1
10
33
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/0383f88995139cf0bf6c986aa22ea936.pdf
695447f030234ef03a4c775f5cbbb5cc
PDF Text
Text
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
Number
“The Temp site is terrific!
Why don’t you just stay there??”
By Mary Pergander, Library Director
Three Generations Celebrate
Library Card Sign-Up Month
While the renovation of the building at 920 Waukegan Road moves along, we’ve
settled in at our temporary home at Cadwell’s Corners. We appreciate the positive
feedback from patrons and visitors: The space is very welcoming and conveniently
arranged on one level. It feels and functions like a “real” library, and it certainly
will work well for us for the year we need to be here.
September is National Libraiy Card Sign-up
Month and—according to three generations
in one family of Deerfielders—their Libraiy
cards are the smartest, most valued cards in
their wallets.
“We moved to Deerfield in 1960,” says Jan
Zobus (left) “and we’ve been faithful Libraiy
users ever since.” Jan has seen—and
supported—the Libraiy as it has evolved
from a place to borrow the latest best seller
or do homework into a full-fledged research,
digital download center and community
meeting place. Her daughter, Laura Kempf
(right) remembers her mother Jan taking her
to the Children’s Department when it was in
a trailer near the current Village Hall. Laura
is now the co-president of the Friends of the
Deerfield Public Library. “We were just at the
Libraiy checking out several books on CD for
our upcoming road trip,” said Laura during
the interview. “The Library gives us open and
free access to so much material we would
otherwise have to buy—and store!” Third
generation family member and Library user
Erin Kempf (center) is a former member of
the Teen Advisory Board, long-time STAR
volunteer and heavy digital downloaded “I
love being able to download e-books from
home.. .and I love the fact I can use my
Deerfield Public Libraiy card to download
e- books when I go away to college."
Do you have a current Library card? If not,
stop by during September with two forms of
identification showing your Deerfield
address, and get one of the most valuable
cards you can own!
Nice as it is, our temporary home lacks some important features. It’s about a third
smaller than the old building at 920 Waukegan, and only about half the size the
renovated and remodeled Libraiy will be when completed. Currently there are no
study rooms, no program spaces, no public meeting rooms, no quiet spaces, no
storage, no drive-up book drops, and only 12 adult and four children’s computers.
Plus, we’re now at the far south end of the Village when we have traditionally been
in the heart of Deerfield, and many residents have let us know this is not
convenient for them.
We’re looking forward to returning to a much more functional, environmentally
friendly, and beautiful building—a fresh space that will be able to flex along with
the changing needs of our community. So come and visit our temporary home soon,
and watch for news of the Grand Re-opening of the main Library in mid-2013.
**tl**il^Bi
*-.
"• rsss
i-
[•• ««
: i
-if i
a1»7?
A rendering of the renovated Libraryfrom the northwest, with Waukegan Road
on your left as youface the picture. Detailed plans of the interior are posted at
the temporary site.
�What can we do for you?
Need help downloading an e-book, starting a
Facebook page, or brushing up on your
Microsoft Office skills? We can help with that!
Contact us to book your own librarian for up
to an hour. Our trained reference librarians
have helped people prepare for job interviews,
learn basic research skills for school, and
more. To “Book a Librarian,” call the Library
at 847-945-3311 and ask for Adult Sendees.
What can we do for you?
Thursday Book Discussions
All book discussions will be held at 7 N. Waukegan Road, Copies of these
books will be available at the self-service holds shelfa month before the discussion.
■ The Story of Beautiful Girl by Rachel Simon
September 13,10:30 a.m.
While institutionalized in 1968, Lynnie and Homan fall deeply in
love and long for their freedom. They escape the institution,
find shelter with a widowed teacher, and are eventually forced
to leave their baby behind. Spanning 40 years, this is a story of
true love, friendship, and destiny.
JOHN
UPDIKE
UJT1JE BROTHER
Voter Registration
Courtesy of the League of Women Voters
Saturday September 15,10 a.m. -2p.m.
We're getting close to the October 9th
deadline to register to vote in the November
6th election. Registrars from the League of
Women Voters will be in our lobby on
Saturday, September 15, from 10 a.m. and
2 p.m. to register voters. Please bring two
forms of identification, at least one of which
must show your name and current address.
Only one form of ID can be a piece of mail
from a contractual service (Com Ed,
telephone or Internet service, etc.)
addressed and delivered to you.
CORY DOCTOROW
I AMILV l-ANG
Social Media Marketing for
Small Business
Tuesday, October 9,2 p.m.
Deerfield Village Hall, 850 Waukegan Road
In this introductory session aimed specifically
at small business owners and/or marketers,
we cover strategies and best practices to get
the most out of your social media activities,
including why it is important, how to create
great content, develop a plan, and much more!
Please register online at deerfieldlibraiy.org,
by phone at 847-945-3311 or in person.
irresislilili1
Hen ry
Mouse
llSi GM*AI8
■ Gertrude and Claudius by John Updike
September 20, 7:30 p.m.
Set before the action begins in Shakespeare's "Hamlet," this
speculative novel follows the lives of Gertrude and Claudius,
King and Queen of Denmark, as they wend their way towards
adultery and treachery to ascend the throne. This book discus
sion is part of Writers’ Theatre “Page to Stage” program, in sup
port of their staging of “Hamlet.” Check out writerstheatre.org
for more information.
■ Little Brother by Corey Doctorow
October 11,10:30 a.m. and October 18, 7:30 p.m.
Marcus’s whole world changes when he and his
friends find themselves caught in the aftermath
neBook
of a major terrorist attack on San Francisco. In
Zip Code
the wrong place at the wrong time, Marcus and
his friends are apprehended by the Department
of Homeland Security and whisked away to a secret prison
where they're mercilessly interrogated for days. When he is
finally released, Marcus discovers that his city has become a
police state where every citizen is treated like a potential
terrorist. He knows that no one will believe his story, which
leaves him only one option: take down the Department of
Homeland Security himself.
■ The Family Fang by Kevin Wilson
November 8,10:30 a.m.
Annie and Buster Fang spent their youth as the children of
famous performance artists. Known only as Child A and Child B,
they were manipulated pawns in their parent’s highly public and
often uncomfortable “performances.” Now adults, both Annie
and Buster find themselves returning home and facing their
family legacy.
■ The Irresistible Henry House by Lisa Grunwald
November 15, 7:30 p.m.
In the mid-twentieth century in a home economics program at
a prominent university, real babies are being used to teach
mothering skills to young women. For a young man raised in
these unlikely circumstances, finding real love and learning to
trust will prove to be the work of a lifetime. From his earliest
days as a "practice baby" through his adult adventures in 1960s
Henry House remains handsome, charming, universally adored,
and never entirely accessible to the many women he conquers
but can never entirely trust.
