the Founda-<lb />tion for the Carolinas to non-profit organiza-<lb />tions that wish to establish endowments.<lb /><lb />A motion was presented and passed that<lb />the Executive Board grant the Development<lb />Committee and President Gass the authority<lb /><lb />168 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />to negotiate an agreement with the North<lb />Carolina Community Foundation for the in-<lb />vestment of endowment funds, and to create<lb />an endowment when the minimum necessary<lb />amount of money ($5,000) is raised. NCCF<lb />has established local chapters that distribute<lb />grants in their communities and manage en-<lb />dowment funds that support statewide orga-<lb />nizations. These include both funds created<lb />by the organizations, and funds created by<lb />outside benefactors for the support of the or-<lb />ganizations. NCCF can accept donations of<lb />any kind " cash, real estate, bequests, stocks,<lb />and even credit card transactions.<lb /><lb />An organization that sets up an endow-<lb />ment with the NCCF receives a variety of ser-<lb />vices from the foundation. The organization<lb />is included in all NCF publicity and<lb />fundraising efforts as a potential target for<lb />donors. The NCCF staff will broker compli-<lb />cated transactions such as real estate, stocks<lb />and bequests. The NCCF also provides a ve-<lb />hicle for outside donors to set up endowments<lb />for organizations such as NCLA, above and<lb />beyond any endowment the organization<lb />might set up itself.<lb /><lb />The committee also recognized the poten-<lb />tial for future creation of additional endow-<lb />ment, such as scholarship funds, with NCCE.<lb /><lb />Finance Committee<lb /><lb />Diane Kester presented an interim 1999 bud-<lb />get for approval. The figures will be adjusted<lb />and submitted as a final budget proposal once<lb />the books are closed on 1998 and better infor-<lb />mation regarding actual revenue and expen-<lb />ditures for the most recent fiscal year is avail-<lb />able. The interim budget is based on the<lb />AssociationTs history of revenues and expen-<lb />ditures since 1994. A more realistic approach<lb />with regard to anticipated operating expenses<lb />indicates that they will exceed the anticipated<lb />revenues. As a result, a transfer of monies<lb />from reserves and/or 1997 Conference profits<lb />is indicated. The Finance Committee has cau-<lb />tioned NCLA from using this practice as the<lb />Association moves into the new millennium.<lb /><lb />A figure from the 1997 Conference profits<lb />was included to be used for Project Grants, an<lb />expenditure which last appeared in the 1996<lb />budget. The purpose is to utilize a portion of<lb />the 1997 Conference profits to implement the<lb />vision of the Association and to support its<lb />goals and objectives.<lb /><lb />As the actual line item structure of past<lb />years is undergoing revisions, the Committee<lb />elected to present revenue and expenditures<lb />in broad categories, rather than in the more<lb />itemized detail of the past.<lb /><lb />Explanations of revenue and expenditure<lb />items were presented to clarify how figures<lb />were determined.<lb /><lb />In the past, postage reimbursement has<lb />been a line item in the budget. This has been<lb />dropped from the budget. Sections pay for<lb />mass mailings. The Administrative Assistant<lb />pays for other mailings.<lb /><lb />The line item for the Treasurer includes a<lb /><lb />financial audit and travel.<lb /><lb />The Committee will start investing some<lb />of the reserves and conference profits back to<lb />the sections and round tables.<lb /><lb />Governmental Relations Committee<lb />This committee has not met yet, but letters<lb />will be sent to committee members asking<lb />who would like to attend the May meeting<lb />with legislators. It there are representatives<lb />from sections, round tables, or committees, or<lb />members at large from various congressional<lb />districts that would like to go, they should<lb />contact Augie Beasley.<lb /><lb />Intellectual Freedom Committee<lb />Although there was no committee report,<lb />oAnn SymonsT Presidential Intellectual Free-<lb />dom Statement: Libraries: An American<lb />Value� was included in the packet mailed to<lb />Executive Board members before the October<lb />meeting for examination. A motion was made<lb />and passed unanimously that the North Caro-<lb />lina Library Association endorses this state-<lb />ment.<lb /><lb />Leadership Institute<lb />Everything is on track for the 1998 Leadership<lb />Institute, scheduled for October 28 " Novem-<lb />ber 1. Barbara Baker had to withdraw as a<lb />mentor.<lb /><lb />$6100.00 was raised from sections, round<lb />tables, and corporate sponsors, allowing<lb />scholarships to be awarded for the Institute.<lb /><lb />A report will be compiled for North Caro-<lb />lina Libraries, as well as an electronic newslet-<lb />ter documenting the Institute. The Leadership<lb />Institute committee will meet in November to<lb />evaluate the Institute and make recommenda-<lb />tions to the next committee.<lb /><lb />Literacy Committee<lb /><lb />At its last meeting, the Literacy Committee<lb />identified three goals to pursue during the<lb />current biennium. Goal 1: To prepare the po-<lb />sition statement approved by the Executive<lb />Board during the last biennium for distribu-<lb />tion. Goal 2: To establish a formal relationship<lb />with the North Carolina Literacy Center for<lb />purposes of awareness and avoidance of dupli-<lb />cative services. Consideration will also be<lb />given to disseminating information of inter-<lb />est to the profession from the Center. Goal 3:<lb />To plan and sponsor a program at the 1999<lb />NCLA Biennial Conference.<lb /><lb />Membership Committee<lb /><lb />Peggy Quinn reported that all sections and<lb />round tables have gained members. Totals are<lb />still lower than last year, but gaining. The New<lb />Members Round Table was commended for<lb />their work in this effort.<lb /><lb />The Membership Committee was asked to<lb />look back at the past membership totals for a<lb />decade. During Executive Board examination<lb />of the chart, it was felt that the number of<lb />personal memberships was incorrect. It was<lb />decided to check the integrity of the database<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0033" />
        <p>and revisit this information at the January<lb />1999 Executive Board meeting.<lb /><lb />The Membership Committee was<lb />charged by the Executive Board during its<lb />January 1998 Planning Retreat with creating,<lb />in writing, a document that could be fol-<lb />lowed by the organization to help increase<lb />membership. A draft was presented. The 1st<lb />section offers current benefits of member-<lb />ship. The 2nd section breaks down the<lb />3RTs " Recruitment, Retention, and Recogni-<lb />tion " into specific proposed actions. Board<lb />members were asked to peruse the document<lb />and offer feedback.<lb /><lb />Creating student chapters at library<lb />schools continues to be a topic of discussion.<lb />Some feel that a new section is not necessary<lb />since library students join the section of their<lb />professional interest.<lb /><lb />An additional strategy suggestion made<lb />in the area of Recruitment was to identify<lb />one person at each library system to serve as<lb />a North Carolina Library Association infor-<lb />mation source.<lb /><lb />It was also suggested that Association<lb />help with Intellectual Freedom challenges<lb />should be noted as a benefit of membership.<lb /><lb />Discussion was held about joining costs<lb />and renewals costs, and having membership<lb />be renewed on the calendar anniversary of<lb />the joining date or by conference period, the<lb />current practice. Karen Gavigan noted that<lb />some frustration over this policy was seen at<lb />the September NCASL Conference. Those<lb />who joined in September have their mem-<lb />bership expire within 2 months because of<lb />the current dues structure. It was also noted<lb />that this discussion has been held numerous<lb />times over the years, and that possibly the<lb />new technology and databases may provide<lb />a deciding factor in the ability of the Associa-<lb />tion to maintain a calendar-based system. A<lb />change in this policy would entail a by-laws<lb />change. It was noted that a listserv discus-<lb />sion from the membership at large regarding<lb />this topic could be beneficial.<lb /><lb />It was moved that the Executive Board<lb />accept the report of the Membership Com-<lb />mittee, post it to the listserv and place this<lb />issue on the agenda for the January 1999<lb />meeting. Motion carried.<lb /><lb />A motion was made and passed that the<lb />Constitution, Codes, and Handbook Com-<lb />mittee review and make a recommendation<lb />regarding a change of membership dues<lb />structure. Gail Keresey will bring this infor-<lb />mation to the January 1999 Executive Board<lb />meeting.<lb /><lb />The Administrative Office and Personnel<lb />Advisory Committee will determine if the<lb />computer software currently being used can<lb />support a change in the dues structure. The<lb />point was made that the Executive Board<lb />needs to determine whether a change in the<lb />dues structure itself would benefit the Asso-<lb />ciation; then, the software issue can be ad-<lb />dressed.<lb /><lb />A final suggestion was made that each<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />section and roundtable consider placing a<lb />representative on the Membership Com-<lb />mittee.<lb /><lb />Nominating Committee<lb />Gwen Jackson reported that the Nominating<lb />Committee, composed of past chairs, has<lb />been meeting for one month. The slate of<lb />officers is incomplete, but will be submitted<lb />to Beverley Gass in the very near future.<lb />Janet Freeman brought the NC LIVE ex-<lb />hibit that was funded by the Association.<lb />Specifics for borrowing the exhibit will be on<lb />the listserv.<lb /><lb />Non-Conference Year Event Planning<lb />Committee<lb /><lb />Dave Fergusson reported that this committee<lb />does not want to interfere with workshops<lb />that are already being planned by other sec-<lb />tions and round tables, but it plans to fulfill<lb />the objective outlined at the NCLA Executive<lb />Board Retreat in January 1998 for a non-con-<lb />ference year celebration event.<lb /><lb />Publications and Marketing Committee<lb />The Marketing Group has contacted Tracy<lb />Casorso, the new staff person for communi-<lb />cations and evaluation at the State Library.<lb />Tracy will be developing radio public service<lb />announcements, to be jointly sponsored by<lb />NCLA and the State Library. Possible content<lb />ideas for the spots include: oAsk your local<lb />librarian�; oWeTre not just books anymore�;<lb />oFreedom of information�; oHistory of librar-<lb />ies/librarians�; and oReasons to become a li-<lb />brarian.� The Marketing Group is also ex-<lb />ploring the possibility of sponsoring a con-<lb />ference program on oMarketing Your Next<lb />Program/Workshop.