Time to Renew your Membership for 2015!
Transcription
Time to Renew your Membership for 2015!
November 2014 -- Issued Quarterly Time to Renew your Membership for 2015! While a few of you paid your 2015 membership at the recent Friends Night of the book sale, many of you were just catching up for 2014 and you might not realize that we start over on January 1st! After the fall book sale, any new members or membership renewals will now be credited to the next year (2015). Newsletters are only mailed to current members, so don't miss the next issue (check your address label)! You must have an active membership in order to attend Friends nights prior to the regular book sales at both TB Scott Free Library and Marathon County Public Library - they (and we) will ask to see your card as proof. If you are a life member and have not yet picked up a card, stop at the circulation desk (in Merrill) and ask for one! Your Friends of the TB Scott Library membership allows you to attend the Friends night at the Wausau (MCPL) library book sale without paying for an additional membership. Plus, your membership helps support those library activities for which the Friends Board allocates funds. If you have any questions about your membership or our activities, you can always e-mail us at [email protected]. Your membership can be renewed any time at the library circulation desk, so stop in and renew now for 2015! Upcoming Events – Mark your Calendars! O’ Tannenbaum Tour – December 6 & 7, 2014 WinterFest Cookbook Exchange – January 24, 2015 Cabin Fever Book Sale – February 26-28, 2015 Next Board Meeting: The board will meet at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 11 – Ask for the location at the circulation desk when you come in. Meetings are open to both members and prospective members, so you’re all welcome to attend! Friends of T. B. Scott Free Library Officers: President…….………. Denise Latzig Vice-President……. Marie Marrier Treasurer………. Lori Anderson-Malm Secretary………... Judy Weaver Board Members/Committee Chairpersons: Book Sales……. Sarah Litzer & Terri Eirich Kiosk Book Sales…… Joyce Kasper Library Liaison…….. Stacy Stevens Membership………… Denise Latzig Newsletter Editor…….Sarah Litzer Publicity……………… Marie Marrier Members at Large… Laurie Cottrell Mike Weckwerth Gloria Ziolkowski Annual Dues Individual $5 Family $10 Patron $25 Business $50 Life Membership $100 Friends of T. B. Scott Free Library 106 W. First St Merrill, WI 54452 715 536-7191 E-mail us: [email protected] Books will Grace Library Tree for O’ Tannenbaum Tour! It’s that wonderful time of year when thoughts switch to the holiday season and we’re reminded of the exceptional people we are thankful for. Thanks to the Friends of T.B. Scott Library’s invaluable support, the library will have a decorated tree for the fourth consecutive year at the O’ Tannenbaum Tour, scheduled this year for December 6 and 7. The O’ Tannenbaum tour is held annually on the first weekend in December in the basement of Merrill’s St. Stephens Church at 2nd & Mill Streets. Between 900 and 1,000 people visit the Tour each year to view the decorations, listen to live entertainment, enjoy refreshments, and generally enjoy the holiday spirit. A $3.00 admission fee lets you browse through a veritable forest of decorated trees, wreaths and gift baskets, decorated by local clubs, organizations, and businesses. This is a chance for the Friends and other area sponsors to reach out to the public and share how these organizations support the community. You can purchase raffle tickets with which you “vote” for your favorite displays. At the Tour’s end, the trees, wreaths, and gift baskets are raffled off to lucky voters. All O’ Tannenbaum proceeds stay in Lincoln County. In 2013, fund recipients ranged from 4-H Clubs to the 4-H Endowment, D.A.R.E., Lincoln County Respite, the River Walk, St. Vincent Outreach, and the Streeter Square Gazebo. A 4-H Scholarship Program, being developed by the 4-H Board, will also be supported with this year’s proceeds. This year’s theme, “Oh, What Fun,” takes one back to Grandma’s house with delectable Christmas treats, homemade presents and backyard sledding. With this in mind, the Friends will be providing a huge basket (inflated sledding tube) filled with books, mittens, a blanket, hot cocoa and all the essential elements to make this dream a reality for one lucky raffle winner. Last year’s T. B. Scott Library entry, the Green Bay Packer Tree, brought in more raffle tickets than any other tree, and lit up the face of one lucky lad who proved to be the ultimate Packer Fan and hoped to put the tree up in his bedroom, much to the dismay of his surprised parents. Trains and the Gift of Reading were themes for previous T.B. Scott Library trees. Local radio stations 730AM The Patriot and Magic 104.1 have been very generous in providing air time to get the message out about the Tour and to give away free tickets. For supporting organizations like the Friends, the radio has recognized them by name and has been instrumental in their public support. Keeping all of this in mind, go get your calendar, circle Saturday, December 6th and Sunday, December 7th and plan to show your support for the Friends of T.B. Scott Library and your community by visiting Merrill’s O’ Tannenbaum Tour and viewing our wonderful tree. BOOK Sorting Super Crew Believe it or not, we’re already getting donations in for our next sale in February – the closet is full of bags that need sorting & boxing. Our super crew is coming together and Sarah has contacted those who volunteered to help with