Progressive Librarian #29 Supplement Page 55 Index #1

Transcription

Progressive Librarian #29 Supplement Page 55 Index #1
Editorial Committee for Preview Issue: Elaine Harger, Joseph Reilly, Mark
Rosenzweig, and Elliott Shore. Typeset by Ann Murphy. Cover graphic by Rini
Templeton. Copies produced on a photocopier. Address: Progressive Librarian,
c/o Empire State College-SUNY, School of Labor Studies Library, 330 W. 42nd
Street, 4th floor, New York NY 10036. 44 pages.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 55
Editorial Collective: Henry T. Blanke, Elaine Harger, Mark Rosenzweig, and Bill Stack.
Typesetting by Jim Murray of Cultural Correspondence. Cover graphic by Rini Templeton
(1935-1986). Allied union bug 101. Address: Progressive Librarian, c/o Empire State CollegeSUNY, School of Labor Studies Library, 330 W. 42nd Street, 4th floor, New York NY 10036.
ISSN 1052-5726. 60 pages.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 56
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Editorial Collective: Henry T. Blanke, Elaine Harger, Mark Rosenzweig and Bill Stack.
Typesetting by Jim Murray of Cultural Correspondence. Cover and inside graphics by
Michael Donovan. Allied union bug 101. Address: Progressive Librarian, c/o Empire State
College-SUNY, School of Labor Studies Library, 330 W. 42nd Street, 4th floor, New York NY
10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 56 pages.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 57
Editors: Henry T. Blanke and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine Harger. Editorial
assistant: Bill Stack. Typesetting by Jim Murray of Cultural Correspondence. Cover graphic
by Ann Murphy and Elaine Harger. GCIU bug 490M. Address: Progressive Librarian, c/o
Empire State College-SUNY, School of Labor Studies Library, 330 W. 42nd Street, 4th floor,
New York NY 10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 72 pages.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 58
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Editors: Henry T. Blanke and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine Harger. Editorial
assistant: Bill Stack. Typesetting and design by Totally Mem Graphic. [Alas, no credit given
for cover graphic.] GCIU bug 490M. Printed with soy ink on recycled paper. Address:
Progressive Librarian, c/o Empire State College-SUNY, School of Labor Studies Library, 330
W. 42nd Street, 4th floor, New York NY 10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 52 pages.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 59
Editors: Henry T. Blanke and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine Harger. Editorial
assistant: Bill Stack. Typesetting and design by Totally Mem Graphics. Graphic by anonymous
artist, published in 1895 entitled “The truth about giving readers free access to the books in a public
lending library.” Printing by Plowshares Press. CWA bug 1082. Address: Progressive Librarian, c/o
Empire State College-SUNY, School of Labor Studies Library, 330 W. 42nd Street, 4th floor, New
York NY 10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 72 pages.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 60
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Editors: Henry T. Blanke and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine Harger. Typesetting
and design by Totally Mem Graphics. Photomontage on cover by Elaine Harger. Printing by
Plowshares Press. CWA bug 1082. Address: Progressive Librarian, c/o Empire State CollegeSUNY, School of Labor Studies Library, 330 W. 42nd Street, 4th floor, New York NY 10036.
ISSN 1052-5726. 87 pages.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 61
Editors: Henry T. Blanke, John Buschman and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine
Harger. Typesetting and design by Totally Mem Graphics. Lithograph on cover by Charles
Keller, “State of the Art.” Printed at the Print Center. Indexed in the Alternative Press Index.
Address: Progressive Librarians Guild, P.O. Box 2203, Times Square Station, New York NY
10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 40 pages.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 62
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Editors: Henry T. Blanke, John Buschman and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine
Harger. Formatted by Elaine Harger. Photocopied. Indexed in the Alternative Press Index.
Address: Progressive Librarians Guild, P.O. Box 2203, Times Square Station, New York NY
10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 96 pages.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 63
Editors: Henry T. Blanke, John Buschman and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine
Harger. Formatted by Elaine Harger. Cover “Book-binderʼs rollilng machine” from Penny
Magazine, December 31, 1833. Printed by Orange Blossom Press (Cleveland, Ohio). Allied
union bug 68. Indexed in the Alternative Press Index. Address: Progressive Librarians Guild,
P.O. Box 2203, Times Square Station, New York NY 10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 77 pages.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 64
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Editors: Henry T. Blanke, John Buschman, Meliassa Riley and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing
editor: Elaine Harger. Formatted by Elaine Harger. Cover “Ancient book-binder” from Penny
Magazine, December 31, 1833. Printed by Orange Blossom Press (Cleveland, Ohio). Allied
union bug 68. Indexed in the Alternative Press Index. Address: Progressive Librarians Guild,
P.O. Box 2203, Times Square Station, New York NY 10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 55 pages.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 65
Editors: Henry T. Blanke, John Buschman Melissa Riley and Mark Rosenzweig. Book review
editor: Rory Litwin. Managing editor: Elaine Harger. Formatted by Elaine Harger. Cover:
poster by Rene Mederos, 1971. Printed by Orange Blossom Press (Cleveland, Ohio). Allied
union bug 68. Indexed in the Alternative Press Index. Address: Progressive Librarians Guild,
P.O. Box 2203, Times Square Station, New York NY 10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 70 pages.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 66
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Editors: Henry T. Blanke and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine Harger. Formatted
by Elaine Harger. Cover: postcard by Free Lunch Counter Culture Association. Printed by
Durland Alternative Library at Cornell University. Indexed in the Alternative Press Index.
Address: Progressive Librarians Guild, P.O. Box 2203, Times Square Station, New York NY
10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 74 pages.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 67
Editors: Henry T. Blanke and Mark Rosenzweig. Managing editor: Elaine Harger. Formatted
by Elaine Harger. Cover: photo of Agnes Inglis, July 1928, by permission of Labadie
Collection, University of Michigan. Printed by Durland Alternative Library at Cornell
University. Indexed in the Alternative Press Index. Address: Progressive Librarians Guild,
P.O. Box 2203, Times Square Station, New York NY 10036. ISSN 1052-5726. 40 pages.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 68
Index #1-16
1990-1999
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Summer 2007
Index A-Z
2
Listing of Acronyms & Initialisms
49
Index to Documents
53
Index to Book Reviews
54
PL Covers
55
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 1
PROGRESSIVE LIBRARIAN INDEX
Issues #1-16, 1990-1999
by Kathleen de la Peña McCook
with assistance from Marianne Lenihan
ALP Advancement of Librarianship
in the Third World
AMC factory workers, 10/11.13-14
ANC See African National Congress
“ANC Statement on Wedgeworth
21st Century, 12/13.43
Trip to S. A.,” 1.29-30
AP, 3.12
APT See Alternative Press Titles for
A
Libraries
“Abandoning care,” 10/11.11-12
A-76 See Circular A-76
“Abandoning share,” 10/11.11
A-130 See Circular A-130
“Abridgement of Human Rights in
AAAS See American Association for the
South Africa,” American Library
Advancement of Science
Association Council Resolution,
AAP See Association of American
1986, 1.18
Publishers
Academic Book Center, 12/13. 39-40
AAP Report (1989) See The Starvation of Academic freedom, 9.23-25, 12/13.
Young Black Minds
8-9
AAUP See American Association of
Academic librarians, 14.13
University Professors
Academic libraries, 4.28-36, 12/13.
ABC See African Books Collective
7-17
ACRL See American Library Association, Academic Press, 12/13.37
Association of College and
Access to communications, 4.42
Research Libraries
“Access to Electronic Information
AEMIC See Asociación para el Estudio
Services and Networks: An
de los Exilos y Migraciones Ibéricas
Interpretation of the Library Bill of
AIDS, 5.19, 15.17
Rights,” 12/13. 7-17
AILS See African Imprint Library
Access to libraries, 3.38
Services
Acción (Asturias), 16. Supp. 37
AFSCME See also American Federation
Accountability of governments,9.1of State, County and Municipal
15
Employees
Accreditation, 10/11.3-4
AKRIBIE See Arbeitskreis Kritischer
Achtenberg, Roberta, 15.10
BibliotharInnen
Ackerman, Marilyn, 5. Inside cover,
“AKRIBIE: Arbeitskreis Kritischer
44-46
Bibliothekarinnen/ Working Group of
An Active Instrument of Propaganda:
Critical Librarians, Germany,” 15.31The American Public Library
36
During World War I (1989), 4.66
ALASA See African Library Association Actors Equity, 2.19
of South Africa
Adams, Don, 4.45
ALIA See Australia Library &
Added Entries, 1.36-42, 2.50-59,
Information Association
3.52-56, 6/7. 52-63, 8. 40-73,
14.51-53, 15.51-53, 16.51-62
Progressive Librarian #29
Index #1-16
Supplement
1990-1999
Page 2
“1940 Statement of Principles on
Academic Freedom and Tenure,”
[AAUP] 12/13.8-9
“Address to the United Nations,”
11/26/90 by Joseph Reilly, 2.4144, 15.25
Adorno, Theodor, 6/7. 32-38, 42, 43,
46, 47, 48, 49
Advancement of Librarianship in
the Third World, 10/11.79
Advertising, 3.9, 16.31
Advocacy, 3.36, 16. 1-25
Affirmative action, 4.3-4
Africa, 3.43-51, 9.16-21
See also names of specific nations
such as Angola, South
Africa, Zimbabwe
Africa News, 16.47
Africa World Press, 4.28-36
African-American artists, 8.66
African-American librarians, 15.6264
African-Americans, 8.69
African Books Collective, 3.44
African Communist, 1.32, 2.30
African Imprint Library Services,
3.46
African Journal Distribution
Program, 3.44
African Library Association of
South Africa, 10/11.89
African Libraries: Western Tradition
and Colonial Brainwashing
(1981), 9.19
African National Congress, 1.3, 1.4,
1.10-12, 1.16, 1.17, 1.19, 1.21,
1.25-28, 1.29-30, 1.35, 2.31, 2.32,
2.34, 2.35, 2.36, 2.38, 2.41-44,
3.21, 3.22, 4.37, 4.51-52, 5.47,
9.6, 9.11, 9.36-37, 15.22
Department of Arts and Culture,
4.51-52
Africaʼs Transkei: The Political
Economy of an “Independent”
Bantustan (1983). 4.31-32
Against the Current, 16.47
The Age of Imperialism: the
Economics of U.S. Foreign Policy
(1969), 16.38
Agee, Philip, 4.67-68
“Agenda for Action” [National
Information Infrastructure], 16.35
Agnostics, 14.3
Agre, Phil, 12/13.1-6, 12/13. 76
AGRICOLA, 12/13. 41
Air and Space Museum
See National Air and Space
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Museum
Air Force Association, 10/11.60-78
Alagoas (Brazil), 6/7.60
Albania, 16.43
Albright, Madelaine, 14.1
Alcón, Marcos, 16.Supp. 30
Aldrig Mere Kring [Never More War]
Danish Section of WRI, 15.48
Alemna, Anaba, 9.16-21, 9. inside back
cover
Alfonso XIII, King (Spain), 16/Supp.4
Algren, Nelson, 1.40
The Alienated Librarian (1989) review,
2.55-58
Alienation, 2.55-58, 6/7. 34-35
All American Anarachist: Joseph A.
Labadie and the Labor Movement
(1998) citation, 16 suppl.10
All the Livelong Day: The Meaning and
Demeaning of Routine Work (1994),
9.30
Allen, Adela Artole, 5.44-46
Allende Popular Unity government,
16.32-33
Alliance for America, 6/7. 11
Alliance for Cultural Democracy, 3.15,
4.37, 4.38-45
Allbemeiner Deutscher Frauenverein
(General German Womenʼs
Association),
8.21
Alterman, Eric, 16.40, 16.45, 16.51
Alternative Information Record, 15.4243
Alternative News Service, 3.21
Alternative Library Literature: A
Biennial Anthology (1984-present),
15.9
Alternative Press Index, 16.37-50, 16.57
Alternative Press Titles for Libraries,
6/7. 72
Alternatives, 16.47
Amadi, A. O., 9.19
Amana (publisher), 4.28-36
Amendment Two (Colorado), 15.10
AmericaOnline, 12/13.29
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee, 5. Inside front cover
American Association for the
Advancement of Science, 3.44
American Association of University
Professors, 2.26, 12/13.8
American Book Review 4.35
American Civil Liberties Union, 2.26,
3.38
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 3
American dream, 10/11.14
American Ex-Prisoners of War, 10/11. 63
American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees, 4.53-58,
6/7.2
Local 2910, 6/7.2
American Federation of Teachers, 2.26
American Friends Service Committee,
2.49
American Historical Association, 6/7.2,
6/7. 68-69
American Legion, 10/11. 60-78
American Libraries, 1.inside back cover,
5.8-10, 6/7.18, 12/13.10, 15.1-3
“The American Library Association
Needs a Progressive Agenda,” 8.818.85
American Library Association
ACONDA, 15.5-8
Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Concepts
Denoted by the Term, “Primitive,”
1.39
African American discrimination
against, 15. 62-64
Association of College and Research
Libraries, 1.20, 4.34-35, 4.36
Black Caucus, 1.20, 15.62
Book reviewing policies, 4.34-35
Code of Professional Ethics, 12/13. 40
Commercialism, 8.82
Conference, 1946, 2.25
Conference, 1986, 3.32
Conference, 1989, 3.32
Conference, 1990, 2.2, 3.32-33
Conference, 1992, 4.66
Conference, 1998, 15.67
Corporatism, 8.81
Council, 1.18, 14.1
“Abridgement of Human Rights in
South Africa,” res.1986, 1.18
Divests South African investments,
1.18
Executive Board, 14.1-4
Executive Director, 8.81
“Feel-good sloganeering,” 8.81
Human rights record of support, 8.84
Intellectual Freedom Committee, 1.2,
1.7, 1.10, 1.12, 8.83, 15.5
Intellectual Freedom Round Table,
10/11.62, 69-70
International Relations Committee,
1.20, 3.49, 15.62-64
International Relations Round Table,
1.20, 15.67
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 4
International Visitors Reception
(protest), 15.67
Keeney, Philip, non-support of,
2.26-27
Library Bill of Rights, 1.35
Library History Round Table, 15.55
Membership meetings, 14.3
Minority Concerns, 1.36
Office of Intellectual Freedom,
8.83, 10/11.69-70
“Pass a Buck,” 10/11.67
Poor Peopleʼs Policy, 3.4, 3.32-33
Postwar planning, 15.54-58
Presidents
Ford, Barbara J., 15.63
Jones, Clara, 15. 63
Moon, Eric, 15.63
Symons, Anne, 14.3-4
Progressive Librarians Council
relations with, 2.23
Racism within, 15.62-64
Resolution on Israeli Censorship,
14.3
Sanctions against South Africa, 1.67, 2. Inside front cover, 2.41-44
Silencing of political statements,
14.1-4
Social Responsibilities Round Table
See Social Responsibilities Round
Table
Status of Women in Librarianship,
Committee, 8.11
Third Activities Committee, 2.23
American Newspaper Association,
6/7.17
Amoros, Solon, 16. Supp. 14
Anarchism, 16. Supp. 1-40
Anarchism & Libraries, special
supplement to Progressive
Librarian #16, Fall 1999
Anarchisme, 16.Supp.16
Anarchist Federation, 16. Supp. 18
Anarchist librarians, 16. Supp. 7-10,
16. supp.11-17
Anarchist publishers, 16.66, 16.Supp.
3
Anarchists, 15.60-61, 16.Supp.1-39
“Anarchists in Libraries: Anecdotes,”
16.Supp.1-6
“Anarchists with a Tool: The Library,”
16.Supp. 18-20
Anarchives, 16. Supp.16, 16.Supp.
30-39
Index #1-16
1990-1999
This cartoon is from issue #1, which was not actually numbered, but called the “Preview
Edition” and focused almost exclusively on South Africa, the anti-apartheid movement, and
libraries involvement in sanctions against apartheid institutions – a hotly debated topic within
the American Library Association at the time. This issue was purposefully intended as a
contribution to the discussions taking place at ALA in the summer of 1990. Peter McDonald
provided this cartoon as an illustration.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 5
Anatomy of a War: Vietnam, the United
States and the Modern Historical
Experience (1985), 16.39
“Ancient Book-binder,” 14.cover
Androcentric, 5.1-18
Anderson, Carlotta, 16. Supp. 10
Anderson, Elizabeth, 1.36
Andres, Emilio, 2.24
Andres, Teresa, 2.24
Angola, 9.5, 9.8
Ann Arbor Public Library, 3.38
Annan, Kofi, 14.1
Antich, Salvador Puig, 16. supp. 38
Anti-Allende, 16.32
Anti-American propaganda, 10/11.65
Anti-apartheid, 1.2, 1.18-19, 1.30-31,
4.37
Anti-censorship, 15.16
Anti-capitalist, 3.9
Anti-democratic, 12/13.47
Anti-ecology, 8.70
Anti-environmentalists, 6/7.11
Anti-feminist (Bliase Cronin), 10/11.3
Anti-imperialism, 3.6
Anti-intellectualism, 14.5-12
Anti-Intellectualism in American Life
(1963), 14.5-6
Anti-Japanese propaganda, 10/11.65
Anti-McDonaldʼs, 15.59-61
Anti-Nuclear Librarians Club, 15.48
Anti-poverty, 1.36-37
Anti-racism, 3.6, 15.16
Anti-social responsibility (Blaise
Cronin), 10/11/2-3
Anti-surveillance, 16.67-68
Anti-utopian view of technology,
10/11.9-10
Anti-Vietnam War, 16. 37
Anti-war, 2.47-48
The Anvil, 1.40
Anyplace But Here (1966), 1.40
Apartheid, 1.2-15, 1.18,1.21-24, 1.2528, 1.30, 2.31, 2.41-44, 3.4, 4.17-27,
4.49- 50, 9.5, 9.12, 10/11. 79-80,
10/11. 87-89, 15.9, 15.16, 15. 21,
15.23, 15. 63
Appeal to Reason, 16. Supp. 9
Arab League, 2.48
Arab-Americans, 5.30
Arabs, 5.26-30
Arafat, Yasir, 4.67
“Arbeitskreis Kritischer
Bibliothekarinnen,” 8.32-35, 15.
31-36
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 6
Arbeitskreis Kritischer
Bibliothekarinnen und Bibliothekare
im Renner-Institut, 15. 37-40
“Archive ʻMemorialʼ St. Petersburg,
Russia,” 14.51-53
Archive of the German Womenʼs
Movement, Kassel, 8.26
“Archives and Libraries of Womenʼs
Literature in Germany: A Survey,”
8.21- 31
Area Handbooks, 5.29
Arena Magazine, 16.47
Arena Party (Brazil), 6/7. 60
Arendt, Hannah, 5.13
Argentina, 16. supp.11-17
Argentine Libertarian Federation, 16.
supp.11
Argentine Regional Labor Federation,
16. supp.11
Ariege, F.L. de la, 16. Supp. 36
Aristide, Jean-Bertrand, 16.41
Arnold, General Hap, 10/11/62-78
Aronowitz, Stanley, 6/7. 41-43,
10/11.28
ARSENAL/SURREALIST
SUBVERSION, 8.37
Asociación Isaac Puente, 16. Supp. 34
Asociación para el Estudio de los
Exilios y Migraciones Ibéricas, 16.
Supp. 33
Association of College and Research
Libraries,
See American Library Association,
Association of College and
Research Libraries
Armitage, Andrew, 15.1
Article 19 (organization), 10/11. 81-82.
Article 19 of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights
See Universal Declaration of Human
Rights
Arts, 4.42-43, 6/7. 34-35
Arrea, Dominguo Fernandez, 16. Supp.
18
Ascaso, Francisco, 16.Supp. 3, 16.Supp.
4
Asmal, Kader, 9.5
Ashtown, library, (South Africa), 2.4144
Association of American Publishers,
1.2, 1.7-8, 1.10, 1.16, 1.18-20, 1.33,
2.41
Atenue Enciclopèdic Popular
(Barcelona), 16. Supp. 36,
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Atheists, 14.3, 16.Supp. 26-27
Atlestam, Ingrid, 15.30
Atom bomb, 10/11.60-78
Attention, MOVE! This is America!
4.35
Australia, 4.19, 9.7-8, 9.14fn.28,
16.13
Australia Library & Information
Association, 16.13
Austria, 15. 37-40
Austrian Federation of Trade Unions,
15. 37, 15.39
Austrofascism, 15. 37
Autodidact, 16.Supp.6
Autonomous Womenʼs Archive
Wiesbaden-Research and
Education Institute,
8.24
Autonomous Womenʼs Movement
(Germany), 8.24-25
Awatere, Donna, 16.22
B
BAFF
See Bundesarbeitsgem
einschaft Autonomer
Frauenforschungseinrich-tungen
BAU
See Bibliotekerarbejdslos
BICEL
See Boletín Interno del Centro de
Estudion Libertarios Anselmo
Lorenzo
BiS
See Bibliotek i Samhalle
Baby Bells
See Regional Bell Operating
Companies
Bagdikian, Ben, 2.10, 3.16-17, 3.53
Baker, James, 2.44
Baker, Nicholson, 12/13.36, 12/13.