�<lb /><lb />The Web site Group met July 31. It was<lb />decided that the website would remain on<lb /><lb />the Rockingham Public Library server for the<lb />time being. Access to the server has been<lb />given to three members of this group for<lb />updating and making additions to the<lb />website. Goals for this group include: set up<lb />standardized links to the NCLA home page<lb />from currently existing NCLA-related web<lb />pages; set up relevant links from the NCLA<lb />home page; make decisions about archiving<lb />the electronic newsletter, including how to<lb />display it; explore modernization of the cur-<lb />rent membership database, especially with a<lb />view to include membersT e-mail addresses as<lb />a field; eventually, offer help to other sec-<lb />tions, committees, and round tables of NCLA<lb />in setting up web pages.<lb /><lb />A workshop was held August 14 to<lb />launch the new electronic newsletter, NCLA<lb />E-News. The editor of the newsletter is Pam<lb />Burton; assistant editors are Margaret Foote<lb />and Marilyn Schuster. A sample newsletter<lb />can be viewed at: http://www.lib.ecu.edu/<lb />NCLAnews/e-newssam.htm.<lb /><lb />The entire committee met on September<lb />11. The suggestion that a print newsletter is<lb />needed was discussed. There is a possibility<lb />of coordination with the State Library in a<lb />newsletter " perhaps along the lines of the<lb />much-missed oTar Heel Libraries.�<lb /><lb />A letter to the membership of NCLA ask-<lb />ing for membersT e-mail addresses and an-<lb />nouncing the new newsletter will be mailed<lb />soon.<lb /><lb />Scholarship Committee<lb /><lb />The following scholarships and loans were<lb />awarded: NCLA Memorial Scholarship to<lb />Carrie McLean, NC Central University;<lb />Query-Long Scholarship for Work with Chil-<lb />dren or Young Adults to Lynda H. Stewart,<lb />Appalachian State University; and<lb />McClendon Student Loan to Charles P.<lb /><lb />FOREIGN BOOKS and PERIODICALS<lb /><lb />CURRENT OR OUT-OF-PRINT<lb /><lb />Specialties:<lb />Search Service<lb /><lb />Irregular Serials<lb />International Congresses<lb />Building Special Collections<lb /><lb />ALBERT J. PHIEBIG INC.<lb />Box 352, White Plains, N.Y. 10602 * FAX (914) 948-0784<lb /><lb />Winter1998 " 169<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0034" />
        <p>Wiggins, UNC-Greensboro.<lb /><lb />A recommendation was made that appli-<lb />cations roll over from year to year to expand<lb />the pool of applicants. A question was raised<lb />regarding the number of loans to be awarded<lb />each year. Beverley Gass checked the NCLA<lb />handbook, which does not specify a number.<lb />Thus, it is determined to be at the discretion<lb />of the Scholarship Committee.<lb /><lb />Folders have been created by the Trea-<lb />surer and Administrative Assistant on each<lb />outstanding loan, and are monitored to en-<lb />sure repayment.<lb /><lb />Special Projects<lb /><lb />Project Grants Committee<lb /><lb />A chair is still needed for this committee, but<lb />a first review of its budget was unveiled.<lb />Approval of this budget will be requested at<lb />the January meeting. Beverley Gass will ex-<lb />plain the budget proposal at section and<lb />round table meetings before the next Execu-<lb />tive Board meeting.<lb /><lb />A focus of the special project money is to<lb />use it to further the new NCLA objectives. A<lb />question arose regarding use of project grants<lb />for the Conference. It was felt that instead of<lb />using funding to subsidize sectionsT work-<lb />shops, we should work towards collaboration<lb />with other sections, round tables, or commit-<lb />tees instead.<lb /><lb />Other Reports<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />The Fall issue, Advise and Consult addressing<lb />reference services, has been sent to the<lb />printer with a projected mailing date of No-<lb />vember 15.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries has signed an<lb />agreement with H.W. Wilson that allows the<lb />journal to be accessed through their full-text<lb />online products. Royalties will be paid to the<lb />journal based on the number of hits. The<lb />journal retains copyright, but gives H.W.<lb />Wilson permission to re-enter all text and<lb />mount it on as many sites as they choose.<lb />North Carolina Libraries reserves the right to<lb />exit from the agreement at any time. Since it<lb />is full text, it can be accessed through<lb />ReaderTs Guide.<lb /><lb />The editorial board will hold its annual<lb />retreat on November 13 and 14.<lb /><lb />ALA Councilor<lb /><lb />ALA Council met three times during the<lb />1998 Annual Conference. During those<lb />meetings, the Council took the following<lb />actions. Council adopted a resolution to sup-<lb />port the oUniversal Provisions of the Tele-<lb />communications Act�, including telecom-<lb />munications discounts (e-rates) for libraries<lb />and schools. Council adopted a oResolution<lb />in Support of the Vitality of Fair Use in the<lb />Digital Age,� which urges Congress to pass<lb />legislation that maintains a balance of copy-<lb />right ownersT rights in cyberspace with con-<lb />tinued fair use by consumers in the digital<lb /><lb />170 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />environment.<lb /><lb />Council defeated a oResolution on the<lb />Reduction of the Quorum for ALA Member-<lb />ship Meetings� to no more than one-half of<lb />one percent of the total membership.<lb /><lb />Wording was amended on various ALA<lb />policies regarding disabilities and discrimina-<lb />tions.<lb /><lb />A motion was defeated to adopt the In-<lb />ternal Review Policy.<lb /><lb />SELA Councilor<lb /><lb />SELA held its biennial conference in partner-<lb />ship with the Arkansas Library AssociationTs<lb />annual conference on September 30 " Octo-<lb />ber 3 in Little Rock, Arkansas. Ann Symons<lb />and Gerald Hodges from ALA attended. SELA<lb />currently has 630 members, 67 from North<lb />Carolina.<lb /><lb />Nancy Fogarty reported that this report<lb />completes her four-year term of office. Dur-<lb />ing this time SELA has reorganized its ad-<lb />ministration and changed the format of its<lb />journal.<lb /><lb />Discussion regarding benefits of contin-<lb />ued membership ensued.<lb /><lb />A motion was made and passed that<lb />nominees for the new SELA Councilor be<lb />informed that continued membership in<lb />SELA will be discussed at the January 1999<lb />Executive Board meeting. A Point-Counter-<lb />point discussion to be held on NCLA E-News<lb />was suggested. Dave Fergusson will represent<lb />the cons. The Constitution, Codes and<lb />Handbook Committee was instructed to put<lb />together a proposed by-law amendment<lb />which could be sent to the membership if<lb />necessary.<lb /><lb />North Carolina State Library Com-<lb />mission<lb /><lb />The Interlibrary Cooperation Committee<lb />had a two-day gathering of nearly 10 librar-<lb />ians from college and university libraries,<lb />public schools, independent schools, com-<lb />munity colleges, public libraries, and special<lb />libraries to discuss interlibrary cooperation.<lb />What is it and what should it be for the fu-<lb />ture? It is hoped that this will lead to coop-<lb />erative ventures.<lb /><lb />A suggestion was made to formally invite<lb />a representative from the State Library to<lb />make a personal report at each Executive<lb />Board meeting.<lb /><lb />A question arose regarding North Caro-<lb />lina schools receiving funding for NC LIVE.<lb />Issues still to be tackled are infrastructure and<lb />funding, but discussions are being held on<lb />this topic. 2<lb /><lb />Old Business<lb /><lb />Discussion was held regarding authorization<lb />of a raise for Maureen Costello, the<lb />AssociationTs Administrative Assistant since<lb /><lb />August 1997. Her contract stated that she<lb /><lb />would be eligible for a pay raise after the first<lb />six months. An increase is based on the cost<lb />of living and performance. A motion was<lb /><lb />made and passed to raise MaureenTs salary by<lb />4%, retroactive to her six-month anniversary<lb />date and to refer the question of a bonus to<lb />the Administrative Office and Personnel Ad-<lb />visory Committee.<lb /><lb />New Business<lb />1998-99 objectives for NCLA were examined,<lb />determining the ownership of each objective.<lb />Changes to the draft were made as follows:<lb />1.1 " Bi-weekly was changed to read bi-<lb />monthly.<lb />1.3.2 " This objective will be the responsi-<lb />bility of the Membership Committee.<lb />1.3.3 " Creating a section for library school<lb />students was stricken.<lb />2.1 " Advise librarians on the development<lb />and revision of policies on materials selec-<lb />tion, collection development, and Inter-<lb />net use.<lb />2.2 " Advise librarians on existing collec-<lb />tion/selection policies to include new<lb />technologies.<lb />2.3 " Conduct presentations on Intellec-<lb />tual Freedom at conferences across the<lb />state.<lb />2.4 " Maintain contact with other profes-<lb />sional associations with similar interests.<lb />2.5 " Forward communications from Intel-<lb />lectual Freedom Listserv to members of<lb />NCLA via NCLA-L.<lb /><lb />Objective 3 was stricken in its entirety.<lb /><lb />4.1 The wording was changed to read:<lb />Strengthen organizational focus on con-<lb />tinuing education<lb /><lb />Ben Speller, chair of the Continuing Educa-<lb />tion Committee, was charged with reviewing<lb />the entire 4th objective and presenting rec-<lb />ommendations at the January meeting of the<lb />Executive Board.<lb /><lb />5.1 " New Members Round Table was as-<lb />signed responsibility.<lb /><lb />5.2 " The Administrative Assistant was as-<lb />signed responsibility.<lb /><lb />5.4 " ***The Publications and Marketing<lb />Committee was assigned responsibility.<lb /><lb />Frances Bradburn was recognized as hav-<lb />ing received the Mary Douglas Peacock<lb />Award.<lb /><lb />The meeting was adjourned at 1:30.<lb /><lb />Respectfully submitted,<lb />Liz Jackson<lb />Secretary<lb /><lb />Thank You to NCLA<lb />Contributing Members:<lb /><lb />David S. Ferriero, Duke University<lb />Dr. Benjamin F. Speller,. Jr.,<lb /><lb />North Carolina Central University<lb />SOLINET<lb /><lb />Tom Broadfoot, BroadfootTs Publishing<lb />Company :<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0035" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />NortH CAROLINA Liprary ASSOCIATION 1997-1999 EXECUTIVE BOARD<lb /><lb />PRESIDENT<lb />Beverley Gass<lb />M.W. Bell Library<lb />Guilford Technical College<lb />P.O. Box 309<lb />Jamestown NC 27282-0309<lb />Telephone: 336/334-4822<lb /><lb />x2434<lb /><lb />Fax: 336/841-4350<lb />GASSB@GTCC.CC.NC.US<lb /><lb />VICE PRESIDENT/<lb /><lb />PRESIDENT ELECT<lb />Plummer Alston ~AlT Jones, Jr.<lb />Catawba College<lb />2300 W. Innes Street<lb />Salisbury, NC 28144<lb />Telephone: 704/637-4449<lb />Fax: 704/637-4204<lb />PAJONES@CATAWBA.EDU<lb /><lb />SECRETARY<lb />Elizabeth J. Jackson<lb />West Lake Elementary School<lb />207 Glen Bonnie Lane<lb />Apex, NC 27511<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/380-8232<lb />Fax: 919/662-2313<lb />LIZ@WLE.APEX.K12.NC.US<lb />TREASURER<lb /><lb />Diane D. Kester<lb /><lb />East Carolina University<lb />105 Longview Drive<lb />Goldsboro, NC 27534-8871<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/328-6621<lb />Fax: 919/328-4638<lb />KESTERD@EMAIL.ECU.EDU<lb />DIRECTORS<lb /><lb />Vanessa Work Ramseur<lb />Hickory Grove<lb /><lb />7209 E. W.T. Harris Blvd.