�• Whole Foods Market Deerfield will sponsor the Friends of
the Deerfield Public Library on Wednesday, September
19th for their quarterly 5% day. Stop by the store to
learn about our organization and donate 5% by simply
shopping!!! Thank you, Whole Foods Deerfield, for your
generous support!
• Become a Friend of the Deerfield Public Library with an
annual membership! (form below)
• Be sure to browse the wide variety of used books, DVDs and
CDs that will be sold during regular library hours in the new
(temporary) library at Cadwell’s Corners.
• Support the Friends of the Library at the Deerfield Farmer’s
Market on Saturday, September 15.
• Come visit our booth at the Deerfield Community Services
Day, Saturday, September 22.
• The Friends continue to accept gently used hardback and
paperback books, as well as CDs and DVDs (No VHS tapes,
textbooks or encyclopedias, please). Cookbooks and
children’s books for our upcoming Fanners Market sale
are especially welcome—tell your friends!
• The Friends welcome volunteers from the community to help
sort and shelve book donations. Any amount of time and help
is appreciated. Contact the Friends for more information
• See the Friends page on the Deerfield Library website for a
listing of our upcoming meeting dates, times and location.
Community members and potential new volunteers are
always welcome.
The Friends can be contacted at (847) 945-3311, ext 8895
or at friends@deerfieldlibrary.org
FRIENDS OF THE DEERFIELD PUBLIC LIBRARY ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
<^0%
y°/(t Pub\wv
Please join the Friends of the Deerfield Public Library.
Your annual membership will enhance the materials and programs
at our library so that it will better serve you and your family.
I would like to become a member of Friends of the Deerfield Public Library for a year at the following level:
,$15-$29
Good Friend
$50-$99
Dear Friend
,$250-$499 Loyal Friend
$30-$49
Family Friend
$100-$249 Best Friend
$500 +
Partner
NAME.
ADDRESS.
PHONE.
E-MAIL
□ Please check this box if you do not want your name listed in any publication.
Please make your check payable to: Friends of the Deerfield Public Library and mail or bring the form to:
920 Waukegan Rd. Deerfield, IL 60015
The Friends are a 501(c) (3) nonprofit group. Contributions may be deductible under IRS regulations.
Does your company have a matching gift program?
}
Thank you to our members who have joined for 2011-2012:
Good Friend
Anonymous
Susan Cramer
Lynn Fradkin
Sue Gottlieb
James Hill
Susan Karp
Diane Mazur
Mark & Lois Nagy
Kyle Nakazawa
Margo & James Oliff
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Robinson
fl
Family Friend
Michele & Harvey Felman
Christine & Rob Cowan
Elaine & Frank Haney
Shari & Harvey Herman
James Hill
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Newhall
Barbara Reich
M.J. Turner, Jr.
Jan & John Zobus
Dear Friend
Ackerson Family
Sherry & Bernard Beck
Karen & Patrick Dessent
Grainger Matching Gifts
Program
Susie & Barry Gray
James Hill
David, Glynis, Quinn & Jonah
Hirsch
Maxine & Larry Kane
Laura & Rick Kempf
Lynn Pivan
Lisa & Brian Schurgin
Ellen G. Wolff
Best Friend
Anonymous
Greta & Brian Davison
James Hill
Marley S. Korn
Mary Pergander
Cheryl & Ron Simon
Eleanor Sylvan
Loyal Friend
James Hill
Claudia Katz
Partner
James Hill
�— --- ----------- -------------------------------- --------------- .........
Registration begins Mi
______ ;___ “
“
. .
.
invited to a special weekly stoiytime,
including stories, songs, and movement,
activities with playtime at the end. S3
!..
DROP-IN
» Family Times
Saturdays, September 1 - November 24,
11 am. All ages and their parents and
Fridays, Octobers. October 19. November
Preschool
Pals
Threes
caregivers
2, and November 16, 10:30 a, m. Ages 0-12
Mondays, October 1, October 15, October 22,
o Come to the Youth Services department for
months and their parent or caregiver
October 29, November 5, and November 12,1:30 o a drop-in storytime for the whole family.
It’s never too early to start reading to your
p. m, Age 3 years and theirparent or caregiver «
baby! Join us for a Baby Lapsit Storytime
Drop-in Crafts
Preschoolers and their caregivers have a
program with rhymes, books, and songs for
Children and their parent or caregiver
program just for them! We’ll listen to stories,
you and your baby, plus social time after
Stop by the Youth Services department to
sing
songs,
and
have
fun
all
while
getting
the program. 13
make a fun and seasonal craft!
ready to read! 13
Wednesday, September 12
Fun for Ones
Preschool
Pals
Fours
and
Fives
Tuesday, October 9
Tuesdays, October 2, October 16, October
Tuesday, November 20
23, October 30, November 6, and November Wednesdays, Octobers, October 17, October
24,
October
31,
November
7,
and
November
9:30
a.m. -8:30 p. m.
13,10:30 a.m,. Ages 13 - 23 months and
14,10:45a.m.
Ages
4
-5
years,
but
not.
yet
in
their paren t or caregiver
Stoiytime, Milk & Cookies at
One-year-olds and their parents or caregivers Kindergarten and their parent or caregiver
Preschoolers and their caregivers have a
Panera Bannockburn
are invited to a stoiytime just for them
program
just
for
them!
We’ll
listen
to
stories,
Tuesdays at 9:30 a.m.
including stories, songs, movement activities,
sing songs, and have fun all while getting
September 4, September 18, October 2,
rhymes, and social time after the program.
ready to read! 13
October 16, October 30, November
This action-packed program will engage
Children and their caregivers are invited to
new walkers in early literacy activities and
After School Stories
Panera Bannockburn (1211 Half Day Road)
encourage a love of books and reading. 13
Thursdays, October 4, October 18, October
for stoiytime, milk, and cookies.
25, November 1, November 8, and November
Time for Twos
15, 4:30p.m. Grades K-2
Trick-or-Treat the Libraiy
Thursdays, October 4, October 18, October
This
program is specifically designed for
Wednesday, October 31, 9:30 a.m. - 8:30
25, November 1, November 8, and
younger elementary school children and
p.m. All ages
November 15,10:30 a.m. Ages 24-35
features
stories
and
crafts.
Caregivers
must
Stop in on Halloween to show off your
months and their parent or caregiver
remain in the Libraiy. 13
costume and get a treat!
Two-year-olds and their caregivers are
Baby Lapsit Stoiytime
Just for
Teen Read Week: It Came From the Library
October 14-20
The annual Teen Read Week encourages teens all around the country to visit
their local Library and check out all the many ways they can read just for the
fun of it! In celebration of this year’s theme “It Came from the Library’’ we dare
you to try out the many books, magazines audiobooks, Playaways, and e-books
that are available in the Teen Space and to submit your own spooky story in our
hair-raising writing contest!