60
Baker & Taylor, 12/13. 37-39
Bakunin, Mikhail Alexandrovich, 16.
Supp.18
Balabanian, Norman, 10/11.45-46,
48
Balaguer Library (Vilanova), 16.
Supp. 27
Baldwin, Roger, 16. Supp. 9
Balkans, 16.43
Bangemann Report, 12/13. 45,
12/13. 46
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Bantu education, 4.49
Bandung, Indonesia, 3.24
Barlow, John H., 9.33
Barnet, Richard, 16.37, 16.51
Barriers to Information: How Formal
Help Systems Fail Battered Women
(1993), 10/11. 97
“The Battle of the Enola Gay,” 10/11.65
Bäumer, Gertrud, 8.13
Bear River Massacre, 1863, 5.39
Beatles, 6/7. 49
Bell, Daniel, 2.3, 2.9, 10/11.23-42,
10/11.92
Beirut Agreement (1949), 4.68
Beloved (1989), 6/7. 49
Benjamin, Walter, 6/7. 35-36, 6/7.43, 6/7.
46, 8. 69
Benson, Mary, 2.32
Berelson, Bernard, 15.55
Berlin City Archive, 8.25
Berlin Wall, 3.26
Berlin Womenʼs Organization, 8.25
Berkman, Alexander, 16. Supp. 8
Berman, Sanford, 1. Inside cover, 1.38,
1.42, 5. Inside cover, 5.19-25,
12/13.41, 14.2, 15.9, 15.42
Berne Copyright Convention, 12/13. 19
Berninghausen, David K. 15.4-13
Misrepresentation of SRRT, 15.8
Berninghausen Debate, 15.4-13
Bernstein, Hilda, 9.5-6
Besançon, Municipal Library, 16.Sup.1
Bettini, Leonardo, 16. Supp. 16
Betser, Charles, 2.33
Bianco, Réne, 16.Supp.16
Bibliografia del anarquismo español, 16.
Supp. 32
Bibliography of Anarchy, 16. Supp.13
Bibliography of Overseas Publications
About South Africa, 1.4
Bibliography of Spanish Anarchism, 16.
Supp. 32
Biblioteca juventud moderna (Mar del
Plata), 16. Supp.12
Biblioteca Nacional Jose Marti, 15.53
Biblioteca Pública Arús, 16. supp. 37
Biblioteca Popular José Ingenieros
(Buenos Aires), 16. supp.11
Biblioteca Social Reconstruir (Mexico
City), 16. Supp, 19, 16.Supp. 22,
16.Supp. 30-31
See also, Library of Social
Reconstruction, 16.Supp. 22, 16.Supp.
30
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 7
Bibliotheʼque Municipale de
Strasbourg, 12/13.63-68
Bibliotek i Samhalle, Sweden
[Libraries in Society] (BIS), 5.3134, 15.22, 15.25, 15. 27-30, 15.32
Bibliotekerarbejdslos, 15.46
Bibliotekarer For Fred, 15.48
Big Mountain, 5.43
Biggs, Mary, 5.1
Bilingual education, 5.44
Bill of Rights, 5.49
Billington, James, 6/7. 64-67
Birdsall, William F., 12/13. 69-70, 15.
14-15
bis (journal of BiS, Bibliotek i
Samhalle], 15.28
Bischof, Phyllis, 9.36-37
Black Caucus of the American Library
Association, 1.20, 15.62
Black Hills, 5.39
Black History, 1.40
“Black on Black” violence (South
Africa), 2.37, 2.38
Black Library Workers, 15.45
Black Swan Press, 8.40-65
“Black Widow,” –Autonomous
Womenʼs Research Office Münster,
8.24, 8.26
Blacklisted authors, 3.3
Blake, Fay. 3.34-35
Blanke, Henry T., 2. Inside front cover,
2.9-14, 2.55-58, 2.59, 3. Inside front
cover, 3.15, 3.52-53, 3.55, 4.2, 5.
Inside front cover, 6/7. Inside front
cover, 6/7.1, 6/7. 30-51, 6/7. 70, 8.
inside front cover, 9. inside front
cover, 10/11. inside front cover,
10/11. 92-96, 10/11.97, 12/13. inside
front cover, 14. inside front cover,
15. inside front cover, 15.15, 16.
inside front cover, 16.Supp. i
Bleifuss, Joel, 16.40, 16.46
Bloom, Allan, 2.3, 4.3
Blue Ribbon Coalition, 6/7.11
Bly, Robert, 8.37
Bogartte, J. Karl, 8.37
Boletín de la Escuela Moderna,
16.Supp. 37
Boletín Interno del Centro de Estudios
Libertarios Anselmo Lorenzo, 16.
Supp. 35
Boletín de Militares del frente de
Aragón, 16. Supp. 37
Bontemps, Arna, 1.40
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 8
Bopape, Stanza, assassinated, 9.3
Book Aid, 15. 46
Book-binderʼs Rolling Machine,
[illustration]” from the Penny
Magazine, December 31, 1833,
12/13. cover and inside front cover
“Book Boycott” (South Africa), 1. 215,1.16-17, 1.18-20, 2.43, 2.45-46
Book burners, 4.6
Book donations, 3.43-51
Book famine (South Africa), 3.43-51,
9.16
“The Book Famine in Africa,” 3.43-51
Book Reviews
The Alienated Librarian (1989),
2.55-58
Class Warfare in the Information
Age (1998), 16.63-66
Columbus, His Enterprise (1976,
1991), 5.40-41
Confronting Columbus (1992), 5.42
The Conquest of Paradise (1990),
5.41-42
Dangerous Memories: Invasions
and Resistance Since 1942
(1991), 5.42-43
Information Liberation (1998),
16.66-70
Into the Future: The Foundations of
Library and Information Science
in the Post-Industrial Era (1993),
10/11. 92-96
Librarianship and Legitimacy: The
Ideology of the Public Library
Inquiry (1997), 15.54-58
McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial
(1997), 15.59-61
The Myth of the Electronic Library:
Librarianship and Social
Change in America (1994),
12/13.69-70
Multicultural Folktales: Stories to
Tell Young Children (1991),
5.44-46
The Right to Know (1990), 3.532-53
Poor People and Library Services
(1998), 16.70-72
Taking Liberties: National Barriers
to the Free Flow of Ideas (1990),
4.66-69
Book selection, 4.28-36, 5.1-18
Booklist, 4.35
Books as war booty, 15.34
Books for College Libraries, 4.35
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Books for Sammies, 15.57-58
Books for the People: An Illustrated
History of the British Public
Library (1977), 6/7. Inside front
cover
Boorstin, Daniel, 6/7. 39-42
Booth, Wayne, 4.6
Bork, Roberet, 9.24
Bosnia, 16.42
Bostwick, Arthur, 10/11.50-52
Botha, P.W., 2.36
Bourdieu, Pierre, 14. 14-15
Bouthillier, France, 14.13-21, 14.54
Boy Scouts of America, 14.3
Brace, William, 15.2
Braverman, Harry, 10/11. 25-32
Braverman thesis, 10/11.26
Bray, John Francis, 16. Supp.9
Brazil, 6/7. 52-61
Brazilian Workerʼs Party, 6/7.2,
52-61
Brecht, Bertolt, 6/7. 43
Breivik, Patricia Senn, 12/13.12,
12/13.13
Bremen Womenʼs Archive
and Documentation Center
“Belladona,” 8.24
Breton, André, 8.36, 8.69, 8.71, 8.72
Briarpatch, 16.48
Brisbane, 16.3-4
British Guiana, 16.38
Broadbent, Marianne 16.7-8
Broderick, Dorothy M., 15.10
Brown, Aggrey, 3.13
Brown, Michael Barrett, 16.42
Browsing, 6/7. 65
Bruno Kreisky Award, 15.40
Brutus, Dennis, 2.41
De Bruyn, Günter, 8.10
Bryan, Alice I. 15. 55
Buchanan, Pat, 3.26, 5.37, 10/11.71
Budd, John, 10/11, 43-59, 10/11.97
Bulfi, Luis, 16. Supp. 36
Bulletin in Defense of Marxism,
16.47
Bulletin of Concerned Asian
Scholars, 16.41, 16.45, 16.47
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
16.29, 16.47
Bundesrepublik Deutschland [West
Germany], 15.33
Bundesarbeitsgemeinschaft
Autonomer Frauenforschungsein
richtungen (National Committee
Index #1-16
1990-1999
of Autonomous Womenʼs Research
Centers), 8.28
Bundy, Mary lee, 3.35, 4.17
Burchinal, Lee, 6/7.16
Burns, John F., 1.26-27
Buschman, John, 3.5-23, 3.55, 5. inside
front cover, 5.51-52, 6/7.1, 6/7. 1529, 6/7. 30, 6/7. 70, 8.9, 9.inside front
cover, 9.22-35, 9. inside back
cover, 10/11. inside front cover, 10/11.
1-4, 10/11. 94, 12/13. inside
front cover, 12/13. 7-17, 12/13. 38,
12/13. 76, 14. inside front cover, 15.
inside front cover, 15.3, 16.71
Bush, George Herbert Walker [41], 2.3,
2.11, 2.48-49, 3.5, 3.14, 3.15, 3.28, 3.52,
5.37, 6/7.18, 9.25-26, 10/11.94, 15.10
Bush, George Herbert Walker [41],
Presidential Library, 9.25
Buthelezi, Mangosuthu Gatsha, 1.27, 2.38
C
CD-ROM, 5.47-50, 6/7. 25, 6/7. 65
CDH-S
See Centro de Documentación HistóricSocial/Atenue Enciclopèdic
Popular
CIRA, 16. Supp. 11-17
See also Centre internationale de
recherches sur lʼAnarchisme
CIA, 3.22
CNN, 3.12
CNT, 15.51, 16. Supp.3, 16. Supp, 4, 16.
Supp. 19, 16.Supp.21, 16.Supp. 25-26
COSATU
See Congress of South African Trade
Unions
COSH groups (Committees on
Occupational Health and Safety),
4.61-63
CSCE
Council for Security and Cooperation
in Europe
CWS (Corporate Wannabee Syndrom),
14.8-9
Cablevision, 4.42
Cadastral Registry, 16. supp.11-17
Calhoun, Jack, 16.46
Camacho, Diego
See Paz, Abel
Canada, 2.20, 3.26, 10/11.6-9, 15.17-18
Adv.Committee on a TelecommunicaProgressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 9
An illustration by Michael Donovan from issue #3, Summer 1991.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 10
Index #1-16
1990-1999
tions Strategy for Ontario,
10/11.7Canadian, Advanced
Technology Association, 10/11.8
Canadian Information Processing
Society, 10/11.8
Cape Resource Centre Forum, 4.50
Capital & Class, 16.43
Capitalism, 2.10, 2.55-58, 3,24-30,
5.48, 6/7.1, 32-35, 41-49, 8.69,
10/11. 10, 10/11. 14-15, 10/11.2627, 10/11.36-37, 10/11.94, 12/13.
47, 15.18, 16.27, 16.41, 16.Supp. 26
Capitalism Nature Socialism, 16. 42
Carbone, Michael, 6/7. 19-20
Card catalog, 3.23, 12/13.36
Caribbean Institute of Mass
Communications, 3.13
Carnegie libraries, 4.22
Carroll, Bernice, 5.12
Carter, James (U.S, president, 19771981) 1.6
Castilla Libre, 16. Supp. 37
Castro, Fidel, 16.41
Catalog, 5.19-25
Cataloguing Consumers Network,
1.38-1.39
Catalog reform, 15.46
Catalonia, 16.Supp. 27-28
Catalunya, 16.Supp.5, 16. Supp. 22
Catholic Church (complicity in
destruction of American Indian
cultures), 8.70
Cauer, Minna, 8.22
Cely, Carlos Mauricio, 16. Supp. 1820, 16. supp. 40
“Censorship in South Africa in an Era
of Glasnost,” 2.30-40.
Censorship, 3.2, 12/13. 32-44, 15.16
Enola Gay, 10/11/60-78
France, 12/13. 63-68
Israel, 2.52-54, 14.3
Middle East, 2.49
Montana, 2.26
Palestinian viewpoint, 5.28
Persian Gulf troops, 3.4
Reliance on mainstream publishers,
4.69
South Africa, 1. 2-15, 1.32, 2.30-40,
2.46-47, 8.74
Center for Civil Networking, 9.33
Center for Media Education, 9.33
Centre de Cultura Contemporània
(Barcelona), 16. Supp. 36
Centre internationale de recherches sur
Index #1-16
1990-1999
lʼAnarchisme, 16.Supp. 11-17
Centro de Documentación HistóricoSocial/Ateneu Enciclopèdic Popular
(Barcelona), 16.Supp.19, 16.Supp.
36-39
Cervantes, Cánovas, 16. Supp.3
Chace, James, 16.41, 16.45, 16.51-52
Chaos, 16.Supp. 22
Chaplin, Ralph, 16. Supp. 9
Chauvinism, 4.40
Chicago Municipal Reference Library,
8.83
Chicago Public Library, 8.83-84
Chicago Public Library Advocates,
8.81-85
Chicago Religious Task Force on
Central America, 5.43
Chicago-Surrealism, 8.36-39
“The Chicago Surrealist Group and
Black Swan Press,” 8.40-65
Chicago Worldʼs Fair (1933), 10/11.4546
Childers, Thomas, 4.18
Childrenʼs books, 1.9-10
Childrenʼs folktales, 5.44-46
Chile, 16.32
China, 9.38
Chinese democracy movement, 5.47
Chivington Massacre
See Sand Creek Massacre
Choice, 4.28-36
Chomsky, Noam, 2.49, 3.53, 4.33-34,
16.41, 16.42, 16.45
Chossudovsky, Michael, 16.43
Chothia, Farouk, 2.33
Christian primacy, 1.39
Churchill, Ward, 5.42
Cinéma et anarchie, 16.Supp.16
Circulation records, 9.24
Circular A-76, 14.44
Circular A-130, 2.11, 2.14 FN 8, 3.17,
12/13. 58
Citicorp, 3.16
Civic role of libraries, 12/13.10
Civil Cooperation Bureau (South
Africa), 2.36
La Civilisation surrealiste, 8.71
Civil rights, 8.74-80
Clandestine press during Nazi
occupation, 15.42, 15.45-46
Claremont (publisher), 4.28-36
Claridad, 16.48
Class culture, 3.2-3
Class struggle, 4.13, 10/11.15
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 11
Class war, 10/11.11
Class Warfare in the Information Age
(1998), 16.63-66
Classism, 4.5, 12/13. 42
Clayton, Patti, 15.54-58
Cleis (publisher), 4.28-36
Cleyre, Voltairine de, 16.Supp. 9
Clinton, William Jefferson, 14.1,
15.10, 15. 65
Clinton administration
High tech communications, 16.3435
Intellectual property, 12/13.18-31
National Information
Infrastructure, 14.30
Clinton-Gore, 16.35
“Clipper” chip, 9.34
Closed Stacks (Library of Congress),
6/7. 64-67
“Closed Stacks at the Library of
Congress: A Historian Responds,”
6/7.64-67
Closing of the American Mind
(1987) 4.3
Club Cinema, 2.28
Clynne-Canham, John, 16.40, 16.46
Cockburn, Alexander, 16.40, 16.45
Code, Lorraine, 5.12
Code of Professional Ethics, 12/13.
40
Coetzee, Dirk, 9.6
Cold War, 2.3-4, 3.5, 4.67, 10/11.
71-72
Cold War liberalism, 6/7. 31, 6/7.
37-41
Cold War rhetoric, 1.25
Cold War thinking, 3.53
Cole, Donna, 1.inside cover
Collection development, 12/13.
35-36
Collor de Mello, Fernando, 6/7.
52-61
Colón. Cristobal, 5.36-43
Colonialism, 1.18, 4.22, 9.18, 16.29
Colorado, Amendment Two, 15.10
Coloured (South Africa), 4.48
Columbus, Christopher, 5.36-43,
8.69-73
Columbus, His Enterprise (1976,
1991), 5.40-41
Columbus Quincentennial, 8.38,
8.69-73, 10/11.66
Columbus Quincentenary
Commission, 5.36
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 12
Complicity of women, 8.18
Comic books, 2.17
Commercial culture as social control,
6/7. 32
Commercialization of information, 2.914, 10/11.94-95
Commercialization of libraries, 1. Inside
front cover, 2.9-14, 2.58
The Coming of the Post-Industrial
Society: A Venture in Social
Forecasting, (1973), 10/11.25, 10/11. 92
Comité Confederal, 16. Supp. 32
Commodification of information,
10/11.18-21, 10/11.94-95, 15.14-19,
16.34-36
Commonweal Collection in Bradford,
UK, 15.48
Communications and Cultural
Domination (1976), 16.32-33
Communism, 2.4, 3.9
Communist Party, Cuba, 15.51
Community for Creative Nonviolence,
3.32
Community information, 4.19
Community Information Service, 4.19-27
Community Librarianship: Changing the
Face of Public Libraries (1982), 4.21
Community libraries, 4.17-27, 16.Supp.6
“Community Libraries: A Viable
Alternative to the Public Library in
South Africa,” 4.17-27
Community needs assessment, 1.37
Community, right to, 4.38-39
“Competing Visions of Library Service,”
14.13-21
Computer, 6/7.17
Computer industry, 3.5-23
Computer Professionals for Social
Responsibility, 9.23, 9.33
Computerization of information, 16.33
Confederación General del Trabajo,
16.Supp.19, 16. Supp. 32
Confederación Nacional del Trabajo
See CNT
“Conference Proceedings: ʻSocial
Responsibility Around the
Worldʼ Sponsored by the Social
Responsibilities Round Table of
the American Library Association,
Washington, DC, June 28, 1998,”
15.20-50
The Confessions of a Revolutionary,
16.Supp.1
Confronting Columbus (1992), 5.42
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Congo, 16.38
Congress of South African Trade
Unions (COSATU), 1.3, 1.20, 2.37,
3.22
Congress of South African Writers,
4.25
Congressional Record, 12/13. 57
Congressional Research Service, 4.57
Conquerorʼs lexicography, 5.38
The Conquest of Bread (1906),
16.Supp. 2
The Conquest of Paradise (1990),
5.41-42
Conquistadors, 5.38, 5.40
Conroy, Jack, 1.40-41
Conscientious objector, 15.50
Conservative attack on poor and
marginalized groups, 10/11.15
Conservative attack specialist (Blaise
Cronin), 10/11.1
Consolidated List [South Africabanned and listed persons]
Consumer culture, 2.2
The Contours of American History
(1989), 16. 38-39
Contracted libraries, 14.44-46
Contributors, Notes on, 1.42, 2.59, 3.
55, 4.71, 5.inside front cover, 6/7.
70-71, 8.86
Cooke, Douglas, 16. supp.11-17,
16.Supp. 30-39, 16. supp. 40
Cooper, Marc, 3.53
Copyright, 12/13.18-31
Cordova Congress, 16. Supp. 18-19
Corn, David, 16.40, 16.46
Cornell University, 1.35
“Corporate Inroads & Librarianship:
The Fight for the Soul of the
Profession in the New Millennium,”
12/13. 32-44
Corporate media, 3.23, 12/13.33,
16.26-36
Corporatism, 2.6, 6/7.15, 8.81, 12/13.
32-44, 14.8-9, 16.26-36
Corporatization of information, 3.16,
8.81, 16.26-36, 16.63-66
Council for Security and Cooperation
in Europe, 16.43
Counter-Quincentennial, 5.36-43
“Coups and Earthquakes” syndrome,
3.8
Courage, 10/11.68
Courtney, Bryce, 16.23
Covert Action Quarterly,16.40, 16.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
43,16.45, 16.46, 16.47, 16.57
Coyle, Karen, 14.22-33, 14.54
Cram, Jennifer, 16. 1-25, 16.73
Creitnon, Denis, 16.71
Creativity, 4.41, 16. 34
Croatia, 16.42
Crises Press, 4.71
Critical Approaches to Information
Technology in Librarianship:
Background and Perspectives (1993),
6/7. 70
Critical consciousness, 16.30-31
“Critical Education/ Popular
Education,” 6/7. 62-63
Critical Sociology, 16.42
Critical thinking, 6/7.33
Cronin, Blaise [AKA Erudite Lite,
Newt Grammbaugh, Melvil
Pangloss] , 10/11.