<lb />Charlotte, NC 28227<lb /><lb />Telephone: 704/563-9418<lb />Fax: 704/568-2686<lb />VWR@PLCMC.LIB.NC.US<lb />Ross Holt<lb /><lb />Raldolph Public Library<lb />201 Worth Street<lb />Asheboro, NC 27203<lb />Telephone: 336/318-6806<lb />Fax: 336/3186823<lb /><lb />RHOLT@NCSL.DCR.STATE.NC.US<lb /><lb />ALA COUNCILOR<lb />Jacqueline B. Beach<lb />Craven-Pamlico-Carteret<lb /><lb />Regional Library<lb />400 Johnson<lb />New Bern, NC 28560<lb />Telephone: 919/823-1141<lb />Fax: 919/638-7817<lb /><lb />JBEACH@NCSL.DCR.STATE.NC.US<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />SELA REPRESENTATIVE<lb /><lb />(election pending)<lb /><lb />EDITOR, North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Frances Bryant Bradburn<lb />Evaluation Services<lb /><lb />NC Dept. of Public Instruction<lb />301 N. Wilmington Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-2825<lb />Telephone: 919/715-1528<lb />Fax: 919/715-4762<lb />FBRADBUR@DPI.STATE.NC.US<lb /><lb />PAST-PRESIDENT<lb /><lb />David Fergusson<lb /><lb />Forsyth County Public Library<lb />660 W. Fifth Street<lb />Winston-Salem NC 27101<lb />Telephone: 336/727-2556<lb />Fax: 336/727-2549<lb /><lb />D_FERGUSSON@FORSYTH.LIB.NC.US<lb /><lb />ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT<lb /><lb />Maureen Costello<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Association<lb />c/o State Library of North Carolina<lb />Rm. 27 109 E. Jones St.<lb /><lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-1023<lb />Telephone: 919/839-6252<lb />Fax: 919/839-6252<lb />MCOSTELLO@NCSLDCRSTATENCUS<lb /><lb />SECTION CHAIRS<lb /><lb />CHILDRENTS SERVICES SECTION<lb /><lb />Susan Adams<lb />Southeast Regional Library<lb />908 7th Avenue<lb /><lb />ore<lb /><lb />Telephone: 919/662-6635<lb />Fax: 919/662-2270<lb />SADAMS@CO.WAKE.NC.US<lb /><lb />COLLEGE anp UNIVERSITY SECTION<lb /><lb />Shirley Gregory<lb /><lb />Hackney Library, Barton College<lb />Box 5000<lb /><lb />Wilson, NC 28893-7000<lb />Telephone: 252/366-6501<lb />Fax: 252/399-6571<lb />SGREGORY@BARTON.EDU<lb /><lb />COMMUNITY anp JUNIOR<lb />COLLEGE LIBRARIES SECTION<lb /><lb />Martha E. Davis<lb /><lb />M. W. Bell Library<lb /><lb />Guilford Tech. Comm. College<lb />P. O. Box 309<lb /><lb />Jamestown, NC 27282-0309<lb /><lb />Telephone: 336/334-4822<lb />Fax: 336/841-4350<lb />DAVISM@GTCC.CC.NC.US<lb /><lb />DOCUMENTS SECTION<lb />Ann Miller<lb />Perkins Library<lb />Duke University<lb />Durham, NC 27708-0177<lb />Telephone: 919/660-5855<lb />Fax: 919/660-2855<lb />AEM@MAIL.LIB.DUKE.EDU<lb /><lb />LIBRARY ADMINISTRATION anp<lb />MANAGEMENT SECTION<lb />Rhoda Channing<lb />Z. Smith Reynolds Library<lb />Box 7777<lb />Wake Forest University<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27109-7777<lb />Telephone: 336/759-5090<lb />Fax: 336/759-9831<lb />CHANNING@WFU.EDU<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA ASSOCIATION<lb />OF SCHOOL LIBRARIANS<lb />Malinda Ratchford<lb />Gaston County Schools<lb />366 W. Garrison Blvd.<lb />Gastonia, NC 28052<lb />Telephone: 704/866-6251<lb />Fax: 704/866-6194<lb />MELEIS@AOL.COM<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA PUBLIC<lb /><lb />LIBRARY TRUSTEES ASSOCIATION<lb /><lb />Peter Keber<lb />Public Library of Charlotte/<lb />Mecklenburg County<lb />310 North Tryon Street<lb />Charlotte, NC 28202<lb />Telephone: 704/386-5086<lb />Fax: 704/386-6444<lb />PK@PLCMC.LIB.NC.US<lb /><lb />PUBLIC LIBRARY SECTION<lb />Steve Sumerford<lb />Glenwood Branch Library<lb />1901 W. Florida Street<lb />Greensboro, NC 27403<lb /><lb />Telephone: 336/297-5002<lb />Fax: 336/297-5005<lb />GLENWOOD@NR.INFI.NET<lb /><lb />REFERENCE anp ADULT SERVICES<lb />Carolyn Price<lb />Forsyth County Public Library<lb />660 W. Fifth Street<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27101<lb />Telephone: 336/727-8456<lb />Fax: 336/727-2549<lb />C_PRICE@FORSYTH.LIB.NC.US<lb /><lb />RESOURCES anp TECHNICAL<lb />SERVICES SECTION<lb />Ginny Gilbert<lb />Perkins Library<lb />Duke University<lb />230C Box 90191<lb />Durham, NC 27708<lb />Telephone: 919/660-5815<lb />Fax: 919/684-2855<lb />VAG@MAIL.LIB.DUKE.EDU<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE CHAIRS<lb /><lb />NEW MEMBERS ROUND TABLE<lb />Tracy Babiasz<lb />Durham County Library<lb />300 N. Roxboro Street<lb />PO Box 3809<lb />Durham, NC 27702-3809<lb />Telephone: 919/560-0191<lb />Fax: 919/560-0137<lb />TBABIASZ@NCSL.DCR.STATE.NC.US<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY<lb />PARAPROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION<lb />Frances Lampley<lb />Southeast Regional Library<lb />908 7th Street<lb />Garner, NC 27259<lb />Telephone: 919/662-2262<lb />Fax: 919/662-2270<lb />FLAMPLEY@CO.WAKE.NC.US<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE FOR ETHNIC<lb />MINORITY CONCERNS<lb />Barbara Best-Nichols<lb />Reichold Chemicals, Inc.<lb />6124 Yellowstone Drive<lb />Durham, NC 27713-9708<lb />Telephone: 919/990-8054<lb />Fax: 919/990-7859<lb />BARBARA.BEST-NICHOLS<lb />@REICHHOLD.COM<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE ON SPECIAL<lb />COLLECTIONS<lb />Maury York<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858<lb />Telephone: 252/328-6601<lb />YORKM@MAIL.ECU.EDU<lb /><lb />ROUND TABLE ON THE STATUS<lb /><lb />OF WOMEN IN LIBRARIANSHIP<lb />Marilyn Miller<lb />4103 Friendly Avenue<lb />Greensboro, NC 27410<lb />Telephone: 336/299-8659<lb />Fax: 336/334-5060<lb />M_MILLER@HAMLET.UNCG.EDU<lb /><lb />TECHNOLOGY AND TRENDS<lb />ROUND TABLE<lb />Eleanor I. Cook<lb />Belk Library<lb />Appalachian State University<lb />Boone, NC 28606<lb /><lb />Telephone: 828/262-2786<lb />Fax: 828/262-2773<lb />COOKEI@APPSTATE.EDU<lb /><lb />NCLA<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Association<lb /><lb />Winter 1998 " 171<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0036" />
        <p>EDITORIAL STAFF<lb /><lb />Editor<lb />FRANCES BRYANT BRADBURN<lb />Evaluation Services<lb />NC Dept. of Public Instruction<lb />301 N. Wilmington Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-2825<lb />(919) 715-1528<lb />(919) 715-4823 (FAX)<lb />fbradbur@dpi.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Associate Editor<lb />ROSE SIMON<lb />Dale H. Gramley Library<lb />Salem College<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27108<lb />(336) 917-5421<lb />simon@salem.edu<lb /><lb />Associate Editor<lb />JOHN WELCH<lb />Division of State Library<lb />109 East Jones Street<lb />Raleigh, NC 27601-2807<lb />(919) 733-2570<lb />jwelch@hal.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Book Review Editor<lb />DOROTHY DAVIS HODDER<lb />New Hanover Co. Public Library<lb />201 Chestnut Street<lb />Wilmington, NC 28401<lb />(910) 341-4389<lb />dhodder@co.new-hanover.nc.us<lb /><lb />Lagniappe Editor<lb />PLUMMER ALSTON JONES, JR.<lb />Corriher-Linn-Black Library<lb />Catawba College<lb />2300 W. Innes Street<lb />Salisbury, NC 28144<lb />(704) 637-4449<lb />pajones@catawba.edu<lb /><lb />Indexer<lb />MICHAEL COTTER<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-0237<lb />cottermi@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Advertising Manager<lb />HARRY TUCHMAYER<lb />New Hanover Co. Public Library<lb />201 Chestnut Street<lb />Wilmington, NC 28401<lb />(910) 341-4036<lb /><lb />htuchmayer@co.new-hanover.nc.us<lb /><lb />Between Us Editor<lb />KEVIN CHERRY<lb />Rowan Public Library<lb />P.O. Box 4039<lb />Salisbury, NC 28145-4039<lb />(704) 638-3021<lb />kcherry@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />172 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services<lb />MELVIN K. BURTON<lb /><lb />Public Library of Charlotte &amp; Mecklenburg<lb /><lb />North County Regional Library<lb />16500 Holly Crest Lane<lb />Huntersville, NC 28078<lb /><lb />(704) 895-8178<lb />mburton@plcmc.lib.nc.us<lb /><lb />College and University<lb />ARTEMIS KARES<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-2263<lb />karesa@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Community and Junior College<lb />LISA C. DRIVER<lb />Pitt Community College<lb />PO Drawer 7007<lb />Greenville, NC 27835-7007<lb />(252) 321-4357<lb />Idriver@pcc.pitt.cc.nc.us<lb /><lb />Documents<lb />MICHAEL VAN FOSSEN<lb />Reference Documents<lb />Davis Library CB #3912<lb />University of North Carolina<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27599<lb />(919) 962-1151<lb />mike_vanfossen@unc.edu<lb /><lb />Library Administration and<lb />Management Section<lb />JOLINE EZZELL<lb />Perkins Library<lb />Duke University<lb />Durham, NC 27708-0175<lb />(919) 660-5925<lb />jre@mail.lib.duke.edu<lb /><lb />New Members Round Table<lb />RHONDA FLORENCE<lb />Florence Elementary School<lb />High Point, NC 27265 +<lb />(336) 819-2120<lb /><lb />rholbroo@guilford.k12.nc.us<lb /><lb />N.C. Asso. of School Librarians<lb />DIANE KESSLER<lb />Durham Public Schools<lb />808 Bacon St.<lb />Durham, NC 27703<lb />(919) 560-2360<lb />kesslerd@bacon.durham.k12.nc.us<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library<lb />Paraprofessional Association<lb /><lb />SHARON NOLES<lb /><lb />Southeast Regional Library in Garner<lb />908 7th Avenue<lb /><lb />Garner, NC 27529<lb /><lb />(919) 894-8322<lb /><lb />Public Library Section<lb />JOHN ZIKA<lb />Person County Public Library<lb />319 S. Main St.<lb />Roxboro, NC 27573<lb />(336) 597-7881<lb />rzika@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Reference/Adult Services<lb />SUZANNE WISE<lb />Belk Library<lb />Appalachian State University<lb />Boone, NC 28608<lb />(704) 262-2798<lb />wisems@appstate.edu<lb /><lb />Resources and Technical Services<lb />PAGE LIFE<lb />Davis Library CB#3914<lb />UNC-Chapel Hill<lb />Chapel Hill, NC 27514-8890<lb />(919) 962-0153<lb />page_life@unc.edu<lb /><lb />Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns<lb /><lb />BRIGITTE BLANTON<lb />Greensboro Public Library<lb />PO Box 3178<lb /><lb />Greensboro, NC 27402-3178<lb />(336) 373-2716<lb />ncs0921@interpath.com<lb /><lb />Round Table on Special Collections<lb />MEGAN MULDER<lb />Wake Forest University Library<lb />PO Box 7777 Reynolda Station<lb />Winston-Salem, NC 27109-7777<lb />(336) 758-5091<lb />mulder@wfu.edu<lb /><lb />Round Table on the Status of Women<lb />in Librarianship<lb /><lb />JOAN SHERIF<lb /><lb />Northwestern Regional Library<lb />111 North Front Street<lb /><lb />Elkin, NC 28621<lb /><lb />(336) 835-4894<lb />jsherif@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb />Technology and Trends<lb />DIANE KESTER<lb />Library Studies and Ed. Technology<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-4389<lb />Isddkest@eastnet.educ.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Wired to the World Editor<lb />RALPH LEE SCOTT<lb />Joyner Library<lb />East Carolina University<lb />Greenville, NC 27858-4353<lb />(252) 328-0235<lb />scottr@mail.ecu.edu<lb /><lb />Trustees<lb />ANNE B. WILGUS<lb />N.C. Wesleyan College<lb />Rocky Mount, NC 27804<lb />(252) 442-2662<lb />(252) 977-3701 (FAX)<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />PS el tn<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Index to<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Volume 56, 1998<lb /><lb />Compiled by Michael Cotter<lb /><lb />Cross-references to pages and issues:<lb /><lb />Pp. 1 " 56: Spring, 1998; pp. 57 " 92: Summer, 1998; pp. 93 " 136: Fall, 1998; pp. 137 "- 178: Winter, 1998<lb /><lb />About the Authors.