<< February 2004 | April 2004 >>
- Comics animate reading skills in school library [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
- Adding Substance, Not Just Frills, to a Library's Online Catalog [Computers in Libraries]
- Youths bash their way out of boredom at library [The Exeter News-Letter]
- Hands Off! That Fact Is Mine [Wired]
- Accountants are the real bookworms [BBC News]
- S.F. library officials grilled on plan to put trackers in books [The San Francisco Chronicle]
- What Newspapers and Their Web Sites Must Do to Survive [Online Journalism Review]
- Public Libraries Are Key to Providing Digital Opportunity for All [Institute of Museum and Library Services]
- Building community partnerships: The "One Book, One Community" experience [College & Research Libraries News]
- Reading over your shoulder [The Boston Globe]
- In search of the deep Web [Salon]
- Encyclopedias gather dust as research moves online [CNN]
- El Cerrito Students Protest Budget Cuts [Berkeley Daily Planet]
- Access for all? [EMBO reports]
- Reading a lost art [The Denver Post]
- The Top Ten Things a new Sci/Tech Librarian Should Know: Developing Core Competencies [Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship]
- SoCal city falls victim to Internet hoax, considers banning items made with water [The Mercury News]
- Boyd Cycle Theory in the Context of Non-Cooperative Games: Implications for Libraries [Library Philosophy and Practice]
- Wilmington parents angered by children's book about gay princes [The News & Observer]
- 'Reading with Dogs' gives students heads up [Los Alamos Monitor]
- Prisons subscribe to LexisNexis [The Seattle Times]
- Library Cats [American Profile]
- E-mailed chapters entice more readers [The Ocala Star-Banner]
- The many-copy problem and the many-copy solution [Open Access Now]
- Sony e-book to be written in electronic ink [CNET News.com]
- Librarian Accused Of Taping Students' Mouths [KCRA-TV]
- Sci-Tech Not-For-Profit Publishers Commit to Limited Open Access [Information Today]
- The Future Of News: The Digital Information Librarian [Robin Good]
- Influential scholar distributes book online for free [USA Today]
- Abridged too far [Salon]
- Wireless internet for bookworms [BBC News]
These links are not updated for accuracy; older links may be dead.
This service is run by John Hubbard (write to me).In 1990, Neptune was the furthest planet from the sun.