News

Supported by “unrestricted gifts” from Microsoft and ChatGPT maker OpenAI, the Harvard-based Institutional Data Initiative is ...
A new business in Downtown Scranton is helping old stories find new homes. Lost and Found Bookshop is opening its doors on ...
Lacey police arrested a 53-year-old man on suspicion of kidnapping and assaulting a woman who was selling books door-to-door ...
Steven Spielberg had already donated money to the Yiddish Book Center when he asked if the center’s founder, Aaron Lansky, ...
Libraries all over the world have poisonous books that contain materials such as copper, arsenic, mercury, and chrome.
And unlike horror movies that often rely on jump scares and gore, these well-written scary books provide all the creepiness without those concerns. So try out one of our favorite horror books, and for ...
University of St. Andrews Libraries and Museums developed a device for detecting the toxic green pigment. Thousands of books believed to be toxic have been quarantined at museums and libraries ...
Some books deal with cyberbullying, while others portray the old-fashioned face-to-face kind. In some cases, bullying stems from racial bias or simply perceiving the other person as "different." In ...
A groundbreaking tool developed by the University of St Andrews is transforming how cultural heritage institutions identify ...
Zylon Tokash and James Hughes opened the Division Street storefront after operating an online and pop-up shop specializing in ...
This year’s theme for an Oakland school‘s yearbook was “Celebrating 100 years.” Parent volunteers at Montclair Elementary ...
Texas’ Senate Bill 13 empowers school boards to decide which books are permitted in their school libraries. It also allows ...