<lb /><lb />53, 99, 147<lb /><lb />Academic Libraries.<lb /><lb />Ezzell, Joline R. It Was the Most Uncertain<lb />of Times: Academic Reference<lb />Librarianship at the End of the Twentieth<lb />Century. 96-99<lb /><lb />Stanley, Deborah, and Natasha Lyandres.<lb />The Electronic Revolution and the Evolv-<lb />ing Role of the Academic Reference Li-<lb />brarian. 100-104<lb /><lb />Advise and Consult.<lb /><lb />Burton, Melvin K. Reference Interview:<lb />Strategies for Children. 110-113<lb /><lb />Ezzell, Joline R. It Was the Most Uncertain<lb />of Times: Academic Reference Librarian-<lb />ship at the End of the Twentieth Century.<lb />96-99<lb /><lb />Kares, Artemis, Guest Editor. Theme issue,<lb />Advise and Consult (Fall 1998) 96-116<lb /><lb />Moore, Betty J. From Reference Class to<lb />Reference Desk: One Year Later. 105-109<lb /><lb />Shearer, Kenneth. ReadersT Advisory Ser-<lb />vices: New Attention to a Core Business<lb />of the Public Library. 114-116<lb /><lb />Stanley, Deborah, and Natasha Lyandres.<lb />The Electronic Revolution and the Evolv-<lb />ing Role of the Academic Reference Li-<lb />brarian. 100-104<lb /><lb />Theme issue, Fall 1998. 96-116<lb /><lb />African American Librarians.<lb /><lb />Valentine, Patrick. Mollie Huston Lee:<lb />Founder of RaleighTs Public Black Library.<lb />23-26<lb /><lb />African American Libraries.<lb /><lb />Valentine, Patrick. Mollie Huston Lee:<lb />Founder of RaleighTs Public Black Library.<lb />23-26<lb /><lb />ALA Legislative Day.<lb />Gass, Beverly. From the President. 58-59<lb />Alexandre VattemareTs System of Interna-<lb />tional Exchanges in North Carolina, by<lb />Maurice C. York. 11-15<lb />And in Edition (column edited by Plummer<lb /><lb />Alston Jones, Jr.).<lb /><lb />Bartlett, Chrystal. The Relationship Between<lb />SuperiorsT Self-Disclosure, Offers of Help,<lb />Offers of Cooperation, Frequency of Con-<lb />tact, Trust, and SubordinatesT Job Satisfac-<lb />tion. 155-157<lb /><lb />Anderson, Julian. Empire Under Glass. Book<lb /><lb />review by Rose Simon. 79<lb /><lb />Another Country: Journeying Toward the Cherokee<lb />Mountains, by Camuto, Christopher. Book<lb />review by Meredith Merritt. 46<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Anthony, Robert G., Jr. Bringing Boston Books<lb />to the Carolina Mountains: Charles Hallet<lb />Wing and the Good-Will Free Library at<lb />Ledger. 16-18<lb /><lb />Anthony, Robert G., Jr., reviewer. See The<lb />Southeast in Early Maps, 3rd ed., rev. and enl.<lb />by Louis DeVorsey, Jr.<lb /><lb />Arrest, Search, and Investigation in North Carolina,<lb />1997 Supplement, by Robert L. Farb. Review. 83<lb /><lb />Avery, Laurence G., comp. and ed. A Paul Green<lb />Reader. Review. 47<lb /><lb />. A Southern Life: Letters of Paul Green,<lb />1916-1981. Review. 47<lb /><lb />The Ballad of Frankie Silver, by Sharyn McCrumb.<lb />Book review by Kevin Cherry. 121<lb /><lb />Bamberger, Bill, and Cathy N. Davidson. Clos-<lb />ing: The Life and Death of an American Fac-<lb />tory. Book review by John Welch. 124<lb /><lb />Banks, Philip P., reviewer. See Memoirs of Grassy<lb />Creek: Growing Up in the Mountains on the<lb />Virginia-North Carolina Line.<lb /><lb />, reviewer. See The Pond Mountain<lb />Chronicle: Self-Portrait of a Southern Appala-<lb />chian Community.<lb /><lb />Barefoot, Daniel. Touring North CarolinaTs Revo-<lb />lutionary War Sites. Review. 125<lb />Barfield, Rodney, reviewer. See Hatteras Journal.<lb />, reviewer. See An Outer Banks Reader.<lb />Barnes, Jay. North CarolinaTs Hurricane History.<lb />Review. 126<lb />Bartlett, Chrystal. The Relationship Between<lb />SuperiorsT Self-Disclosure, Offers of Help,<lb />Offers of Cooperation, Frequency of Con-<lb />tact, Trust, and SubordinatesT Job Satisfac-<lb />tion. 155-157<lb />Bell, A. Fleming, II. Ethics, Conflicts, and Offices:<lb />A Guide for Local Officials. Review. 47<lb />Between Us (Column)<lb />Burton, Mel. ChildrenTs Librarians: Manage-<lb />ment Gurus of Librarianship? 152<lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr. Serving the Silent:<lb />We Are Still a Nation of Immigrants. 118<lb />Biographical Information.<lb />About the Authors. 53, 99, 147<lb />Blakely, Florence.<lb />Illustration of. Cover, Summer 1998<lb />Simon, Rose. Interview with Florence<lb />Blakely. 60-64<lb />Blethen, H. Tyler, and Curtis W. Wood, Jr. From<lb />Ulster to Carolina: The Migration of the Scotch-<lb />Irish to Southwestern North Carolina. Review.<lb />125<lb />Blouin, Nicole. See Guide to the Blue Ridge<lb />Parkway.<lb /><lb />Book Reviews.<lb />See Reviews.<lb /><lb />Brewington, Jan, reviewer. See LeonTs Story.<lb />Bringing Boston Books to the Carolina Moun-<lb />tains: Charles Hallet Wing and the Good-<lb />Will Free Library at Ledger, by Robert G.<lb /><lb />Anthony, Jr. 16-18<lb /><lb />Brook, David Louis Sterrett. A Lasting Gift of<lb />Heritage: A History of the North Carolina Soci-<lb />ety for the Preservation of Antiquities, 1939-<lb />1974. Book review by Edward F. Turberg. 41<lb /><lb />Brower, Neal. Mayberry 101: Behind the Scenes of<lb />a TV Classic, vol. 1. Review. 164<lb /><lb />Brown-Graham, Anita R. Creating Effective Part-<lb />nerships for Community Economic Develop-<lb />ment. Review. 47 :<lb /><lb />Buie, Jill E. See Feehan, Patricia E.<lb /><lb />Bull Durham. Video review by Billy King. 128<lb /><lb />Burton, Mel. ChildrenTs Librarians: Manage-<lb />ment Gurus of Librarianship? 152<lb /><lb />Burton, Mel, Guest Editor. See ChildrenTs<lb />Services.<lb /><lb />Burton, Mel, reviewer. See The LyonTs Cub.<lb /><lb />, reviewer. See The LyonTs Roar.<lb /><lb />Burton, Melvin K. Reference Interview: Strate-<lb /><lb />gies for Children. 110-113<lb /><lb />Camp Greene Library, Charlotte.<lb />Photograph. 36<lb /><lb />Camuto, Christopher. Another Country: Journey-<lb />ing Toward the Cherokee Mountains. Book<lb />review by Meredith Merritt. 46<lb /><lb />Card, Orson Scott. Homebody: A Novel. Book<lb />review by Rebecca Taylor. 77<lb /><lb />Carmichael, James V., Jr. Innovation in Library<lb />Education: Historical X-Files on Technology,<lb />People, and Change. 28-35<lb /><lb />Carolina Piedmont Country, by John M.<lb /><lb />Coggeshall. Book review by Richard<lb />Shrader. 45<lb />Casstevens, Frances H. The Civil War and<lb />Yadkin County, North Carolina. Review. 83<lb />Cecelski, David S., and Timothy B. Tyson, eds.<lb />Democracy Betrayed: The Wilmington Race<lb />Riot of 1898 and Its Legacy. Book review by<lb />Maurice C. York. 158<lb />Charlotte Public Library Speaks Espanol:<lb />Approaching the Hispanic Community<lb />Through Storytelling, by Irania Macias<lb />Patterson. 145-147<lb />Cherry, Kevin. See The Ballad of Frankie Silver.<lb />Cherry, Thomas Kevin B. Interview with Elinor<lb />Swaim. 71-74<lb />. See Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr.<lb />Chesnutt, Charles. Mandy Oxendine. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Winter1998 " 173<lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />ChildrenTs Librarians: Management Gurus of<lb />Librarianship?, by Mel Burton. 152<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs and Youth Services.<lb /><lb />Burton, Melvin K. Reference Interview:<lb />Strategies for Children. 110-113<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services<lb />Burton, Mel, Guest Editor. Theme issue,<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services (Winter 1998) 141-<lb />uty<lb /><lb />Burton, Mel. ChildrenTs Librarians: Manage-<lb />ment Gurus of Librarianship? 152<lb /><lb />Feehan, Patricia E., and Jill E. Buie. Looking<lb />Up: The Image of Youth Services<lb />Librarianship. 148-151<lb /><lb />Hutchison, Beth, and Burton, Mel, Guest<lb />Editors. Theme issue, ChildrenTs Services<lb />(Winter 1998) 141-151<lb /><lb />Owen, Hannah. Smart Start: One Public<lb />LibraryTs Experience. 148-151<lb /><lb />Patterson, Irania Macias. Charlotte Public<lb />Library Speaks Espanol: Approaching the<lb />Hispanic Community Through<lb />Storytelling. 145-147<lb /><lb />Theme issue, Winter 1998. 141-151<lb /><lb />Chitwood, Michael. Hitting Below the Bible Belt:<lb />Baptist Voodoo, Blood Kin, GrandmaTs Teeth<lb />and Other Stories from the South. Review. 164<lb /><lb />The Civil War and Yadkin County, North Caro-<lb />lina, by Frances H. Casstevens. Review. 83<lb /><lb />A Civil War Diary, by Henry S. Lee. Review. 83<lb /><lb />The Civil War on the Outer Banks, by Fred M.<lb />Mallison. Book review by George Stevenson.<lb />81<lb /><lb />Closing: The Life and Death of an American Fac-<lb />tory, by Bill Bamberger and Cathy N.<lb />Davidson. Book review by John Welch. 124<lb /><lb />Coe, Marian. EveTs Mountain: A Novel of Passion<lb />and Mystery in the Blue Ridge. Book review by<lb />Helen Kluttz. 80<lb /><lb />Coggeshall, John M. Carolina Piedmont Country.<lb />Book review by Richard Shrader. 45<lb /><lb />Collection Development on the Web? Yes, Try<lb />Evalutech!, by Angela Leeper. 84-85<lb /><lb />Conrad, Dennis M., ed. The Papers of Nathanael<lb />Greene, vol. X. Review. 164<lb /><lb />Coonin, Bryna, reviewer. See Enterprising South-<lb />erners: Black Economic Success in North Caro-<lb />lina, 1865-1915.<lb /><lb />Cooper, Leland R., and Mary Lee Cooper. The<lb />Pond Mountain Chronicle: Self-Portrait of a<lb />Southern Appalachian Community. Book re-<lb />view by Philip P. Banks. 78<lb /><lb />Cooper, Mary Lee. See The Pond Mountain<lb />Chronicle: Self-Portrait of a Southern Appala-<lb />chian Community. 78<lb /><lb />Cotten, Bruce.<lb /><lb />McGrath, Eileen. oIn My Mind ITm Going to<lb />Carolina ...�: Bruce CottenTs Passion for<lb />North Caroliniana. 19-22<lb /><lb />Creating Effective Partnerships for Community<lb />Economic Development. Review, by Anita R.<lb />Brown-Graham. 47<lb /><lb />Cumming, William P. The Southeast in Early<lb />Maps, 3rd ed., rev. and enl. by Louis<lb />DeVorsey, Jr. Book review by Robert G. An-<lb />thony, Jr. 162-163<lb /><lb />Davidson, Cathy N. See Closing: The Life and<lb />Death of an American Factory.<lb /><lb />Davis, John Dixon, ed. A Civil War Diary, by<lb />Henry S. Lee. Review. 83<lb /><lb />DeBlieu, Jan. Hatteras Journal. Book review by<lb />Rodney Barfield. 119<lb /><lb />Debreczeny, Gillian M. Learning WhatTs New<lb />from Library Newsletters: A Selected List of<lb />North Carolina Resources. 48-49<lb /><lb />174 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />DeGroat, Diane. Roses are Pink, Your Feet<lb />Really Stink.<lb />Receives North Carolina ChildrenTs Book<lb />Award. 82<lb />Democracy Betrayed: The Wilmington Race Riot<lb />of 1898 and Its Legacy, ed. by, David S.<lb />Cecelski and Timothy B. Tyson. Book review<lb />by Maurice C. York. 158<lb />Duke University Library.<lb />Simon, Rose. Interview with Florence<lb />Blakely. 60-64<lb />Duncan, Barbara R., ed. Living Stories of the<lb />Cherokee. Book review by Meredith Merritt.<lb />122-123<lb />Dunn, Elizabeth Bramm, reviewer. See The<lb />Power of Femininity in the New South:<lb />WomenTs Organizations and Politics in North<lb />Carolina, 1880-1930.<lb /><lb />Electronic Resources.<lb /><lb />Stanley, Deborah, and Natasha Lyandres.<lb />The Electronic Revolution and the Evolv-<lb />ing Role of the Academic-Reference Li-<lb />brarian. 