October 2015 - Daniel Boone Regional Library
Transcription
October 2015 - Daniel Boone Regional Library
About Your Library OCTOBER 2015 Daniel Boone Regional Library One Read 2015: An acoustic performance of Rambler’s Club, a visit from “Station Eleven” author Emily St. John Mandel, author George Hodgman leads a book discussion Freegal: A Music Giveaway Where can you download five songs each week and listen to five hours a day of streaming music without commercial interruption for free? Through the library’s digital branch, www.dbrl.org. Music has been a part of our collection for decades; some of you may remember checking out vinyl records. Our music CD collection remains popular, but we know our patrons want to borrow library materials with computers, tablets and phones. (According to our 2014 community survey, the digital branch is our second most used location.) Freegal is a natural extension of our services. It complements the music available on Hoopla. It’s easy, convenient and gives you free music anywhere you are. Freegal works much like other streaming music services. Browse top hits, make playlists and explore musical genres. The Freegal collection has more than 9 million songs from over 28,000 record labels worldwide. Unlike commercial services, you can listen to ad-free music without paying for a premium service, AND you can download five free songs a week that you can add to your permanent personal collection. Music videos are also available and count as two downloads. There are no digital rights management restrictions on anything you download from Freegal. You can transfer the music to any computer or device or burn it to a CD for “There is no shortage of genres to explore, both popular and obscure. Looking for some great bolero or reggaeton music? Or maybe a little touch of schlager in the night?… Freegal has dozens or more artists in each of these genres.” Get the Most Out of the Digital Branch Get a library card online. www.dbrl.org/librarycard Download the free apps listed below or access these services through www.dbrl.org.* DBRL Catalog: Search for most digital items www.dbrl.org/catalog STEVE KEMPLE A music librarian at the Cincinnati Public Library had this to say about the depth of Freegal’s collection. He also applauded other niche genres available such as noise, lo-fi and surf.* *Library Journal, 2014 your personal use. Copyright laws apply for all music downloaded, of course. Get started at www.dbrl.org/freegal. All you need is your library card number and birthdate (or alternate PIN). If you don’t have an active account, you can apply for one online (adult cards only). Freegal music works on most devices and the apps are free through Google Play or the App Store. That’s it! Now you can start exploring all the options available through Freegal. music Freegal: Weekly music downloads and ad-free streaming music www.dbrl.org/freegal Hoopla: Streaming and downloadable audiobooks, comics, eBooks, music, movies and TV shows www.dbrl.org/hoopla OverDrive: Downloadable eBooks and audiobooks www.dbrl.org/overdrive Zinio: Digital magazines www.dbrl.org/magazines *You must live in our service area to use Freegal, Hoopla, OverDrive & Zinio. INSIDE: Revisiting High School | New Children’s Computers | Board Member Kate Markie | Teen Short Story Contest Revisiting High School A Note From the Director New Children’s Computers One of Daniel Boone Regional Library’s longstanding goals is to promote early childhood learning by offering books and interactive opportunities for even the very youngest children, including family programs and age-appropriate technology. As you know, technology changes constantly. Last month, we updated the children’s computers to new touch-screen models loaded with games for kids of different ages. These Early Literacy Stations feature over 4,000 learning activities that engage kids in math, science, social studies and geography, reading, art, music, writing, computer skills and reference. Game titles include “Sesame Street Learn, Play & Grow,” “Getting Ready for Kindergarten,” “Volcanic Panic,” “ClueFinders Adventures” and “Kid Pix 3D,” to name a few. Bring your children in to any of our libraries to explore this fun new learning equipment. What memories old high school yearbooks hold! The dances, ballgames, concerts, and all those strange hairdos and odd clothes we used to wear! Have you ever found yourself thinking about those bygone days and wanting to take a trip down memory lane, but couldn’t find that old yearbook of yours anywhere? Wouldn’t it be nice to sit in front of your computer, key in an address and find that