this ongoing process to meet for some “basic training.” If you volunteered and have not been contacted since the book sale, please call or e-mail Sarah right away! Super crew members will be able to set their own hours and communicate with other members if there’s a high volume of donations requiring additional time. You simply pick a time when the library is open and Sarah will meet you there (until we get this really rolling and we’re all trained!). If you like books, can read the cover or inside cover to decide what category a book belongs in, and then pack those books into an appropriate box, then you’ve got what it takes! We now use only two sizes of boxes – egg box and book box – to make it easier for our volunteers to handle them. Besides helping the library and the Friends, Super Crew volunteers may purchase books that they come across in advance of the sale – there are always perks for doing a good deed! E-mail us at [email protected] or call Sarah at 715-536-5090. What’s hot at TB Scott and beyond…. Here is the Hot List from Library Director Stacy Stevens. Warm up this winter and escape by reading one or two of these…. Top 10 Most Requested Books by T.B. Scott Library Patrons: Gray Mountain by John Grisham Deadline by John Sandford Hope to Die by James Patterson The Cinderella Murder by Mary Higgins Clark Burn by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge The Job by Janet Evanovich Leaving Time by Jodi Picoult Mr. Miracle: a Christmas novel by Debbie Macomber Cold Cold Heart by Tami Hoag Crash and Burn by Lisa Gardner Top 10 Movies! Check out one of these Most Requested DVDs Maleficent X-Men: Days of Future Past Neighbors Captain America: The Winter Soldier Blended Heaven is For Real The Fault in Our Stars Draft Day Edge of Tomorrow How to Train Your Dragon 2 To see more new arrivals in our library system, hold down Ctrl and click on the box above. If you’re reading a print version of this newsletter, get on a computer and go to the “Reader’s Page” of our library’s website. http://www.tbscottlibrary.org/ There were plenty of books to sell in October – a rough estimate is that we put out 400 boxes of books and returned under 150 boxes to the closet. Our total income for the sale was $1228.95. In an unusual twist, we extended this sale to include Sunday, occasioned by a Words Worth Hearing program. As evidenced by brisk sales on Friends night, books were well sorted and people could find what they wanted within the 2 hour timeframe. And thanks to those of you who came and renewed your membership that night! Friends who attended Thursday night were treated to Halloween goodies, courtesy of the library, in honor of National Friends of the Library Week – yum and thank you! During the setup week, a few sizeable donations were brought in which complicated matters for our volunteers and hampered setup temporarily. Therefore, we will be suspending the acceptance of donations during future setup weeks – please keep this in mind and plan accordingly if you’re cleaning out Grandma’s basement! Also, please be mindful of our guidelines in the box on the last page and sniff your books before bringing them in. thank you A huge goes out to our many devoted volunteers, with a special note of gratitude to Phyllis Bauman, Kay Andrews and Susanne Gilk, who showed up either every single day OR just in the nick of time when extra help was needed! Although we had a few volunteers cancel due to illness, etc. and one noshow, everyone else showed up at their assigned time and worked, sometimes longer than planned. Plus several volunteers stepped up and offered to become part of the new Super Crew – again, we thank you and salute you!! Thank you for your patronage and support! Terri Eirich & Sarah Litzer Fall Book Sale Co-Chairs You are most welcome to join us at our next discussion. Coming Up in December: “COVER TO COVER” – submitted by Judy Weaver First, we need to catch up with our October selection: You think, at first, that the chief topic of The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh is, well, flowers… and how in Victorian times they were used to convey romantic expressions, such as honeysuckle for devotion, aster for patience, red roses for love and so on. But there is a lot more weight to the book – for the damaged heroine of the novel was a child in foster care so what’s right and wrong about the system is a good part of the story. At the age of eighteen, foster children are emancipated – on their own – which means no more payment for the foster child. Victoria of this story - ends up sleeping in a park. Her knowledge of flowers leads her on a path of redemption: employment with an understanding florist, developing a gift for helping others with very personalized bouquets, learning forgiveness, being forgiven and finding love at last. *** For November, we have a somewhat confusing moral tale from Australia: The Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman is set post-WWII on Janus Rock lighthouse and in the fictional village of Point Partageuse on the southern tip of the continent. The light in the title turns out to be a divining moral compass – which eventually brings a harsh judgment on the decision of Tom Sherbourne and his young wife Isabel to keep the infant that washes up in a dinghy as their own and not report the unusual occurrence to the authorities as required. The population of the small village is distrustful and devastated by the loss of young men and those who returned damaged from the war. There is a specter of wariness about the town when Tom appears as the new lighthouse