100-104<lb /><lb />Ezzell, Joline R. It Was the Most Uncertain<lb />of Times: Academic Reference<lb />Librarianship at the End of the Twentieth<lb />Century. 96-99<lb /><lb />The Electronic Revolution and the Evolving<lb /><lb />Role of the Academic Reference Librarian,<lb /><lb />by Deborah Stanley and Natasha Lyandres.<lb /><lb />100-104<lb /><lb />Eminent Domain Procedure for North Carolina<lb />Local Governments, by, Ben F. Loeb, Jr. Re-<lb />view. 83<lb /><lb />Empire Under Glass, by Julian Anderson. Book<lb />review by Rose Simon. 79<lb /><lb />Enterprising Southerners: Black Economic Success<lb />in North Carolina, 1865-1915, Robert C.<lb />Kenzer. Book review by Bryna Coonin. 82<lb /><lb />Ethics, Conflicts, and Offices: A Guide for Local<lb />Officials, by A. Fleming Bell II. Review. 47<lb /><lb />EveTs Mountain: A Novel of Passion and Mystery<lb />in the Blue Ridge, by Marian Coe. Book re-<lb /><lb />view by Helen Kluttz. 80<lb /><lb />Exchange of Library Materials.<lb /><lb />York, Maurice C. Alexandre VattemareTs<lb />System of International Exchanges in<lb />North Carolina. 11-15<lb /><lb />Ezzell, Joline R. It Was the Most Uncertain of<lb />Times: Academic Reference Librarianship at<lb />the End of the Twentieth Century. 96-99<lb /><lb />Ezzell, Joline, reviewer. See If Gargoyles Could<lb />Talk: Sketches of Duke University.<lb /><lb />The Face Finder, by Carol F. Fantelli. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Fantelli, Carol F. The Face Finder. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Farb, Robert L. Arrest, Search, and Investigation<lb />in North Carolina, 1997 Supplement. Review.<lb />83<lb /><lb />Feehan, Patricia E., and Jill E. Buie. Looking<lb />Up: The Image of Youth Services Librarian-<lb />ship. 141-144<lb /><lb />Final Vinyl Days, by Jill McCorkle. Book review<lb />by Geraldine Purpur. 163<lb /><lb />oFind the Bird.� Cover photo by Pat<lb />Weathersbee. Fall, 1998.<lb /><lb />Fonvielle, Chris E., Jr. See Hurricane of Fire: The<lb />Union Assault on Fort Fisher.<lb /><lb />Forrester, Sandra. My Home is Over Jordan. Book<lb />review by Frances M. Wood. 124<lb /><lb />From Reference Class to Reference Desk: One<lb />Year Later, by Betty J. Moore. 105-109<lb /><lb />From the President, by Beverly Gass. 2-3, 58-<lb />59, 94-95, 140<lb /><lb />Gambold, John, and Anna Rosina.<lb /><lb />Simon, Rose. Saved: The Gambold Collec-<lb />tion of Moravian Devotional Books. 4-10<lb />Garvey, Edward B. The New Appalachian Trail.<lb /><lb />Review. 83<lb />Gass, Beverly. From the President. 2-3, 58-59,<lb />94-95, 140<lb />Gehagen, Karen. Pictured. 150<lb />Gibbons, Kaye. On the Occasion of My Last After-<lb />noon. Book review by Rose Simon. 160-161<lb />Gingher, Marianne. Teen Angel and Other Stories<lb />of Wayward Love. Review. 164<lb />Good-Will Free Library, Ledger, N.C.<lb />Anthony, Robert G., Jr. Bringing Boston<lb />Books to the Carolina Mountains:<lb />Charles Hallet Wing and the Good-Will<lb />Free Library at Ledger. 16-18<lb />Grant, Joanne. Ella Baker: Freedom Bound.<lb />Review. 125<lb />Guide to the Blue Ridge Parkway, by Victoria<lb />Logue, Frank Logue, and Nicole Blouin.<lb />Review. 83<lb />Gutek, Gerald, and Patricia Gutek. Visiting<lb />Utopian Communities: A Guide to the Shakers,<lb />Moravians, and Others. Review. 125<lb /><lb />Hallowell, Barbara G. Mountain Year: A Southern<lb />Appalachian Nature Notebook. Review. 126<lb /><lb />Hamby, Zetta Barker. Memoirs of Grassy Creek:<lb />Growing Up in the Mountains on the Virginia-<lb />North Carolina Line. Book review by Philip P.<lb />Banks. 78<lb /><lb />Hanchett, Thomas W. Sorting Out the New South<lb />City: Race, Class, and Urban Development in<lb />Charlotte, 1875-1975. Book review by<lb />Lawrence D. Turner. 160<lb /><lb />Hatteras Journal, by Jan DeBlieu. Book review<lb /><lb />by Rodney Barfield. 119<lb /><lb />Hinkel, James R. Parkway Byways. Review. 126 _<lb /><lb />Hitting Below the Bible Belt: Baptist Voodoo, Blood<lb />Kin, GrandmaTs Teeth and Other Stories from<lb />the South, by Michael Chitwood. Review.<lb />164<lb /><lb />Hodder, Dorothy, comp. North Carolina<lb />Books. 40-47, 76-83, 119-126, 158-164<lb /><lb />Hodder, Dorothy, reviewer. See Home Fires<lb />Burning.<lb /><lb />Holaday, J. Chris. Professional Baseball in North<lb />Carolina: An Illustrated City-by-City History,<lb />1901-1996. Review. 126<lb /><lb />Holley, Edward G.<lb /><lb />Illustration of. Cover, Summer 1998<lb />Nixon, Tommy. Interview with Edward G.<lb />Holley. 65-70<lb /><lb />Home Fires Burning, by Margaret Maron. Book<lb />review by Dorothy Hodder. 159<lb /><lb />Homebody: A Novel, by Orson Scott Card. Book<lb />review by Rebecca Taylor. 77<lb /><lb />Hope Mills, by Constance Pierce. Book review<lb />by Lisa D. Smith. 80<lb /><lb />Hurricane of Fire: The Union Assault on Fort<lb />Fisher, by Charles M. Robinson, III. Book<lb />review by Chris E. Fonvielle, Jr. 120<lb /><lb />Hyde, Herbert L. My Home is in the Smoky<lb /><lb />Mountains. Review. 125<lb /><lb />If Gargoyles Could Talk: Sketches of Duke Univer-<lb />sity, by William E. King. Book review by<lb />Joline Ezzell. 44<lb /><lb />oIn My Mind ITm Going to Carolina ...�: Bruce<lb />CottenTs Passion for North Caroliniana, by<lb />Eileen McGrath. 19-22<lb /><lb />In Some Foreign Field: Four British Graves and<lb />Submarine Warfare on the North Carolina<lb />Outer Banks, by L. VanLoan Naisawald. Book<lb />review by Mark Wilde-Ramsing. 42<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
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        <p>InfoTech: The Advisory List.<lb />Leeper, Angela. Collection Development on<lb />the Web? Yes, Try Evalutech! 84-85<lb />Innovation in Library Education: Historical X-<lb />Files on Technology, People, and Change,<lb />by James V. Carmichael, Jr. 28-35<lb />Internet.<lb />~Meeks, Trilby. Kids Traveling Through<lb />Cyberspace: ItTs a Family Affair. 153-154<lb />Scott, Ralph Lee. Java and The Web. 117<lb />. Managing Lists. 39<lb />. Webcelerator. 165<lb />Sores Zune tenets.)<lb />See also World Wide Web<lb />Into the Sound Country: A CarolinianTs Coastal<lb />Plain, by Bland Simpson and Ann Cary<lb />Simpson. Book review by William H. King. 40<lb />Is There a Dead Man in the House?, by Elizabeth<lb />Daniels Squire. Review. 83<lb />It Was the Most Uncertain of Times: Academic<lb />Reference Librarianship at the End of the<lb />Twentieth Century, by, Joline R. Ezzell. 96-99<lb /><lb />Jackson, Liz. See North Carolina Library Asso-<lb />ciation. Executive Board. Minutes.<lb /><lb />JacobTs Ladder: A Story of Virginia During the<lb />War, by Donald McCaig. Book review by<lb />Joan Sherif. 123<lb /><lb />Java (Programming Language).<lb /><lb />Java and The Web, by Ralph Lee Scott. 39<lb />Java and The Web, by Ralph Lee Scott. 39<lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr. Reel North Carolina<lb /><lb />II: More Movies and Videos from the Old<lb /><lb />North State.127-128<lb /><lb />. Serving the Silent: We Are Still a Na-<lb /><lb />tion of Immigrants. 118<lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr., ed. And in Edition<lb /><lb />(column) 155-157<lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr., comp. Lagniappe/<lb /><lb />North Caroliniana (column) 48-49, 84-85,<lb /><lb />127-128, 153-154<lb />Jones, Plummer Alston Jr., reviewer. See A Sepa-<lb /><lb />rate Canaan: The Making of an Afro-Moravian<lb /><lb />World in North Carolina, 1763-1840.<lb /><lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr., and Thomas Kevin<lb />B. Cherry. Newfangled &amp; Highfalutin: North<lb />Carolina Library Innovations Over the De-<lb />cades. 36-38<lb /><lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr., and Thomas Kevin<lb />B. Cherry, Guest Editors. Theme issue,<lb />North Carolina Library Innovators: Lessons<lb />Learned from the Past (Spring 1998)<lb /><lb />Kares, Artemis, Guest Editor. Theme issue,<lb />Advise and Consult (Fall 1998) 96-116<lb /><lb />Kenzer, Robert C. Enterprising Southerners: Black<lb />Economic Success in North Carolina, 1865-<lb />1915. Book review by Bryna Coonin. 82<lb /><lb />Kids Traveling Through Cyberspace: ItTs a Fam-<lb />ily Affair, by Trilby Meeks. 153-154<lb /><lb />Kierner, Cynthia A. Southern Women in Revolu-<lb />tion, 1776-1800: Personal and Political Narra-<lb />tives. Book review by Patrick Valentine. 122<lb /><lb />King, William E. If Gargoyles Could Talk:<lb />Sketches of Duke University. Book review by<lb />Joline Ezzell. 44<lb /><lb />King, William H., reviewer. See Into the Sound<lb />Country: A CarolinianTs Coastal Plain.<lb /><lb />Kluttz, Helen, reviewer. See EveTs Mountain: A<lb />Novel of Passion and Mystery in the Blue Ridge.<lb /><lb />Knight, Cheryl. Co-author of oTechnology Use<lb />in North Carolina Public Schools: The<lb />School Library Media Specialist Plays a Ma-<lb />jor Role,� in North Carolina Libraries, Spring<lb />1997 issue. [named as co-arthur] 85<lb /><lb />Krawiec, Richard. Voices From Home: The North<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />Carolina Prose Anthology. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Lagniappe/North Caroliniana (column com-<lb />piled by Plummer Alston Jones, Jr.).<lb /><lb />Debreczeny, Gillian M. Learning What's<lb />New from Library Newsletters: A Selected<lb />List of North Carolina Resources. 48-49<lb /><lb />Leeper, Angela. Collection Development on<lb />the Web? Yes, Try Evalutech! 84-85<lb /><lb />Meeks, Trilby. Kids Traveling Through<lb />Cyberspace: ItTs a Family Affair. 153-154<lb /><lb />Reel North Carolina II: More Movies and<lb />Videos from the Old North State.127-128<lb /><lb />Laine, Jackie. Cover art, Winter, 1998<lb />A Lasting Gift of Heritage: A History of the North<lb /><lb />Carolina Society for the Preservation of Antiqui-<lb /><lb />ties, 1939-1974, by David Louis Sterrett<lb /><lb />Brook. Book review by Edward F. Turberg. 41<lb /><lb />Lawrence, David M. Public Records Law for<lb /><lb />North Carolina Local Governments. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Learning WhatTs New from Library Newslet-<lb />ters: A Selected List of North Carolina Re-<lb /><lb />sources, by Gillian M. Debreczeny. 48-49<lb /><lb />Lee, Henry S. A Civil War Diary. Review. 83<lb />Lee, Mollie Huston.<lb /><lb />Valentine, Patrick. Mollie Huston Lee:<lb />Founder of RaleighTs Public Black Library.<lb />23-26<lb /><lb />Leeper, Angela. Collection Development on<lb /><lb />the Web? Yes, Try Evalutech! 84-85<lb /><lb />LeonTs Story, by Leon Walter Tillage and Susan<lb />Roth.. Book review by Jan Brewington. 77<lb />Librarianship.<lb /><lb />Burton, Mel. ChildrenTs Librarians: Manage-<lb />ment Gurus of Librarianship? 152<lb /><lb />Feehan, Patricia E., and Jill E. Buie. Looking<lb />Up: The Image of Youth Services<lb />Librarianship. 141-144<lb /><lb />Library Administration and Management.<lb /><lb />Burton, Mel. ChildrenTs Librarians: Manage-<lb /><lb />ment Gurus of Librarianship? 152<lb />Library Education.<lb /><lb />Carmichael, James V., Jr. Innovation in Li-<lb />brary Education: Historical X-Files on<lb />Technology, People, and Change. 28-35<lb /><lb />Nixon, Tommy. Interview with Edward G.<lb />Holley. 65-70<lb /><lb />Library History.