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The News
Why the Next Big Pop-Culture Wave After Cupcakes Might Be Libraries
Tuesday, 03 August 2010 12:51

NPR

by Linda Holmes

I realize we're picking the bones from the Old Spice campaign at this point, but when I saw that the Brigham Young University parody of the Old Spice ads had gotten more than 1.2 million views (Old Spicy himself — that's what I'm calling him — did a video for libraries), it got me thinking.

Specifically, it got me thinking about the very enjoyable Librarians Do Gaga video that everyone sent my way after the debut of the NPR Does Gaga video.

And about the fact that a local news story skeptically questioning whether libraries are "necessary" set off a response from Vanity Fair, and a later counterpunch by Chicago's Public Library Commissioner won her support from such diverse, non-library-specific outlets as The A.V. Club and Metafilter, and from as far away as The Guardian.

Call it a hunch, but it seems to me that the thing is in the air that happens right before something — families with a million kids, cupcakes, wedding coordinators — suddenly becomes the thing everyone wants to do happy-fuzzy pop-culture stories about. Why?

Libraries get in fights. Everybody likes a scrapper, and between the funding battles they're often found fighting and the body-checking involved in their periodic struggles over sharing information, there's a certain ... pleasantly plucky quality to the current perception of libraries and librarians. Yes, it plays a little ironically against the hyper-stereotypical buttoned-up notion of what a librarian is, but the sense that they're okay with getting mad in public — like Chicago's Public Library Commissioner did — gives library people a spark they might not otherwise have.

Librarians know stuff. You know how the words "geek" and "nerd" have gone from actual insults to words used to lovingly describe enthusiasts? Well, if we haven't gotten past venerating people who don't know anything, we've certainly reduced, I'd argue, the degree to which we stigmatize people for knowing a lot. This alone might not make libraries cool, but it takes away from the sense that they're actively not cool. More specifically, they live in the world of information, and are employed in part to organize and make accessible large quantities of data. If your computer had feet and a spiffy personality, you see.

Libraries are green and local. This is where there's a lot of potential appeal for the same people who like organic produce and reusable grocery bags. You can pretty easily position a library as environmentally friendly (your accumulation of books and magazines you are not reading is fewer trees for the rest of us, you know), not to mention economical (obvious) and part of your local culture. This is the part of the potential appeal that's anti-chain-store, anti-sprawl, anti-anonymity, and so forth.

Libraries will give you things for free. Hi, have you noticed how much hardcover books cost? Not a Netflix person? They will hand you things for free. That's not an especially hard concept to sell.

"Open to the public" means "some days, you really have to wonder about people." This is where you get the spark of an idea for TLC or somebody to do some goofball show called The Stacks, which follows a small local library through funding problems, trying to get book clubs started, whatever. When your building is open to the public, that means open ... to ... the ... public. And you know what's a little unpredictable? The public. This is where you might get your drama. (When I was in college, the information desk used to post the best questions it received, one of which was "How long do you cook spaghetti?" I suspect many libraries have similar stories.)

There seems to be a preposterous level of goodwill. Quite honestly, I feel like you can go on YouTube and act like a complete goof (in the best way), and if it's for libraries, people have that same rush of warmth that they used to get about people who had sextuplets, before ... well, you know. Before.

I don't know whether it's going to come in the form of a more successful movie franchise about librarians than that TV thing Noah Wyle does, or a basic-cable drama about a crime-fighting librarian (kinda like the one in the comic Rex Libris), or that reality show I was speculating about, but mark my words, once you've got Old Spicy on your side and you can sell a couple of YouTube parodies in a couple of months, you're standing on the edge of your pop-culture moment. Librarians: prepare.

 
U.S. public libraries: We lose them at our peril
Tuesday, 03 August 2010 12:37

Los Angeles Times


July 06, 2010
|By Marilyn Johnson

The U.S. is beginning an interesting experiment in democracy: We're cutting public library funds, shrinking our public and school libraries, and in some places, shutting them altogether.

These actions have nothing to do with whether the libraries are any good or whether the staff provides useful service to the community. This country's largest circulating library, in Queens, N.Y., was named the best system in the U.S. last year by Library Journal. Its budget is due to shrink by a third. Los Angeles libraries are being slashed, and beginning this week, the doors will be locked two days a week and at least 100 jobs cut. And until it got a six-month reprieve June 23, Siskiyou County almost became California's only county without a public library. Such cuts and close calls are happening across the country. We won't miss a third of our librarians and branch libraries the way we'd miss a third of our firefighters and firehouses, the rationale goes … but I wonder.

I've spent four years following librarians as they deal with the tremendous increase in information and the many ways we receive it. They've been adapting as capably as any profession, managing our public computers and serving growing numbers of patrons, but it seems that their work has been all but invisible to those in power. I've talked to librarians whose jobs have expanded with the demand for computers and training, and because so many other government services are being cut. The people left in the lurch have looked to the library, where kind, knowledgeable professionals help them navigate the government bureaucracy, apply for benefits, access social services. Public officials will tell you they love libraries and are committed to them; they just don't believe they constitute a "core" service.

But if you visit public libraries, you will see an essential service in action, as librarians help people who don't have other ways to get online, can't get the answers they urgently need, or simply need a safe place to bring their children. I've stood in the parking lot of the Topeka and Shawnee County Library in Kansas on a Sunday morning and watched families pour through doors and head in all directions to do homework or genealogical research, attend computer classes, read the newspapers. I've stood outside New York city libraries with other self-employed people, waiting for the doors to open and give us access to the computers and a warm and affordable place to work. I've met librarians who serve as interpreters and guides to communities of cancer survivors, Polish-speaking citizens, teenage filmmakers, veterans.

