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Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Times. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2013

Public Libraries Are Better Than Congress, Baseball, and Apple Pie, Say Americans - Robinson Meyer - The Atlantic

Public approval polls reveal the amazing truth!
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studioVin/Svetlana Foote
Every so often, a grave and concerned person will ask (as, in fact, the New York Times asked last year): “Do We Still Need Libraries?” Hasn’t the Internet kind of, you know, ended all that? Aren’t libraries falling behind?

Tellingly, the Times could find no one to argue against libraries, and that mirrors American sentiment pretty much exactly. A new Pew study finds that not only do Americans adore libraries, but a majority of us think they’re adjusting to new technology just fine.
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Thursday, December 12, 2013

Mariners Harbor Library to Open on Monday - NYTimes.com


Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
The inside of the Mariners Harbor Library, on the north shore of Staten Island, is almost all open.
No one has to tell Mohammed Iddrisu that a public library branch is long overdue in his neighborhood, Mariners Harbor

Mr. Iddrisu, 61, raised three school-age children on South Avenue. When they went to the library — and Mr. Iddrisu said he made sure they did so regularly — they had to travel two and a half miles to the Port Richmond branch. Including the wait for a bus, the trip could take an hour or so.  Read more

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Thursday, April 11, 2013

At a Do-It-Yourself Salon in Brooklyn, Books Obscure and Arcane - NYTimes.com


Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times
Kyle Appelgate, left, a visitor at Mellow Pages Library in Bushwick, with Matt Nelson, a co-founder.

Lucas Pinheiro and Magda Mortner entered the Mellow Pages Library in Brooklyn on Saturday afternoon, greeted the others there, and began to look at some of the library’s inventory of 1,300 books, many of them from obscure presses or by little-known writers. 

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Thursday, January 31, 2013

Employers Increasingly Rely on Internal Referrals in Hiring - NYTimes.com

Employers Increasingly Rely on Internal Referrals in Hiring - NYTimes.com

Danielle Cosgrove, left, referred Riju Parakh for a job at Ernst & Young. Ms. Parakh was hired within three weeks. 
Riju Parakh wasn’t even looking for a new job. 

But when a friend at Ernst & Young recommended her, Ms. Parakh’s résumé was quickly separated from the thousands the firm receives every week because she was referred by a current employee, and within three weeks she was hired. “You know how long this usually takes,” she said. “It was miraculous.” Read more...
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Monday, January 28, 2013

How Job Seekers Can Say ‘Look at Me’ to Online Recruiters - NYTimes.com

How Job Seekers Can Say ‘Look at Me’ to Online Recruiters - NYTimes.com

Minh Uong/The New York Times

Workstation

How to Say ‘Look at Me!’ to an Online Recruiter


IF you are thinking of looking for a job this year, or are already searching for one, be warned: for some job seekers, the rules have changed. Technology and social media have altered the way some employers consider candidates. Simply sifting through job postings and sending out applications en masse was never a good route to success, and is even less so now. Read more.
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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

ALA Press Release - American Library Association

ALA Press Release - American Library Association

NEWS
For Immediate Release
September 28, 2012
Contact: Jazzy Wright

An open letter to America’s publishers from ALA President Maureen Sullivan

CHICAGO — The following open letter was released by American Library Association (ALA) President Maureen Sullivan regarding Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, and Penguin refusal to provide access to their e-books in U.S. libraries.

The open letter states:

It’s a rare thing in a free market when a customer is refused the ability to buy a company’s product and is told its money is “no good here.” Surprisingly, after centuries of enthusiastically supporting publishers’ products, libraries find themselves in just that position with purchasing e-books from three of the largest publishers in the world. Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, and Penguin have been denying access to their e-books for our nation’s 112,000 libraries and roughly 169 million public library users.
Let’s be clear on what this means: If our libraries’ digital bookshelves mirrored the New York Times fiction best-seller list, we would be missing half of our collection any given week due to these publishers’ policies. The popular “Bared to You” and “The Glass Castle” are not available in libraries because libraries cannot purchase them at any price. Today’s teens also will not find the digital copy of Judy Blume’s seminal “Forever,” nor today’s blockbuster “Hunger Games” series.