1-4
Self-promoting, 10/11.3-4
Crouch, Tom, 10/11.69
Cuauhtemoc, 8.69
Cuba, 1.35, 3.26, 9.39-40, 15.51-53,
16.41, 16.56-57
Cuba Update, 16.47
Cuban Film Institute
See ICAIC
“The Cuba Poster Project,” 15.51-53
Cultural and Academic Links with
South Africa Symposium, 4.51
“The Cultural Boycott” (South Africa),
4.51-52
Cultural chauvinism, 4.40
Cultural democracy, 4.38-45, 6/7.30
Cultural imperialism, 5.33, 8.70
Cultural human rights, 4.38-45
Cultural pluralism, 4.41
Cultural production, 15.14-19
Culture, Inc.: The Corporate Takeover
of Public Expression (1989), 5.51,
16.34
Culture industry, 6/7. 32-35, 16.34
“The Culture Industry: Enlightenment
as Mass Deception,“ 6/7. 32-33
“Culture Industry Reconsidered,”
6/7.32
“The Culture Wars,” 4.3-6, 10/11.66,
10.11.71-72
Curricula (of universities) 4.3-6
Currin, Brian, 9.5
Curtis, Bruce, 15.17-18
Cushing, Lincoln, 15.51-53, 15.68
Cyprus, 2.48
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 13
D
DAC
See African National Congress,
Department of Arts and Culture
DʼAdamo, Charles, 16. 37-50, 16.5165, 16.73
DʼSouza, Dinesh, 4.3
Dain, Phyllis, 14.8, 15.57
Dallas Agencies Serving the
Homeless, 3.34
Dallas Public Library, 3.34, 3.37
Danky, James, 15.9
Dangerous Memories: Invasions
and Resistance Since 1942 (1991),
5.43
Darch, Colin, 15.22
Databases, 12/13.18-31, 12/13. 40-41
“Dateline: South Africa,” 1.29-32
David, Henry, 16. Supp. 9
Day, Hem, 16. Supp. 14
“A Declaration of Cultural Human
Rights: Draft,” 4.38-45
Decolonization, 3.7
Decontextualization, 10/11/54-55
DeGennaro, Richard, 1.34
“DeGennaro Calls S.A. Boycott
“Mickey Mouse,” 1.34
Deinstitutionalization, 3.31
DeJohn, William, 15. 4
de Klerk, F.W., 1.25, 1.26, 1.28,
1.30, 1.32, 2.30, 2.36, 2.39
Democracy, 1.8-9, 1.16-17, 1.36,
1.44, 2.13, 2.15, 2.23, 3.2-4, 4.6,
5.31-34, 5.35, 6/7.15, 8.74-80,
9.7, 12/13. 53-59
Democratic party, 10/11.11
Democratization of database
searching , 5.48
Democratization of communications,
4.47, 5.47-50, , 16.34
Democratization of culture, 4.38-45,
5.31-34, 6/7.1
Den(t)räume,Hamburg, 8.26
Dennie, Joseph, 14.6
Deregulatory legislation, 16.27-28
DeSirey, Jan, 5.42
Deskilling, 10/11.25-30
Determinism, 10/11.48-55
Detroit, 8.66-68
Deutsche Demokratische Republik
[GDR, East Germany], 15.33
Dewey, John, 12/13.9, 12/13.15
Dewey, Melvil, 10/11/49-50
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 14
DIALOG, 6/7. 25
DiFazio, W., 10/11.28
Digitized culture, 6/7. 24-25
Directions, a Semi-annual publication of
the Program on Communication and
Development Studies at Northwestern
University, 2.22
Discrimination, 1.36
The Disinherited (1933), 1.40
Dissent, 16.47
Diversity, 4.5
“Documents” 2.41-49, 4.37-52, 6/7. 6469, 8.74-80, 10/11. 83-89,12/13. 49-68,
14.47-50, 15. 62-67
“Address to the United Nations,
11/26/90 by Joseph Reilly,” 2.41-44
“Closed Stacks at the Library of
Congress: A Historian Responds,”
6/7.64-67
“The Cultural Boycott,” 4.51-52
“A Declaration of Cultural Human
Rights: Draft,” 4.38-46
“Few Voices, Many Worlds,” 4.46-47
“From France: Libraries Losing Their
Reason,” 12/13. 63-68
“LIWO and the South African
Unification Debate,” 10/11.87-89
“LIWO Resolution on Censorship and
Freedom of Information,” 2.46-47
“LIWO Resolution on the Academic
and Cultural Boycott,” 2.45-46
“LIWO Statement to IFLA,” 4.48-50
“LIWOʼs Guiding Principles, 2.44
“Letter Against Bombing of Iraq;
12/16/98” 15. 65-66
“Librarians Against War” An Open
Letter. 2/28/98” 14.47-50
“MSRRT Persian Gulf Resolution,
1/91,” 2.48-49
“Manifesto of Avant-Garde
Librarianship,” 8.79-80
“The Media Charter of the African
National Congress,” 8.74-76
“Middle East” “PLG Press Release on
Gulf Crisis, 9/90, 2.47-48
“Notes from the Front Lines at SFPL,”
12/13. 60-62
“PLG Press Release on Gulf Crisis,
9/90,” 2.47-48
“A Program for Library Change in
Sweden,” 5.31-34
“Remarks on Racism, International
Relations and Librarianship,” 15.
62-64
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Song published in issue #4, Winter 1991/92.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 15
“Resolution on the Importance of
Freedom of Expression and Free
Access to Information,”10/11.83-85
“Resolution on New Statesman and
Society,” 8.77-78
“Resolution on New York Public
Libraryʼs Science, Industry and
Business Library,” 10/11.86
“Resolution on the Library of
Congress,”-American Historical
Association,6/7. 68-69
“South Africa.” “Address to the
United Nations, 11/26/90 by
Joseph Reilly,” 2.41-44
“Speech by Wayne Kelly, the
Superintendent of Documents, to
the Federal Documents Task Force
at ALAʼs Midwinter Meeting in
Washington, DC,” Feb. 15, 1997,
12/13. 49-53
“Statement of Robert L. Oakley,
Director of the Law Library and
professor of Law, Georgetown
University Law Center, Edward
B. Williams Law Library on
Behalf of the American Library
Association, American Association
of Law Libraries, Association
of Research Libraries, Special
Libraries Association before the
Subcommittee on Legislative House
Committee Appropriations
on the FY 1998 Appropriations for
the Government Printing Office,
February 12, 1997.” 12/13. 53-59
“Statement and Resolution to the
IFLA Conference, Moscow, August,
1991,” 4.48-50
“World Bank Protest Letter;
6/29/98), 15.67
Dodge, Chris, 5.42
Dominant culture, 4.40
Dominican Republic, 16.38
Donations, 3.43-51
Donovan, Michael, 3.cover, 3.28, 3.30,
3.42, 3.51, 3.54, 4.70, 4.71
“Donʼt Ask, Donʼt Tell,” 15.10
Dougherty, Richard M., 14.8
Douglas, Susan, 16.46
Dowlin, Ken, 12/13.60-62
Dreams of Dignity, Workers of Vision:
A History of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
(1991), 6/7. 70
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 16
Drew, Lisa, 1.7
Dubois, Barbara, 5.4-5
Dudley, Kathryn Marie, 10/11. 11-18
Duke, David, 5.37
Du Preez, Max, 2.33, 2.35
Durrani, Shiraz, 4.23
Durruti, Buenaventura, 16.Supp.3-4,
16. Supp.6, 16. Supp. 35, 16. supp.
38
Durruti in the Spanish Revolution,
16.Supp. 6
Dworkin, Andrea, 5.9
Dynix, 6/7.17
E
EDGAR, 9.34, 12/13.23
EDUCOM, 9.29
EP
See Editora Politica
EU
See European Union
E-mail, 9.23
Earth Island Institute, 6/7.11
Earth Resources Research (publisher),
4.28-36
Earth Summit (Rio), 6/7.13
See also United Nations Conference
on Environment and Development
(UNCED), Rio de Janeiro, 3-14 June
1992
East Germany, 8.32, 15.33
East Jerusalem, 2.48
Easter, David, 16.46
Eastern Europe, 8.70
Ecology, 6/7.10
Economic imperialism, 16. 38
The Economic Organism of the
Revolution (1936), 16.Supp.4
Editora Politica, 15. cover, 15.50, 15.51
Editorials
“ A Blaise with Indignation,” 10/11.
1-4
“The Culture Wars,” 4.3-6
“Institutionalizing Silence within
ALA,” 14.1-4
“Politics and Anti-Politics in
Librarianship,” 3.2-4
Educación y Biblioteca: revista
mensual de documentacion y
recursos didacticos, 16.Sup. 1
Education, 4.41, 6/7.15, 9.22
Education for librarians
See Librarian education
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Eisenhower, Dwight D., 10/11.64
Egner, Carl, 16.71
Egypt, 3.25
“Election Day Messages from South
African Librarians, “9.36-37
Electronic communication, 12/13.10
Electronic copyright, 9.23, 9.33,
12/13.18-31
Electronic databases, 12/13. 18-31
Electronic eavesdropping, 9.23
Electronic federal depository library
program, 12/13. 53-59
Electronic Frontier Foundation, 9.33,
9. inside back cover
Electronic information, 12/13. 7-17
Electronic Illusions: A Skepticʼs
View of Our High-Tech Future
(1984), 4.7
Electronic principles, 12/13.7-17
Electronic Sweatshop (1989), 9.30
Elephant Bird egg, 16.17
Elias Sports Bureau, 12/13.28
Elites, 3.13, 15.56
Elitism, 3.38-39
Elliott, T.S., 6/7. 31
Elliott, Jan, 5.42
Ellsberg, Daniel, 2.49
Emergency (South Africa), 2.33-34
Empire building, 16. 29
Empowerment, 16.1-25
Encryption, 9.24, 9.34
Enckell, Marianne, 16. supp.11-17,
16. supp. 40
“End of history,” 2.2-8
“The End of Information & the
Future of Libraries,” 12/13.1-6
The End of the Line: Lost Jobs, New
Lives in Postindustrail America
(1994), 10/11. 11-16
“End of ideology,” 2.3
“Enemies: An Annotated
Bibliography for a Middle School
Social Studies Curriculum,”
16.59-62
“Enemy,” 16.41
Energy policy, 2.49
Enola Gay, 10/11.60-78
“The ʻEnola Gayʼ Controversy as a
Library Issue,” 10/11. 60-78
Enriquez, Rafael, 15.36
Entertainment, 6/7. 32-37
Environment, 6/7.10-11
Environmentalism, 6/7. 10-14
Target of conservatives, 6/7.12
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Enzensberger, Hans Magnus, 6/7. 43-44,
46
Epcot Center, 9.28
Epstein, Cynthia Fuchs, 5.5
Equal access to information, 6/7.17
Equity, 3.3, 12/13.10
Ergonomics, 4.53-58, 8.3
Erotic, 5.22-24
Erotica, 5.22-23
Erudite Lite (Blaise Cronin) , 10/11. 1-4
Estabrook, Leigh, 10/11.fn2.39
Estrategia y táctica: ayer, hoy y mañana
(1976), 16. Supp.4
Estudios sociales sobre la educación de
los pueblos, (1864) 16.suppl.18
Ethnic cleansing, 16.43
Ethnic diversity, 15.45
Ethnonyms (derogatory), 1.38-39
Europe, 3.13, 14.41-42
European Union (EU) , 12/13.19, 12/13.
26-27, 12/13. 46
European, dominant culture, 4.40
Ewell, Maryo, 4.45
“Exhibiting Ideology,” 5.42
Exodus: Diary of a Spanish Refugee,
16.Supp.22
Extra: the Magazine of FAIR, 16.57
Extraction from databases, 12/13.21-22
F
FAI
See Federación Anarquista Ibérica
FAL
See Fundación de Estudios Libertarios
Anselmo Lorenzo
FARA
See Foreign Agents Registration Act
FBI, 2.27
See also U.S. Federal Bureau of
Investigation
FFBIZ
See Frauenforschungs, Bildungs, und
Informtationszentrum Berlin
FICEDL
See Fédération internationale des
centres dʼ etude et de
documentation libertaire
FID
See International Federation for
Documentation
FMC
See Federation of Cuban Women
FOIA
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 17
See Freedom of Information Act
FSS
See Fundación de Estidios
Libertarios Salvador Seguí
FYI France, 12/13. 63
Fascism, 16.28, 16.Supp. 4
Faculty status, 12/13. 8-9
Fahrenheit 451 (1953), 3.23
Fair use, 12/13.22, 12/13.23-24
Falk, Richard, 16.41, 16.46
False Promises: The Shaping
of American Working Class
Consciousness (1973), 6/7. 41-43
Family Friendly Libraries, 15.2
Familialization, 8.14-15
Fanelli, Giuseppe, 16. Supp. 18
Farelo, Maria, 15.22
Farm Bureau, 12/13. 41
Farm workers, 16.72
Fasana, Paul, 1.35
The Fast Sooner Hound, 1.40
Faxon, 3.46
Federación Anarquista Ibérica,
16.Supp. 4, 16.Supp. 21
Federación Ibérica de Juventudes
Libertarias, 16. Supp. 21
La federación libertaria Argentina, 16.
Supp.11
La federación obrera regional
Argentina, 16. Supp.11
Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2.27
Federal Depository Libraries,
12/13.49-53, 12/13. 53-59
Federal Information News Syndicate,
12/13. 45-48
Federal information policy, 2.11,
12/13. 49-52
Federalist, 14.6
Federation of Cuban Women, 15.51
Federation of Local Unions, 16.Supp.
25
Fédération internationale des centres dʼ
etude et de documentation libertaire,
FICEDL, 16.Supp.16[French], 16.
Supp. 32 [Spanish]
Fee-based service, 3.34, 6/7. 19-20,
12/13. 14
Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural
Telephone Service, 12/13.18,
12/13.26
Felipe, León, 16.Sup.28
Feminism, 5.11-12, 8.1-9, 15.15, 16.11
Feminist Archive and Documentation
Center in Cologne, 8.27
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 18
Feminist Archive in Marburg, 8.27
Feminist libraries, 8.22-23
Feminist philosophy, 8.7
Feminist scholarship, 8.8, 10/11.3
Feminist Task Force, 8.11
See also Social Responsibilities
Round Table
“Feminist Thought and the Critique of
Information Technology,” 8.1-9
Feministisches Informations-Bildungsund Dokumentationszentrum
Nürnberg (Feminist Information,
Education and Documentation Center
Nüremberg), 8.23
Feminized profession, 5.1-18, 8.17-18,
10/11.3, 14.10
Fenton, Thomas P., 16.51
Fernández, Progreso, 16.Supp.34
Fernández, Sinesio Vaudilio García
SEE Santillán, Diego Abad de
Ferreira, Eleonora, 6/7.2, 6/7. 52-61,
6/7. 70
Ferreira, Joao Paulo Castaño, 6/7.2,
6/7.52-61, 6/7. 70
Ferrer I Guardia, Francisco, 16. Supp.
34, 16. supp. 38
Ferreras, Félix Alvarez, 16.Supp.34
Ferrua, Pietro, 16.Supp.16
Fetterly, Judith, 5.5-6
“A Few Gates: An Examination of the
Social Responsibilities Debate in the
Early 1970s & ʻ90s,” 15.1-13
“Few Voices, Many Worlds,” 4.37,
4.46-47
Fiction, 5.1-18
Fierheller, George, 10/11.8-9
Fifth Estate, 16.48
Film, 6/7. 33, 6/7. 36, 6/7. 42
Film studios, 2.18
Finnish Library Association, 10/11.81
Finnegan, Ruth, 9.16-17
Fins-Federal Information News
Syndicate, 12/13. 45-48
First Amendment, 1.8, 1.11, 1.18, 4.3-6,
12/13. 32-44
“First Encounters” [University of
Florida, Museum of Natural History],
5.38
First International, 16. Supp. 37
First, Ruth, 1.32
First Search database, 6/7. 19
Fish, Stanley, 4.6
Fisher, Vardis, 2.26
Flannel boards, 5.45
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Flax, Jane, 15.14
FlbiDoZ
See Feministisches
Informations-Bildungs-und
Dokumentationszentrum Nürnberg
The Flight from Reason: Essays
on Intellectual Freedom in the
Academy, the Press, and the
Library (1975), 15.5
Florida Gulf Coast University, 12/13.
39-40
Florida Library Association, 16.72
Flynn, Elizabeth Gurley, 16. Supp. 9
Folk culture, 6/7.37
Folktales, 5.44-46
Follett, Mary Parker, 12/13.46-47
Fomento de las Artes, 16.Supp. 34
Foreign Agents Registration Act
(1938), 4.68
Foreign policy, 16.37-50, 16.51-58
Fourth World Movement, 16.71
France, 3.14, 12/13. 63-68
Franco, Francisco, 16. Supp. 22
Francoism, 16.Supp.6, 16.Supp. 32
Frank Music vs. CompuServe, 9.33
Frankfurt School, 6/7.1, 31-50
Franklin Street Settlement House
(Detroit), 16. Supp.8
“Frauenarchive und
Frauenbibliotheken in
Deutschland,” 8.21-31
Frauenforschungs, Bildungs,
und Informtationszentrum
Berlin (Womenʼs
Research,Education and
Information Center in Berlin),
8.23-24, 8.25, 8.26
Frauenanstiftung Hamburg e.V
(Womenʼs Foundation Hamburg),
8.23,
Free expression, 10/11, 79-85
Free flow of information, 2.20, 3.7,
3.25, 4.66-69, 5.49, 10/11. 83-85,
16.32, 16.68
Free Lunch Counter Culture
Association, 16. cover, inside front
cover
Free market, 12/13. 46
Free press , 4.33-34, 9.10
Free speech, 16.68
Free trade imperialism, 16.29
Freedom
As U.S. strategy for informal
domination, 16.30
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Freedom Charter (South Africa), 2.42,
4.21
Freedom House, 3.11
Freedom of information,
Australia, 9.7-8, 9.14fn.28fn.30
South Africa, 2.46, 9.7, 9.14, fn29
Freedom of Information Act, 12/13.23
Freedom of speech, 3.2
Freedom Press, 16.66
Freire, Paulo, 4.23, 6/7.1
Freirians, 6/7.2
French colonialism, 3.14-15
French Revolution, 2.5
Frese, Petra, 8. 32-35 (translator)
Friedman, Harvey L., 4.11-12
Friends of the Earth, 6/7.11
“From France: Libraries Losing Their
Reason,” 12/13. 63-68
“From Student Revolt to Working
Librarians: The Formation of bis,
Sweden,” 15. 27-30
Front National, (France) 12/13. 63-68
“Fucking” (ignored as library catalog
entry), 5.19-25
“The ʻFuckingʼ Truth About Library
Catalogs,” 5.19-25
Fukuyama, Francis, 2.2-8
Fund for Free Expression, 1. 2, 1.33
Fundación Anselmo Lorenzo, 16. Supp.
19, 16. Supp. 34-35
See Fundación de Estudios Libertarios
Anselmo Lorenzo
Fundación Aurora Intermitente, 16. Supp.
34
Fundación de Estudios Libertarios
Anselmo Lorenzo, 16. Supp. 19, 16.
Supp. 34-35
Fundación de Estudios Libertarios
Salvador Seguí (Madrid), 16.Supp. 19,
16. Supp. 32-33
Further Indemnity Act of 1992 (South
Africa), 9.5
Future, 10/11. 92-96, 14. 22-33
G
G-7, 12/13. 46
GATS
See General Agreement on Trade and
Services
“GII: Global Power Grab,” 12/13. 45-48
Gandhi, Mahatma, 10/11.68, 15.48
Galileo, 10/11/68
Gallery Bugs Bunny (Chicago), 8.37
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 19
Gamero, Juan, 16. Supp. 35
Ganesha, 16.22
Gans, Herbert, 6/7. 38-41
Garankuwa Uprising, 2.31
Garceau, Oliver, 15.54-55
García, Marta, 16.Supp.30
Gardner, Eileen Marie, 10/11.15-16
Garfias, Pedro, 16.Supp. 22
“Garlic, Vodka and the Politics of
Gender: Anti-intellectualism in
American Librarianship,” 14.5-12
Garon, Paul, 8.37,8.40-65
(bibliography), 8.86
Garrison, Dee, 8.17-18, 14.10
Garson, Barbara, 9.22-35, 9. inside
back cover
Gassol de Horowitz, Rosario, 4.23
Gates, Henry Louis, 4.6
Gaughan, Tom, 6/7.18, 6/7. 23, 15.2
Gays in Library Land: The Gay and
Lesbian Task Force of the American
Library Association: The First
Sixteen Years (1990), 15.6-7
Gays, library service, 15.6-7, 15.9
Gay and Lesbian Task Force, 6/7. 26,
14.39, 15.1
See also Social Responsibilities
Round Table
Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Task Force
See also Social Responsibilities
Round Table
Gay Liberation Task Force
See also Social Responsibilities
Round Table
Gaza, 2.48
Gender analysis, 8.1-9
Gender issues, 14. 52-53
General Agreement on Trade and
Services (GATS), 12/13. 45
General Idea of the Revolution in
the Nineteenth Century, (1851)
16.Supp.1
Genocide, 5.36-43
Gerbner, George, 12/13. 48
German Democratic Republic, 15.33
Germany, 8.10-35, 9.7, 15. 31-36,
16.28, 16.42
Unification, 8.32
Germen, 16.Supp.30
Geronimo, 8.69
Gerstner, Louis V. 10/11.69
Ghikas, Mary, 14.2
Giddons,Anthony, 14.14-15
Gilabert, Alejandro, 16.Supp.4
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 20
Gilbey, Emma, 9.7
Gingrich, Newt, 10/11.8
Giroux, Henry, 3.17-18, 6/7.1516,6/7.26, 12/13. 11
Gisonny, Karen, 2.50-51, 2.59
Gitlin, Todd, 6/7. 43
Gittings, Barbara, 15.6
GlasNet, 5.47
Glasnost, 1.32, 2.30-40
“The Global Commercialization of
Culture,” 2.15-22
Global conglomerates, 4.46
“Global Crisis: Media, Democracy
and the Left,” Plenary Session at
Midwest Radical Scholars and
Activists Conference, 1990, 3.24-28
“Global Gladiators,” 12/13. 47
Global Information Infrastructure,
12/13. 45-48
Global Information Society, 12/13.45
Global village, 2.15
“Glossary for Lula Comic,” 6/7. 60-61
God, 16.20
Golan Heights, 2.48
Goldbard, Arlene, 4.45
Golden Harvest, 15. 46
Goldman, Emma, 16. cover, 16. Supp.
