Although the website now reflects our new logo and looks a little different, the content and navigation remains the same. So you will still find your favorite resources on the same pages. Plans are underway to construct a new website in 2010, but we couldn't keep the spectrum of colors in the new logo under wraps any longer!
We would like to celebrate the life of Effie Lee Morris, advocate and children's librarian who began her career at the Cleveland Public Library, where she established CPL's first Negro History Week celebration for children.
Ms. Morris began working part-time at Cleveland Public Library in 1941. In 1949, Ms. Morris began a course entitled "Reading for Understanding" at Woodland Branch. "The children learn through this course that regardless of their racial or religious background, all of them have problems that are common, and that they must face these barriers courageously," the Call & Post quoted Ms. Morris in a 1950 article.
Passport Project's mission is to provide exciting educational experiences that build community through the arts, encourage respect for diversity and rejection of racism, and inspire a passion for learning and the global community.

The Cleveland Public Library Main Library has unparalleled research collections available for students participating in National History Day 2009. The Library holds a variety of material that documents the history of Cleveland, Northeast Ohio, Ohio, the United States and the World.
Here’s a fun fact: Cleveland Public Library has been a United Nations Depository library since 1947 and it is recognized as the official UN deposit library for the state of Ohio. The UN Deposit Library System is an important part of the United Nation’s outreach and education effort and consists of over 400 libraries in 140 different countries. This means that the Library receives official UN Documents that are archived in the Social Sciences Department on the 5th Floor of the Louis Stokes Wing.

Thursday, October 1 marks the re-opening of the newly restored Capitol Theatre in the Detroit Shoreway Neighborhood on the city's near west side.
The Capitol Theatre features several framed reproductions from Cleveland Public Library's W. Ward Marsh Lantern Slide Collection. When visiting this new destination be sure to stop on the second floor to check out the beautiful images, or view the collection online.
This project was made possible with support from the Friends of the Cleveland Public Library.
Learn more about the W. Ward Marsh Lantern Slide Collection and Cinema Archive here.
September 26-October 3, 2009 is designated as Banned Books Week by the American Library Association to celebrate the freedom provided by the First Amendment as it relates to information and literature. This map, courtesy of bannedbooksweek.org, provides information about titles challenged in the United States from 2007-2009.
Starting Monday, several staff will be sharing their favorite books from the 100 most frequently challenged books: 1990–1999 and Banned and Challenged Classics. Tell us about your favorite challenged and banned books by visiting our Facebook page.
Written in 1922, Nella Braddy's Young Folks' Encyclopedia of Etiquette is filled with all kinds of useful knowledge for young folks in the 1920s.
Of course, accepted etiquette changes over time, depending on many factors. For instance, according to this passage entitled "The Child's Rights," it was considered harmful to the child's psyche to brag incessantly about his or her accomplishments in front of the child. Today, such behavior might be construed in a much different way.
The rules of decorum related to dress and modesty have obviously changed since 1922. Check out how a young lady was expected to dress for a day at the beach. Hard to imagine what a similar book would say today.
Visit the Social Sciences Department or click here for a list of titles on etiquette from yesterday and today.