It Came from the Libraiy! Writing Contest
Grades 7 -12 • Submissions accepted October 14-20
Celebrate Teen Read Week and Halloween with a writing contest that will give
you the chills! Make your story creepy, make it funny, make it dramatic, but
don’t forget to add the scare factor. A panel of judges will choose the wining
story, which will be bound and presented to the winning author. Prizes for run
ners-up will also be given. Entry forms will be available online and at the Youth
Services desk beginning Monday, October 1.
Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Grades 7 -12 • Sunday, September 16,1 p.m.
Looking for ways to be seen and heard at the Library? As a TAB member you
can come up with programming ideas for Teens at the Library; help create
content for the Library’s Teen Web page; help out with programs at the Library;
and give input for the new Teen Space. Plus, any hours you contribute to TAB
meetings and programs count as volunteer service in the community! For more
information contact Nina Varma at teenservices@deerfieldlibrary.org or check
out the Teen Events page of the Library’s website.
Q. “How do you get into a great college?”
A. “Practice! Practice! Practice!”
FREE PSAT Practice Test
Saturday, October 6,10 a.m. -1 p.m., Jewett Park Community Center
FREE SAT Practice Test
Saturday, November 3,10 a.m. - 2:30 p.m., Jewett Park Community Center
FREE ACT Practice Test
Saturday, December 110 a.m. -1:30 p.m., Jewett Park Community Center
Taking a full length proctored ACT, SAT, or PSAT practice test is the best
preparation for the actual exam. You’ll learn what to expect on test day and
receive a complete analysis of your results. Bring #2 pencils, a calculator,
wear comfortable clothing, and leave your cell phone in the car. Participants
will receive their scores via email approximately two weeks after the exam.
Register now to save a seat! These free practice tests includes all aspects of
the actual tests except for the essay portion. □
�i!
One Book, One Zip Code
2012 Selection
neBook
Zip Code
Little Brother by Cory Doctorow
Imagine if our country were turned into a police state,
UTILE BROTHER! where
every citizen is treated like a potential terrorist.
The government could track every step you take
with video surveillance and monitor all of your
communication. Would you trade your freedom for
, security? In an increasingly digital world, privacy has
become a huge issue. The War on Terror, globalization,
CORY DOCTOROW
and economic difficulties have led corporations and
governments to abuse digital technology, threatening
our privacy and civil liberties. In the 21st century, Little Brother is watching you.
Little Brother by Cory Doctorow is the story of seventeen-year-old Marcus, who
ditches school one morning to hang out with his friends. But when a major
terrorist attack takes place, Marcus finds himself in the wrong place at the
wrong time and is swept up by the Department of Homeland Security and
whisked away to a secret prison, where he is interrogated for days. When he is
finally released, Marcus discovers that his city has become a police state where
every citizen is treated like a potential terrorist. He knows that no one will
believe his stoiy, which leaves him only one option: take down the Department
of Homeland Security himself.
Book Discussions of Little Brother at the Deerfield Public Library
Thursday, October 11,10:30 p.m. and Thursday, October 18, 7:30 p.m.
Meet Cory Doctorow
Tuesday, October 9, 7p.m.
Deerfield High School Auditorium
Meet the talented author of Little Brother,
Cory Doctorow, who will discuss the issues
addressed in the novel and introduce his
new novel, Pirate Cinema. Lake Forest
Bookstore will be selling copies of the
author’s books, which he will be happy to
sign following his talk. Seating for this
popular event is limited, so please register
in advance on line at deerfieldlibraiy.org, by
phone at 847-945-3311 or in person.
Cory Doctorow (craphound.com) is a sciencefiction author, activist,
journalist and blogger. He wasformerly Director ofEuropean Affairsfor the
Electronic Frontier' Foundation (eff.org), a non-profit civil liberties group
that defendsfreedom in technology law, policy, standards and treaties. His
best-selling novel Little Brother was nominatedfor the 2008 Hugo, Nebula,
Sunburst and Locus Awards. It won the Ontario Library White Pine Award,
the Prometheus Award, as well as the Indienet Awardfor bestselling young
adult novel in America's top 1000 independent bookstores in 2008.
Just like Little Brother’s main character
Marcus, today’s teens are extremely tech
savy. But the digital footprint they create
can affect their future. These programs,
sponsored by the Deerfield Parent Network,
aim to help parents understand the issues
surrounding social media and the digital
world their child or teen lives in.
Is There an App for That?
Parenting Your Digital Child
Sponsored by the Deerfield Parent Network.
Monday, October 15, 7:00 p.m. reception
followed by the presentation at 7:30 p.m.
Deerfield High School Auditorium.
As soon as your child can swipe a
touchscreen, your family should establish a
culture around technology. Educator and
researcher, Devorah Heitner, Ph.D., presents
this informative program designed to teach
you what you need to know about the digital
world your child lives in.
Bridging the Tech-Culture Divide:
Parenting Your Digital Teen
Sponsored by the Deerfield Parent Network.
Thursday, October 18, 7:0 0 p.m., reception
followed by the presentation at 7:30 p.m.
The rise of digital technology and social
media has introduced many challenges for
parents. This informative program by
educator and researcher Devorah Heitner,
Ph.D., will teach you what you need to know
to prevent your teens from creating a digital
footprint that will haunt them the rest of
their lives.
HATS OFF!
Hats off to all of our 4th of July volunteers!
Rebecca, Marguerite, Sarah, Danny, Cara,
Nikki, Lauren, and Henry for separating
3,000 white plastic hard hats and Heather,
Dan, Bella, Julia, Charlie, Will, Erin,
Carolyn, Sarah, Charlie, and Ethan for
helping our Library Trustees hand them out!
�m-'.KHI- I
>
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
New temporary home at Cadwell's Corners
7 N Waukegan Road
Important Library Numbers
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
° Telephone: 847-945-3311
° TTY: 847-945-3372
© Library Home Page and Catalog:
www.deerfieldlibraty.org
° E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibrary.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfieldlibraiy.org
• FAX: 847-945-3402
& PRINTED WITH
SOY INK
• TEXT US at 847-790-4TXT (4898)
Upcoming Late Openings and Holiday Closings
THE LIBRARY WILL CLOSE AT 5 P.M. Wednesday, November 21
Deerfield Public Library
Maiy Pergander, Library' Director
Library Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretary
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Sunday Mueller, Treasurer
847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Mary' Courtney • 847-945-9460
marycourtneymail@gmail.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg * 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Library Hours
Mon.-Thurs:
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Friday:
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Saturday:
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday:
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
THE LIBRARY WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY Thursday, November 22
THE LIBRARY WILL OPEN AT 10 A.M. Tuesday, September 11
Thursday, October 18
Wednesday, November 28
Library Trustee Nominating Petitions
Available at Village Hall
September 25 is the first day for candidates for the Deerfield
Public Library Board of Trustees to circulate nominating petition
sheets for the April 9, 2013 consolidated election. The petition
sheets and all other forms related to the election will be available
at Deerfield Village Hall. For more information about the election
process, please contact the Village at 847-945-5000. For more
information on the role and duties of a Libraiy Trustee, please
contact Mary Pergander at 847-945-3311.
