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One of my colleagues sent this to our library listserv (it is from
today's NYT). I thought you all might enjoy it.<br><br>
Cormac<br><br>
<br><br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite="">June 9, 2009...nytimes<br>
Experience Necessary<br><br>
<h1><b>From Uzbekistan to a Desk at the Library </b></h1><br><br>
By
<a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/b/ralph_blumenthal/index.html?inline=nyt-per"><font color="#000066">RALPH
BLUMENTHAL</a><br>
</font><br>
With 49,000 loans a month, the Queens Library at Broadway is a busy place
in the busiest
<a href="http://www.queenslibrary.org/"><font color="#000066">public
library system</a></font> in the nation � circulating more books, tapes
and videos (23 million a year) from its 63 branches than its
<a href="http://www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/"><font color="#000066">Brooklyn
counterpart</a></font> or the combined branches of the separate
<a href="http://www.nypl.org/"><font color="#000066">New York Public
Library</a></font>. The library, at 40-20 Broadway, where Astoria meets
Long Island City, is scheduled to reopen Wednesday after nine months of
renovation. In charge is Tatyana Magazinnik, 53, pianist, �migr� from
Uzbekistan and a librarian since 1996, like her husband, David.<br><br>
How she arranged the perfect name: It�s my husband�s name. It sounds like
�magazine,� but in Russian it means �store.� Maybe somebody wanted me to
be a librarian.<br><br>
Other parallels to �The Music Man�: I graduated from conservatory and was
teaching piano. I performed sometimes until my daughter was born. My
husband was a professor of piano in the Tashkent conservatory.<br><br>
Transplantation: When perestroika started, the future of our child was
not there. We came as refugees in 1993. My husband had a sister here. She
invited us. When we came to the country, we were looking for information.
We came to the library.<br><br>
Learning the language: My daughter didn�t know English well; I didn�t
know English. I was trying to teach her myself. The library was my life
at the time. We took out children�s books to hear that language. We
learned 30 words a day. We memorized them, put them on the wall. The next
day, another 30 words. After half a year she didn�t need English as a
second language anymore. I learned with her. She just graduated from
Vassar, Phi Beta Kappa. The library was everything for us. We were in the
library every day, me and my husband. <br><br>
The making of a librarian (couple): We went to
<a href="http://sils.pratt.edu/"><font color="#000066">Pratt for library
science</a></font>. It took me two and a half years, my husband two years
� well, he didn�t sit with the child. I graduated in 1996, and in August
I got the job at the library in Lefrak City. In �99 I became manager of a
small branch, in Maspeth. I loved Maspeth. I still have customers that
still send me cards at Christmastime. <br><br>
Biggest relief: Before I got this position, people told me all those
homeless people will come. I was starting to prepare myself so I�d be
ready for something disastrous. But fortunately I don�t see that many
problems. During the day they just sit there and read the
newspaper.<br><br>
What she does, exactly: I make out a lot of reports, time sheets,
assignments to staff. Also work with customers. I�m still a librarian. My
office is in the children�s room. I call myself librarian. I like it. I
can go to 641.5 and get you a cookbook. <br><br>
Proudest moments: At Maspeth, there was a lady with no job. I would give
her books and talked to her, and after two months she said she got a job
and brought me flowers. So touching. I had a kid whose first book was a
graphic novel. He started to read every book. He became a writer. I had a
Russian customer who didn�t speak the language. She took an E.S.L.
program in the library. You don�t even pay for it. She went through two
programs, spring and fall. After that she got a job in Tiffany�s and then
became a secretary.<br><br>
What a librarian hates: People who don�t return books. I call them
book-keepers. <br><br>
How she keeps fit: I run four miles every day. I run my stairs at work.
It�s a free exercise machine. <br>
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