8, 16. Supp. 9, 16. Supp. 10, 16.
Supp. 35
Gómez, Fernando Fernán, 16. Supp. 6
Gompers, Samuel, 6/7. 65
Goniwe, Matthew, assassinated, 9.3
Gonzalez, Mario, 3.36
“Goodbye Columbus: A Review of
Selected Quincentennial Literature,”
5.36-43
Gorbachev, Mikhail, 3.26
Gorman, Michael, 14.10
Gottfried, Harriet, 1.40-41, 1.42, 3.36
Goudie, John, 5.36
Gough, Cal, 15.9
Government information, 2.11-14, 3.17,
12/13.23, 12/13.49-52, 12/13.53-59
Government Printing Office, 12/13.36,
12/13.49-52, 12/13.53-59
Graaf, Michael, 2.35, 9.4
Grave, Jean, 16. Supp. 15
Gray, Carolyn, 12/13.40
Gray literature, 8.26
Great Books, 5.8-10
Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 4.13
Greece, 16.38
Green, Robert, 8.37
Greenblatt, Ellen, 15.9
Index #1-16
1990-1999
From issue #6/7, page one of a political comic book created and translated by
Brazilian artists and popular educators Eleonora and Joao Paulo Castaño Ferreira,
who encouraged librarians to collect material documenting political struggles.
Index #1-16
Progressive Librarian #29
1990-1999
Supplement
Page 21
Greene, Graham, 4.67
Greene, Maxine, 6/7.26
Greenpeace, 15.59-61
Green-washing, 6/7.11
Greiner, Joy, 3.33, 3.34, 3.40
Grenada, 2.48, 3.52
Grim, Jessica, 10/11.90-91, 10/11.97,
Gropper, William, 10/11.68
“Growing Our Communications
Future: Access—Not Just Wires,”
14.22-33
Guardia, Francisco Ferrer, 16.Supp.3
Guardian (NY), 16.47
Guatemala, 16.38
Guérin, Daniel, 16. Supp. 15
Gruber, Nancy, 3.52-53
Guerrero, Gonzalo, 8.69
Guevara, Che, 15. 52
Guía de Fuentes del anarquismo
español, 16. Supp. 32
Guide to Sources in Spanish
Anarchism, 16. Supp. 32
Guillén, Abraham, 16.Supp.34
Gulf Crisis, 2.47-48
See also Gulf War
Gulf War I, 2 August 1990- 28
February, 1991, 3.14-16, 3.42,
4.46-47, 5.26-30, 8.70, 16.42
Guyton, Karen, 8.66
Guyton, Tyree, 8.38, 8.66-68
A Hard Road for Mandela, 1.25, 1.26
Harger, Elaine, 1.inside front cover, 1.
2-15; 1.33, 1.35, 1.42, 2. Inside front
cover, 3. inside front cover, 4.2, 4.5963, 4.66-69, 4.71, 5. Inside front cover,
6/7. Inside front cover, 6/7. 60-61, 6/7.
62-63, 8.cover, 8.inside front cover,
9.inside front cover, 10/11. inside front
cover, 10/11.2, 10/11.60-78, 10/11.97,
12/13. inside front cover, 14. inside
front cover, 14.1-4, 15. inside front
cover, 15.3, 16.inside front cover,
16.59-62, 16.73, 16.Supp.inside front
cover
Harold Washington Library (Chicago),
8.83
Harris, Gill, 15.43
Harris, Michael H., 5.Inside front cover,
5.1-18, 6/7.1, 6/7.30, 10/11.23-42,
10/11.92-96, 10/11.97
Harris, Roma, 10/11.3, 10/11.9-22, 14.10,
15.9
Harms Commission (South Africa), 2.36
Harry, Margot, 4.35
Hartung, William, 16.46
Hartwell, Rob, 15.1
Harvard University, 1.35
Harwit, Martin, 10/11.69
Haun, Agatha, 15.35
Haymarket, 16. Supp. 9
Haverhill, MA, public library, 3.35
H
Hawaii, Librarians Association of ,
12/13.38-39
HIV, 15.17
Hawaii State Librarian, 12/13. 37-39
Haar, John, 5.51
Hazardous waste, 4.68-69
Hadar, Leon, 16.41, 16.46
Health hazards, 8.3
Hadden, R. Lee, 14.44-46, 14.54
Heard, Tony, 9.10
Hafner, Arthur, 5.8-10
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 2.2
Haiti, 16.41
Hegemony, 10/11.53, 10/11. 53-55
Haiti Info: News Direct from the
Hegemonic literary canon, 5.8-18
People and Organizations of
Heidegger, Martin, 10/11.44, 10/11.55-56
Haitiʼs Grassroots Democratic
Heidelberg Project, 8.66-68
Movement, 16.57
Heidelberg Street (Detroit), 8.66-68
Handicapped, blaming (Reagan/
Heim, Kathleen M., 8.20
Gardner), 10/11.15-16
See also Kathleen de la Peña McCook
Hannah, Stan A., 10/11. 23-42,
Hennepin County, 16.68
10/11. 92-96, 10/11. 97
Heinrich Boell Foundation, 14. 52
Hansel, Patsy, 3.33
Helderberg, 9.3
Haraway,Donna, 15.15, 15.19
Helene Lange Archive, 8.25
Harare Declaration, [Declaration of
Helms, Jesse, 5.38
the OAU Ad-hoc Committee on
Helsinki Agreement, 4.67
Southern Africa on the Question of Hentoff, Nat, 1.2, 1.7-8, 1.10-11, 1.12,
South Africa, Harare, Zimbabwe:
1.16
August 21,1989], 1.31
Hepburn, Katherine, 16. 20
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 22
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Heritage Foundation, 3.10, 3.26
Herman, Edward, 3.11, 3.53, 16.41,
16.45
Hernández, Héctor, 16.Supp.30
Herrada, Julie, 16. Supp. 7-10, 16.
supp. 40
Hettinger, Edwin C., 16.67
Heyman, Michael, 10/11.60-78
Higher education, 4.3-6
Highfield Community Library
(Belfast), 4.18
Hildenbrand, Suzanne, 8.22, 10/11.47,
14.10
Hiroshima, Japan, 10/11. 60-78
“Hiroshima & Nagasaki, The
Atomic Bomb, and History: A
Bibliography,” 10/11.72-78.
Hitchens, Christopher, 16.40, 16.45
“Historical Patterns of a Womenʼs
Profession in Germany,” 8.10-8.20
Hoerig, Günter, 16.Supp.16
Hofstadter, Richard, 14. 5-7
The Homeless (1987), 3.31-32
“The Homeless and the Public
Library,” 3.31-42
Homelessness, 1.36, 3.4, 3.31-42, 5.49,
8.67
Homophobia, 3.24, 15.1-3, 15.17
Homosexuality, 14.3, 14.34-40, 15.1-3,
15.6-13
Hope and Folly: The United States and
UNESCO, 1945-1985 (1989), 3.11
Horn, Zoia, 1. Inside cover, 3.52-53
Horkheimer, Max, 6/7. 32-37, 42, 43,
49
Horowitz, Irving Louis, 1.8-9
Horse Capture, George P., 5.40
Horup, Ellen, 15.48
“A House Divided Against Itself:
ACRL Leadership, Academic
Freedom & Electronic Resources,”
12/13. 7-17
House Committee on Un-American
Activities, 2.27
Housework, 8.15
Housmans Peace Directory, 15.47
Houston Public Library, 1.6-7
Hudson, Mark, 16. 26-36, 16.73
Hug, Heinz, 16.Supp.16
Hugo, Victor, 16.Supp. 24
Hull, Elizabeth, 4.66-69
Hull House, 16.Supp. 8
Human nature, myth of 16.31
Human rights, 2.15, 3.4, 5.49, 8.84,
Index #1-16
1990-1999
9.1, 9.8, 10/11.79-82, 14.3-4, 15.3-5,
15. 65,
16.43
Human Rights Commission, 2.39
Humanism, 16. Supp. 26
Humbolt University, 15.33
Humphrey, John Ames, 15.62-64
Hune, Shirley, 3.6
Hunink, Maria, 16. Supp. 16
Hungary, 2.16
Hunger, 1.36, 2.49
Hussein, Saddam, 16. 42
Hygiene, 3.38
Hyry, Tom, 16. Supp. 7-10, 16. supp. 40
I
IAEA
See International Atomic Energy
Authority
IAI
See International African Institute
IALHI
See International Association of
Labour History Institutions
IAMCR
See International Association of
Mass Communication Research
IBM, 3.17, 10/11.69
ICAIC, 15.51, 15.52
See also Instituto Cubano del Arte e
Industria Cinematográficos
IFF
See Interdisziplinäre Forschungsgruppe Frauenforschung: Dokumentation-Information-Archiv
Bielefeld
IFLA
See International Federation of
Library Associations
“IFLA and Human Rights,” 10/11.79-82
“IFLA Cuba Statement: Statement of
Librarians from the United States
and Puerto Rico on U.S.-Cuba
Relations,” 9.38-40
IFLA Express, 10/11.81
ILAD
See Turkish Communication
Research Association
IMF
See International Monetary Fund
IPS
See Inter-Press Service
ISC
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 23
See Information for Social
Change
ITU
See International
Telecommunications Union
IWW
See International Workers of the
World
Ibadan, University of (Nigeria), 3.43
Iberian anarchism, 16. supp. 38
Iberian Liberation Movement (MIL),
16.Supp. 37
Idée générale de la révolution au
XIXe siècle (1851), 16. Supp.1
Ideological conformity, 2.13
Ikkevold (Nonviolence), 15.48
Illiberal Education (1991), 4.3
Illinois Writers Project, 1.40
Illiteracy, 1.36, 2.49
Illness, 1.36
The Image: A Guide to PseudoEvents in America (1961), 6/7.
39-42
Immigrants, 15.9
Imperialism, 5.33
“In Defense of the Great Books,”
5.8-9
In the Age of the Smart Machine
(1988), 6/7. 22-23, 10/11. 31-32
In These Times, 16.40, 16.45, 16.46,
16.47, 16.58
Indexes, 6/7. 65
Independent press, 2.50, 16.37-50
India, 3.25
Indians in South Africa, 4.48
Indigenous people, 5.37-43
Indonesia, 3.25, 16.38
Industrial society, 2.6-7
Industrial Workers of the World,
8.36, 16. Supp. 8
Inequality, 6/7.42, 16.34
Informated organization, 10/11.3235
Information, 4.18-19, 6/7.3-14,
12/13.1-6, 12/13. 70
Information and the Crisis Economy
(1984), 16.33-34
Information collectives, 16.32
Information economy, 6/7.16,
6/7.48, 10/11.8, 10/11.94, 16.6366
Information Ethics for Librarians
(1997), 16.73
Information for Social Change,
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 24
15.25, 15.32, 15.44-46
Information highway, 10/11.7, 14.22
Information industry, 2.11, 3.16, 6/7.7,
10/12.6-8, 16.34
Information Industry Association, 6/7.17,
9.34
Information inequality, 16.34-36, 16.6366
Information Inequality: The Deepening
Social Crisis in America (1996), 16.3435
Information Liberation (1998), 16.66-70
Information poor, 3.5, 4.18, 5.50, 16.3436
Information poverty, 4.18, 4.42, 16.34-36
Information processing, 12/13.2
Information professionalism, 12/13.3-6
Information rich, 3.5, 4.18, 5.50, 16.3236
Information society, 2.6, 2.9-14, 3.9, 3.18,
4.42, 9.22, 10/11.94, 15.14
Information technology, 3.22, 5.47-50,
5.51-52, 6/7.15-29, 8.1-9, 9.22-35,
10/11.95, 12/13.1-6, 15.64, 16.63-66
“Information Technology and the Future
of Work,” 10/11.23-42,
“Information Technology, Power
Structures, and the Fate of
Librarianship,” 6/7.15-29
Information Technology Association of
Canada, 10/11.8
Infoshops, 16.Supp. 20
Inglis, Agnes, 16.Supp. cover, [i], 7-10
Inkatha, 1.27, 2.37, 2.38, 9.5, 9.37
Inkworks Press, 15.68
Inquietudes, 16.Supp.30
Institute of Amsterdam, 16.Supp.16
Institute for African Alternatives, 3.44
Institute for Media Analysis, 3.11
Institute for Policy Studies, 16.39, 16.51
Institute for Social Research
See Frankfurt School
Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria
Cinematográficos, 15.51, 15.52
Institut für Sozialforschung
See Frankfurt School
Instructional effectiveness, 9.26-29
Intellectual freedom, 2.49, 3.2, 10/11.6078, 10/11. 83-85, 12/13. 8-9, 14.3, 15.
4-13, 15.15-16
Intellectual property rights, 12/13.18-31,
16.67
“Intensify the Struggle, statements on
sanctions from the ANC, COSATU &
Index #1-16
1990-1999
UDF,” 1.30-31
Interdisziplinäre Forschungsgruppe
Frauenforschung: DokumentationInformation-Archiv Bielefeld
(Interdisciplinary Research Group:
Womenʼs Documentation-Archive
Bielefeld), 8.23
Interior (tierra adentro) , 8.70-71
Internal Security Act [South Africa],
2.30, 2.39
International Anarchist Library,
16.Supp.3
International Book Year, 15.62
“Interlibrary Loan Offices Violate
Boycott,” 1.35
Interlibrary loans, 14.45
International African Institute, 3.43
International Association of Labour
History Institutions, 16. Supp. 33
International Association of Mass
Communication Research, 4.46
International Atomic Energy Authority
(IAEA), 9.4
International Council for Scientific
Unions, 3.47
International Federation for
Documentation, 1.18
International Federation for Libertarian
Study and Documentation, 16.
Supp.16
International Federation of Library
Associations, 1.3, 1.6, 1.16, 1.17,
1.18, 2.42, 4.49-50, 9.38-40,
10/11.79-82, 10/11/ 83-85, 15.43
Apartheid, 15.25
Istanbul conference (1995),
10/11.79-82, 10/11/83-85
Stockholm, 15.25
International Institute of Social History
15.48
International Ladies Garment Workers
Union, 6/7.2
“International Librarianship & the
Struggle for Democracy in South
Africa,” 1.16-17
International Monetary Fund, 3.27,
16.42, 16.43
International Organization of
Journalists, 3.11
International Research Center on
Anarchy, 16. Supp. 14
“An International Surrealist
Declaration on the ʻColumbus
Quincentennial” 1492-1992. “As
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Long As Tourists Replace Seers…”
8.69-73
International Telecommunications
Union (ITU), 12/13.45, 12/13.46
International Workers of the World, 16.
Supp. 9
International Workingmenʼs
Association, 16. Supp. 18, 16. Supp.
37
International Viewpoint, 16.47
Internet, 6/7.25, 12/13.11, 14.23-33,
16.32
“Internet and the Academic
Community,” 12/13.10
Internment camps (for JapaneseAmericans), 10/11.65
Inter-Press Service, 3.12
Interracial childrenʼs books, 1.9, 1.21
Intervention and Revolution: Americaʼs
Confrontation with Insurgent
Movements around the World (1969),
16.38
“Interviews with South African Library
Users,” 1.21-24
Into the Future: The Foundations of
Library and Information Services
in the Post-Industrial Era (1993),
10/11.97, 10/11.92-96
The Inveterate Life (1991), 10/11.97
“The ʻInvisiblesʼ: Lesbian Women as
Library Users,” 14.34-40
Iran, 2.48, 4.23, 16.38
Iran-Contra (Bush 41), 9.25
Iraq, 2.47-48, 2.48-49, 14.47-50, 15.6566, 16.42
Iron Column, 16. Supp. 6
Islam, lack of understanding in U.S.
5.26-30
Ismail, Noha, 5. Inside front cover,
5.26-30
Israel, 2.48, 5.27, 8.84
Istanbul, 10/11.79-82, 10/11.83-85
Istanbul Statement, June 21, 1991,
4.46-47
Iverson, David, 9.30, 9.33
Iverson, Sandy, 15.14-19, 15.68
J
JURIS, 9.34
Jablonski,Joseph, 8.37
“Jack Conroy- Writer for the
Dispossessed (obituary),” 1.40-41
Jacobs, Johnny, 15.20-26, 15.68
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 25
From issue #8, an illustration provided by Paul Garon to illustrate his bibliography
of publications of the Chicago Surrealist Group and Black Swan Press.
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 26
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Jamile, Samuel, 2.38
Janda, Kenneth, 9.27
Jank, Dagmar, 8.21-31, 8.86
Japan, 2.27, 10/11.60-78
Japanese-Americans, 10/11.65,
16.61-62
Jaszi, Peter, 12/13.26
Jazz, 6/7.48
Jefferson, Thomas, 14.6
Jensen, Robert, 9.22, 29
Jewish books, 15.34
Jewish Holocaust, 1.38
Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A.,
10/11.63
Jobless recovery, 10/11.18
Johannesburg Public Library, 1.6
John Ames Humphrey/OCLC/Forest
Press Award, 15.62-64
John, Nancy, 15.67
John Noyce Publications, 15.42
John Sessions Memorial Committee,
16.73
Johns Hopkins University, 10/11.47
Johnson, Ebba I., 5. Inside front
cover, 5.34
Johnson, Gisela, trans. 8.10-20
(translator)
Johnstone, Diana, 16.43
“Joint Statement on Faculty Status
of College and University
Librarians,” 12/13. 8-9
Joll, James, 16. Supp. 15
Jones, Alma Wyden (maybe
Simmons), 5.9
Jones, Bernie, 4.45
Jones, Clara, 15.63
Joseph, Helen, 1.32
Josey, E.J., 1. Inside cover, 1.29-30,
3.37, 15.1, 15.62-64
Journal of Palestine Studies, 16.41,
16.46, 16.47
Joyce, Steven, 15.1-13
Judis, John, 16.45, 53
Juravich, Tom, 4.64-65, 4.71
K
KLA
See Kosovo Liberation Army
KRIBIBI, 15.32, 15.37-40
Kagan, Al, 1.18-20, 3.21, 5. Inside
front cover, 5.47-50, 5.51-52,
10/11.79-82, 97, 16.51
Kaminsky, Robert, 5.44-46
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Kane, Bart, 12/13.37-39
Kapor, Mitch, 9.33
Karlsson, Jenni, 15.29
Kaufmännische Verband für weibliche
Angestellte (Commerical League of
Women Employees), 8.21-22
Keeney, Mary Jane, 2.24-30
Keeney, Philip, 2.23-2.30
Keller, Charles ((lithography), 9. cover, 9.
inside back cover
Kelley, Thomas, 6/7. Inside front cover
Kelly, Wayne, 12/13. 49-52
Kellner, Douglas, 6/7.44-46
Kelsey, Jane, 12/13.44
Kempton Park negotiations (South
Africa), 9.10-11
Kennedy, John F., 5.30, 14.5
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 10/11.13
Kenya, 4.23
Kessler, Jack, 12/13. 63-68
Khunou, Miriam, 4.21
Kierkegaard, Soren, 16.7
The Killing Ground (film about hazardous
industrial waste), 4.68-69
Kimball, Roger, 4.3
Kirkus Reviews, 4.35
Kissinger, Henry, 4.36
Kitsch, 6/7. 37
Klare, Michael, 16.41, 16.46
Knowledge workers, 16.31
Koblenz Autonomous Womenʼs Archive,
8.24
Koevoet [crowbar] archive, 9.6
Kolbe, Vincent, 15.20
Kolko, Gabriel, 16.37-38, 16.39
Koning, Hans, 5-40-41
Kosiplay (censorship of ), 2.38
Kosovo, 16.43
Kosovo Liberation Army, 16.43
Kramer, Hilton, 8.66
Kreisky, Bruno, 15.40
Kropotkin, Peotr, 16.Supp. 1-2, 16. Supp.