Couldn’t Have Done it Without You!
Many thanks to MicheUe Bayuk, JiU Bonucci, Sue Gottlieb,
Laurie Liebowitz and Marc Noftsger for all their help preparing
for the “Big Move.” Special thanks to our good friends the Friends
of the Deerfield Library and our great Board of Trustees for
providing some delicious meals and snacks for staff during the
long haul. And again to our Friends for providing the two new
drop boxes. PLUS ... hats off to the winner of the drawing for a
Barnes & Noble Nook - Pamela Bach - during our opening week
“housewarming” at our temporary home. Thanks to TRAX for
being such a great host for our Fifty Shades of Grey book
discussion last month and to all of the sponsors of our Summer
Reading Programs including: Baskin Robbins, Brunswick Zone,
Campus Colors, H-Fomo Pizza & Pasta, KidSnips, McDonald’s,
Meatheads Burgers & Fries, PotbeUy Sandwich Shop, Target,
Tom & Eddie’s,Whole Foods Market, Sur la Table and Rosebud.
Common Sense,
Safety and
Library Policy
For the safety of all
children who visit the
Library, children 8 years
of age and under must
be accompanied and
directly supervised by a
responsible caregiver
who assumes full
accountability for the
children’s safety and
behavior in the Library.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Fall 2012
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 28, No. 2
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
09/2012
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.105
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
September - November 2012
American College Test (ACT)
Annie Fang
Bannockburn Illinois
Barbara Reich
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Barry Gray
Baskin Robbins
Bella
Bernard Beck
Brian Davison
Brian Schurgin
Brunswick Zone
Buster Fang
Cadwell's Corners
Campus Colors
Cara
Carolyn
Charlie
Cheryl Simon
Christine Cowan
Civil Liberties
Claudia Katz
Commonwealth Edison
Cory Doctorow
Dan
Danny
David Hirsch
Deerfield Community Services Day
Deerfield Elections
Deerfield Farmers Market
Deerfield High School
Deerfield High School Auditorium
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Parent Network
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Book Drop Boxes
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Card
Deerfield Public Library Computers
Deerfield Public Library Donations
Deerfield Public Library Electronic Book Collection
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Meeting Rooms
Deerfield Public Library One-on-One Training Sessions
Deerfield Public Library Policies
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library S*T*A*R Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Study Rooms
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Technology Classes
Deerfield Public Library Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Deerfield Public Library Temporary Building
Deerfield Public Library Unattended Child Policy
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Village Hall
Devorah Heitner
Digital Technology
eBooks
Elaine Haney
Eleanor Sylvan
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
Electronic Frontier Foundation Director of European Affairs
Ellen G. Wolf
Erin
Erin Kempf
Ethan
Facebook
Fifty Shades of Grey
Frank Haney
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Gertrude and Claudius
Globalization
Glynis Hirsch
Grainger Matching Gifts Program
Greta Davison
Halloween
Hamlet
Harvey Felman
Harvey Herman
Heather
Henry
Henry House
Hugo Award
Il Forno Pizza and Pasta
Indienet Award
James Hill
James Oliff
Jan Zobus
Jeffrey Rivlin
Jill Bonucci
John Updike
John Zobus
Jonah Hirsch
Julia
July 4th Activities
Karen Dessent
Kenan Abosch
Kevin Wilson
KidSnips
Kyle Nakazawa
Lake Forest Bookstore
Larry Kane
Laura Kempf
Lauren
Laurie Liebowitz
League of Women Voters Deerfield - Lincolnshire
Lisa Grunwald
Lisa Schurgin
Little Brother
Locus Award
Lois Nagy
Lynn Fradkin
Lynn Pivan
M.J. Turner Jr.
Marc Noftsger
Margo Oliff
Marguerite
Mark Nagy
Marla Bark Dembitz
Marley S. Korn
Mary Courtney
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Pergander
Mary Robinson
Maxine Kane
McDonalds
Meatheads Burgers and Fries
Michael K. Goldberg
Michaelle Bayuk
Michele Felman
Microsoft Office
Mrs. Robert Newhall
National Library Card Sign-Up Month
Nebula Award
Nikki
Nina Varma Michael
Nook eReader
One Book One Zip Code
Ontario Library White Pine Award
Pamela Bach
Panera
Patrick Dessent
Pirate Cinema
Playaway Audiobooks
Potbelly Sandwich Shop
Preliminary Scholastic Assessment Test (PSAT)
Privacy
Prometheus Award
PSADewberry
Quinn Hirsch
Rachel Simon
Rebecca
Rick Kempf
Rob Cowan
Robert Newhall
Ronald Simon
Rosebud Italian Country House and Pizzeria
San Francisco California
Sarah
Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT)
Searchable PDF
Shari Herman
Sherry Beck
Sue Gottlieb
Sunburst Award
Sunday G. Mueller
Sur la Table
Susan Cramer
Susan Karp
Susie Gray
Target
Teen Read Week
The Family Fang
The Irresistible Henry House
The Story of Beautiful Girl
The War on Terror
Tom and Eddie's
Trax Tavern and Grill
United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
Voter Registration
Whole Foods
Will
William Shakespeare
Writers Theatre
Writers Theatre from Page to Stage Program
Writers Theatre Website
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/773f829f13006da0ad66ecfb8b7d11d5.pdf
cc4449f0a1aaa725c709b9adde8aa88d
PDF Text
Text
w w w. d e e rfi e Id li b ra ry. o rg
N umbc(
Deerfield
Public library
is on the
move!
X.
'
r
The library will be temporarily closing on May 18 at 6 p.m.
and reopening at Cadwell’s Corners
(7 North Waukegan Road) on June 11.
Library
SmpBimiei
Plian
Meeting the evolving
needs of Deerfield now
and into the future
____
>
�Hot Summer Nights with
Fifty Shades of Grey
Summer Book Discussions Eat, Move, Read!
Trax Tavern and Grill, 833 Deerfield Road
Tuesday, July 10, 7:30 p.m.
E.L. James’s erotic romance Fifty Shades of Gi'ey is the
hottest title of the summer. We’ll discuss what makes this
novel the most talked about novel of the year. A limited
number of copies will be available to book discussion
participants and can be picked up at the Adult Sendees desk starting June 11.
Extra eBook copies have also been purchased; put yourself on the list today!
Please register in advance on line, by phone (847-945-3311) or in person.
