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This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
Designed to assist beginning searchers, whether they are
students or practitioners, this text offers a comprehensive
introduction to online systems that primarily provide information
in the form of bibliographic citations. Walker and Janes give basic
how-to information on the use of online systems, discuss topics for
which there are no accepted paradigms, and present alternative
points of view within a framework of previous research. Expanding
on their immensely popular and critically acclaimed first edition,
the authors have added extensive new material addressing Internet
search and retrieval techniques as well as the more traditional
Dialog and Lexis-Nexis services. Invaluable as a textbook for
students in online retrieval courses, practicing librarians, and
online searchers in library settings, this book can be used as a
quick reference tool and as a handy guide for in-service training.
Information seekers who want to perform their own searches for
bibliographic information using an online sea
Documents are milestones and markers of human activity, part of who
and what we are. Our story can be told through the objects,
profound and trivial, famous and forgotten, by which we remember
and are remembered. Documents That Changed the Way We Live examines
dozens of compelling stories that describe these documents; their
creation, motivation, influence, importance, historical and social
context, provenance; and their connections to contemporary
information objects, technologies, and trends. These documents
include the following: *"Exaltation of Innana," a Sumerian hymn
composed c. 2300 BCE by the high priestess Enheduanna, likely the
first known author...of anything *The "We Can Do It!" poster
everybody knows is Rosie the Riveter calling women to work in the
factories in World War II. Except it's not, and she isn't *Joseph
McCarthy's "list" of Communists that ruined lives and careers,
because it was believed - even though it never existed *The "He has
waged cruel war..." passage on slavery, deleted from the
Declaration of Independence *The poorly designed Palm Beach County
"butterfly ballot," on which the 2000 U.S. presidential election
may have hinged *And the lesser-known stories behind the Zapruder
Film, the Watergate tapes, the Obama birth certificate, airplane
black boxes, Thanksgiving, IQ tests, the Star-Spangled Banner, why
Americans spell the way they do, Nobel Prizes, Wikipedia, and how
you're cooking dinner tonight
Thinking about the future of libraries, librarianship and the work
librarians do is as old as libraries themselves. (No doubt seminars
were organized by the Alexandria Librarians Association on the
future of the scroll and what to do about the rising barbarian
tide.) At no time in our memory, though, have these discussions and
conversations been so profound and critical. Here one of today's
leading thinkers and speakers about the future of libraries brings
together 30 leaders from all types of libraries and from outside
librarianship to describe their vision of what the library will be
in 2020. Contributors including Stephen Abram, Susan Hildreth,
Marie Radford, Clifford Lynch, and Library Journal's The Annoyed
Librarian were asked to describe the "library of 2020," in whatever
terms they wanted, either a specific library or situation or
libraries in general. They were told: "be bold, be inspirational,
be hopeful, be true, be provocative, be realistic, be depressing,
be light-hearted, be thoughtful, be fun...be yourself, and for
heaven's sake, don't be boring." Not that they could be. Broadly
representative of important perspectives and aspects within the
profession as well as featuring important voices beyond the
professional realm, Library 2020 presents thought-provoking and
illuminating visions from many points of view. It is both required
reading for library leaders and trustees as well as an ideal
supplemental text for LIS classes looking at the future of the
profession.
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