14, 16.Supp.15-17
Krug, Judith, 1.16, 12/13. 11
Kühn-Ludewig, Maria, 8.35
Kurds, 2.48, 10/11.80-82
Kuwait, 2.47-48, 2.48-49
KwaZulu police, 2.37
L
LC Subject Headings, 12/13.42
LEXIS, 12/13.23 – See also Lexis
LIWO
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 27
See Library and Information
Workers Organization (South
Africa)
LIWO National Conference, 1995,
15.22-23
LIWO-Durban, 15.21
LIWO-Gauteng, 15.21
LIWO-Northern Cape Province, 15.26
LIWO-Pietermaritzburg, 15.21
LIWO-Western Cape, 15.21
“LIWO and the South African
Unification Debate,” 10/11.87-89
“LIWO: Local Touch and Global
Networking in South Africa,” 15.2026
“LIWO Resolution on Censorship and
Freedom of Information,” 2.46-47
“LIWO Resolution on the Academic
and Cultural Boycott,” (South
Africa), 2.45-46
“LIWO Statement to IFLA,” 4.48-50
LIWO Support Group, 15.43
“LIWOʼs Guiding Principles”, (South
Africa), 2.44-45
LIWOLET, 15.21
LSG
See LIWO Support Group
Labadie Collection, 16.Supp. [i], 16.
Supp. 7-10
Labadie, Joseph A., 16.Supp. 7-10
Labash, Steve, 16.63-66, 16.73
Labor, 10/11.23-42, 10/11.86, 16.
Supp. 7-10
Labor and Monopoly Capital:
The Degradation of Work in the
Twentieth Century (1974), 10/11.
25-32
Labor history, 1.40, 6/7.2, 6/7. 65, 16.
Supp. 7-10, 16. Supp. 32-33
Labor, library service to, 4.5, 16. Supp.
7-10
La Guma, Alex, 1.32
Lakota Sioux, 5.39
Lamantia, Philip, 8.37
Lancaster, F.W., 3.45, 10/11.93
Landau, Elaine, 3.31-32, 3.38
Landy, Joanne, 16.40, 16.46
Lane, David, 15.16
Lange, Helene, 8.13, 8.22, 8.25
Language rights, 4.39
Larson, Magali Sarfatti, 5.1-18, FN 3
Larson, Ulf, 15.30
Lategan, Lindsay, 4.24
Latimer, Clare, 8.77
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 28
Latin America, 16.42, 16.56-58
Latin America Bureau (publisher),
4.28-36
Latin American Perspectives,
16.41,16.46, 16.48, 16.58
Latin American Students Association
See OCLAE
Latshaw, Patricia, 12/13.11
Latz, Birgit, 8.23, 8.29
Laurentius, 15.32, 15.35
Lawrence Hill (publisher), 4.28-36
Lawrence Scientific School, 10/11.47
Lawyers for Human Rights, 9.5
Layret, Francesc, 16. Supp. 36
Lebanon, 2.48, 16.38
“The Left” (political/ theoretical), 2.
Inside front cover, 2.2, 2.27, 4.3,
5.38, 5.48, 6/7.30-51, 8.77-78
“Left Wing of the Beat Generation,”
8.36-37
Lehman, Bruce, 12/13.19, 12/13. 27
Leicht, Hilka, 14.53, 14.54-55
Leidenschaft und Bildung: Zur
Geschichte der Frauenarbeit in
Bibliotheken (1992), 8.10-20
Leigh, Robert D., 15.54-58
Leisure, 6/7.34
Lesbians, 14.34-40
“Lesbians & Libraries,” 14.34-40
“Lesbians & Libraries” Resource list,
14.41-43
Less Access to Less Information By
and About the United States
Government: A 1981-1987
Chronology, 4.69
“Letter Against Bombing of Iraq;
12/16/98,” 15.65-66
Leuenroth, Edgar, 16.Supp.14
Levey, Lisbeth, 3.45
“Lexicon of hatred,” 5.9
Lexikon der Frau, 8.22
Lexis, 9.34
See also LEXIS
Lewis, Alison, 16.Supp.21-29, 16.supp.
40
Libertarian communism, 16.Supp.see
entire issue
Libération, 12/13.63
Liberation Distributors, 4.35
Liberation Graphics, 15.51-53
“Liberation Technology,” 5.47-50
Librarian education, 14.7-11
Librarian of Congress, 2.25, 4.53-58
Librarians for Nuclear Arms Control,
Index #1-16
1990-1999
15.48
Librarians for Social Change, 15.4243
Librarians
Alienation of, 2.55-58
Courage, 10/11.67
Germany, 8.10-20, 8.32-35
Heroes, 9.11-12
Image, 8.80
Openmindedness, 10/11.67
Pimps for the information
industry, 2.6, 9-14
Propaganda, instruments in
World War I, 3.3
Service ideal, 14.13-21
South Africa, 1.4-5, 1.21-24
Technologists, 3.18, 10/11.9-22
Women librarians, 5.1-18, 8.1-9,
10/11.9-22
Women readers, attitudes toward,
5.1-18
Librarians Against Nuclear Arms in
Sweden, 15.48
“Librarians Against War: an Open
Letter,” 14.1-4, 14.47-50
Librarians Association of Hawaii,
12/13.38
Librarians within the Peace
Movement, 15.25, 15.42
“Librarianship and Resistance,”
15.14-19
Librarianship
Anti-intellectualism, 14.5-12
Corporatism, 12/13. 32-44
Defined, 6/7.1-2
Deskilling, 6/7. 21-22
Foundation, 12/13.11
German, 8.32-35
Intellectual freedom as foundation,
12/13.11
Politics of, 3.2-4, 4.3-6
Profession, 6/7. 21-23, 8.17-18
Principles, 3.2-4
Reskilling, 6/7. 21-23
Service ideal, 14.13-21
Technology, 10/11.43-59
Women in, 5.1-18, 10/11.9-22
Librarianship and Legitimacy: The
Ideology of the Public Library
Inquiry (1997), 15.54-58
Librarianship: The Erosion of a
Womenʼs Profession, (1993),
10/11.97, 14.1
Libraries
Index #1-16
1990-1999
British, censorship, 8.77
Civic role, 12/13.10
Democratizing function, 6/7.15
Future of, 6/7, 15-29
Germany, 8.10-35
Hawaii, 12/13. 37-39
Mass media and, 6/7. 30-51
Politics of, 6/7.30
Public good, 6/7. 47-48, 10/11.67
Public sphere, 6/7. 26
Safe spaces, 6/7. 26
South Africa, 1.21-24
Virtual, 6/7, 21-26
Libraries and Culture, 15.55
“Libraries and the Commercialization of
Information: Towards a Critical
Discourse of Librarianship,” 2.9-14
“Libraries and the Middle East Question,”
5.26-30
“Libraries at the End of History?” 2.2-8
“Libraries in Society,” 5.31-5.34
“Libraries Losing Their Reason,” 12/13.
63-68
Library and Information Workers
Organization (LIWO, South Africa), 2.
Inside front cover, 2.42, 2.43-47, 2.59,
4.37, 4.49-50, 9.3, 9. inside back cover,
10/11.87-89, 15.20-26. 15.43
See also LIWO
The Library and Its Users: The
Communication Process, 10/11.97
Library Association, 9.11, 10/11.81, 15.43
International Group, 15.25
Library Bill of Rights, 12/13.7-17,
12/13.32, 15.3-13, 15.13, appendix
Library Campaign (Britain), 15. 47
Library catalog, 5.19-25
Library Faith, 15.55
Library history, 3.2-4, 8.11
Library Journal, 2.6, 2.27, 2.43-44,
4.30-36
Berninghausen Debate, 15.4-13
Library of Congress, 1.35, 2.27
American Historical Association
Resolution, 1992, 6/7. 68-69
Closed Stacks Policy, 6/7.2, 6/7. 64-67
Entrepreneurial aspects, 6/7. 19-20
` Joint Committee on the Library, 6/7.66
Manuscript Reading Room, 6/7. 68-69
Office for Subject Cataloguing Policy,
1.38-39
Open Stacks, 6/7. 64
Subject Headings, 5.19-25
Virtual library products, 9.29
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 29
Library of Social Reconstruction,
16.Supp. 22, 16.Supp. 30
Library Services Act, 2.24
Library Services Construction Act,
3.35
Libya, 2.48, 4.33
Lies of Our Times, 1.25-1.28, 16.47
Lincoln, Alan Jay, 3.36
Lincoln, Abraham, 16.8-9
LINK, 15.43
Linton, David, 4.7-16, 4.71
Lippmann, Walter, 9.30, 12/13. 10-11
Lippard, Lucy, 4.45
Lippincott, Kate, 16.72
Lischnewska, Maria, 8.22
A Literature of Their Own: British
Women Novelists From Bronte to
Lessing (1977), 5.6-8
Literary canon, 5.4-5
Literature, 5.1-18
Litwin, Rory, 15. inside front cover,
16.inside front cover, 16.66-70,
16.73, 16.Supp. [i]
Living My Life (1931), 16. Supp. 35
Llunas, J.L. 16.Supp. 37
Locale (1995), 10/11. 97
Lorenzo, Anselmo, 16. Supp. 34
Los Angeles Rebellion (manifesto by
Chicago Surrealists, 1992), 8.37
LʼOuverture, Toussaint, 8.69
Low income, 1.36-37
Love, James, 12/13.18-31, 12/13.76
Love, Jamie, 9.33
Lowe, Martyn, 15.41-50, 15.59-61,
15.68
Loyalty oaths, 5.35
Lubowski, Anton, assassinated, 9.3
Ludd, Ned; Ludd, King; Ludd,
General, 4.8-15
Luddite (1811-16), 4.7-16
Lüdtke, Helga, 8.10-8.20, 8.86
Lula (Luis Inácio Da Silva), 6/7. 52-61
“Lula Against the Alagoas Maharajah,”
6/7.52-61
Lyotard, Jean-Francois, 10/11.54
M
MIL (Iberian Liberation Movement),
16. Supp. 37
MLB
See Major League Baseball
MSSRT
See Minnesota Library Association
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 30
Social Responsibilities Round
Table
“MSRRT Persian Gulf
Resolution,1/91,” 2.48-49
MTV, 2.16, 6/7.47
MʼBow, Amadou-Mahtar, 3.7, 3.14-15
Mabudafhasi, Joyce, 1.16, 2.42
MacBride Report
See Many Voices, One World
MacBride Round Table-Harare, 3.12,
4.46
MacBride Round Table-Istanbul, 3.12,
4.37, 4.46-47
MacBride Round Table-Prague, 3.12,
4.46
MacBride, Seán, 2.43, 3.5, 4.46-47
MacCann, Donnarae, 15.12
Macdonald, Dwight, 6/7.36-37, 49
MacDonald, Margaret Read, 5.46
Machel, Samora, 9.3
“Machine as being”
(phenomenological), 10/11.44
Mackey, Sam, 8.66
MacLeish, Archibald, 2.25
Major, John Prime Minister, 8.77
Malinconico, Michael S. 6/7.17,
6/7.19, 6/7.24, 10/11.84-85, 97
Mbeki, Govan, 2.34
McCarran-Walter Act (1952), 4.66-67
McCarthy, Joe, 10/11.68
McCarthyism, (new) 4.3
McChesney, Robert W, 16.27
McConnell, Michael, 15.7
McCook, Kathleen de la Peña, 16. 72
McDonald, Peter, 1. Inside front
cover, 1.33, 1.35, 1.42, 5. Inside
front cover, 5.36-43, 12/13.32-44,
12/13.76
McDonaldʼs restaurant chain, 14.2-3,
15.59-61
McGraw-Hill, 1.8
Mchombu, Kingo, 4.22
McJob, 15.61
McLibel trial, 15.59-61
McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial
(1997), 15.59-61
McReynolds, David, 16.40, 16.46
McReynolds, Rosalee, 2.23-2.29, 2.59
McSpotlight (website), 15.61, fn 1
Madison, James, 12/13.10
Madrid, Paco, 16.Supp.16
Magdoff, Harry, 16.37, 16.54
Magón, Ricardo Flores, 16.Supp.30
Mährt-Thomsen, Frauke 15. 31-36,
Index #1-16
1990-1999
15.68
Mafole, Tebogo, 1.20, 1.29-30, 1.35,
2.41
Major League Baseball, 12/13.25-30
Makerere University (Uganda), 3.43
Malatesta, Errico, 16.Supp.14
Male hegemony, 5.1-18, 8.13
Male-stream values, 5.1-18
Malen, Kiesa, 14.53, 14.54-55
Man and People (1957), 10/11.44-45
“Mana, Manna, Manner: Power and
the Practice of Librarianship,” 16.
1-25
Mandela, Nelson, 1.12, 1.19, 1.21,
1.22, 1.25-1.28, 1.31, 1.32,
2.inside front cover, 2.34, 9.36-37,
10/11.68
Mandela, Winnie, 9.7
Manhattan Project, 10/11.64-65
“Manifesto of Avant-Garde
Librarianship,” 8.79-80
“Manufacture of consent,” 4.33, 4.36
Many Voices, One World, (1980),
3.5, 3.13, 3.19-20,4.46-47
Maplethorpe, Robert, 5.21-22
Los Maquis, 16. supp. 38
Marchand, Roland, 14.9
Marcuse, Herbert, 6/7. 34-35, 39,
42, 43
Market force, 16.30
Marram (publisher), 4.28-36
Márquez, Gabriel García , 3.19-20,
4.67
Martin, James J., 16.Supp.9
Martin, Sue, 12/13.12
Martin, W.H., 4.18
Martz, J.D. 4.34
Marx, Karl, 10/11.48
Marxist concepts, 3.8, 3.14, 6/7.
32-50
Marxist scholarship, 10/11.26
Marxʼs theory of alienation, 2.55-58
Masculine transcendentalism,
12/13.2-3
Masekela, Barbara, 15.21
Masizame Community Project, 15.29
Masmoudi, Mustapha, 3.12, 3.14-16
Maori, 16.19
Martin, Brian, 16.66-70
Mass Communications and American
Empire (1969), 16.29-33
Mass culture, 6/7. 30-51
Mass Culture: The Popular Arts in
America (1957) 16.36-37
Index #1-16
1990-1999
“The Mass Culture Debate: Left
Perspective,” 6/7. 30-51
Mass Democratic Movement, 1.3, 1.1617, 1.19-20, 1.30, 2.inside front cover,
2.41, 15.21
Mattelart, Armand, 3.9
Mauritius, 3.47
May, 1968(Paris), 16. Supp. 15
Mayor, Federico, 3.10-11
Mayibuye, 4.51-52
Mead Data Central, 9.34
Mead, Walter, 16.46, 16.54
Mechanical reproduction, 6/7.35-36
Mederos, Rene, 15.50, 15. front cover
Media bias, 16.43
Media convergence, 4.46-47, 16. 26-36
Media literacy, 16.32
Media pluralism, myth of, 16.31
Media workers, 8.75
Media Workers of South Africa, 2.32
MEDLINE, 12/13.41
Meeting rooms, cost at Harold
Washington Library (Chicago), 8.83
Melcher, Daniel, 2.27
Meli, Francis, 2.34
Memphis/Shelby County Public Library,
3.36
“The Media Charter of the African
National Congress,” 8.74-76
Men Against the State : The Expositors
of Individualist Anarchism, 1827-1908
(1953), 16. Supp.9
Men as librarians, 8.3-4, 8.13, 10/11.1322
Merrett, Christopher, 1.5, 1.32, 1.42,
2.30-40, 2.59, 9.1-15, 9. inside back
cover, 15.23
Meritocracy, 10/11.13
Mestre, Ricardo, 16. Supp.19, 21-29, 30
Mexico, 3.27, 16.Supp.27
Michell,Walter W. 15.2
Middle East, 5.26-30, 16.42
Middle East Reports, 16.47
Middle East War, 2.47-49
Midwest Federation of Library
Associations, 5.30
Midwest Radical Scholars and Activists
Conference, 3.28
Migrant workers, 16.72
Miklowitz, Gloria, 1.9
Milam, Carl, 2.25, 15.54, 15.57
The Militant Proletariat, 16. Supp. 34
Military Contractors, 10/11. 64
Military Families Support Network, 2.49
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 31
Military-industrial complex, 6/7.17,
10/11.64, 10/11.71
Military Order of the World Wars,
10/11.63
Military-technological barbarism,
15.65
Millenarian worldview, 12/13.3
Miller, Marilyn, 15.10
Miller, Mark, 4.45
Mills, C. Wright, 2.3, 6/7. 41
Milwaukee Public Library, 3.35
The Mind Managers (1973), 16.30-32
Mini, Thembi, 4.24
Minitel, 6/7.17
Minnesota Library Association Social
Responsibilities Round Table, 1.3637, 2.48-49
Missouri Writers Project, 1.40
Modern School (Barcelona),
16.Supp.3, 34, 38
Modern Youth Library (Buenos Aires),
16.Supp.12
Modernity, 10/11.53
Mohawk, John, 5.42
Le Monde Diplomatique, 16.47
Monette, Paul, 6/7.26
Monopoly capitalism, 3.24-30
Monopoly of media, 4.46-47
Montana State Supreme Court, 2.26
Montana State University (University
of Montana), 2.26
Montand,Yves, 4.67
Monthly Review, 16.39, 16.47
Monthly Review Press (publisher),
4.28-36
Montjuich Prison (Barcelona),
16.Supp.37
Mooney, Thomas, 16.Supp.9
Morris, Dave, 15.60-61
Morrison, Toni, 6/7.49
Morristown Public Library, New
Jersey, 3.38
Morocco, 2.48
Mosco, Vincent, 3.21, 10/11.9-10
Mother Earth, 16. Supp. 9
Mother Jones, 16.66-67
Motherliness, 8.13-14
Motorola, 12/13.29
MOVE (Philadelphia), 4.35
Movement for Avant-Garde
Librarianship, 8.79-80
Mtimkulu, Siphiwe, assassinated, 9.3
Multicultural Folktales: Stories to Tell
Young Children (1991), 5.44-46
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 32
Multiculturalism, 4.3-6, 4.40, 5.31,
5.44-46
Multiforo Alicia (Mexico City),
16.Supp.21
Multimedia instruction, 9.27
Multinational Monitor, 16.47
Multnomah County Public Library, 3.36
Mumble, Dennis A., 1.25-28, 1.42
Mundaneum de Mons, 16.Supp.14
Mundo, 16.Supp.30
Museums, 5.38, 10/11.60-78, 16.34
Music, 6/7.45
Mutual Aid: A Factor of Revolution
(1902), 16.Supp,2.
Mistral, Sylvia, 16.Supp.22
The Myth of the Electronic Library:
Librarianship and Social Change in
America (1994), 12/13.69-70
Myths that structure content of
corporate controlled media, 16.30-32
N
NAM
See Non-Aligned Movement
NASM
See National Air and Space Museum
NATO, 16.43
NBA
See National Basketball Association
NERL
See Northeast Research Libraries
Network
NFL
See National Football League
NGOs
See Non-Governmental
Organizations
NHL
See National Hockey League
NII
See National Information
Infrastructure
NOTIS, 6/7.17, 10/11. 52
NREN
See National Research and Education
Network
NUMMI10/11.34-35
NWICO
See New World Information and
Communications Order
NYCOSH, (compiler of COSH Group
directory), 4.61-63
NACLA 16.41, 16.46, 16.47, 16.58
Index #1-16
1990-1999
This image appeared in #15 and was provided by Lincoln Cushing who also
contributed a report of his work to document, collect, catalogue and preserve postrevolution Cuban posters. The lines missing from the poem at the top of the page,
which ended an article concerning the German librarians group AKRIBIE, are:
In other words
Criticism is not a complaint...
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 33
Nader, Ralph, 9.33.
Nagasaki, 10/11.65
Namibia, 9.6, 15. 45-46
Nasser, Gamal Abdel, 3.25
Natal Resource Centre Forums, 4.50
The Nation, 16.29, 16.40,
16.41,16.45, 16.46, 16.47
National Agriculture Library, 12/13.
41
National Air and Space Museum,
10/11. 60-78
National Archives Database, 9.34
National Basketball Association,
12/13. 25-30
National Cancer Institute, 12/13.4950
“National Cataloguing Petition
Campaign Continues,” 1.38-39
National Coalition for the Homeless,
3.31
National Confederation of Labour,
16.Supp. 4
National Conference of Workers
(Cuba)
See CNT
National Council of Churches of
Christ, 2.49
National Endowment for Democracy,
2.44
National Football League, 12/13.
25-30
National Hockey League, 12/13.