<lb /><lb />See Theme Issue, North Carolina Library<lb />Innovators (Spring 1998)<lb /><lb />See Theme issue, Turning Points: A North<lb />Carolina Oral History of Librarianship<lb />(Summer 1998)<lb /><lb />Library Innovations (Historical).<lb /><lb />Photographs. 36-38<lb /><lb />Library Newsletters.<lb /><lb />Debreczeny, Gillian M. Learning WhatTs<lb />New from Library Newsletters: A Selected<lb />List of North Carolina Resources. 48-49<lb /><lb />Library Services for Immigrants.<lb /><lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr. Serving the Silent:<lb /><lb />We Are Still a Nation of Immigrants. 118<lb />Library Services to Hispanics.<lb /><lb />Patterson, Irania Macias. Charlotte Public<lb />Library Speaks Espanol: Approaching the<lb />Hispanic Community Through<lb />Storytelling. 145-147<lb /><lb />Listservs.<lb />Scott, Ralph Lee. Managing Lists. 117<lb />Literacy.<lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr. Serving the Silent:<lb />We Are Still a Nation of Immigrants. 118<lb />Living Stories of the Cherokee, ed. by Barbara R.<lb />Duncan. Book review by Meredith Merritt.<lb />122-123<lb />Locklair, Paula W. Quilts, Coverlets, &amp; Counter-<lb /><lb />panes: Bedcoverings from the Museum of Early<lb />Southern Decorative Arts and Old Salem Collec-<lb />tions. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Loeb, Ben E, Jr. Eminent Domain Procedure for<lb />North Carolina Local Governments. Review. 83<lb /><lb />Logue, Frank. See Guide to the Blue Ridge<lb />Parkway.<lb /><lb />Logue, Victoria, Frank Logue, and Nicole Blouin.<lb />Guide to the Blue Ridge Parkway. Review. 83<lb /><lb />Looking Up: The Image of Youth Services<lb />Librarianship, by Patricia E. Feehan, and Jill<lb />E. Buie. 141-144<lb /><lb />Lyandres, Natasha. See Stanley, Deborah.<lb /><lb />The LyonTs Cub, by M. L. Stainer. Book review<lb />by Mel Burton. 121<lb /><lb />The LyonTs Roar, by M. L. Stainer. Book review<lb />by Mel Burton. 121<lb /><lb />Mallison, Fred M. The Civil War on the Outer<lb />Banks. Book review by George Stevenson. 81<lb /><lb />Managing Lists, by Ralph Lee Scott. 117<lb /><lb />Mandy Oxendine, by Charles Chesnutt. Review.<lb />47<lb /><lb />Maron, Margaret. Home Fires Burning. Book<lb />review by Dorothy Hodder. 159<lb /><lb />Mayberry 101: Behind the Scenes of a TV Classic,<lb />vol. 1., by Neal Brower. Review. 164<lb /><lb />McCaig, Donald. JacobTs Ladder: A Story of Vir-<lb />ginia During the War. Book review by Joan<lb />Sherif. 123<lb /><lb />McCorkle, Jill. Final Vinyl Days. Book review by<lb />Geraldine Purpur. 163<lb /><lb />McCrumb, Sharyn. The Ballad of Frankie Silver.<lb />Book review by Kevin Cherry. 121<lb /><lb />McGrath, Eileen. oIn My Mind ITm Going to<lb />Carolina ...�: Bruce CottenTs Passion for<lb />North Caroliniana. 19-22<lb /><lb />McIntosh, Archie N. Little Doc. Review. 125<lb /><lb />Meeks, Trilby. Kids Traveling Through<lb />Cyberspace: ItTs a Family Affair. 153-154<lb /><lb />Memoirs of Grassy Creek: Growing Up in the<lb />Mountains on the Virginia-North Carolina<lb />Line, by Zetta Barker Hamby. Book review by<lb />Philip P. Banks. 78<lb /><lb />Merritt, Meredith, reviewer. See Another Country:<lb />Journeying Toward the Cherokee Mountains.<lb /><lb />reviewer. See Living Stories of the<lb />Cherokee.<lb /><lb />Miss Kiwanis bookmobile, Durham.<lb />Photograph. 37<lb /><lb />Mollie Huston Lee: Founder of RaleighTs Public<lb />Black Library, by Patrick Valentine. 23-26<lb /><lb />Moore, Betty J. From Reference Class to Refer-<lb />ence Desk: One Year Later. 105-109<lb /><lb />Moravians.<lb />Simon, Rose. Saved: The Gambold Collec-<lb /><lb />tion of Moravian Devotional Books. 4-10<lb />Morris, Glenn. North Carolina Beaches. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Naisawald, L. VanLoan. In Some Foreign Field:<lb />Four British Graves and Submarine Warfare on<lb />the North Carolina Outer Banks. Book review<lb />by Mark Wilde-Ramsing. 42<lb /><lb />National Library Commission.<lb /><lb />Cherry, Thomas Kevin B. Interview with<lb />Elinor Swaim. 71-74<lb /><lb />Naylor, Phyllis. Shiloh Season.<lb /><lb />Receives North Carolina ChildrenTs Book<lb />Award. 82<lb /><lb />NCLA. Executive Board. Minutes. 50-53, 86-89,<lb />129-133, 166-170<lb /><lb />The New Appalachian Trail, by Edward B. Garvey.<lb />Review. 83<lb /><lb />Newfangled &amp; Highfalutin: North Carolina<lb />Library Innovations Over the Decades, by<lb />Plummer Alston Jones, Jr., and Thomas<lb /><lb />WinterR1998 " 175<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0040" />
        <p>Kevin B. Cherry (photographic essay). 36-38<lb /><lb />Nixon, Tommy. Interview with Edward G.<lb />Holley. 65-70<lb /><lb />North Carolina Beaches, by Glenn Morris.<lb />Review. 47<lb /><lb />North Carolina Books (column comp. by<lb /><lb />Dorothy Hodder). 40-47, 76-83, 119-126,<lb /><lb />158-164<lb />North Carolina ChildrenTs Book Award.<lb />Announcement of awards for 1998. 82<lb />North Carolina County Fact Book, by Beverly<lb />Tetterton and Glenn Tetterton. Review. 83<lb />North Carolina Department of Public In-<lb />struction.<lb /><lb />Leeper, Angela. Collection Development on<lb /><lb />the Web? Yes, Try Evalutech! 84-85<lb />North Carolina Foreign Language Center.<lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr. Serving the Silent:<lb />We Are Still a Nation of Immigrants. 118<lb />North Carolina Library Association. Executive<lb />Board. Minutes. 50-53, 86-89, 129-133, 166-170<lb />North Carolina Library Association. Vision<lb />and Objectives for 1998-99.<lb />Gass, Beverly. From the President. 2-3<lb />North Carolina Library Association.<lb />Objectives for 1998-99. 3, 53<lb />North Carolina Library Association. Vision<lb />Statement<lb />[Draft]. 2-3<lb />North Carolina Library Innovators: Lessons<lb /><lb />Learned from the Past.<lb /><lb />Anthony, Robert G., Jr. Bringing Boston<lb />Books to the Carolina Mountains:<lb />Charles Hallet Wing and the Good-Will<lb />Free Library at Ledger. 16-18<lb /><lb />Carmichael, James V., Jr. Innovation in Li-<lb />brary Education: Historical X-Files on<lb />Technology, People, and Change. 28-35<lb /><lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr., and Thomas<lb />Kevin B. Cherry. Newfangled &amp;<lb />Highfalutin: North Carolina Library In-<lb />novations Over the Decades. 36-38<lb /><lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr., and Thomas Kevin<lb />B. Cherry, Guest Editors. Theme issue,<lb />North Carolina Library Innovators: Lessons<lb />Learned from the Past (Spring 1998)<lb /><lb />McGrath, Eileen. oIn My Mind ITm Going to<lb />Carolina ...�: Bruce CottenTs Passion for<lb />North Caroliniana. 19-22<lb /><lb />Simon, Rose. Saved: The Gambold Collec-<lb />tion of Moravian Devotional Books. 4-10<lb /><lb />Theme Issue, Spring, 1998. 4-36<lb /><lb />Valentine, Patrick. Mollie Huston Lee:<lb />Founder of RaleighTs Public Black Library.<lb />23-26<lb /><lb />York, Maurice C. Alexandre VattemareTs<lb />System of International Exchanges in<lb />North Carolina. 11-15<lb /><lb />North Carolina State Library Commission.<lb /><lb />Cherry, Thomas Kevin B. Interview with<lb /><lb />Elinor Swaim. 71-74<lb />North Carolina " Libraries.<lb /><lb />See Theme issue, North Carolina Library Inno-<lb />vators: Lessons Learned from the Past.<lb /><lb />See Theme issue, Turning Points: A North<lb />Carolina Oral History of Librarianship.<lb /><lb />North Caroliniana.<lb /><lb />McGrath, Eileen. oIn My Mind ITm Going to<lb />Carolina ...�: Bruce CottenTs Passion for<lb />North Caroliniana. 19-22<lb /><lb />The Nostradamus Prophecy, by John S. Powell.<lb /><lb />Book review by Harry Tuchmayer. 159<lb /><lb />Oldenbury, Debbie. Pictured. 149<lb />On the Occasion of My Last Afternoon, by Kaye<lb />Gibbons. Book review by Rose Simon.<lb /><lb />176 " Winter 1998<lb /><lb />An Outer Banks Reader, ed. by David Stick, ed.<lb /><lb />Book review by Rodney Barfield. 119<lb /><lb />Outreach.<lb /><lb />Patterson, Irania Macias. Charlotte Public<lb />Library Speaks Espanol: Approaching the<lb />Hispanic Community Through<lb />Storytelling. 145-147<lb /><lb />Owen, Hannah. Smart Start: One Public<lb /><lb />LibraryTs Experience. 148-151<lb /><lb />The Papers of Nathanael Greene, vol. X., ed. by<lb />Dennis M. Conrad. Review. 164<lb /><lb />Patterson, Irania Macias. Charlotte Public<lb />Library Speaks Espanol: Approaching the<lb />Hispanic Community Through<lb />Storytelling. 145-147<lb /><lb />A Paul Green Reader, comp. and ed. by Laurence<lb />G. Avery. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Pierce, Constance. Hope Mills. Book review by<lb />Lisa D. Smith. 80<lb /><lb />Poff, Jan-Michael, ed. Addresses and Public Pa-<lb />pers of James Grubbs Martin, Governor of North<lb />Carolina, volume II, 1989-1993. Review. 125<lb /><lb />The Pond Mountain Chronicle: Self-Portrait of a<lb />Southern Appalachian Community, by Leland<lb />R Cooper, and Mary Lee Cooper. Book re-<lb />view by Philip P. Banks. 78<lb /><lb />Powell, John S. The Nostradamus Prophecy. Book<lb />review by Harry Tuchmayer. 159<lb /><lb />Powell, William S., reviewer. See oStrength<lb />Through Struggle:� The Chronological and His-<lb />torical Record of the African-American Commu-<lb />nity in Wilmington, North<lb />Carolina, 1865-1950. Ed. by Beverly<lb />Tetterton.<lb /><lb />The Power of Femininity in the New South:<lb />WomenTs Organizations and Politics in North<lb />Carolina, 1880-1930, by Anastatia Sims.<lb />Book review by Elizabeth Bramm Dunn. 43<lb /><lb />Public Libraries.<lb /><lb />Burton, Mel. ChildrenTs Librarians: Manage-<lb />ment Gurus of Librarianship? 152<lb /><lb />Burton, Melvin K. Reference Interview:<lb />Strategies for Children. 110-113<lb /><lb />Moore, Betty J. From Reference Class to<lb />Reference Desk: One Year Later. 105-109<lb /><lb />Owen, Hannah. Smart Start: One Public<lb />Library's Experience. 148-151<lb /><lb />Patterson, Irania Macias. Charlotte Public<lb />Library Speaks Espanol: Approaching the<lb />Hispanic Community Through<lb />Storytelling. 145-147<lb /><lb />Shearer, Kenneth. ReadersT Advisory Ser-<lb />vices: New Attention to a Core Business<lb />of the Public Library. 114-116<lb /><lb />Valentine, Patrick. Mollie Huston Lee:<lb />Founder of RaleighTs Public Black Library.<lb />23-26<lb /><lb />See also ChildrenTs Services.<lb /><lb />Public Library of Charlotte and<lb />Mecklenburg County. -<lb />Patterson, Irania Macias. Charlotte Public<lb /><lb />Library Speaks Espanol: Approaching the<lb />Hispanic Community Through<lb />Storytelling. 145-147<lb /><lb />Public Records Law for North Carolina Local Gov-<lb />ernments, by David M. Lawrence. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Purpur, Geraldine, reviewer. See Final Vinyl<lb />Days.<lb /><lb />Quilts, Coverlets, &amp; Counterpanes: Bedcoverings<lb />from the Museum of Early Southern Decorative<lb />Arts and Old Salem Collections, by Paula W.<lb />Locklair. Review. 47<lb /><lb />ReadersT Advisory Services.<lb /><lb />Shearer, Kenneth. ReadersT Advisory Ser-<lb />vices: New Attention to a Core Business<lb />of the Public Library. 114-116<lb /><lb />ReadersT Advisory Services: New Attention to a<lb />Core Business of the Public Library, by<lb />Kenneth Shearer. 114-116<lb /><lb />Reaves, William M. oStrength Through Struggle:�<lb /><lb />The Chronological and Historical Record of the<lb /><lb />African-American Community in Wilmington,<lb /><lb />North Carolina, 1865-1950. Ed. by Beverly<lb /><lb />Tetterton. Book review by William S. Powell.