Not all publishers are following the path of these three publishers. In fact, hundreds of publishers of e-books have embraced the opportunity to create new sales and reach readers through our nation’s libraries. One recent innovation allows library patrons to immediately purchase an e-book if the library doesn’t have a copy or if there is a wait list they would like to avoid. This offers a win-win relationship for both publishers and library users since recent research from the Pew Internet Project tells us that library users are more than twice as likely to have bought their most recent book as to have borrowed it from a library.

Libraries around the country are developing mobile applications and online discovery systems that make it easier to explore books and authors on the go. Seventy-six percent of public libraries now offer e-books — double the number from only five years ago — and 39 percent of libraries have purchased and circulate e-readers. Public libraries alone spend more than $1.3 billion annually on their collections of print, audio, video, and electronic materials. They are investing not only in access to content and devices, but also in teaching the skills needed to navigate and utilize digital content successfully.
Librarians understand that publishing is not just another industry. It has special and important significance to society. Libraries complement and, in fact, actively support this industry by supporting literacy and seeking to spread an infectious and lifelong love of reading and learning. Library lending encourages patrons to experiment by sampling new authors, topics and genres. This experimentation stimulates the market for books, with the library serving as a de facto discovery, promotion and awareness service for authors and publishers.

Publishers, libraries and other entities have worked together for centuries to sustain a healthy reading ecosystem — celebrating our society’s access to the complete marketplace of ideas. Given the obvious value of libraries to publishers, it simply does not add up that any publisher would continue to lock out libraries. It doesn’t add up for me, it doesn’t add up for ALA’s 60,000 members, and it definitely doesn’t add up for the millions of people who use our libraries every month.

America’s libraries have always served as the “people’s university” by providing access to reading materials and educational opportunity for the millions who want to read and learn but cannot afford to buy the books they need. Librarians have a particular concern for vulnerable populations that may not have any other access to books and electronic content, including individuals and families who are homebound or low-income. To deny these library users access to e-books that are available to others — and which libraries are eager to purchase on their behalf — is discriminatory.

We have met and talked sincerely with many of these publishers. We have sought common ground by exploring new business models and library lending practices. But these conversations only matter if they are followed by action: Simon & Schuster must sell to libraries. Macmillan must implement its proposed pilot. Penguin must accelerate and expand its pilots beyond two urban New York libraries.
We librarians cannot stand by and do nothing while some publishers deepen the digital divide. We cannot wait passively while some publishers deny access to our cultural record. We must speak out on behalf of today’s — and tomorrow’s — readers.The library community demands meaningful change and creative solutions that serve libraries and our readers who rightfully expect the same access to e-books as they have to printed books.
So, which side will you be on? Will you join us in a future of liberating literature for all? Libraries stand with readers, thinkers, writers, dreamers and inventors. Books and knowledge — in all their forms — are essential. Access to them must not be denied.
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Wednesday, December 21, 2011

2011 I Love My Librarian Award Follow-up from ALA.


 Thank you for attending the
2011 I Love My Librarian Award

We hope you agree that it was an inspirational evening with the 10 winners and the 300 librarians, guests and friends from the New York Metro area. 

If you’d like to relive the evening, check out:

Caroline Kennedy: http://tinyurl.com/6wqjm7o
Vartan Gregorian: http://tinyurl.com/7r5tr72

Video of the award ceremony:

Photos from the award ceremony:

Short video interviews with the 10 winners:

Thursday, December 15, 2011

10 Librarians Honored at the 2011 I Love My Librarian Award Ceremony

Last week on Dec. 8th,10 librarians from around the country were recognized for their service to their communities, schools and campuses as winners of the Carnegie Corporation of New York/New York Times I Love My Librarian Award. The I Love My Librarian Award is an initiative of the American Library Association and is administered with the generous support of the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the New York Times. The award “encourages library users to recognize the accomplishments of exceptional public, school, college, community college, or university librarians.”1

The 10 librarians were selected from more than 2,000 nominations nationwide. Each honoree received a $5,000 cash award, a plaque, and a $500 travel stipend to attend the awards ceremony and reception. The awards ceremony and reception were hosted at The TimesCenter, located in the heart on New York City’s bustling Times Square District. This year’s winners included Venetia V. Demson, of DC Public Library’s Adaptive Services Division: a librarian who makes the library easier to use for people with disabilities; Michelle Luhtala of the New Canaan High School Library, an innovator who integrates technology throughout her school for improved collaboration among students and teachers and Jennifer O. Keohane of the Simsbury Public Library, a business outreach librarian who creates a space for the unemployed and local business community to learn new skills, network and collaborate.2 For the complete list of winners, click on the following link: http://www.pio.ala.org/visibility/?p=3484.