Thursday morning and evening book discussions will
continue at Barnes and Noble of Deerfield Square
and the Patty Turner Center, and a special Cookbook
Book Discussion of Joy of Cooking will be held at
Whole Foods Market Deerfield on Wednesday, August
1 at 6:30 p.m.
College of Lake County
Thursday July 12,10 a.m. - 1:00p.m.
A staff member from CLC’s Enrollment Services Office will visit the Library
to answer questions about the college’s programs for new and returning
students. Stop by and get to know this great community resource better!
Voter Registration
Courtesy of the League of Women Voters
Saturday July 21,10 a,m. -2 p.m.
You may have heard that 2012 is a presidential election year! Come to the
Library and get registered! Please bring two forms of identification, at least
one of which must show your name and current address. Only one form of
identification can be a piece of mail for a contractual service addressed and
delivered to you.
Reading is So Delicious! Adult Summer Reading Program
Grades 11 to Adult
Saturday June 23 - Saturday August 18
2012 is a momentous year for the Deerfield Public Library and this year’s
Summer Reading Program is no different! The program kicks off on June 23
soon after we re-open in our temporary home in Cadwell’s Corners and
celebrates three significant themes: Eat, Move, and Read!
Participants who read, watch, or listen to five library titles this summer can
enter to win a cooking class for two at Northbrook’s Sur la Table or a
number of other prizes from local Deerfield eateries including Rosebud and
Tom & Eddie’s. Registration forms will be available on the library website
and at the Adult Services desk beginning Saturday, June 23.
® All Nrw AH
Joy
Special Book Discussion & Tasting
Joy of Cooking
hy Irma S. Rombauer, Marion Rombauer Becker, and
Ethan Becker, 2006.
Wednesday August 1, 6:30 - 8p.m. at Whole Foods
Cooking*'
Market Deerfield
Originally published in 1931, Joy of Cooking has been
through multiple editions and still remains one of the
most popular cookbooks in print. Join us at Whole Foods Market Deerfield
to discuss this classic American cookbook. Please cook one of the souffles
from the Egg chapter as well as 1 or 2 other recipes of your choice and we
will discuss your results. No need to bring your creations—Whole Foods will
provide a tasting after the discussion!
!«•>
r*.
Thursday Book Discussions
IS Hov/ to Eat a Small Country: A Family’s Pursuit
of Happiness, One Meal at a Time
by Amy Finley
July 12,10:30 a.m. at the Patty Turner Center
When the author wins a Food Network competition
and lands her own television show, her husband
declares he does not want to be married to a
celebrity. Determined to save their already
shaky marriage, Finley instead moves her family
to France.
■ The Weird Sisters by Eleanor Brown
July 19, 7:30 p.m. at Barnes & Noble—
Deerfield Square
The Andreas sisters love reading but have little
else in common. Rose never left their hometown,
Bean lives a fast life in New York, and Cordy floats
around as a gypsy. When their mother is diagnosed
with cancer the sisters are forced to interact with
each other as a family instead of hiding behind
a book.
■ Crescent by Diana Abu-Jabar
August 9,10:30 a.m. at the Patty Turner Center
The love story of Sirine, an L.A. born, half-Arab
blonde chef and Hanif, an exiled Iraqi professor
with a mysterious past. Their story takes place
among the scents of Sirine’s cooking at a Middle
Eastern cafe. Thought- provoking and enchanting,
you will become immersed in the delightful
characters of Crescent.
■ Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka
August 16, 7:30 p.m. at Barnes & Noble—
Deerfield Square
Follow the journey of eight “picture brides” who
travel by boat from Japan to San Francisco to
meet the Japanese workers they have agreed to
marry. Their stories of hope, family, culture, and
compromise span from the early 20th century to
the time of Japanese internment during World
War II.
�The Friends will remain active during Library renovations!
• Calling all Angels! Help fund the newest goal of purchasing
two additional book return drop boxes for the Library to
accommodate expanded volume during the move and beyond!
• Become a Friend of the Deerfield Public Library with an
annual membership! (form below)
• Be sure to browse the wide variety of used books, DVDs and
CDs, that will be sold during regular library hours in the
Library’s temporary home beginning June 11.
• Support the Friends of the Library at the Deerfield Farmers
Market on July 21 and September 15.
• After a short break from accepting donations, once the
temporary library space opens, the Friends will continue to
accept gently used hardback and paperback books, as well
as CD’s and DVD’s (No VHS tapes, textbooks or
encyclopedias, please). Cookbooks and children’s books for
our upcoming Farmer’s Market sales are especially welcome.
• The Friends welcome volunteers from the community to help
sort and shelve book donations. Any amount of time and
help is appreciated. Contact the Friends for more
information.
• See the Friends page on the Deerfield Library Website for a
listing of our upcoming meeting dates, times and location.
Community members and potential new volunteers are
always welcome.
The Friends can be contacted at (847) 945-3311, ext 8895
or at friends@deerfieldlibrary.org
FRIENDS OF THE DEERFIELD PUBLIC LIBRARY ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
* Please join the Friends of the Deerfield Public Library.
Your annual membership will enhance the materials and programs
f at our library so that it will better serve you and your family.
'e/tfPubV'cV
I would like to become a member of Friends of the Deerfield Public Library tor a year at the following level:
_$15-$29
$50-$99
$250-$499
Good Friend
Dear Friend
Loyal Friend
$30-$49
Family Friend
$100-$249 Best Friend
$500 +
Partner
NAME.
ADDRESS.
PHONE.
E-MAIL______________________________ __________________________________________ ________
□ Please check this box if you do not want your name listed in any publication.
Please make your check payable to: Friends of the Deerfield Public Library and mail or bring the form to:
920 Waukegan Rd. Deerfield, IL 60015
The Friends are a 501(c) (3) nonprofit group. Contributions may be deductible under IRS regulations.
Does your company have a matching gift program?
Thank you to our members who have joined for 2011-2012:
Good Friend
Anonymous
Susan Cramer
Lynn Fradkin
Sue Gottlieb
James Hill
Susan Karp
Diane Mazur
Kyle Nakazawa
Margo & James Oliff
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Robinson
Family Friend
Michele & Harvey Felman
Christine & Rob Cowan
Elaine & Frank Haney
James Hill
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Newhall
Barbara Reich
M.J. Turner, Jr.
Jan & John Zobus
Dear Friend
Ackerson Family
Karen & Patrick Dessent
Grainger Matching Gifts
Program
Susie & Barry Gray
James Hill
David, Glynis, Quinn & Jonah
Hirsch
Maxine & Larry Kane
Laura & Rick Kempf
Lynn Pivan
Lisa & Brian Schurgin
Ellen G. Wolff
Best Friend
Anonymous
Greta & Brian Davison
James Hill
Mary Pergander
Cheryl & Ron Simon
Eleanor Sylvan
Loyal Friend
James Hill
Claudia Katz
Partner
James Hill
i
�Children s Programs
I- R = Please register in advance in person, by phone at 847.945.3311 or
> online at www.deerfieldlibrary.org.
