Students Attend School While It Is Under Construction
Most schools close down when they undertake a massive remodeling project. That's not true for a Washington, D.C. high school, and a few other schools in the area. They plan to stay open the full 2 years it takes to modernize the facilities.
The school claims instruction won't be hampered. Parents worry about the hidden hazards of having their kids attend a construction site.
We hope you like this article!
Please help us grow by sharing:
Get Updates In Your Inbox
Free weekly emails, plus get access
to subscriber-only prizes.
We won't share your email. You can cancel at any time.
Comments (1)
If I can't find room in the house the books'll have to go in the loft with the rest of the deep storage - there's got to be around half a ton up there already.
How stupid is this idea - I thought burning books got ridiculed out of fashion with the bible thumpers.
Sometimes, they make odd choices, and we lose gems.
That doesn't mean that there isn't a place for some of these books. Many larger public libraries, university libraries and the Library of Congress keep many older, outdated books for the purpose of historical significance or tracking societal trends. Most public libraries are not archives. They do not have that mission nor the space or funds to do so.
When people come to the library for books about pregnancy or careers or for their science papers, they need current material, not outdated stuff that may misinform them.
Sure, this book isn't likely to "mislead" anyone, but it's less funny when outdated science or population figures make it into a kid's paper.
Frankly, old pregnancy advice could be dangerous!
You average public library's mission is not to be a home for your poor, your tired, your ragged masses falling from their bindings, it is a place people go for information. Current information.
It's hardly "book burning" for heaven's sake! Exactly how long are libraries supposed to hang on to outdated material? 'Til we are buried under it?