Caroline Kennedy, author, attorney and daughter of former President John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, was the I Love My Librarian Award’s keynote speaker. A transcript of her opening remarks can be viewed here: http://www.pio.ala.org/visibility/?p=3494.

Close to 200 library supporters gathered at The TimesCenter for the Wednesday night awards ceremony. The event also commemorated the one hundred year anniversary of the Carnegie Corporation; and in honor of the 100th anniversary of his organization, Carnegie Corporation President Vartan Gregorian announced that a $5 million grant would be given to the New York City public libraries. 3

Footnotes:
1. American Library Association. (2011). About the I Love My Librarian Award. Retrieved December 13, 2011, from Atyourlibrary.org: http://atyourlibrary.org/ilovemylibrarian/about

2. Admin. (2011, December 9). Carnegie Corporation of New York/New York Times I Love My Librarian award winners announced. Retrieved December 13, 2011, from Visibility @ your library Web site: http://www.pio.ala.org/visibility/?p=3484

3. Staino, R. (2011, December 9). Three Media Specialists Win the 'I Love My Librarian Award'. School Library Journal. Retrieved December 13, 2011, from http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/slj/home/893006-312/three_media_specialists_win_the.html.csp

Monday, February 21, 2011

Freedom of Information Day at the New York Public Library March 16th, 2011

Who: David Barstow, of The New York Times

Freedom of Information Day at the New York Public Library

March 16, 2011 at 10:30 a.m.

Freedom of Information Day will be observed at the Science, Industry and Business Library (SIBL) of The New York Public Library (188 Madison Ave. @ 34th Street) on Wednesday, March 16, with a presentation and discussion from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. in Conference Room 014/015 on the lower level of the library. This year’s guest speaker is David Barstow, Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter for The New York Times. He will discuss freedom of information and the freedom of the press, particularly how accessing government information using the Freedom of Information Act affects the work of journalists.  The title of his presentation is: “ Freedom of Information: The Act (FOIA), the Press and the Future.”

Established by a Congressional Joint Resolution in 1989, Freedom of Information Day is held on or near March 16, the birthday of James Madison, fourth President of the United States and primary architect of the Bill of Rights. The observance underscores the importance of freedom of the press, speech, information, and the public’s right to know.

David Barstow has been an investigative reporter for The New York Times since 2002. Mr. Barstow joined The New York Times in 1999, as a reporter for the Metro desk.

In 2002 and 2003, Mr. Barstow reported extensively on workplace safety in America, leading a team of journalists that produced two series for The Times and an hour-long documentary for the PBS program "Frontline." The two series, "Dangerous Business" and "When Workers Die,'' won the Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2004. The two series and the documentary were also recognized with the duPont Silver Baton, an award long regarded as the Pulitzer Prize of television reporting.


In 2009, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for "Message Machine," two articles that exposed a covert Pentagon campaign to use retired military officers, working as analysts for television and radio networks, to reiterate administration "talking points" about the war on terror.


His most recent article, “Deepwater Horizon’s Final Hours,” appeared on December 26, 2010.


Before joining the paper, Mr. Barstow worked for The St. Petersburg Times in Florida beginning in 1990, reporting on a wide range of issues. While there, he was a finalist for three Pulitzer Prizes: in 1997, he was the lead writer for coverage of race riots and was a finalist for spot news reporting; in 1998, he helped lead coverage of financial wrongdoing at the National Baptist Convention and was a finalist for investigative reporting; and, that same year, he wrote a series of stories about tobacco litigation and was a finalist for explanatory journalism. Before joining The St.
Petersburg Times, Mr. Barstow was a reporter for The Rochester Times-Union in upstate New York.


This event is free and open to the public. No reservations are required.
Erminio D'Onofrio
Head of Information Services
The New York Public Library
Science, Industry and Business Library
188 Madison Ave.
New York, NY 10016
Tel.: 212-592-7037
Fax: 212-592-7061
edonofrioATnypl.org

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