________
...
SSsS!
STORYTIMES
Storytime @ the Farmers
Market
Children and their parent or caregiver
Saturday, June 28,8-11 a.m,
A librarian from the Youth Services
department will be at the Farmers Market
presenting storytime alfresco! Children will
also be able to register for the Summer
Reading Program.
Drop-in Storytimes
Children and their parent or caregiver
Wednesday, June 27,10 a.m.
Wednesday July 18,10 a.m.
Wednesday, August 1,10 a.m.
Kick-off our book-inspired drop-in crafts
with a storytime! Join us for storytime, and
stay to make a fun craft to take home.
Book Discussion: The Candymakers by Wendy Mass
Thursday, July 19,4-5p.m. @ Whole Foods Market Deerfield
Grades 4-6
Registration begins Monday, June 18.
Four unusual 12-year-olds participate in the annual candy-making contest at the Life Is
Sweet candy factory in this yummy mystery told from each of their perspectives. Read the
book, then join us for a lively discussion followed by a treat-making workshop led by a
professional from Whole Foods Market! E3
Reading is So Delicious!
Children’s Summer Reading
Program
Children birth - 6th grade
Saturday, June 23 - Saturday,
August 18
Hungry for something fun to do this
summer? Children birth through 6th
grade are invited to register, keep track
of what they read, and check in with
Youth Services to win fun prizes!
Children who achieve their summer
reading goals will receive a paperback
book of their choice.
Stop by the Youth Services department
on or after Saturday, June 23 to register.
Children are encouraged to feed their minds with the biweekly trivia
challenges in the Youth Services department, as well as two guessing jars
during the Summer Reading Program.
Who do we appreciate??
Drop-in Crafts
Children and their parent or caregiver
10:30 a.m. - 8:30p.m.
Stop by the Youth Services department
to make a fun, book-inspired craft to
take home!
Wednesday, June 27: Painting inspired by
The Very Hungry Caterpillar by
Eric Carle
Wednesday, July 18: Dried pasta art
inspired by Cloudy With A Chance of
Meatballs by Judi Barrett
Wednesday, August 1: Coloring inspired by
The Popcorn Dragon by Jane Thayer
The following students were recognized
at the 2012 Optimist Youth Appreciation
Awards ceremony for their outstanding
contributions volunteering at the
Deerfield Public Library: Lindsey
Aaronson, Graham Ambrose, Amanda
Barr, Elizabeth Bartusiak, Emily
Bartusiak, Laura Bartusiak, Mackenzie
Bean, Ashley Benson, Hannah Benson,
Andrew Burmeister, Meili Burns, Andrew
Devedjian, Jordyn Drake, Megan Garrett,
Joe Gerber, Kate Henry, Evan Hoffman,
Marguerite Kelly, Erin Kim, Sarah Kim,
Sarah Kirby, Isabella Lackner, Garret
Lerman, Maddy Maroney, Henry Umlauf,
Ian Wright, and Anna Zimmerman.
THANK YOU!
Thank you to Tom & Eddie’s and Rosebud
Italian Country House and Pizzeria for
donating prizes to the Summer Reading
Program.
Big shout out to Barnes and Noble of
Deerfield Square, Whole Foods Deerfield,
Trax and the Patty Turner Center for
welcoming the library book discussions
and programs.
�□ = Please register in advance in person, by phone at 847.945.3311 or online at
www.deerfieldlibrary.org.
Resource Guide...while we’re
away, find out what resources
are available to you!
NEIGHBORING LIBRARIES
Need a study room, free WiFi, or to use a computer between now and June
11? Here’s a list of alternate libraries you can use after registering with them
as a reciprocal borrower. A word to the wise: some features like using a
study room or a computer may be limited to cardholders at that library. So
call in advance!
Eat Move Read! Teen Summer Reading Program
Saturday, June 23 - Saturday; August 18. Teens grades 7 and up
Is your Teen a ravenous reader? Teens grades 7 and up are invited to
participate in the Teen Summer Reading Program, by writing book, audiobook,
movie, or music reviews in the Library’s catalog. Teens who submit at least 5
reviews will be entered to win a variety of awesome prizes they can really sink
their teeth into, including Apple iPod Nanos and Apple iTunes gift cards.
Teen Summer Reading Program registration forms will be available on the
Teen page of the Library’s website and in the Teen area of the Library
beginning Saturday, June 23.
Pizza Bake-off
Wednesday, July 11, 5 - 6 p.m. @ Whole Foods Market Deerfield
Teens grades 7 and up. Registration begins Monday, June 18
Is your teen a natural competitor in the kitchen? Bring your budding chef to
Whole Foods Market Deerfield for a “Top Chef’ themed cooking class. Teens
will be divided into groups that will have a budget and a set amount of time to
get all of the necessary ingredients needed to make a unique and delicious pizza!
Each pizza will be judged on appearance, creativity, teamwork and taste! El
Teen Book Discussion: Feed by M.T. Anderson
Thursday, August 2, 4 p.m. @ Starbucks Deerfield
Teens grades 7 and up. Registration begins Monday, June 18
Join the Teen Librarian at Starbucks (675 Deerfield Rd, next to Chipotle) for
a book discussion to feed your read! Swap your thoughts and opinions and
ei\joy a free drink. El
FREE ACT Practice Test
Saturday, August 25,10:30a.m. - lp.m. @ Jewett Park Community Center
Registration begins Monday, June 18
Taking a full length, proctored ACT practice test is the best preparation for
the actual exam. You’ll learn what to expect on test day and receive a
complete analysis of your results. Bring #2 pencils, a calculator, wear
comfortable clothing, and leave your cell phone in the car. Participants will
receive their scores via email approximately 2 weeks after the exam. Register
now to save a seat! Please note: the practice test includes ail aspects of the
actual test except for the essay portion. El
Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Teens grades 7 and up
Looking for ways to be seen and heard at the Library? As a TAB member you
can come up with programming ideas for Teens at the Library; help create
content for the Library’s Teen Web page; help out with Teen programs at the
Library; and give input for the new Teen space. Plus, any hours you contribute
to TAB meetings and programs count as volunteer service in the community!
For more information and meeting dates contact Teen Librarian Nina Varma
at teensemces@deerfieldlibraiy.org or check out the Teen Events page of the
Library’s website.