The people who welcome us to the library are idealists, who believe that accurate information leads to good decisions and that exposure to the intellectual riches of civilization leads to a better world. The next Abraham Lincoln could be sitting in their library, teaching himself all he needs to know to save the country. While they help us get online, employed and informed, librarians don't try to sell us anything. Nor do they turn around and broadcast our problems, send us spam or keep a record of our interests and needs, because no matter how savvy this profession is at navigating the online world, it clings to that old-fashioned value, privacy. (A profession dedicated to privacy in charge of our public computers? That's brilliant.) They represent the best civic value out there, an army of resourceful workers that can help us compete in the world.

But instead of putting such conscientious, economical and service-oriented professionals to work helping us, we're handing them pink slips. The school libraries and public libraries in which we've invested decades and even centuries of resources will disappear unless we fight for them. The communities that treasure and support their libraries will have an undeniable competitive advantage. Those that don't will watch in envy as the Darien Library in Connecticut hosts networking breakfasts for its out-of-work patrons, and the tiny Gilpin County Public Library in Colorado beckons patrons with a sign that promises "Free coffee, Internet, notary, phone, smiles, restrooms and ideas."

Those lucky enough to live in those towns, or those who own computers, or have high-speed Internet service and on-call technical assistance, will not notice the effects of a diminished public library system — not at first. Whizzes who can whittle down 15 million hits on a Google search to find the useful and accurate bits of info, and those able to buy any book or article or film they want, will escape the immediate consequences of these cuts.

Those in cities that haven't preserved their libraries, those less fortunate and baffled by technology, and our children will be the first to suffer. But sooner or later, we'll all feel the loss as one of the most effective levelers of privilege and avenues of reinvention — one of the great engines of democracy — begins to disappear.

 
Dr. Douglas Brinkley Video Sample
Wednesday, 28 July 2010 13:09
Dr. Douglas Brinkley on "The Wilderness Warrior: Teddy Roosevelt and the Crusade for America"
Presented October 17, 2009


Dim lights Download Embed Embed this video on your site
 
August 1: Nabokov on Mt. Ashland
Tuesday, 20 July 2010 16:08
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Lecture and Dinner in the Mt. Ashland Lodge, August 1, 3PM

Russian-born American novelist Vladimir Nabokov spent the summer of 1953 in Ashland, Oregon, collecting butterflies and working on his new novel, Lolita. A lepidopterist (butterfly collector), Nabokov once estimated that between 1949 and 1959 he and his wife Vera traveled more than 150,000 miles on butterfly trips.

In a 1956 essay, “On a Book Entitled Lolita,” Nabokov wrote: "Every summer my wife and I go butterfly hunting. . . . It was at such of our headquarters as Telluride, Colorado; Afton, Wyoming; Portal, Arizona; and Ashland, Oregon, that Lolita was energetically resumed in the evenings or on cloudy days."

The Ashland “headquarters” was a house at 163 Meade Street owned by Professor Arthur S. Taylor, head of the Department of Social Sciences at Southern Oregon College of Education (now Southern Oregon University). The house burned down on September 17, 1999. On a wall in front of the two townhouses that now occupy the site is this memorial plaque: “On this site in 1953, Russian writer Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977) completed his notorious Lolita.”

First published in Paris in 1955, Lolita made its U.S. debut in 1958. Scandalous as it was popular, Lolita is considered to be one of the most significant novels of the twentieth century.

Written by Don Reynolds

See Also: http://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/entry/view/nabokov_vladimir_in_oregon
 
After Hours Event: Launch new Business Partnership Program
Tuesday, 30 March 2010 00:00

After Hours Business Event to Launch the NEW Library Foundation Business Partnership Program
Friday, June 18 @ 4:30 PM
205 S. Central Avenue - upstairs
Medford

The Library Foundation is hosting an After Hours Business Event on Friday, June 18 at 4:30pm in the Medford Branch Library. 

We are quite proud to announce that the Oldtown Dining and and Entertainment Group, our founding Business Partner, has extended thier partnership and celebration of library support to our guests:  Four members of that group are offering $1 to the Foundation for every $10 spent in thier establishment: Elements, Porters, Habaneros and Jackson Creek Pizza.  The Group made a healthy contribution and will continue to add restaurants to the list of participants.

Four Daughters Irish Pub has donated discount coupons to the event as well.

It's incredible! We are thrilled! The local down town business community has stepped up and helped achieve exactly what we wanted -- they are our first example of broad and creative support of the Libraries.

The Library Foundation and staff have discussed opportunities to connect library users with the local businesses. In the Foundation's case, we've been looking for ways to encourage the large audiences we've created with our Arts & Lecture Series to patronize local restaurants after our events.

We have also been developing our giving programs and publicity opportunities for sponsors and thus -- we created a new giving program called Business Partnership. This program offers publicity and public acknowledgement of businesses who support the Library Foundation on an annual basis. 
 
Would you please come to our launch and first After Hours gathering on June 18?   We've invited members of the Medford, Ashland, Talent, Eagle Point and Central Point Chambers, library staff and supporters from all 15 branches, and many more.
 
Hope to see you there!

 
Annual Meeting Letter from the President
Tuesday, 03 March 2009 00:00
Annual Meeting Letter from the President
A Year of Transition for the Jackson County Library Foundation
March 3, 2009

Thank you for extending your financial support to the Jackson County Library Foundation and for supporting the communities in our region by doing so.

The mission of the Foundation is to help our library attain a level of excellence in facilities and services for the people of Jackson County.  The Foundation has existed since 1982 and is managed by an eight-member volunteer Board of Directors. We employ one full-time Executive Director and one temporary part-time support staff.
Read more...
 
2008 Annual Report
Tuesday, 03 March 2009 00:00
The 2008 Annual report is available as a downloadable PDF by clicking here.