25-30
National Indemnity Council (South
Africa), 9.5
National Information Infrastructure,
10/11.7, 14.30, 16.35
National Library of Medicine,
12/13.41
National Museum of Natural History,
5.38
National Party (South Africa), 1.25,
1.26, 2.39
National Registry of Argentina, 16.
Supp.11
National Research and Education
Network, NREN, 6/7.18, 6/7.25,
12/13.46
National Union for the Total
Independence of Angola
See UNITA
National Union of South African
Students, 2.33
National Writersʼ Union, 9.32
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 34
Nationalism and Culture, 16.Supp.22
Native Americans, 2.5
Nauratil, Marcia, 2.55-58
Nazi occupation, 15.42, 15.45-46
Nehru, Jawaharlal, 3.25
Neoliberalism, 16.26-36
Nettlau, Max, 16.Supp. 13
Neufeld, Michael, 10/11.69
Neutrality, 2.6, 3.2-4, 5.51, 15.5, 15.1012, 15.14-19, 15.49
Neutrality, 15.3, 15.14
Myth of 16.30-31
New African, 2.33, 9.10
New Age ideology, 10/11.12
New Information Order (for South
Africa), 2.43-44
New International Economic Order, 3.5,
3.7
New International Order, 3.7
New Labor, 15.44
New Left, 6/7.31, 6/7.41-46, 16.37, 16.43
New Left Review, 16.41, 16.45,
New Masses, 9.inside back cover
New Nation, 2.35
New Political Economy, 16.42
New Statesman and Society, 8.77-78
New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc
See NUMMI
New World Information and
Communications Order (NWICO),
2.43, 3.5-23, 3.24-30, 4.37, 4.46-47
Bibliography, 3.29-30
New World Order, 2.3, 3.5, 3.14, 5.37
(AKA Manifest Destiny), 8.69
New York, 4.3
New York African Studies Association,
3.47
New York City Central Labor Council,
10/11.86
New York Public Library, 1.34, 1.35, 3.3,
3.36, 3.39, 6/7.20, 10/11.68-69,
10/11.86, 16.Supp.14
Science, Industry and Business Library,
10/11.86
New York Times, 1.25-28
New Zealand, 16.19-20
News flow, 3.8
News Media and International Conflict
(conference), 4.46
Newcastle Public Library (South Africa),
2.42
Newsday, 9.33
Newsweek, 4.3
Nexis, 9.32
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Nicaragua, 2.48, 3.26
Nigeria, 4.21
Nixon, Richard, 14.5
Nkomo, Mokobung, 1.21, 1.24
No Easy Walk to Freedom, (1986)
1.22, 2.34
“No Love Lost: Library Women Vs.
Women Who Use Libraries,” 5.1-18
Noble, David, 6/7.17, 12/13.2
Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), 3.68, 3.11, 3.24-25, 4.46-47
Non-Aligned Pool, 3.13
Non-Alignment in an Age of Alignment,
1986, 3.6
Non-Governmental Organizations,
3.22, 16.43
Non-Violent Activist, 16.48
Nordenstreng, Kaarle, 3.8
North American Congress on Latin
America
See NACLA
Northeast Research Libraries Network,
12/13.37
Norwegian Library Association,
10/11.81
“Not Three Worlds, But One!” 3.24-30
“Notes from the Front Lines at SFPL,”
12/13.60-62
Las Noticias, 16.Supp.37
Nuclear arms race, 2.4
Nuclear disarmament, 15.9
Nunn, Sam, 10/11.64
Nursing, 8.14
Nye, David E., 14.9
Nyongwana, Reigneth, 4.24
Nyquist, Corinne, 1.42, 1.18-20, 3.4351, 3.55
O
OAS
See Organization of African Unity
OCLAE, 15.51
OCLC, 6/7.18-20, 6/7.22, 12/13.39-40
Corporate culture of, 6/7. 18-20,
12/13. 40
OCLC LS200, 6/7.17
OMB
See U.S. Office of Management and
Budget
OMB Circular A-130, 12/13.58
ON
See Operation Namibia
OSPAAAL, 15.36, 15.51-53
Index #1-16
1990-1999
See also Organización de Solidaridad
con los Pueblos de Asia, Africa y
América Latina
ÖTV
See Öffentlich Dienst Transport und
Verkehr
Oakley, Robert L., 12/13. 53-59
Obadalek, Renate, 15.37-40, 15.69
Objectivity, 15.14-19
OʼBrien, Patrick, 3.34
OʼConnor, James, 16.42
“Occupational Safety & Health
Resources,” 4.59-63
Occupational segregation, 8.3, 8.16
Öffentlich Dienst Transport und
Verkehr (West German Librarian
Union), 8.34
Official Secrecy (South Africa), 9.1-15
Oil, 5.27
Oklahoma City bombing, 16.62
Olden, Anthony, 3.45
Oldenburg, Claes, 8.37
Omnibus Children and Youth Literacy
Initiative, 6/7.18
On Power and Ideology: The Managua
Lectures (1987), 4.34
“One-dimensional man,” 6/7.34-35
Onimode, Bade, 3.44
Ontario Advisory Committee on
Telecommunications, 10/11.8
Open Libraries Project (South Africa),
15.21
Open Stacks (Library of Congress),
6/7.64-67
Operation Namibia, 15.45-46
Operation Vula, 2.33
Oppositional movements, 16.33
Oral culture, 9.16-21
Oral documentation (Africa), 9.16-21
“Oral Documentation: The Other
ʻFamineʼ in African Libraries,”
9.16-21
Orality, 9.16-21
Orbis (publisher), 4.28-36
Order of Daedilians, 10/11.63
El organismo económico de la
revolución (1936), 16. Supp. 4
Organización de Solidaridad con los
Pueblos de Asia, Africa y América
Latina, 15.36, 15.51-53
Organization of African Unity, 1.19
Organization of Solidarity with the
People of Asia, Africa and Latin
America, 15.36, 15.51-53
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 35
Organizational models 10/11.32-36
Ortega y Gasset, José, 6/7. 31
Orwell, George, 9.6
OSPAAAL,
See Organización de Solidaridad
con los Pueblos de Asia, Africa y
América Latina
Ostlandritt, 8.34
“Outsourcing Federal Libraries,”
14.44-46
Ownership of media, 16.35
Oxford University Press, 12/13.50
P
PANA
See Pan-African News Agency
PC
See political correctness
“PC for Pre-Schoolers,” 5.44-46
PDS
See Social Democratic Party
(Brazil)
PLC Bulletin, 2.23-29
“PLG Press Release on Gulf Crisis,
9/90,” 2.47-48
PLG “Resolution on New Statesman
and Society,” 8.77-78
PLG Statement of Purpose, 4.72, 5.
inside back cover, 6/7. inside back
cover, 8.88, 14. 57, 15.70, 16.74
PLG Statement of Purpose [Draft],
1.44, 2.60, 3.56
“PLG Talks to the Fund for Free
Expression,” 1.33
PLGNet, 12/13.38, 14.1-4
PT
See Brazilian Workerʼs Party
“P.W. Bothaʼs American Helpers”
[Village Voice, 1/12/88], 1.2
Pacifism, 2.24
PAIS International database, 16.39
Pateman, John, 15.43
Palestine, 5.27, 8.84
Palestine Human Rights Information
Center, 2.52-54, 2.59
Palestine-Israel Journal, 16.47
Palestinian viewpoint, 5.28
Palladino, Grace, 6/7.2, 6/7.64-67
Panama, 3.52
Pan-African News Agency, 3.13
Pan-American Health Organization,
5.47-48
Paper Tiger, 3.15
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 36
Paperless society, 3.45, 10/11.93
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980, 2.11;
1995 Act, 12/13.58-59
Parenti, Michael,10/11.12
Passions Spin the Plot (1934), 2.26
Patriarchal ideology of librarianship, 5.118, 6/7.30
Patrick, Valerie Ann, 16.Supp. 18-20, 16.
Supp.40
“Patrons in Crisis: Where Theyʼre
Coming From—Where Weʼre
Sending Them—A Call for Library
Intervention,” 3.32
Pay-per society, 10/11.9-10
Paz, Abel, 16.Supp.6, 16.Supp.35
Peace, 4.38-45, 5.26-30, 15.47, 15.48
Peace & Freedom, 16.48
Peace and Democracy, 16.47
“Peace letter” to Roosevelt, 2.25
Peace Magazine, 16.47
Peace News, 16.48
Peace Review, 16.48
PeaceNet, 3.12, 3.20, 3.21
Peiró, Juan, 16. Supp.5, 16.Supp.21
Peiser, Bona, 8.22
Pellowski, Anne, 5.46
Pendakur, Manjunath, 3.24-30, 3.55
The Penny Magazine, 14. cover and
inside front cover
Pentagon, 3.52
People of color, 3.26, 4.40, 5.8-9,
10/11.25
Peopleʼs Daily World, 9.inside back cover
Peopleʼs Libraries (Argentina), 16.
supp.11-17
Perelman, Michael, 16.63-66
Persian Gulf Resolution, 2.inside back
cover, 2.48-49, 3.2
Persian Gulf War
See Gulf War I, 2 August 1990-28
February 1991
Personal computers, 6/7. 4, 8.4
“A Perspective on the Book Famine”
3.43-51
Peters, John Durham, 5.51-52, 6/7.17
Peters, Nancy Joyce, 8.37
Petras, James, 16.41, 16.46, 16.54
Phallocentric, 5.4
Philadelphia, 4.35
Philadelphia Inquirer, 1.28
Pienaar, Louis, 2.34
Pierce, Linda, 16.70-72, 16.73
Pietris, Mary K.D., 1.38-39
Pilgrims, 5.38
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Pirates and Emperors: International
Terrorism in the Real World (1986),
4.32-34
Planetary corporations, 3.16-17
Playboy v. Tech Warehouse, 9.33
Plummer, Mary Wright, 10/11.49-50
Poem, 10/11.90-91
Poetry, 8.72
Poland, 2.16
Police and Prison Warders Civil Rights
Union (South Africa), 2.35
Police informants (South Africa),
1.22-23
Political Affairs, 16.47
Political correctness, 4.3-6, 10/11.63
Political prisoners, 16.Supp, 2
Political repression, 14.51
“Politically Controversial
Monographs,” 4.28-36
“Politics and Anti-Politics in
Librarianship,” 3.2-4
“Politics of Information and the Fate
of the Earth,” 6/7.3-14
Poor people, 1.36-37, 3.31-42, 4.40,
16.70-72, 16. Supp.18
Poor People and Library Services
(1998), 16.70-72
Poor Peopleʼs Policy (ALA), 3.4,
3.32-33
“Poor Peopleʼs Services, from
MSRRT,” 1.36-37
Poorman, Susan, 3.39
Popular agency, 16.35-36
Popular Culture and High Culture
(1974), 6/7.38-39
Pornographic literature, 8.34
Position Paper on the Cultural and
Academic Boycott (ANC), 1989,
1.19
Poster, Mark, 10/11.54-55
Poster Art, 15.51-53
Poster Project, Cuba, 15.51-53
Postcolonialism, 16.29
Post-Gutenberg, 6/7. 24-25
Post-industrial society, 2.3-4, 2.9, 6/7.
48, 10/11.23-42, 10/11.92-96
Postman, Neil, 9.27-28, 10/11.46
Postmodernism, 10/11.54, 15.14
Pot, Pol, 5.36
Poverty, 1.36-37, 1.40-41, 2.49, 15.44,
16. 26, 16.31-32
Power, 16.1-25, 16.66-67
Powerlessness, 5.5-6
Prado, Antonio, 16.Supp.1-6, 16.
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Supp.40
Pragmatism, 14.6
Pratt Institute Library School, 10/11.4950
De Preez, 9.3-4
Preservation, electronic,9.25-26
Preston, Bill, 3.11
Pretoria, State Library in, 1.4
“Primer on WIPO,” 12/13.18-31
Prison camps, 14.51
Pritchard, Sarah, 6/7.1, 8.1-9, 8.86
Privacy, 6/7.22-23, 9.23-25, 12/13.14
Private sphere, 8.12
Privatization, 2.6, 2.11, 3.10, 3.17
“The Pro-Machine Bias: The Fate of the
Luddites,” 4.7-16
Professionalism, 5.1-18, 8.17-18,
10/11.47, 15.14
Progress, 10/11.46-47
Progressive (definitions), 1-inside back
cover
The Progressive, 16.29, 41-47, 16.66-67
Progressive Librarian (journal), 2.
Inside cover, (Tables of Contents,
1990-1996, 12/13.71-75, 15.43
The Progressive Librarian Council,
2.23-29
“The Progressive Librarian Council and
Its Founders,” 2.23-29
Progressive Librarians Guild (PLG)
Arbeitskreis Kritischer
Bibliothekarinnen, 15.32
Conscientious objectors to
corporatism, 12/13.34
Democratic movement, 3.15
Founding, 1. Inside front and back
covers
Growth, 2. Inside front and back
covers
Many Voices, One World vision, 3.5
Information for Social Change, 15.25
Political dimensions, 3.4
Privatization, 3.10
South Africa, support of boycott,
2.41-44
Spain, 16. Supp.18
Statement of Purpose, 4.72, 5. inside
back cover, 6/7. inside back
cover, 8.88, 12/13.77
Progressive librarianship, 2.8, 2.23-29,
5.31-34
Progressive purge, 4.3
Progressivism, 10/11.47
El proletariado militante, 16.Supp.34
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 37
Propaganda (South Africa), 9.1-15
Propaganda model, 3.53
Protection of Information Act (South
Africa), 2.35
Protestant Churches (complicity in
destruction of American Indian
cultures, 8.70
Protestantism, 14.6
Proudhon, Pierre-Joseph, 16.Supp.1,
16.Supp.14, 16.Supp.30
Provenzo, Eugene, 5.51, 6/7.24-25,
9.25-26
Przeworski, Adam, 10/11.95
Public domain, 12/13.18-31
Public good, 6/7.48, 12/13. 11
Public libraries, 2.10, 3.31-42, 6/7.8
Austria, 15. 37-40
Canada, 15.17-18
Democratic purpose of, 10/11.86,
15.18
Environmental information,
6/7.12-13
Legitimacy, 15.54-58
Postwar planning (WWII), 15.5458
Social change, 4.19
Working classes, 15.17-18
The Public Library : Democracyʼs
Resource: A Statement of
Principles (1982), 3.38, 3.42
Public Library Policy and Social
Exclusion, 15. 44-45
Public Library Inquiry, 15.54-58
Public Library Trusteeship, 1.18
Public media, 8.76
Public Policy, 4.44-45
Public space, 10/11.10, 16.34
Public sphere, 6/7.15-16, 6/7.19, 8.4
Publications Act, 1.32, 2.34
Publishers Weekly, 1.8-9, 4.30-36
Puppets, 5.44-46
Q
Quayle, Dan, 15.10
Québec, 14.13-21
Quʼest-ce que la propriété?
Recherche sur le principe du
droit et du gouvernement, (1840)
16.Supp.1
Quincentennial (Columbusʼ voyage),
5.36-43
Counter-Quincentennial, 5.36-43
Quincentennial Literature, 5.36-43
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 38
Quitzow, Grace, 8.21-31 (translator)
R
RBOCs
See Regional Bell Operating
Companies
Raber, Douglas, 15.54-58
Racism, 3.24, 4.3-6, 5.33, 15.16, 15.44,
15.62-64, 16.10-11, 16.59-60
Radical activism, 15.48
Radical Historians Newsletter, 10/11.65
Radical History Review, 16.41, 16.45,
16.47
Radical immigrants, 16.Supp.7
Radical librarians, 6/7.31, 15.46
“Radical Librarianship: Something of an
Overview from the UK,” 15.41-50
Radical Research Center, 16.39
Radio, 4.42, 16.32
Radio Marti, 3.26
Radway, Janice A., 5.10-11
Ragan, Robin, 16.Supp.1-6, 16.Supp.40
Rasimus, Edward J., 15.13
Raven Press, Bloemfontein, S.A., 1.22
Readers, 16.Supp.13, 16.Supp. 25
Reader-response criticism, 5.10-12
Readerʼs Forum, 8.81-85
Reading Circles, 16.Supp. 19, 16.Supp.37
Reading the Romance: Women,
Patriarchy and Popular Literature
(1984), 5.10-12
Reagan, Ronald, 1. 2, 1.41, 2.3, 2.11,
2.48, 3.9, 3.17, 3.26, 3.31, 3.52, 4.33,
5.36, 10/11.15-16, 10/11.94, 14.5,
16.27
Reason, 10/11.46-47
The Rebel Poet, 1.40
Reclus, Elisée, 16.Supp.13, 16.Supp.30
Red Army Faction, 8.34
Red Pepper, 16.48
Red Scare, 16.Supp.8
Redfield, J.S., 12/13. cover and inside
front cover, 14 cover and inside front
cover
Regeneration, 16.Supp.9
Regional Bell Operating Companies
(RBOCs), 6/7.17-18
Reid, Barrett, 4.18-19
Reinecke, Ian, 4.7
Reilly, Joseph, 1.inside cover, 1.16-17,
1.21-24, 1.42, 2.41-44, 2.59, 3.22,
15.25
Reilly [sic], Melissa
Index #1-16
1990-1999
See Riley, Melissa
Renewable power, 2.49
Republican National Convention,
10/11.71
The Resisting Reader: A Feminist
Approach to American Fiction
(1979), 5.5-6
Resolution on Israeli Censorship, 14.3
“Resolution on Loyalty Oaths,” 5.35
“Resolution on New York Public
Libraryʼs Science, Industry and
Business Library,” 10/11.86
“Resolution on the Importance of
Freedom of Expression and Free
Access to Information, “ 10/11.8385.
“Resolution on the Library of
Congress,”American Historical
Association, 6/7.68-69
Resolution on New Statesman and
Society,” 8.77-78
“A Response,” 5.51-52
Restitution of books, 15.34
Retired Officers Association, 10/11.63
Review of African Political Economy,
16.47
Reviewers as Censors, 4.34
Revista Blanca, 16.Supp.30,
16.Supp.37
Revisionist historians, 16.37
Revolutionary consciousness, 6/7. 42
Rhodes, Glenda, 3.33
Ribeiro, Fabian, assassinated, 9.3
Ribeiro, Florence, assassinated, 9.3
“Ricardo Mestre (1906-1997): A
Man Who Died Disseminating ʻthe
Idea,ʼ” 16.Supp.21-29
Rich, Adrienne, 5.1
Richards, Margaret, 9.37
Rider University, 12/13.14
Riefenstahl, Leni, 6/7.36
Riera, José,16.Supp.22
See Mestre, Ricardo
The Right to Know, 9.12
The Right to Know (ALA Conference
theme, 1992), 4.66
The Right to Know (1990) review,
3.52-53
The “Right” political , 4.6, 5.37,
(France)12/13.63-68, 14.6
Rigney, Daniel, 14.8
Riley, Melissa, 12/13.60-62, 12/13.76,
14.inside front cover, 15.inside front
cover,
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Ríos, Francesc, 16.Supp.35
Primo de Rivera, Miguel, 16.Supp.21
Rivonia Trial, 9.6
Roach, Colleen, 3.5-23
Robinson, Charles, 6/7.24
Rockefeller, Nelson, 6/7.17
Rocker, Rudolf, 16.Supp. 22
Rojas, Eliseo, 16.Supp. 30
The Role of Women in Librarianship:
1876-1976: The Entry, Advancement
and Struggle for Equalization in One
Profession (1979), 8.11
Romance novels, 5.10-11, 6/7. 49
Romani Holocaust, 1.38
Rondonia, 5.43
Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 2.24, 14.5
Roots, 6/7.49
The Roots of American Foreign Policy:
An Analysis of Power and Purpose
(1969), 16.38
Rose, Charlie, Congressman, 6/7.66-67
Rose, Lance, 9.22-35, 9. inside back
cover
Rosemont, Franklin, 8.36, 8.37
Rosemont, Penelope, 8.36
Rosenzweig, Mark, 1. Inside front
cover, 1. 2-15, 1.42, 2. Inside front
cover, 2.2-8 , 2.59, 3. Inside front
cover, 3.2-4, 3.5-23, 3.55, 4.2, 5.
Inside front cover, 6/7. Inside front
cover, 8. Inside front cover, 8.32-35
(translator), 8.36-39, 9.inside front
cover, 10/11. inside front cover,
10/11.2, 12/13. inside front cover,
12/13. 69-70, 12/13. 76, 14. inside
front cover, 14.1-4, 14.47-50, 15.
inside front cover, 15.3, 15.65,
16.inside front cover, 16.Supp. inside
front cover
Rotenberg, Marc, 9.23
Rothstein, Samuel, 14.7
Royal Library of Belgium, 16. Supp. 14
Rozsak, Theodore, 6/7.1, 6/7.3-14, 6/7.