old volume online? In 2013, one of our librarians found a vendor in Oklahoma offering yearbook-scanning services to libraries at no cost. She later learned that it was a work project for the Oklahoma State Correctional System. So, we emptied our shelves of the local yearbooks we had, filling six boxes, and sent them south. In return, we received 40 GB of scanned data on CD, along with the original books back. We posted the files to a digital archive where you can look through the books page by page at www.dbrl.org/yearbooks. Since that first set was uploaded, our librarians have been contacting the high schools in Boone and Callaway Counties seeking as many yearbooks as we can find to flesh out the digital archive. We’ve even found some individual alums who loaned us a personal copy for certain missing years. To date we have yearbooks for the following: Douglass High School 1954, 1960, 1988, 1990-1994, 1996-2001, 2003-2008 Fulton High School 1949-1965, 1968-1970, 1973-1974, 1976-1987, 1992-2002, 2004, 2009-2014 Harrisburg schools 1946-1949, 1951-2014 Hickman High School 1912-1918, 1920-2004, 2006-2009, 2011-2013 New Bloomfield High School 1946-2014 North Callaway schools 1969-1972, 1974-1976, 1980-1983, 2007-2011 Rock Bridge High School 1974-1976, 1978-2013 If you have a yearbook missing from our archive, please contact Nina Sappington at (573) 443-3161 or [email protected]. South Callaway schools 1968, 1970-2014 Enjoy a few laughs at the clothing and hairstyles of yesteryear, refresh your memory on the names of your classmates before your next reunion or share memories of your youth with the kids. A wealth of local history rests in these yearbooks, and we feel it’s important to preserve. We plan to expand our digitized archive beyond yearbooks and are working on a web-based photo archive that we hope to unveil in the next year. Southern Boone R-1 schools 1949-1950, 1952-1958, 1962, 1969-2014 Sturgeon schools 1981-1985 Teen Short Story Contest Entry deadline: December 6 In celebration of Teen Read Week, we invite teens to submit an original short story around the theme “Get Away” for a chance to win a Barnes & Noble gift card. It can be about a grand adventure, a secret hideaway, how folks escape their day-to-day routines or whatever you imagine on this theme. Winning stories will be published on the library’s teen blog. This contest is open to all teens ages 12-18 in Boone and Callaway counties. Find contest rules and submission guidelines at teens.dbrl.org or at your library. Get Away Kate Markie ? Columbia Library District Board Trustee What makes DBRL special? Libraries have become the glue that holds communities together. They welcome everyone, and they provide computer access and training (even job applications have to be made online these days!); free programs for kids and the general public; warming and cooling places; bookmobiles that go to smaller towns, daycares and nursing homes; and meeting rooms for all kinds of groups. All this, in addition to lending books, DVDs, music and electronic materials. I’ve got to say the director, Melissa Carr, and the staff. They make our library the welcoming, creative institution that it is, and are full of ideas for new ways to serve the public. What made you apply to be on the board? When I started to think about retirement I was looking for volunteer activities that I could really believe in. A friend told me about the opening on the board. I’ve known past board members who were wonderfully giving people. I had to apply! What are you most proud of regarding the district board? The members of the district board are thoughtful, generous and caring people who listen well and study hard for our meetings. In the few months I have been on the board I have been so very impressed with how much they know about the library, its needs and how it works. One READ One READ EAD One ne R REA eO D On We’re accepting your suggestions during November for which book our community should read together next year. Submit your ideas at www.oneread.org or at your library or bookmobile. D ne READ On e R E EAD O AD ne R One DO RE EA A eR Why do you think libraries are important? What Should We Read in 2016? One Read is a community-wide reading program coordinated by the Daniel Boone Regional Library. Do you have a favorite memory or story about libraries from your youth? When I was in junior high and high school, I would have a few free hours on Saturdays. I was allowed to walk by myself to our local branch of the Boston Public Library or take the streetcar to the beautiful main building in Copley Square. I discovered many of the classics, and