Northbrook Public Library
(3.3 miles from 920 Waukegan Road)
1201 Cedar Ln„ Northbrook, IL 60062
www.northbrook.info
Main number: 847-272-6224
Highland Park Public Library
(3.4 miles from 920 Waukegan Road)
494 Laurel Ave., Highland Park, IL 60035
www.hplibrary.org
Main number: 847-432-0216
Vernon Area Public Library District
(6.3 miles from 920 Waukegan Road)
300 Olde Half Day Rd., Lincolnshire, IL 60069
www.valpd.info
Main number: 847-634-3650
ELECTRONIC RESOURCES
While the Library is temporarily closed, the following electronic resources
will remain available:
Library website
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
Online reference databases
www.deerfieldlibrary.org/deerfield/onlineresources.asp
With your Deerfield Public Library card, you can access many useful online
databases including business, medicine, literature, genealogy and general
interest periodicals.
Tutor.com
Live one-to-one tutoring assistance is available for students of all ages every
day from 2 p.m. - 9 p.m.. Use study guides, watch video lessons, find job
seeking tools, and other resources available 24/7.
Illinois State Library (ISL) Ask A Librarian
For answers to simple, quick reference questions up to 160 characters in
length, you can text a librarian at the Illinois State Library in Springfield.
Send a text to (217) 953-0575. The body of the text must start with the
keyword ASKISL, followed by a space, followed by your question. The
Illinois State Library does not charge for this service but the message and
data rates that some cell phone service carriers charge still apply. Available
Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
INTERRUPTED SERVICES
The following services will be unavailable while the Library is temporarily
closed May 19 through June 10:
• Library catalog
• MyMediaMall (Service available intermittently)
• Library phones and email
• Deerfield Public Library Ask A Librarian
STAY IN THE KNOW...
• Sign up for our Be the First to Know E-news by visiting our website at
www.deerfieldlibrary.org.
• Like us on Facebook and get updates on what’s happening with
our relocation and renovation.
Please note that Library staff will not be able to receive or
respond to phones or emails until June 11. Subscribing to our
E-news will be the best way to stay informed about updates that
affect patrons.
�iir.r.Hi’iKU)
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
New temporary home at CadweWs Corners
7N. Waukegan Road
Important Library Numbers
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
• Telephone: 847-945-3311
° TTY: 847-945-3372
® Library Home Page and Catalog:
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
° E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibrary.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfieldlibrary.org
• FAX: 847-945-3402
| IPRINTED WITH
• TEXT US at 847-790-4TXT (4898)
l^lSOYlNK
Announcements
THE LIBRARY WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY Wednesday, July 4
Monday, September 3
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergander, Library Director
Library' Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretary
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
THE LIBRARY WILL OPEN AT 10 A.M. Thursday, July 19
A Milestone!
We now begin the next phase of our Library Improvement Project. From May 19 through June 10
we will be moving and readying our temporary home at Cadwell’s Corners. We look forward to
welcoming you there starting June 11. Then the demolition, remodeling, and expansion of our
permanent Library begins in earnest!
We appreciate your patience through these changes, and we look forward to serving you
again soon.
Ken Abosch
President
Sunday Mueller, TYeasurer
847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Maiy Courtney • 847-945-9460
marycourtnejTnail@gmail.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg * 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Library Hours
Mon.-Thurs:
Friday:
Saturday:
Sunday:
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
Can’t wait to show you around!
Come visit us at our new temporary home at Cadwell’s Corners
(NE corner of Waukegan and Lake Cook Road)
on Monday, June 11, between 9 a.m and noon., get a quick tour
and eqjoy light refreshments.
Bring this invitation with you between June 11th and June 18th
and enter to win a Barnes & Noble Nook!
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Summer 2012
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 28, No. 1
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
06/2012
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.104
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
June - August 2012
Amanda Barr
American College Test (ACT)
American Cookbooks
Amy Finley
Andrew Burmeister
Andrew Devedjian
Anna Zimmerman
Ashley Benson
Barbara Reich
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Barry Gray
Bean Andreas
Brian Davison
Brian Schurgin
Buddha in the Attic
Cadwell's Corners
Cheryl Simon
Chipotle
Christine Cowan
Claudia Katz
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs
College of Lake County
College of Lake County Enrollment Services Office
Cordy Andreas
Crescent
David Hirsch
Deerfield Farmers Market
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Catalog
Deerfield Public Library Donations
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library First to Know eNewsletter
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Online Resources
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library Staff
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Deerfield Public Library Temporary Building
Deerfield Public Library Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Square
Diana Abu-Jabar
Diane Mazur
E.L. James
eBooks
Elaine Haney
Eleanor Brown
Eleanor Sylvan
Elizabeth Bartusiak
Ellen G. Wolf
Emily Bartusiak
Eric Carle
Erin Kim
Ethan Becker
Evan Hoffman
Feed
Fifty Shades of Grey
Food Network
France
Frank Haney
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Book Sale
Garret Lerman
Glynis Hirsch
Graham Ambrose
Grainger Matching Gifts Program
Greta Davison
Hannah Benson
Harvey Felman
Henry Umlauf
Highland Park Illinois
Highland Park Public Library
How to Eat a Small Country
Ian Wright
Illinois State Library
Illinois State Library Ask a Librarian
iPod Nanos
Iraq
Irma S. Rombauer
Isabella Lackner
iTunes
James Hill
James Oliff
Jan Zobus
Jane Thayer
Japan
Japanese American Internment
Jeffrey Rivlin
Joe Gerber
John Zobus
Jonah Hirsch
Jordyn Drake
Joy of Cooking
Judi Barrett
Julie Otsuka
Karen Dessent
Kate Henry
Kenan Abosch
Kyle Nakazawa
Larry Kane
Laura Bartusiak
Laura Kempf
League of Women Voters Deerfield - Lincolnshire
Lincolnshire Illinois
Lindsey Aaronson
Lisa Schurgin
Los Angeles California
Lynn Fradkin
Lynn Pivan
M.J. Turner Jr.
M.T. Anderson
Mackenzie Bean
Maddy Maroney
Margo Oliff
Marguerite Kelly
Marion Bombauer Becker
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Pergander
Mary Robinson
Maxine Kane
Megan Garrett
Meili Burns
Michael K. Goldberg
Michele Felman
Mrs. Robert Newhall
My Media Mall
New York City New York
Nook eReader
Northbrook Illinois
Northbrook Public Library
Optimist Youth Appreciation Awards
Patrick Dessent
Patty Turner Senior Center
Quinn Hirsch
Rick Kempf
Rob Cowan
Robert Newhall
Ronald Simon
Rose Andreas
Rosebud Italian Country House and Pizzeria
San Francisco California
Sarah Kim
Sarah Kirby
Searchable PDF
Springfield Illinois
Starbucks
Sue Gottlieb
Sunday G. Mueller
Sur la Table
Susan Cramer
Susan Karp
Susie Gray
The Candymakers
The Popcorn Dragon
The Very Hungry Caterpillar
The Weird Sisters
Tom and Eddie's
Top Chef
Trax Tavern and Grill
Tutor.com
Vernon Area Public Library District
Voter Registration
Wendy Mass
Whole Foods
WiFi
World War II
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/763a47c967d10eda55d96d4ef66c7b56.pdf
9f23ab2c4cab1ebd4bcf3a43319791c9
PDF Text
Text
W
:
;
U
V
t
'
Vd Public Lib
t>e
FAST FACTS
%ifj,
°lUnie 27, Number U
WHAT?