<lb /><lb />162<lb /><lb />Reel North Carolina II: More Movies and<lb />Videos from the Old North State. 127-128<lb />Reference Interview: Strategies for Children, by<lb /><lb />Melvin K. Burton. 110-113<lb /><lb />Reference Services.<lb /><lb />Burton, Melvin K. Reference Interview:<lb />Strategies for Children. 110-113<lb /><lb />Moore, Betty J. From Reference Class to<lb />Reference Desk: One Year Later. 105-109<lb /><lb />See also Advise and Consult (Theme issue).<lb /><lb />The Relationship Between SuperiorsT Self-Dis-<lb />closure, Offers of Help, Offers of Coopera-<lb />tion, Frequency of Contact, Trust, and Sub-<lb />ordinatesT Job Satisfaction, by Chrystal<lb /><lb />Bartlett. 155-157<lb /><lb />Religious Literature.<lb />Simon, Rose. Saved: The Gambold Collec-<lb />tion of Moravian Devotional Books. 4-10<lb />Reviews.<lb />Hodder, Dorothy, comp. North Carolina<lb />Books. 40-47, 76-83, 119-126, 158-164<lb /><lb />Jones, Plummer Alston, Jr., comp. Reel<lb />North Carolina I: More Movies and<lb />Videos from the Old North State. 127-<lb />128<lb /><lb />Reviews " Sources.<lb /><lb />Leeper, Angela. Collection Development on<lb />the Web? Yes, Try Evalutech! 84-85<lb /><lb />Richard B. Harrison Library, Raleigh.<lb /><lb />Valentine, Patrick. Mollie Huston Lee:<lb />Founder of RaleighTs Public Black Library.<lb />23-26<lb /><lb />Robinson, Charles M., III. Hurricane of Fire: The<lb />Union Assault on Fort Fisher. Book review by<lb />Chris E. Fonvielle, Jr. 120<lb /><lb />Roth, Susan. See LeonTs Story.<lb /><lb />Rowan County Public Library.<lb /><lb />Cherry, Thomas Kevin B. Interview with<lb />Elinor Swaim. 71-74<lb /><lb />Rural Libraries.<lb /><lb />Anthony, Robert G., Jr. Bringing Boston<lb />Books to the Carolina Mountains:<lb />Charles Hallet Wing and the Good-Will<lb />Free Library at Ledger. 16-18<lb /><lb />Sanders, Janet. Pictured. 150<lb />Saved: The Gambold Collection of Moravian<lb />Devotional Books, by Rose Simon. 4-10<lb />School Libraries.<lb />Leeper, Angela. Collection Development on<lb />the Web? Yes, Try Evalutech! 84-85<lb />Scott, Ralph Lee. Java and The Web. 39<lb />2 Managing: Lists: 117,<lb />. Webcelerator. 165<lb />. Wired to the World (column). 39, 75,<lb />1M fret C045)<lb />. Zurfing the Net. 75<lb />A Season on the Appalachian Trail, by Lynn<lb />Setzer. Review. 83<lb />Sensabach, Jon F. A Separate Canaan: The Mak-<lb />ing of an Afro-Moravian World in North Caro-<lb />lina, 1763-1840. Book review by Plummer<lb />Alston Jones, Jr. 76<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0041" />
        <p>A Separate Canaan: The Making of an Afro-<lb />Moravian World in North Carolina, 1763-<lb />1840, by Jon F. Sensabach. Book review by<lb />Plummer Alston Jones, Jr. 76<lb /><lb />Serving the Silent: We Are Still a Nation of<lb />Immigrants, by Plummer Alston Jones, Jr.<lb />118<lb /><lb />Setzer, Lynn. A Season on the Appalachian Trail.<lb />Review. 83<lb /><lb />Shearer, Kenneth. ReadersT Advisory Services:<lb />New Attention to a Core Business of the<lb />Public Library. 114-116. Errata. 144<lb /><lb />Sherif, Joan, reviewer. See JacobTs Ladder: A<lb /><lb />Story of Virginia During the War.<lb /><lb />Shrader, Richard, reviewer. See Carolina Piedmont<lb />Country.<lb /><lb />Simon, Rose, reviewer. See Empire Under Glass.<lb /><lb />reviewer. See On the Occasion of My<lb /><lb />Last Afternoon.<lb /><lb />Simon, Rose. Interview with Florence Blakely.<lb /><lb />60-64<lb /><lb />. Saved: The Gambold Collection of<lb /><lb />Moravian Devotional Books. 4-10<lb /><lb />Simpson, Ann Cary. See Into the Sound Country:<lb />A CarolinianTs Coastal Plain.<lb /><lb />Simpson, Bland, and Ann Cary Simpson. Into<lb />the Sound Country: A CarolinianTs Coastal<lb />Plain. Book review by William H. King. 40<lb /><lb />Sims, Anastatia. The Power of Femininity in the<lb />New South: WomenTs Organizations and Poli-<lb />tics in North Carolina, 1880-1930. Book re-<lb />view by Elizabeth Bramm Dunn. 43<lb /><lb />Smart Start: One Public LibraryTs Experience,<lb />by Hannah Owen. 148-151<lb /><lb />Smith, Lisa D., reviewer. See Hope Mills.<lb /><lb />Sorting Out the New South City: Race, Class, and<lb />Urban Development in Charlotte, 1875-1975,<lb />by Hanchett, Thomas W. Book review by<lb />Lawrence D. Turner. 160<lb /><lb />The Southeast in Early Maps, by, William P.<lb />Cumming, 3rd ed., rev. and enl. by Louis<lb />DeVorsey, Jr. Book review by Robert G. An-<lb />thony, Jr. 162-163<lb /><lb />A Southern Life: Letters of Paul Green, 1916-<lb />1981, comp. and ed. by Laurence G. Avery.<lb />Review. 47<lb /><lb />Southern Regional Education Board.<lb /><lb />Leeper, Angela. Collection Development on<lb />the Web? Yes, Try Evalutech! 84-85<lb /><lb />Southern Women in Revolution, 1776-1800: Per-<lb />sonal and Political Narratives, by Cynthia A.<lb />Kierner. Book review by Patrick Valentine.<lb />122<lb /><lb />Squire, Elizabeth Daniels. Is There a Dead Man<lb />in the House? Review. 83<lb /><lb />St. Thomas Church, Bath, N.C.<lb /><lb />Front cover (pic.). Spring, 1998<lb /><lb />Stainer, M. L. The LyonTs Cub. Book review by<lb />Mel Burton. 121<lb /><lb />. The LyonTs Roar. Book review by Mel<lb /><lb />Burton. 121<lb /><lb />Stanley, Deborah, and Natasha Lyandres. The<lb />Electronic Revolution and the Evolving Role<lb />of the Academic Reference Librarian. 100-104<lb /><lb />Stevenson, George, reviewer. See The Civil War<lb />on the Outer Banks.<lb /><lb />Stick, David, ed. An Outer Banks Reader. Book<lb />review by Rodney Barfield. 119<lb /><lb />Storytelling.<lb /><lb />Patterson, Irania Macias. Charlotte Public<lb />Library Speaks Espanol: Approaching the<lb />Hispanic Community Through<lb />Storytelling. 145-147<lb /><lb />oStrength Through Struggle:� The Chronological<lb />and Historical Record of the African-American<lb />Community in Wilmington, North Carolina,<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />1865-1950, by William M. Reaves. Ed. by<lb />Beverly Tetterton. Book review by William S.<lb />Powell. 162<lb />Swaim, Elinor.<lb />Cherry, Thomas Kevin B. Interview with<lb />Elinor Swaim. 71-74<lb />Illustration of. Cover, Summer 1998<lb /><lb />Taylor, Michael W., comp. To Drive the Enemy<lb />from Southern Soil: The Letters of Col. Francis<lb />Marion Parker and the History of the 30th Regi-<lb />ment North Carolina Troops. Review. 164<lb /><lb />Taylor, Rebecca, reviewer. See Homebody: A Novel.<lb /><lb />Teater, Barry. Close to the Heart: A FamilyTs En-<lb />counter with Breast Cancer. Review. 126<lb /><lb />Teen Angel and Other Stories of Wayward Love, by<lb />Marianne Gingher. Review. 164<lb /><lb />Tetterton, Beverly, and Glenn Tetterton. North<lb />Carolina County Fact Book. Review. 83<lb /><lb />Tetterton, Glenn. See North Carolina County<lb />Fact Book.<lb /><lb />Theme Issues.<lb /><lb />Advise and Consult. (Fall 1998) 96-116<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services. (Winter 1998) 141-151<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Innovators: Lessons<lb />Learned from the Past (Spring 1998) 4-36<lb /><lb />Turning Points: A North Carolina Oral His-<lb />tory of Librarianship. (Summer 1998) 60-<lb />74<lb /><lb />Tillage, Leon Walter, and Susan Roth. LeonTs<lb />Story. Book review by Jan Brewington. 77<lb /><lb />To Drive the Enemy from Southern Soil: The Let-<lb />ters of Col. Francis Marion Parker and the His-<lb />tory of the 30th Regiment North Carolina<lb />Troops, comp. Michael W. Taylor. Review.<lb />164<lb /><lb />A Tribute to Charles Kuralt. Video review by<lb />Melody Moxley. 127<lb /><lb />Tuchmayer, Harry, reviewer. See The<lb /><lb />Nostradamus Prophecy.<lb /><lb />Turberg, Edward F,, reviewer. See A Lasting Gift<lb />of Heritage: A History of the North Carolina<lb />Society for the Preservation of Antiquities,<lb />1939-1974.<lb /><lb />Turner, Lawrence D., reviewer. See Sorting Out<lb />the New South City: Race, Class, and Urban<lb />Development in Charlotte, 1875-1975.<lb /><lb />Turning Points: A North Carolina Oral His-<lb />tory of Librarianship.<lb /><lb />Cherry, Thomas Kevin B. Interview with<lb />Elinor Swaim. 71-74<lb /><lb />Nixon, Tommy. Interview with Edward G.<lb />Holley. 65-70<lb /><lb />Simon, Rose. Interview with Florence<lb />Blakely. 60-64<lb /><lb />Theme issue, Summer 1998. 60-74<lb /><lb />University of Houston Libraries.<lb />Nixon, Tommy. Interview with Edward G.<lb />Holley. 65-70<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb />Institute of Government. See Arrest, Search,<lb />and Investigation in North Carolina, 1997<lb />Supplement.<lb />____. See Eminent Domain Procedure for<lb />North Carolina Local Governments.<lb />University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb />School of Information and Library Science.<lb />Nixon, Tommy. Interview with Edward G.<lb />Holley. 65-70<lb /><lb />Valentine, Patrick. Mollie Huston Lee: Founder<lb />of RaleighTs Public Black Library. 23-26<lb /><lb />Valentine, Patrick, reviewer. See Southern<lb />Women in Revolution, 1776-1800: Personal<lb />and Political Narratives.<lb /><lb />Vattemare, Alexandre.<lb /><lb />York, Maurice C. Alexandre VattemareTs<lb />System of International Exchanges in<lb />North Carolina. 11-15<lb /><lb />Video Reviews.<lb /><lb />See Reviews.<lb /><lb />Voices From Home: The North Carolina Prose<lb /><lb />Anthology, by Richard Krawiec. Review. 47<lb /><lb />Wake County Public Library.<lb /><lb />Bartlett, Chrystal. The Relationship Between<lb />SuperiorsT Self-Disclosure, Offers of Help,<lb />Offers of Cooperation, Frequency of Con-<lb />tact, Trust, and SubordinatesT Job Satisfac-<lb />tion. 155-157<lb /><lb />Weathersbee, Pat. oFind the Bird.� Cover<lb /><lb />photo, Fall, 1998<lb /><lb />. Cover illustrations of Florence<lb /><lb />Blakely, Edward G. Holley, and Elinor<lb />Swaim, Summer, 1998.<lb /><lb />Webcelerator, by Ralph Lee Scott. 165<lb /><lb />Welch, John, reviewer. See Closing: The Life and<lb />Death of an American Factory. Book review<lb />by. 124<lb /><lb />Wilde-Ramsing, Mark, reviewer. See In Some<lb /><lb />Foreign Field: Four British Graves and Subma-<lb /><lb />rine Warfare on the North Carolina Outer<lb /><lb />Banks.<lb /><lb />Wing, Charles Hallet.<lb /><lb />Anthony, Robert G., Jr. Bringing Boston<lb />Books to the Carolina Mountains:<lb />Charles Hallet Wing and the Good-Will<lb />Free Library at Ledger. 16-18<lb /><lb />Winston-Salem Public Library Hospital<lb /><lb />Service.<lb /><lb />Photograph. 37<lb /><lb />Wired to the World (column by Ralph Lee<lb />SGOth) 59) 7oyll7 165<lb />World Wide Web.<lb />Scott, Ralph Lee. Java and The Web. 39<lb />. Webcelerator. 165<lb />. Zurfing the Net. 75.<lb />See also Internet.<lb /><lb />York, Maurice C. Alexandre VattemareTs System<lb />of International Exchanges in North Caro-<lb />lina. 11-15<lb /><lb />York, Maurice C., reviewer. See Democracy Be-<lb />trayed: The Wilmington Race Riot of 1898 and<lb />Its Legacy.<lb /><lb />Young, Perry Deane. The Untold Story of Frankie<lb />Silver. Review. 125<lb /><lb />Zurfing the Net, by Ralph Lee Scott. 75<lb />ZurfRider.<lb />Scott, Ralph Lee. Zurfing the Net. 75<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Guidelines for Using the Index<lb />to North Carolina Libraries<lb /><lb />1. Articles are indexed by title, subject, and<lb />first-named author, with cross-references<lb />from coauthors.<lb /><lb />2. Reviews are indexed by the title and first-<lb />named author, with cross-references from<lb />reviewers.<lb /><lb />3. All library organizations are entered un-<lb />der their full names. Information about<lb />the substructures of these organizations,<lb />such as committees, round tables, etc., is<lb />listed alphabetically under the organiza-<lb />tion name. (For example, for information<lb /><lb />on the activities, officers, reports, com-<lb /><lb />mittees, and round tables of NCLA, see<lb /><lb />North Carolina Library Association.)<lb /><lb />Winter 1998 " 177<lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00027365_0042" />