saw people from all over the world studying or reading newspapers or magazines in their native languages. It was eye-opening and thrilling. Is there anything else you’d like to add? For six years, after moving to Columbia in 1976, we lived in a little apartment across the street from the Columbia Public Library. The library was our greatest source of entertainment. We read all of the Travis McGee novels by John D. MacDonald. And we went to the summer family movies that used to be shown on the back wall of the library. What a wonderful place! Each library board member serves on his or her own district board as well as on the regional library board, which is the governing body responsible for policy-making and fiscal oversight. Children’s Musician Dino O’Dell It’s a party! Dino O’Dell, the musical alter ego of Kevin Dolan, entertains children with his lively original tunes. Come tap your toes and sing along with some of Dino’s silly songs. Dino has two albums and, most recently, a book based on one of his songs, “Zar and the Broken Spaceship.” Families, ages 2-6. Callaway County Public Library Tuesday, November 3 • 10-10:30 a.m. Columbia Public Library Tuesday, November 3 • 6:30-7:15 p.m. Wednesday, November 4 • 9:30-10 a.m. Southern Boone County Public Library Monday, November 2 • 10-10:30 a.m. DO One REA ne READ On e RE EAD eR AD On On Kate’s husband, Peter, is a philosophy professor at the University of Missouri. Their daughter Liz is a Hickman grad and now a teacher at Crossroads Academy in Kansas City. Their son Bob is a Rock Bridge grad and an ICU nurse at University Hospital. Kate and her husband also have two golden retrievers, Rose and Gus. ne READ One READ O REA One DO EAD ne R RE e On AD Kate Markie grew up in Boston and the surrounding area, and, as the oldest of eight children, was her mother’s helper. She earned her Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Rochester and her law degree from the University of Missouri. Kate was a lawyer for 32 years before retiring last year. In her free time, Kate knits, is learning to weave, occasionally embroiders, does needlepoint, and is a Master Gardener intern. And she reads, of course! Daniel Boone Regional Library • www.dbrl.org bout Your Library is a publication of the Daniel Boone Regional Library, and is provided A as a public service to all households served by the library system. Callaway County Public Library Established in 1959, DBRL provides public library services to three library districts: Boone County Library District (outside the 1965 Columbia and Centralia city limits); Callaway County Library District (all of Callaway County); and the City of Columbia Library District (within the 1965 Columbia city limits). 710 Court Street, Fulton, MO 65251, (573) 642-7261, TTY 642-0662 Open: Monday – Thursday 9 a.m. – 9 p.m., Friday & Saturday 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Columbia Public Library 100 West Broadway, Columbia, MO 65203 (573) 443-3161, TTY 443-6027, 1-800-324-4806 Open: Monday – Thursday 9 a.m. – 9 p.m., Friday 9 a.m. – 6 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday 1-5 p.m. Daniel Boone Regional Library P.O. Box 1267 Columbia, MO 65205-1267 Nonprofit U.S. Postage PAID Columbia, MO Permit No. 10 Southern Boone County Public Library 109 N. Main Street, Ashland, MO 65010, (573) 657-7378 Open: Monday – Thursday 9 a.m. – 7 p.m. Friday 9 a.m. – 6 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. ECRWSS Residential Customer Bookmobile & Outreach Department P.O. Box 1267, Columbia, MO 65205, 1-800-324-4806, [email protected] See www.dbrl.org for a complete list of bookmobile stops. Boone County Library District Board of Trustees: Dorothy Carner, Angie Crumbliss, Susan Daly, Patricia Powell, Bill Young Callaway County Library District Board of Trustees: Mary Fennel, Tonya Hays-Martin, Terry K. Higgins, Jean Howard, Michael Luebbert Columbia Library District Board of Trustees: Julie Baka, John French, Lisa Groshong, Philip Harrison, Lynn Hostetler, J. Hasbrouck Jacobs, Kathleen Markie, Gena Scott, Khaki Westerfield SPECIAL PROGRAM SERIES Latino Americans: 500 Years of History Discover how the rich and varied experiences of Latinos have contributed to American culture at the Columbia Public Library this fall. Learn more about the programs at www.dbrl.org/latino. Olga Loya, Nov. 8 La Morena, Nov. 12 “Cesar Chavez,” Nov. 18 About Your Library October 2015 | Daniel Boone Regional Library | Serving Boone & Callaway Counties and Columbia, Missouri INSIDE: Revisiting High School | New Children’s Computers | Board Member Kate Markie | Teen Short Story Contest