keeper and takes the lovely and lonely Isabel as his bride. Unable to start a family on their own, the decision to keep the child is made with love and good intention, but leads them both through despair to a kind of redemption. *** The Beauty of Humanity Movement by Camilla Gibb is on the schedule for December. This is a novel of contemporary Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam. The remarkable characters in this story are living in a country divided many times by war: the back story is the French/Communist conflict when the people of Vietnam fought the French along with their communist leader – Ho Chi Minh – only to be enslaved and betrayed by the Communist regime once the French left. In modern times, they are enjoying a little relaxation of the Communist fist and are sorting out their histories, building family connections, and nourishing each other. Old Man Hung is a survivor of the indigenous artists’ Movement and Maggie is a Vietnamese/American searching for her father’s art and the story of his life within the Movement. The connection between these two people creates the essence of this lovely story. *** All of our selections are available from TB Scott or the library system – just ask at the desk. Many are on disc (CD) as well – Bob and I listened to The Light Between Oceans while on a trip to Ohio! Cover to Cover readers enjoy quality and prize-winning writers – books with style and grit that are thought provoking and discussion ready. We like variety. Though our selections take us through time, traverse geography and venture into exotic cultures, we are grounded in respect for clear and true writing that expands our hearts and minds. We meet the third Thursday of each month at 1 p.m. in the Community Room. Call Judy Weaver at 715-536-7918 for more information about Cover to Cover, our Library sponsored book club. For lots more ideas on what to read next, visit http://www.tbscottlibrary.org/node/37 on the library’s website. Second Annual Cookbook Exchange Once again, as part of Merrill’s WinterFest, the library will host a cookbook exchange. Cookbooks are one of the first categories to sell out at used book sales and library cookbooks are so frequently checked out that they are seldom “weeded” from the collection. So, how do you get fresh cookbooks? You trade with other cooks! We invite you to “weed” your own collection of cookbooks and bring them with you on Saturday, January 24 from 9:30 a.m. – Noon. You will be able to exchange like items for your donations, so hardcover cookbooks for other hardcover cookbooks, paperbacks for paperbacks, etc. And we will put cooking magazines on a “free” table to ensure that they find a home! Even if you can’t participate that Saturday, you are welcome to donate your no-longer-needed used cookbooks at any time. And rest assured that any leftovers will be included at the Cabin Fever Book Sale in February! Book Material Donation Guidelines: Clean, gently used hardcover & paperback books except: NO high school/college textbooks, NO encyclopedias, NO smelly/musty books Plus videos & cassette tapes (originals only), music CDs and commercially produced DVDs as well as books on cassette or CD. Puzzles – clean & complete; Magazines – craft only No Donations accepted Feb. 23 – Mar 2 "Libraries offer, for free, the wisdom of the ages - and sages and, simply put, there's something for everyone inside." Laura Bush Former First Lady of the United States Reprinted from libraryquotes.org Prepare for WINTER at the Library… It’s here! Annie’s Attic Mysteries is a new series which many booklovers lobbied the library to order. First Book: The Lady in the Attic by Tara Randel introduces the character Annie Dawson, newly widowed, returning after many years to her childhood home in Stony Point, Maine. Annie’s grandmother has recently died and left her the daunting task of sorting out the household treasures at Grey Gables. There are many unrealized treasures in the attic that are intertwined with Annie’s heritage and the history of the community. With the help of the Woman’s Needlecraft Club, she begins to unravel the past. Other books in the series include Medals in the Attic by Cathy Elliot; The Photo Album by Marlene Chase; Letters in the Attic; The Package – fifteen so far- so you’ll be set for the winter. (They aren’t all at T.B. Scott Library just yet, though.) Check out a Christmas themed movie on DVD and get in the spirit! Miracle at Christmas: Ebbie’s Story was a popular 1995 Lifetime telemovie recently digitized. A modern modification of Dickens’ Christmas Carol with a feminist twist, it stars Susan Lucci (All My Children) as Elizabeth Scrooge. Another novel movie is Christmas Comes to Willow Creek, set in a remote Alaskan Village with a town cannery about to shut down, edgy families, and a semi full of presents and supplies driven by two feuding brothers and making its way from California in a blizzard. A Christmas Wish is a digitally restored (with color) 1950’s movie with Jimmy Durante about – of all things – a trained squirrel named Rupert and financially struggling vaudeville performers. Our library’s DVD collection is awesome – lots of Hollywood classics, cult favorites, and foreign masterpieces too (don’t let the subtitles deter you)! Happy Holidays! Submitted by Judy Weaver *** Highlights – Here’s what you’ll find inside your newsletter: Membership – Time to Renew! O’ Tannenbaum Tour Participation Fall Book Sale News and Super Crew Reports “Cover to Cover” News Upcoming Cookbook Exchange Reading & Viewing “Hot Lists” Important Dates to Remember!