<< December 2004 | February 2005 >>
- Turn the page to 2025 [The Cape Codder]
- Will Buffalo System Finally Close Branches? [Library Journal]
- Bookstores rated NYC's best pickup spot [CNN]
- World Braille Day [Florida Department of Education]
- Latest thing in hi-tech: a book [The Times]
- Vintage comics donated to museum [Canada.com]
- Information Literacy Makes All the Wrong Assumptions [The Chronicle of Higher Education]
- Delivering the News with Blogs: The Georgia State University Library Experience [Internet Reference Services Quarterly]
- Internet threat to libraries analyzed [University at Buffalo Reporter]
- Military librarians help readers from warriors to retirees [The State]
- Mississippi libraries ban 'Daily Show' book [CNN]
- Don't close the book on libraries [The Boston Globe]
- Let a Thousand Googles Bloom [The Los Angeles Times]
- Judge nixes evolution textbook stickers [MSNBC News]
- Book 'em: Libraries turn to collection agencies [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]
- Virtual Reference: Alive & Well [Library Journal]
- Dissing the King [Salon]
- Gates Foundation gives libraries nearly $11 million [USA Today]
- How copyright could be killing culture [The Globe and Mail]
- Preparing Tomorrow's Professionals: LIS schools and scholarly communication [College & Research Libraries News]
- Measuring Literacy in a World Gone Digital [The New York Times]
- A brave new gamer world [The Capital Times]
- Book thief who pillaged libraries gets 5 1/2 years [The New Zealand Herald]
- New York publisher faces fierce opposition to al-Qa'eda tome [Telegraph]
- Literacy the bottom line [The South Bend Tribune]
- At Free Library of Philadelphia, 20 Branches to Operate Without Librarians [Library Journal]
- Boy brings encyclopaedia to book [BBC News]
- A Librarian's Alphabet [Denise Plourde]
- Mayor puts lock on racy book [The Houston Chronicle]
- Problem Patrons or Problem Libraries? [Laurie Henry]
- From musty to megabytes [CNN]
These links are not updated for accuracy; older links may be dead.
This service is run by John Hubbard (write to me).Six people died in Oregon during WWII as a result of a Japanese balloon bomb.