70-71, 8.2, 8.9
Ruckelshaus, Wlliam, 16.3
Ruggiero, Renato, 12/13. 46
Ruiz, Cano, 16.Supp. 30
Rushdie, Salman, 8.34
Russia, 16.43
Russian Revolution, 6/7. 32
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 39
S
SAB
See Sveriges Allmänna
Biblioteksförening
SACP
See South African Communist
Party
SAILIS
See South African Institute of
Library and Information Science
SDS, 6/7. 43
SEC, 9.34
SEGUEF
See Sociedad para el Estudio de la
Guerra Civil y el Franquismo
SEIU, 4.59
SOMAFCO
See Solomon Mahlangu Freedom
College
SRRT
See Social Responsibilities Round
Table
Saatchi & Saatchi, 3.16
Sabosik, Patricia E. 4.30-31
Sabotage, 4.11-12
Sacco, Nicola, 16.Supp.9
Sacco and Vanzetti, 16.Supp.9
Sachs, Albie, 9.6
Salaberria, Ramon, 16.Supp. entire
issue
Salem affair (Liberian tanker
delivers Kuwait oil to South
Africa), 9.3, 9.8
Sale, Kirkpatrick, 5.41-42
Salvador Seguí Foundation for
Libertarian Studies (Madrid), 16.
Supp.32-33
Samizdat documents, 14.51
San Francisco Public Library, 12/13.
60-62
Sanchez, Joseph, 5.40
Sanctions Handbook (1987), 1.8
Sand Creek Massacre (1864), 5.39
Sanders, Gary, 4.35-36
Sandinistas, 3.26
Sandoval, Enrique, 16.Supp.23
Sanger, Margaret, 10/11.68
Santillán, Diego Abad de, 16.Supp.4
Sar, Saloth
See Pol Pot
Sarmiento, Domingos F., 8.70
Sarney, José, 6/7.52-61
Satellite communications, 3.22
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 40
Saudi Arabia, 2.49
Savimbi, Jonas, 9.5
Scandanavian Resolution concerning
freedom of expression in Turkey,
10/11. 79-82, 84
Schatzberg, Karin, 8.22-23
Schiller, Anita, 6/7.16-17
Schiller, Herbert I., 2.10, 2.15-22, 2.59,
3.9, 3.11, 3.20, 5.52, 6/7.16-17,
10/11.19, 16.26-36
Schmück, Jocken, 16.Supp.16
Schneider, Karen G., 14.10
Schniderman, Saul, 4.53-58, 4.71
“The School and the Barricade,” 16.
supp.11-17
School of Library Economy, Columbia
University,10/11.49-50
Schooling and the Struggle for Public
Life (1988), 10/11.20
Schools, 6/7.15, 6/7.30, 6/7.42
Schreibman, Vigdor, 12/13.45-48,
12/13.76
Schwenninger, Sherle, 16.46
Scientific management, 10/11.35,
10/11.50-51
“Searches with No Direct Hits/Words. An
OPAC-generated list,” 10/11.90-91
“Searching for the ʻEnemy:ʼ Alternative
Resources on U.S. Foreign Policy,”
16.37-50
Sechaba, (official journal of the ANC),
1.22, 1.32, 2.34
Secrecy (South Africa), 9.1-15
Security legislation 2.31-32,
“Seeds of Change” [National Museum of
Natural History], 5.38-40
Seers, 8.72
Segal, Howard, 10/11.8
Segui, Salvador, 16.Supp.32-33
Seidel, Heike, 14.34-40, 14.55
“Selected Bibliography of Alternative
Books on U.S. Foreign Policy,” 16.5155
“Selected Bibliography of Alternative
Sources for Latin America,” 16.56-58
Self-determination, 16.37
Sellen, Betty-Carol, 15.6
Semana Tragica, 16.Supp.33
Separate Amenities Act, 2.31, 2.42, 4.48
Serbia, 16.43
Serbs, 16.43
“Service Undermined by Technology: An
Examination of Gender Relations,
Economics and Ideology,” 10/11.5-22
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Sex, 5.19-25
Sex segregation, 8.3-4
Sexism, 3.24, 4.3-6
Sexton, Ron, 8.32-35 (translator)
Shah, T. D., Mrs. 9.36
Shamy, Salwa M., 1.34, 1.42
Sharpeville Massacre, March 21, 1960
(South Africa), 1.18-19
Shaw, G.B., 8.77
Sheffield Scientific School, 10/11.47
Shalom, Stephen, 16.41, 45, 55
Shils, Edward, 6/7.38-41
Shopping malls, 2.17, 16.34
Shore, Elliott, 1.inside cover ,1.42
Showalter, Elaine, 5.6-7
Sierra, Judy, 5.44-46
Silberberg, Sophie, 1.33
Simians, Cyborgs, and Women (1991),
15.15
Simmons, Alma Wyden (aka Alma
Wyden Jones), 5.17
Simmons, Randall, 3.38-39
Sindicato de Espectáculos, 16.Supp. 34
Singham, A.W., 3.6, 3.15
Sister libraries, 3.47
Sisulu, Walter Max, 2.30, 9.11
Sitting Bull, 8.69
Slovevnis, 16.42
Slovo, Joe, 2.30
Small Press, 4.35
Small Press Book Fair, 2.50
“Small Press Center,” 2.50-51
Small presses, 2.50-51, 4.28-36, 12/13.
35-36
Smith, Merritt Rose, 10/11.46
Smithsonian Institution, 10/11.60-78
Smythe, Dallas, 3.20
Snyder, Mitch, 3.32
Social accountability, 16.33-34
Social change, 5.47
Social crisis, 16.34-35
Social Democratic Party (PDS,Brazil),
6/7.60
Social exclusion, 15.44
Social isolation, 1.36
Social justice, 2.7, 3.3, 6/7.42,
12/13.10, 15.44
Social Responsibilities Round Table
(SRRT), 1.2, 1.16, 1.17, 1.20, 15.25
Alternatives in Print Task Force,
12/13.39
ACONDA, 15.5, 15.8
Conscience of ALA, 14.2
Conscientious objectors to
Index #1-16
1990-1999
corporatism, 12/13.34
Enola Gay, 10/11. 62, 10/11.70-71
Feminist Task Force, 8.11
Founding (1969), 15.4
Gay and Lesbian Task Force, 6/7. 26,
14.39, 15.1
Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Task
Force, 15.1
Guidelines for Librarians Interacting
with South Africa, 1.20
International Human Rights Task
Force, 1.18, 8.84
International Responsibilities, 16.51
“Librarians Against War: an Open
Letter,” 14.1-4, 14.47-50
Persian Gulf, 2.49
Resolution on the “Together is
Better…Letʼs Read,” [McDonaldʼs
adv. Campaign], 14.2-3
Role in librarianship, 15.1-13
“Social Responsibility Around the
World,” 15.20-50
Social responsibility, 2.7, 3.4, 15.1-13
“Social Responsibility Around the
World,” 15.20-50
Social Responsibility in Librarianship
(1989), 15.12
“Social Responsibility vs. the Library
Bill of Rights,” 15.6
Social Studies, 16.Supp. 22
Social work, 8.14
Socialism, 3.14, 10/11.95, 15.27, 15.44,
16.32
Socialist critique of mass culture, 6/7.
31-32
Socialist International, 16.Supp. 2
Socialist party, 9. inside back cover
Socialist Scholars Conference -9th, 3.523; 9.22-35
Socialist/Third World alliance, 3.9
Sociedad para el Estudio de la Guerra
Civil y el Franquismo, 16.Supp.33
Society for Electronic Access, 9.33
Sojourners, 16.47
Soldevila, Cardinal, 16.Supp.4
Solidaridad Obrera 16.Supp.5, 16.Supp.
22, 16.Supp.37
Soley, Laurence, 3.53
SOLINET, 12/13.39-40
Solomon Mahlangu Freedom College,
1.21, 1.24, 5.47
Somerville, Mary, 12/13.59
Somovia, Juan, 3.19-20
Songs of the Spanish Civil War,
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 41
16.Supp. 22
Soros Foundation, 14.51
South Africa, 1. 2-15, 1.16-17, 1.1820, 1.21-24, 1.25-28, 4.17-27,
4.49-50,
10/11.79-80,
16.60-62
Advisory Committee on Land
Reform, ACLA, 9.4
Apartheid, 1.2-15, 1.18,1.21-24,
1.25-28, 1.30, 2.31, 2.41-44, 3.4,
4.17-27, 4.49-50, 9.5
Arbitrary government power, 9.2
“Archives Act,” 9.2, 9.6
Bantu education, 4.49
Book boycott, 1.2-15
Centre for Educational Policy
Development, 15.22
Civil Cooperation Bureau, 9.4
Civil Rights, 4.49-50
CODESA, Convention for A
Democratic South Africa, 9.4
Cultural boycott, 3437, 4.51-52
Election Day Messages from
South African Librarians,
9.36- 37
Freedom of Information, 9.1-15
Human rights, 9.1
Illiteracy, 4.17
“Indemnity Act,” 9.2
Kempton Park negotiations,
9.10-11
Librarians as cowards, 9.11-12
Librariansʼ messages on election
day, 9.36-37
Libraries, 1.21-24, 4.17-27 , 4.49
Library and Information Workers
Organization (LIWO, South
Africa), 2. Inside front cover,
2.42, 2.43-44, 2.44-47, 2.59,
4.37, 4.49-50, 9.3, 9. inside back
cover, 10/11.87-89,15.20-26
Motsuenyane Commission, 9.6
Masizame Community Project,
15.29
National education Policy
investigation, 15.21-22
National Indemnity Council, 9.5
National Intelligence Service, 9.6
National Security Management
System, 9.6
Nuclear capability, 9.3, 9.4
Official secrecy, 9.1-15
Open Libraries Project, 15.21
Police informants, 1.22-23
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 42
Poverty, 4.17
Propaganda, 9.1-15
“Protection of Information Act,”
9.2, 9.3, 9.9
Racial discrimination, 4.49-50
Secrecy, 9.1-15
“Statistics Act,” 9.2
Statutory Censorship, 9.1-15
Transitional Executive Council, 9.11
Unification Debate, 10/11.87-89
White elite, 9.1
South Africa: The Peasantsʼ Revolt
(1964), 2.34
“The South Africa ʻBook Boycottʼ:
Censorship or Solidarity?”, 1. 2-15
Bibliography, 1.13-15
South African Communist Party, 1.3, 1.4,
1.30, 2.31-32
South African Council of Churches, 1.21,
1.27
South African Institute of Library and
Information Science, 1.3, 1.5-6, 1.16,
1.17, 2. Inside front cover, 2.42-43,
10/11.89, 15. 20-21
Apartheid, 15.21
South African Journal for Librarianship,
1.5
South African Journal of Library and
Information Science, 15.21
South African State Library, 1.4, 1.35
South and Meso-American Indian
Information Center, 5.43
Southall, Roger 4.31-32
Soviet Union, 3.25, 5.47, 10/11.64-65,
14.51
Soviet-style Communism, 2.4
Soweto, South Africa, 4.24
Soweto Uprisng (1976), 1.21
Spam, 6/7.5
“Spanish Anarchives: A Directory,”
16.Supp. 30-39
Spanish Civil War, 2.24, 16. supp. Entire
issue
Spanish Loyalists, 2.24
Spanish Revolution of 1936, 16.Supp.14
Sparanese, Ann, 16.56-58, 16.73
Sparks, Allister, 1.27
Special Libraries Association, 12/13. 42
“Speech by Wayne Kelly, the
Superintendent of Documents, to the
Federal Documents Task Force at
ALAʼs Midwinter Meeting in
Washington, DC,” Feb. 15, 1997,
12/13. 49-52
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Spinnboden Lesbenarchiv Berlin
(Spinning-Room Lesbian Archive,
Berlin), 8.24
Sports, 6/7.42, 16.34
Sports statistics, 12/13. 25-30
St. Petersburg, Russia, 14.51-53
St. Petersburg Center for Gender
Issues, 14.52-53
Stack, Bill, 1.Inside front cover,
2.Inside front cover, 3.Inside front
cover, 3.23, 4.2, 5. Inside front
cover, 6/7. Inside front cover
“Statement of Robert L. Oakley,
Director of the Law Library and
professor of Law, Georgetown
University Law Center, Edward
B. Williams Law Library on
Behalf of the American Library
Association, American Association
of Law Libraries, Association
of Research Libraries, Special
Libraries Association before the
Subcommittee on Legislative
House Committee Appropriations
on the FY 1998 Appropriations for
the Government Printing Office,
February 12, 1997.” 12/13. 53-59.
Stalinism, 2.7
Starr, Paul, 10/11.47
The Starvation of Young Black Minds:
The Effect of Book Boycotts in South
Africa: Report of a Fact-Finding
Mission to South Africa, May 18-28,
1989, 1.2, 1.16-17, 1.18-20, 1.33
“The Starvation of Young Black
Minds? A Critique,” 1.18-20
State of Emergency (South Africa),
1.30, 2.30-31
State library agencies, 2.23
“Statement and Resolution to the
IFLA Conference, Moscow, August,
1991,” 4.48-50
STATS, Inc. 12/13.29
Statutory censorship (South Africa),
2.35-36
Steel, Helen, 15.60-61
Strategy and Tactics: Yesterday, Today
and Tomorrow (1976), 16.Supp.4
Street Library program, 16.71-72
Stenstrom, Pat, 9.21
Stilwell, Christine, 4.17-27, 4.71,
9.36-37
Stonewall Uprising, 1969, 15.10
Stork, Joel, 16.42
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Structuration, 14.14-15
The Struggle is My Life, 1.21
Study to Identify Measures Necessary
for a Successful Transition to a
More Electronic Federal Depository
Library Program, (June, 1996),
12/13. 54
Stultz, Newell, 4.31-32
Subject headings, 5.19-25, 8.30
Sub-Sahara, 3.43
Sugarcane industrialists (Brazil),
6/7.52, 55
Sukarno, 3.25
“Superhighways, Work and
Infrastructure in the Information Age:
A Symposium,” 9.22-9.35.
“Suppression of Information Under
Israeli Rule: A Bibliography,” 2.5254
Surrealism, 8.36-39
“Surrealism-Chicago Style,” 8.36-39
Surrealist Manifesto (1924), 8.71
Surrealist Movement
Australia, 8.72
Buenos Aires, 8.72
Czechoslovakia, 8.73
Madrid, 8.73
Paris, 8.73
Sao Paulo, 8.73
Stockholm, 8.73
United States, 8.73
Surveillance of workers, 6/7. 22-23
Surviving Together, 16.48
Sussman, Leonard, 3.11
Sveriges Allmänna Biblioteksförening,
15.29-39
Swarthmore College Peace Collection,
15.48
Sweden, 5.31-34, 15. 27-30
Swedish Confederation of Trade
Unions, 15.30
Swedish International Development
Authority, 15. 22
Swedish Library Association, 10/11.81,
15.29-30
Swedish Public Library Investigation
(1984), 5.32
Swedish Writerʼs Union, 15. 29
Switzer, Donna, 1.4-5
Syndicalism, 16. Supp. 5
Symons, Anne, 14.3-4
Syria, 2.48
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 43
T
TAP
See Taxpayer Asset Project
TNCs
See Transnational corporations
TRANSLIS
See Transforming Our Library and
Information Services
Taking Liberties: National Barriers
to the Free Flow of Ideas (1990)
(review), 4.66-69
Tales from Times Square (1989),
5.20-21
Tambo, Oliver, 2.35
Tanzania, 4.21
Tárrida del Marmol, Fernando,
16.Supp.37
Taxpayer Asset Project, 9.33-34
Taylor, Frederick, 10/11.50
Taylorizing work, 10/11.26-27, 14.8
Teachers for a Democratic Culture,
4.6
Technics, 10/11.44, 10/11.49
Technological determinism,
10/11.48-49
Technological subterfuge, 16.35
Technological utopianism, 10/11.912
Technology, 5.47-50, 6/7. 15-29,
8.1-9, 10/11.9-22, 10/11.43-59,
12/13.1-6, 14.9- 10, 16.33-34,
16.63-66
“Technology and Library and
Information Science: Question or
Answer?” 10/11.43-59
Technopornographic, 3.18
Telecommunications, 12/13. 45
Television, 6/7.42, 44-49, 16.32
Television flow, 3.8, 4.42
“Television Traffic-A One-Way
Street.” UNESCO Reports and
Papers on Mass Communication
No. 70 (1974), 3.8
Telos, 2.2
Tembisa, South Africa, 4.24
Templeton, Rini, 2.cover, 2.8,2.40,
2.51, 2.58
Temps Nouveaux, 16.Supp.15
Tenured Radicals (1990), 4.3
Terp, Holger, 15.48
Terra Lliure, 16.Supp.22
Thatcher, Margaret, 16.27
Theme parks, 2.17
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 44
They Seek a City (1944), 1.40
Third World, 3.5-23, 3.24-30, 3.45, 4.40,
16.38
Third World Quarterly, 16.41, 16.48
Thomas-Harrison Bill, 2.23
Three worlds, 3.24
Thürmer-Rohr, Christina, 8.18-19
Tierra y Libertad, 16.Supp.37
Time-Warner, 3.16
The Times Miscovers the ANC,”
(reprinted from Lies of Our Times),
1.25-28
Thistlethwaite, Polly, 15.17
Tiananmen Square, 10/11.68
Tin Pan Alley, 6/7.49
Tito, Josip Broz, 3.25
To Live in Utopia, 16.Supp.34-35
“Together is Better…Letʼs Read,”
[McDonaldʼs adv. Campaign], 14.2-3
Toffler, Alvin, 10/11.8
Tolstoy, (Lev Nikolayevich), Leo,
16.Supp.24
Totemeyer, Andree Jeanne, 1.9
Toth, James, 16.42
Toward Freedom, 16.47
“Towards a New World Information
and Communication Order: A
Symposium,” 3.5-23
Tracings, 5.20
The Tragedy of American Diplomacy
(1962), 16.37
Tramontana, 16.Supp.37
Transcendental worldview, 12/13.2
Transforming Our Library and
Information Services (South Africa),
10/11.88 15.22
TRANSLIS (South Africa), 10/11.88,
15.22
Transnational corporations (TNCs) , 2.6,
2.9-11, 2.18, 3.9, 6/7.47
Transvaal Resource Centre Network, 4.50
Transvaal Supreme Court, 9.6
Trash (reading material designation), 5.118, 6/7. 30
Traven, B., 16.Supp.22
Treasure of the Sierra Madre, 16.Supp.
22
Testimonies, 16.Supp. 22
Tricontinental, 15.51-52
Tronchet, Lucien, 16.Supp.14
Triumph of the Will (1936), 6/7.36
Trudeau, Pierre, 4.67
Truman, Harry S. 10/11.64, 14.5
“The Truth About Giving Readers Free
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Access to the Books in a Public
Lending Library,” (1895), 6/7. Front
cover
Tshwete, Steve, 2.30
Tubau, Josep, 16. Supp. 36
Tulsa Public Library, 3.36-37, 3.39-40
Tupac-Amaru, 8.69
Turkey, 2.48, 10/11.80-82, 14.3-4
Turkish Anti-Terrorism Law, 10/11.8182, 10/11.84
Turkish Communication Research
Association, 4.46
U
ULIS
See Unification of Library and
Information Stakeholders
UNITA, 9.5
USSR
See Soviet Union
U.S. Congressional Serial Set, 12/13.
57
U.S.C. Title 44, 12/13.56-59
Uganda, 3.43
Umafrika, 2.38
Umbral, 16.Supp. 37
Unbanning (South Africa), 2.30, 4.48
UnClassified, 16.48
“Understanding Information Media in
the Age of Neoliberalism: The
Contributions of Herbert Schiller,”
16. 26-36
Unemployed librarians, 15.46-47
UNESCO, 1.18, 3.24-30
GII, 12/13. 46
Manifesto on public libraries, 5.34
New World Information and
Communication Order (NWICO),
3.5-23
Peace-making body, 4.47
Resolution 8 (regarding apartheid
and colonialism), 1.18
United States withdrawal, 3.5-15,
3.26
União Nacional para a Independência
Total de Angola
See UNITA
Unification of Library and Information
Stakeholders (South Africa),
10/11.87-89
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
See Soviet Union
Union for Democratic
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Communications, 3.11, 3.15
Unions, 1.40, 4.53-58, 4.65, 5.33, 8.3435, 16.Supp.12
United Democratic Front, 1.3, 1.19,
1.20, 1.31, 2.33, 2.37, 2.42, 15.20
United Kingdom, 3.10, 15.41-50
United Nations, 1.19, 2.28, 2.41-44,
2.49, 3.5, 15. 46, 16.42
Centre for Science and Technology
for Development, 3.45
Special Committee Against
Apartheid, 4.51
United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development
(UNCED), Rio de Janeiro, 3-14
June 1992, “Earth Summit,” 6/7.13
United States
Archives, 9.25
Bosnia, 16. 42-43
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),
3.22, 16.44
Congress, 10/11. 60-78
Department of Defense, 10/11.67
Domestic Council Committee, 6/7.17
Environmental Protection Agency,
4.68, 16.3
Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI), 2.27
Federal Depository Libraries 12/13.