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          <lb />NCLA North Carolina Library Association<lb /><lb />Use the application below to enroll as a member of the North Carolina Library Asssociation or to renew your<lb />membership. All memberships are for one calendar year. THE MEMBERSHIP YEAR IS JANUARY 1 THROUGH<lb />DECEMBER 31. Memberships postmarked during the last quarter of the year cover the next year.<lb /><lb />Dues (see below) entitle you to membership in the Association and to one section or round table. For each<lb />additional section or round table, add $5.00. Return this form with your check or money order, payable to<lb />North Carolina Library Association (see address below).<lb /><lb />NCLA DUES<lb />(Membership and One Section or Round Table)<lb />(1 FULL-TIME LIBRARY SCHOOL 4 LIBRARY PERSONNEL<lb />STUDENTS (two years only) .... $10 Rarning up.to $15,000)... aerrnens $15<lb />Earning $15,001 to $25,000........... $25<lb />LJ RETIRED LIBRARIANS ............. DS Earning $25,001 to $35,000.......... $30<lb />OQ NON-LIBRARY PERSONNEL: Earning $35,001 to $45,000 Boocncads $35<lb />(Trustee, Non-salaried, or Friends Earning $45,001 and above........... $40<lb />Le CS ORE ae CONTRIBUTING (Individuals, Associations,<lb />Q INSTITUTIONAL (Libraries &amp; and Firms interested in the work of<lb />Library/Education-related NGA)? uu. .....he reece se patra eons $100<lb />BiASHAGISES) 2141.01.00 ROR....cccecucoees $50 (1 Contributing member acknowledged in North Carolina<lb /><lb />Libraries unless this box is checked<lb /><lb />NORTH CAROLINA LIBRARY ASSOCIATION<lb /><lb />please print or type CHECK SECTIONS AND ROUND TABLES<lb />ONE IS INCLUDED IN BASIC DUES. (New Members &amp; First Time<lb /><lb />New membership* Renewal** :<lb />*Dues automatically include membership in New Members Round Table renewals should choose a section other than New Members Round Table.)<lb />**Dues automatically include membership in New Members Round Table for FIRST TIME renewals. Add $5.00 for each additional section or round table.<lb /><lb />ChildrenTs Services<lb />College &amp; University Section<lb />Community &amp; Junior College Libraries Section<lb /><lb />Membership Number if Renewal ae<lb /><lb />Name lash<lb />Last First Middle ___ Documents Section<lb /><lb />Library Administration &amp; Management<lb />Title __ NC Association of School Librarians<lb /><lb />NC Public Library Trustees Association<lb />Library ____ Public Library Section<lb />Reference &amp; Adult Services Section<lb />Business Address Resources and Technical Services Section<lb />New Members Round Table<lb />NC Library Paraprofessional Association<lb />Round Table for Ethnic Minority Concerns<lb />Round Table on Special Collections<lb />Round Table on the Status of Women in Librarianship<lb /><lb />City State Zip<lb /><lb />Daytime Telephone Number<lb /><lb />Area Code ___ Technology &amp; Trends Round Table<lb />[J Check here if you NO NOT wish to be signed up for NCLA-L listserv AMOUNT ENCLOSED: (SEE ABOVE)<lb />$ Membership and one section/round table<lb /><lb />Mailing Address (if different from above)<lb /><lb />$5.00 for each additional section/round table<lb /><lb />TYPE OF LIBRARY I WORK IN: $ TOTAL (PLEASE DO NOT SEND CASH)<lb />___ Academic ;<lb />ab secubhe Mail Payment and Form to: North Carolina Library Association<lb />eee School : c/o State Library of North Carolina<lb />meee special 109 East Jones Street<lb />Other Raleigh, NC 27601-1023 ncla@mindspring.com<lb /><lb />THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT<lb />NCLA Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-1; Telephone (Voice &amp; FAX) 919-839-NCLA; E-mail: mcostello@ncsl.dcr.state.nc.us<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />fagek oe<lb /><lb />Light and Air<lb />The Photography of Bayard Wootten<lb /><lb />JERRY W. COTTEN<lb /><lb />The stunning presentation of the life and work<lb />of North CarolinaTs Bayard Wootten (1875-1959),<lb />a trailblazer for women photographers in the<lb />South. Includes many of WoottenTs most notable<lb />images, the portraits she crafted of black and<lb />white working people.<lb /><lb />8 x10, 190 duotones<lb /><lb />-2445-3 Nov $37.50 cloth<lb />Blythe Family Fund Series<lb /><lb />Sticks and Stones<lb /><lb />Three Centuries of North Carolina<lb />Gravemarkers<lb /><lb />M. RUTH LITTLE<lb /><lb />PHOTOGRAPHY BY TIM BUCHMAN<lb /><lb />A beautifully illustrated history, drawing on<lb /><lb />20 years of research and the talents of a superb<lb />photographer.<lb /><lb />oWith a discerning heart and eye, . .. Ruth Little<lb />illuminates the history as well as the artistry<lb /><lb />of gravemarkers in North Carolina.� "Catherine<lb />W. Bishir, author of North Carolina Architecture<lb /><lb />73/4 X11, 236 duotones<lb /><lb />2417-8 Oct $45 cloth<lb /><lb />Richard Hampton Jenrette Series<lb /><lb />in Architecture and the Decorative Arts<lb /><lb />Now back in print in paperback from UNC Press<lb /><lb />The Great Dismal<lb /><lb />A CarolinianTs Swamp Memoir<lb /><lb />BLAND SIMPSON<lb />WITH A NEW EPILOGUE BY THE AUTHOR<lb /><lb />o[Simpson] has given us a jewel of natural and<lb />human history.� " The New Yorker<lb /><lb />oIn this quietly eloquent book, Bland Simpson<lb />takes the reader on a journey through a remark-<lb />able place, and the stories he brings back are well<lb />worth the trip.� "North Carolina Historical Review<lb /><lb />39 illus.<lb />4752-6 Sept $14.95 paper<lb />Chapel Hill Books<lb /><lb />o :<lb />~ie }<lb /><lb />OV<lb /><lb />a /<lb />we<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Tar Heel Politics 2000<lb /><lb />PAUL LUEBKE<lb /><lb />oPaul Luebke understands North Carolina politics<lb />like no one else. ... This extraordinarily valuable<lb />account should be read by anyone who cares<lb />about the recent course and likely future of our<lb />state.� "John Shelton Reed, coauthor of 1001<lb />Things Everyone Should Know about the South<lb /><lb />+2452-6 Nov $34.95 cloth<lb />-4756-9 Nov $14.95 paper<lb /><lb />Democracy Betrayed<lb /><lb />The Wilmington Race Riot of 1898<lb />and Its Legacy<lb /><lb />DAVID S. CECELSKI AND<lb />TIMOTHY B. TYSON, EDITORS<lb /><lb />FOREWORD BY JOHN HOPE FRANKLIN<lb /><lb />Published on the centennial of the white su-<lb />premacy revolution that claimed many black<lb />lives and rolled back decades of progress for<lb />African Americans in N.C. This volume aims to<lb />draw attention to the tragedy, to honor its<lb />victims, and to add a timely historical voice to<lb />debates over its legacy.<lb /><lb />-2451-8 Nov $45 cloth<lb />4755-0 Nov $18.95 paper<lb /><lb />Colorblind Injustice<lb /><lb />Minority Voting Rights and the<lb />Undoing of the Second Reconstruction<lb /><lb />J. MORGAN KOUSSER<lb /><lb />An illuminating and controversial view of<lb />racial gerrymandering and the fight for<lb />minority voting rights.<lb /><lb />oAn indispensable guide to the uses of discrim-<lb />ination and fraud against racial and ethnic<lb />minorities in American politics.�<lb /><lb />-C. Vann Woodward, Yale University<lb /><lb />+2431-3 Jan $65 cloth<lb /><lb />-4738-0 Jan $29.95 paper<lb /><lb />} ee tna<lb /><lb />fall, o¢<lb /><lb />P esis out for a free<lb /><lb />copy of our catalog<lb /><lb />ISBN 0-8078<lb /><lb />FloridaTs<lb />Hurricane History<lb /><lb />JAY BARNES<lb />FOREWORD BY NEIL FRANK<lb /><lb />An illustrated history of FloridaTs most notable<lb />hurricanes, from colonial days through Andrew<lb />and Opal. Filled with photos, maps, and fasci-<lb />nating stories of tragedy and survival.<lb /><lb />81/2 X 10, 112 photos, 76 maps<lb />+2443-7 Oct $39.95 cloth<lb />-4748-8 Oct $19.95 paper<lb /><lb />The ChildrenTs Civil War<lb /><lb />JAMES MARTEN<lb /><lb />oGives voice to silent thousands"the boys<lb /><lb />and girls, black and white, northern and southern,<lb />who fought their own battles and endured this<lb />greatest American tragedy.� " Elliot West, author<lb />of Growing Up With the Country: Childhood on the<lb />Far-Western Frontier<lb /><lb />-2425-9 Sept $34.95 cloth<lb />Civil War America<lb /><lb />MemoryTs Nation<lb /><lb />The Place of Plymouth Rock<lb />JOHN SEELYE<lb /><lb />An extraordinary exploration of the changing<lb />meanings of this national icon over two centuries.<lb /><lb />oA rich and thorough study, ... one of the most<lb />illuminating books ever written about the role<lb />of regional legends in our sense and non-sense<lb />of American origins as well as national identity.�<lb />" Michael Kammen, Cornell University<lb /><lb />36 illus.<lb />-2415-1 Nov $39.95 cloth<lb /><lb />ys University of<lb />Vovth Caeslis Presi<lb /><lb />CHAPELHILL�"� PHONE [800] 848.6224 / FAX [800] 272.6817 / http://sunsite.unc.edu/uncpress/<lb /></p>
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          <lb />OwrmM<lb />aoOonAm<lb />m~aAMn<lb /><lb />es<lb /><lb />=<lb /><lb />wiviss<lb /><lb />TD<lb />rs]<lb /><lb />)<lb />UL<lb /><lb />rr rm<lb /><lb />ale!<lb /><lb />AO<lb /><lb />Morel<lb /><lb />3)<lb />=<lb />AD<lb /><lb />~<lb /><lb />poninin ste<lb /><lb />Spring 1999 Outreach<lb />Steve Sumerford, Guest Editor<lb /><lb />Mm<lb />~J<lb />oo<lb />Ww<lb />Oo<lb />1<lb />Pe<lb />LA<lb />uv<lb />tA<lb /><lb />Summer 1999 North Carolina Writers<lb />Alice Cotten, Guest Editor<lb /><lb />Fall 1999 Life and Limb (security issues)<lb />Page Life, Guest Editor<lb /><lb />Winter 1999 Conference Issue<lb /><lb />Spring 2000 The Millennium: Celebration or Disaster<lb />David Ferriero, Guest Editor<lb /><lb />Unsolicited articles dealing with the above themes or any issue of interest to North Carolina<lb />librarians are welcomed. Please contact the editor for manuscript guidelines and deadlines.<lb /><lb />North Carolina Libraries, published four times a year, is the official publication of the North<lb />Carolina Library Association. Membership dues include a subscription to North Carolina<lb />Libraries. Membership information may be obtained from the Administrative Assistant of<lb />NCLA. Subscription rates are $32.00 per year, or $10.00 per issue, for domestic<lb />subscriptions; $50.00 per year, or $15.00 per issue, for foreign subscriptions. Backfiles are<lb />maintained by the editor. Microfilm copies are available through University Microfilms.<lb />North Carolina Libraries is indexed by Library Literature and publishes its own annual index.<lb />Editorial correspondence should be addressed to the editor; advertisement<lb />correspondence should be addressed to the advertising manager. Articles are juried.<lb /><lb /></p>
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