49-52, 12/13. 53-59
Foreign Policy, 16.37-50, 16.51-58
Government Printing Office,
12/13.36, 12/13.49-53, 12/13.
53-59
House Committee on Un-American
Activities, 2.27, 4.68
Imperialist, 16. 37-50.
Information Agency, 1.12, 3.20, 3.45,
4.35, 4.68-69
Library of Congress
See Library of Congress
Manufacture of consent, 4.33
Military bases, 3.26, 16.30
Military budget, 4.33
National Cancer Institute, 12/13.4950
National Security Agency, 9.34
National Security Council, 9.25
National Science Foundation, 6/7.16
[NSF] Division of Scientific
Information, 6/7.16
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), 2.11, 14.44
Office of Technology Assessment,
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 45
12/13.52
Patent and Trademark Office,
12/13.19, 12/13.27
Propaganda, 4.33
Public Printer, 12/13. 53-59
Security and Exchange
Commission,
12.23
State Department, 1.12, 2.27, 3.22,
3.25, 4.67
Superintendent of Documents,
12/13.49-53
Supreme Court, 6/7.16-17, 9.24,
12/13.18
Treasury, 15.51
War Department, 2.27
United States Trade Representative,
12/13.45
United States, policy towards Cuba,
9.38-39
Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, 8.84, 10/11.80
Article 19, 10/11.80-82, 10/11.
83-85
Universal homogeneous state, 2,2
University of California, San Diego
16. 30
University of Chicago, 16.32
University of Florida, 5.38
University of Illinois,
Schiller, Herbert, 16.28-29
Student ALA Chapter, 5.35
University of Maryland
College of Library and
Information Sciences, 3.35, 4.17
Samuel Gompers Papers, 6/7.65
University of Michigan, 16.Supp.
7-10
Labadie Collection, 16.Supp.[i],
16. Supp. 7-10
University of Natal, 1.32, 4.22
University of South Florida, 16.72
Uprising in Palestine, 2.54
Upskilled, 10/11.25
Uris, Leon, 5.29
Utility, 14.6-7
Utilization from databases, 12/13.2122
Utopian vision of technology,
10/11.9-10
V
VDT (song), 4.64-65
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 46
“VDT Survey, AFSCME Locals 2477 and
2910, Library of Congress,” 4.53-58
van Zijl, Philip, 15.20
Van Niekerk, Philip, 9.6
Vanzetti, Bartolomeo, 16.Supp.9
Varis, Tapio, 3.8
Venturella, Karen M., 3.31-42, 3.55,
16.70-72
Verein Frauenwohl (Association for
Womenʼs Prosperity), 8.21-23
Veterans of Foreign Wars, 10/11.60-78
Victory Book Campaign, 15.57
Vidal, John, 15.59-61
Video display terminals (VDTs), 4.53-58,
8.3
Vietnam, 3.16, 3.26, 9.38
Vietnam War, 16.38
Vilanova (Spain), 16.Supp.21-24
Villanovense, 16.Supp.25
Virtual libraries, 6/7.21-22, 12/13.37
Virtual library, 10/11.13
Vivir la Utopía, 16.Supp.34-35, 16.Supp.
38
Volksbuchereien, 15.37
Voluntà, 16.Supp.15
Voluntary Service Overseas, 15. 43
Von Ebner-Eschenbach, Marie, 8.22
Vrye Weekblad, 2.33, 2.35, 2.36, 9.3-4,
9.10
Vyrheid, 4.21
W
WIPO
See World Intellectual Property
Association
WTO
See World Trade Organization
Wallace, Mike, 10/11.65
Walsh, Dan, 15.51
Wang word processor, 9.31-32
War, 16.61
War Resisters League, 2.49, 15.42
Ward, John, 4.18
Warrior, Robert Allen , 5.42
Washington Post, 1.27, 1.28
Webb, Beatrice, 8.77
Webb, Sydney, 8.77
Webster, David, (assassinated) 2.35, 9.3
Wedgeworth, Robert, 1.2, 1.7, 1.10-11,
1.12, 1.16, 1.20, 1.29-30, 1.33
Wedgeworth/Drew report
See The Starvation of Young Black
Minds
Index #1-16
1990-1999
The Weed King and Other Stories
(1985), 1.41
Weeding, 12/13.60-62
Weibel, Kathleen, 8.11
Welfare hotels, 3.36
Weskott, Father Martin, 15.33
West Africa, 3.46
West Bank, 2.48
West, Celeste, 12/13.38
West Germany, 15.33
West Publishing, 12/13.20-21, 23, 27
Western canon, 6/7.30
Western control of information, 3.8-23
Western culture, 4.3-6, 5.8-9, 6/7.30,
8.72
Western Europe, 3.13
Western Librarianship, 5.1-18
Western Sahara, 2.49
WESTLAW, 9.34
Westzonen, 8.32
Wettmark, Lennart, 5. Inside front
cover, 5.31-34, 5.34, 15. 27-30,
15.69
What is Property? (1840), 16.Supp.1
“What Price Freedom?” NYPL
Centennial exhibit 10/11.68
“Whatʼs Public is Propaganda, Whatʼs
Secret is Serious: Official Secrecy
and Freedom of Information in
South Africa,” 9.1-15
“When Freedom to Read Suffers”
[Publishers Weekly, 7/17/87], 1.8
White House Conference on Library
and Information Science, 6/7.18
The White Rose, 10/11.68
White, Herbert S., 3.32
White ruling class (South Africa) 1.5,
1.30
Who Knows: Information in the Age of
the Fortune 500 (1981), 16.33-34
“Why Deny the Children?” [Publishers
Weekly, 10/9/87], 1.9
Wiegand, Wayne A. 4.66, 15.57
Wilde, Oscar, 10/11.68
Will, George, 3.26
Willett, Charles, 4.28-36, 4.71,
12/13.44
Williams, William Appleman, 16.37,
16.38-39, 16.55
Williams, David, 8.81-85, 8.86
Winner, Langdon, 9.30
Winter, Michael, 6/7.21-23, 14.5-12,
14.55
Wired, 12/13.2
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Wiretap, 9.24
“Wise Use Agenda”, 6/7.11
Witbank Public Library (South Africa),
2.42
Witt, John M. 15.1
Wolfe, Tom, 2.2
Wolpe, Harold, 1.32
Women
Germany, 8.10-8.20, 8.21-31
Librarians, 5.1-18, 8.1-9
See also, Social Responsibilities
Round Table, Feminist Task Force
Library Users, 5.1-18, 6/7.30, 8.1-9,
15.9
Literacy, 4.25
Workers, 8.1-9
Women Against Military Madness, 2.49
Women Library Workers, 8.11
Womenʼs Archive in Osnabrück. 8.26
Womenʼs archives (Germany), 8.21-31
“Womenʼs Collections: Libraries,
Archives and Consciousness,” 8.22
Womenʼs issues, 3.13, 4.3-6, 10/11.25
Womenʼs libraries (Germany), 8.21-31
Womenʼs literature, 8.21-31
Womenʼs studies, 8.5
Womenʼs Summer University
(Munich), 14.34
Woodcock, George, 16.Supp.15
Woodrum, Pat, 3.36-37
Woo, Janice
American Libraries article on
SRRT “Guidelines for Librarians
Interacting with South Africa”
interpreted as boycott exemption,
1.18, 1.20
Words of a Rebel, 16.Supp.2
Work, 10/11.23-42
“The Work of Art in the Age of
Mechanical Reproduction,” 6/7.
35-36, 6/7.40
Work Circle of Critical Library
Workers, 8.35
“Work Circle of Critical Library
Workers, (“Arbeitskreis Kritische
Bibliothekarinnen,”) Who We AreWhat We Want, ” 8.32-35
Workersʼ Library (Johannesburg), 4.25
Workers Museum in Copenhagen,
Denmark, 15.48
Workers Solidarity, 16.Supp.5
Working classes, 4.40, 6/7.32, 6/7.4143, 16.Supp.8
Workplace democracy, 2.57, 8.84
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 47
World Association of Christian
Communication, 3.11
World Bank, 3.27, 15.67
“World Bank Protest Letter
(6/29/98)”, 15.67
World Intellectual Property
Association, 12/13.18-31
World Press Freedom Committee,
3.10
World Policy Journal, 16.47, 16.58
World Report, 3.12
A World to Win (1935), 1.40
World Trade Organization, 12/13.45
World War I, 3.3, 6/7.32, 16.Supp.
7-10
World War II veterans, 10/11.60-78
Worldwatch Institute, 6/7.11
Wounded Knee Massacre, 1890, 5.39
Wren, Christopher, 1.25-1.27, 1.28
Wright, Christopher, 1.35
Wyley, Chantelle, 15.23
X
Y
Yeats, William Butler, 12/13.52
Yewell, John, 5.42
Yugoslavia, 3.25, 16.42-43
Z
Z Magazine,16.41, 16.45, 16.47
Zaid, Gabriel, 16.Supp.22
Zed (publisher), 4.28-36
Zell, Hans, 3.43
Ziervogel, Christian, 15.20
Zimbabwe, 9.11
Zines, 16.Suppl.16
Zola, Emile, 16.Supp.23
Zuboff, Shoshana, 6/7.22-23,
10/11.30-35, 10/11.39
Zumbi dos Palmares, 8.69
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 48
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Listing of Acronyms & Initialisms in Issues #1-16
A
AAAS
AAP
AAUP
ABC
ACRL
AILS
AFSCME
AKRIBIE
ALASA
ALIA
ALP
ANC
APT
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Association of American Publishers
American Association of University Professors
African Books Collective
Association of College and Research Libraries
African Imprint Library Services
American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees
Arbeitskreis Kritischer BibliotharInnen
African Library Association of South Africa
Australia Library & Information Association
Advancement of Librarianship in the Third World
African National Congress
Alternative Press Titles for Libraries
B
BAFF
BAU
BiS
BSR
Bundesarbeitsgemeinschaft Autonomer
Frauenforschungseinrichtungen
Bibliotekerarbejdslos
Bibliotek i Samhalle
Biblioteca Social Reconstruir
C
CIA
CIRA
CDH-S
CNN
CNT
COSATU
COSH groups
CSCE
CWS
Central Intelligence Agency (U.S.)
Centre internationale de recherches sur lʼAnarchisme
Centro de Documentacón Histórico-Social/Atenue
Enciclopèdic Popular
Cable News Network
Confederación Nacional del Trabajo
Congress of South African Trade Unions
Committees on Occupational Health and Safety
Council for Security and Cooperation in Europe
Corporate Wannabee Syndrom
D
DAC
Department of Arts and Culture. African National Congress
E
EDGAR
EDUCOM
EP
EU
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval (US)
July 1, 1998, EDUCOM merged with Cause to become
EDUCAUSE
Editora Politica
European Union
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 49
FAI
FAL
FARA
FBI
FFBIZ
FICEDL
FID
FMC
FOIA
FSS
F
Federación Anarquista Ibérica
Fundación de Estudios Libertarios Anselmo Lorenzo
Foreign Agents Registration Act
Federal Bureau of Investigation (U.S.)
Frauenforschungs, Bildungs, und Informtationszentrum
Berlin
Fédération internationale des centres dʼ etude et de
documentation libertaire
International Federation for Documentation
Federation of Cuban Women
Freedom of Information Act (U.S.)
Fundación de Estidios Libertarios Salvador Seguí
G
G-7
GATS
GDR
Seven industrialized nations (Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, United Kingdom, United States of
America, which later became the G-8 with Russia)
General Agreement on Trade and Services
German Democratic Republic
H
HIV
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
I
IAEA
IAI
IAMCR
IALHI
IBM
ICAIC
IFF
IFLA
ILAD
IMF
IPS
ISC
ITU
IWW
International Atomic Energy Authority
International African Institute
International Association of Mass Communication Research
International Association of Labour History Institutions
International Business Machines
Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria Cinematográficos
Interdisziplinäre Forschungsgruppe Frauenforschung:
Dokumentation-Information-Archiv Bielefeld
International Federation of Library Associations
Turkish Communication Research Association
International Monetary Fund
Inter-Press Service
Information for Social Change
International Telecommunications Union
International Workers of the World
J
JURIS
Westlaw database
K
KLA
KRIBIBI
Kosovo Liberation Army
Arbeitskreis Kritischer Bibliothekarinnen und
Bibliothekare im Renner-Institut
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 50
Index #1-16
1990-1999
L
LEXIS
LIWO
LSG
Lexis, now LexisNexis, provider of comprehensive
information and business solutions in a variety of areas—
legal, risk management, corporate, government, law
enforcement, accounting, academic.
Library and Information Workers Organization (South
Africa)
LIWO Support Group
M
MIL
MLB
MSSRT
MTV
Iberian Liberation Movement
Major League Baseball
Minnesota Library Association Social Responsibilities
Round Table
Music Television
N
NACLA
NAM
NASM
NATO
NBA
NERL
NFL
NGOs
NHL
NII
NOTIS
NREN
NUMMI
NWICO
NYCOSH
North American Congress on Latin America
Non-Aligned Movement
National Air and Space Museum
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
National Basketball Association
Northeast Research Libraries Network
National Football League
Non-Governmental Organizations
National Hockey League
National Information Infrastructure
A library management system (computer)
National Research and Education Network
New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc.
New World Information and Communications Order
New York Commitee on Occupational Safety and Health
O
OAS
OCLAE
OCLC
OMB
ON
OSPAAAL
ÖTV
Organization of African Unity
La Organización Continental Latinoamericana y Caribeña
de Estudiantes
Online Computer Library Center (founded 1967; name
changed from Ohio College Library Center in 1981)
Office of Management and Budget (U.S.)
Operation Namibia
Organización de Solidaridad con los Pueblos de Asia,
Africa y América Latina
Öffentlich Dienst Transport und Verkehr
P
PANA
PC
PDS
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Pan-African News Agency
political correctness
Social Democratic Party (Brazil)
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 51
PLG
PLGNet
PT
Progressive Librarians Guild
Progressive Librarians Guild e-mail discussion list
Brazilian Workerʼs Party
Q
R
RBOCs
Regional Bell Operating Companies
S
SAB
SACP
SAILIS
SDS
SEC
SEGUEF
SEIU
SOMAFCO
SRRT
Sveriges Allmänna Biblioteksförening
South African Communist Party
South African Institute of Library and Information Science
Students for a Democratic Society
Society for Electronic Access
Sociedad para el Estudio de la Guerra Civil y el
Franquismo
Service Employees International Union
Solomon Mahlangu Freedom College
Social Responsibilities Round Table
T
TAP
TNCs
TRANSLIS
Taxpayer Asset Project
Transnational corporations
Transforming Our Library and Information Services
U
ULIS
UNESCO
UNITA
USSR
Unification of Library and Information Stakeholders
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization
União Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola
(National Union for the Total Independence of Angola)
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (Soviet Union)
V
VDT
Video Display Terminal
W
WIPO
WTO
World Intellectual Property Association
World Trade Organization
X
Y
Z
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 52
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Index to Documents
“Documents” appear in these issues:
2.41-49,
4.37-52,
6/7. 64-69,
8.74-80,
10/11. 83-89,
12/13. 49-68,
14.47-50,
15. 62-67
“Address to the United Nations, 11/26/90 by Joseph Reilly,” 2.41-44
“Closed Stacks at the Library of Congress: A Historian Responds,” 6/7.64-67
“The Cultural Boycott,” 4.51-52
“A Declaration of Cultural Human Rights: Draft,” 4.38-45
“Few Voices, Many Worlds,” 4.46-47
“From France: Libraries Losing Their Reason,” 12/13. 63-68
“LIWO and the South African Unification Debate,” 10/11.87-89
“LIWO Resolution on Censorship and Freedom of Information,” 2.46-47
“LIWO Resolution on the Academic and Cultural Boycott,” 2.45-46
“LIWO Statement to IFLA,” 4.48-50
“LIWOʼs Guiding Principles,” 2.44-45
“Letter Against Bombing of Iraq; 12/16/98” 15. 65-66
“Librarians Against War: An Open Letter. 2/28/98” 14.47-50
“MSRRT Persian Gulf Resolution, 1/91,” 2.48-49
“Manifesto of Avant-Garde Librarianship,” 8.79-80
“The Media Charter of the African National Congress,” 8.74-76
“Middle East” “PLG Press Release on Gulf Crisis,” 9/90, 2.47-48
“Notes from the Front Lines at SFPL,” 12/13. 60-62
“PLG Press Release on Gulf Crisis, 9/90,” 2.47-48
“A Program for Library Change in Sweden,” 5.31-34
“Remarks on Racism, International Relations and Librarianship,” 15. 62-64
“Resolution on the Importance of Freedom of Expression and Free Access to
Information,” 10/11. 83-85.
“Resolution on New Statesman and Society,” 8.77-78
“Resolution on New York Public Libraryʼs Science, Industry and Business
Library,” 10/11.86
“Resolution on the Library of Congress,”-American Historical Association,6/7.
68-69
“South Africa.” “Address to the United Nations, 11/26/90 by Joseph Reilly,”
2.41-44
“Speech by Wayne Kelly, the Superintendent of Documents, to the Federal
Documents Task Force at ALAʼs Midwinter Meeting in Washington, DC,”
Feb. 15, 1997, 12/13. 49-52
“Statement of Robert L. Oakley, Director of the Law Library and professor of
Law, Georgetown University Law Center, Edward B. Williams Law Library
on Behalf of the American Library Association, American Association
of Law Libraries, Association of Research Libraries, Special Libraries
Association before the Subcommittee on Legislative House Committee
Appropriations on the FY 1998 Appropriations for the Government Printing
Index #1-16
1990-1999
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 53
Office, February 12, 1997.” 12/13. 53-59
“Statement and Resolution to the IFLA Conference, Moscow, August, 1991,”
4.48-50
“World Bank Protest Letter; 6/29/98, 15.67
Index to Book Reviews
The Alienated Librarian (1989), 2.55-58
Class Warfare in the Information Age (1998), 16.63-66
Columbus, His Enterprise (1976, 1991), 5.40-41
Confronting Columbus (1992), 5.42
The Conquest of Paradise (1990), 5.41-42
Dangerous Memories: Invasions and Resistance Since 1942 (1991), 5.42-43
Information Liberation (1998), 16.66-70
Into the Future: The Foundations of Library and Information Science in the PostIndustrial Era (1993), 10/11. 92-96
Librarianship and Legitimacy: The Ideology of the Public Library Inquiry (1997),
15.54-58
McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial (1997), 15.59-61
The Myth of the Electronic Library: Librarianship and Social Change in America
(1994), 12/13. 69-70
Multicultural Folktales: Stories to Tell Young Children (1991), 5.44-46
The Right to Know (1990), 3.532-53
Poor People and Library Services (1998), 16.70-72
Taking Liberties: National Barriers to the Free Flow of Ideas (1990), 4.66-69
Progressive Librarian #29
Supplement
Page 54
Index #1-16
1990-1999
PROGRESSIVE
LIBRARIAN
A Journal for Critical Studies  Progressive Politics in Librarianship
Issue #29 supplement
Summer 2007
INDEX to ISSUES #1-16
1990-1999
CALL FOR PAPERS
Articles, book reviews, bibliographies, reports, documents, artwork and poetry
that explore progressive perspectives on librarianship and information issues are
wanted for future issues of Progressive Librarian.
Please submit electronic-files via e-mail, CD-ROM or floppy as
Rich Text Format (.rtf) or Microsoft Word (.doc). Typewritten manuscripts are
welcome. Prints and digital images also welcome, if digital provide
300 dpi grayscale TIFF (.tiff) files no larger than 5x7 inches.
Use your favorite citation style for references. Just be consistent, please.
We reserve all rights to edit all submissions.
Submit manuscripts to:
Progressive Librarians Guild, PL Editors
Rider University Library, 2083 Lawrenceville Road, Lawrenceville NJ 08648
or e-mail [email protected]
PROGRESSIVE LIBRARIAN, Issue #29, Supplement, Summer 2007
Index to issues 1-16, 1990-1999
Published, produced and distributed by Progressive Librarians Guild
2 issues per year; ISSN 1052-5726
Indexed in Alternative Press Index, Library Literature
Printed with Durland Alternatives Library, Cornell University, Ithaca NY
This publication is covered by the Creative Commons License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/
© Progressive Librarian
Editors: John Buschman, Kathleen de la Peña McCook, Peter McDonald, Mark Rosenzweig;
Managing Editor: Elaine Harger; Book Review Editor: Tom Eland
FRONT & BACK COVER IMAGES: Covers from past issues of Progressive Librarian
Subscription/membership rates:
$20 individuals; $35 institutions; $40 overseas firstclass
Checks and money orders in US$ to Progressive Librarians Guild
Subscription requests & membership dues to:
Progressive Librarians Guild
Rider University Library
2083 Lawrenceville Road
Lawrenceville NJ 08648
PLG membership form at www.libr.org/PLG