Message from the President
Deerfield Public Library is expected to move to
Cadwell’s Corners as a temporary site during
the remodeling and expansion of the 40 year old
current library building.
The current Libraiy is 32,500 sq. ft. The
temporary home will be about 22,000 sq. ft.
Regarding our temporary library home
We have reached another milestone in our Library Improvement Project. We
are finalizing lease negotiations with the owners of the Cadwell’s Corners
shopping center. The former furniture store is the anticipated temporary home
for Deerfield Public Libraiy. We are also seeking approval from the Village of
Deerfield. The Library Board would like to thank resident Jack Frigo for his
invaluable service in guiding us through the temporary property selection process.
WHERE?
The Deerfield Public Library is currently
located at 920 Waukegan Road in Deerfield.
Cadwell’s Corners is 1.3 miles south, at the
north east corner of the intersection of
Waukegan Road and Lake Cook Road in
Deerfield. The Libraiy will occupy the far south
unit, formerly the Honquest furniture store.
The space is only two-thirds the size of our current building. Nevertheless, we
are committed to continuing quality library services while occupying our
temporary home. Through creative planning we will be able to bring our full
collections of books, movies, and music. There also will be computers for
adults and children. Some of our programs and meetings will be held off-site,
and we appreciate the cooperation of the Village, Park District, School
District 113 and local businesses to make this possible.
WHEN?
The Libraiy is expected to close its 920
Waukegan Road site in early May and reopen at
the Cadwell’s Corners site in early June.
The temporary home is expected to open in June, just in time for the Summer
Reading Clubs. Changes to that site will be minimal - just enough for safety
and comfort. We want to focus our construction dollars on the permanent
location, rather than the temporary one.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
There are many ways to learn more and follow
our progress:
• Go to our website at deerfieldlibrary.org.
Updates will be posted regularly.
• While there, sign up for Be First to Know,
our e-newsletter, and the news
will come to YOU!
• Follow us on Facebook for
updates and links.
Once we are out of our current facility, the construction work will commence
and last about a year. Then we will have the privilege of welcoming you back
to our current location.
Ken Abosch
Libraiy Board President
"•
i
j
!
■»
In'*■»
I .
V wortgfe -iT1
r.
M i>i jrt
i* ••• ii*
rj
•>!
*
■ ■ □u
c~J£VH§fRVICES
INFO DESK
."yoUTH*
DESK,.^-, •
COMPUTERS
a 'i.
V
: :
r n
r.___L
JL
if:
r* -fii i-
lectrica
"1. ■" I"
Pi
* "
! i? r
g £ Z : ill i:j ill
YA BOOKS
I i 6 i
•
3 "j
�E-book Demand and Collection
Continue to Grow
The library e-book checkout rose by 25 percent
in December alone! The Library’s e-book
collection continues to grow with demand as
we purchase extra copies of high-demand titles
just for Deerfield cardholders. New to e-book
borrowing? Staff are happy to help you download
a title. Please contact us with your questions,
or schedule a one-hour session with a librarian
who will walk you through the process. You can
also find handy guides to the Kindle, Nook, and
iPad on our website home page.
Deerfield Cardholders Can Now
Place Holds on DVDs
Based on community feedback, the Library has
updated its system to allow Deerfield
cardholders to place holds on DVDs. That
means if your favorite movie or the next season
of your show is checked out you can simply
request it at the library or via our online
catalog and we will call or email you when it is
available for pickup! Due to high demand, New
DVDs remain first come, first served.
Just
1«ens
Test Stress?
Up late studying for the SAT. and AC.T.?
Not to worry—the Library has got your
back! Not only do we offer books with
practice tests and studying techniques, but
there are also e-books and e-audiobooks
available through MyMediaMall, the
Library’s digital library. Come on in or give
us a call if you need help using
MyMediaMall to download to your e-reader
or mobile device.
TAB
The Library’s Teen Advisory Board (TAB) is
looking for new members! Join the Teen
Librarian for meetings to discuss ideas for
teen programs, come up with themes and
displays for the Teen Space, offer
suggestions for developing the teen blog
and website, and brainstorm ideas for
outreach in the community. Your
participation counts as volunteer hours and
your ideas will help shape the Teen area at
the Library!
While most adult programs are on hiatus as we prepare to move to our temporary location, we
are happy to report that the Patty Turner Center and Deerfield Barnes & Noble have graciously
agreed to host library book discussions starting this April. For more staff reading recommenda
tions and book news please check out our blog, Running with Books, on our website homepage.
Pick up books at the Library one month in advance.
ooeoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeooooooo
Book Discussions
^ The Submission by Amy Waldman
April 12,10:30 a.m. at the Patty Turner
Center
What would happen if a Muslim won a
contest to design the 9/11 memorial in
NYC? Waldman examines the controversies
that ensue by looking at the lives and
interactions of politicians, businessmen,
journalists and ordinary people.
■ The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman
April 19, 7:30 p.m. at Barnes & Noble
Deerfield
Set against the backdrop of Rome, eleven
stories follow the private lives of the
reporters, editors, and executives of an
international English language newspaper.
As the era of print gives way to the Internet
age, they struggle to keep the paper afloat.
□ The Cookbook Collector by Allegra Goodman
May 10,10:30 a.m. at the Patty Turner Center
Mix drama, love, romance and complex
characters together and you get The
Cookbook Collector. A story about two
sisters who are complete opposites leads us
to think about the ways we live our lives.
□ Little Princes: One man’s promise to
bring home the lost children of Nepal
by Conor Grennan
May 17, 7:30 p.m. at Barnes & Noble
Deerfield
While volunteering at an orphanage in
Nepal, Grennan realizes that the children
residing there were taken from their
families by human traffickers. Grennan risks
life and limb travelling through treacherous
terrain in order to reunite these abandon
children with their families.
S.T.A.R. Volunteers
S.TAR. Volunteers assist the Youth Services department with the Summer Reading
Program by taking reports from participants, passing out prizes, and engaging children in
discussion about books. If you are between the ages of 12 - 17, stop by the Youth Services
department and pick up an application. Applications will be made available starting
Monday, April 9 in the Library, and on the Children’s page of the Library Web site.
Questions? Email Nina Varma at teensemces@deerfieldlibrary.org.
Stoichiometric Coefficients and Molar Ratios
“Mom, can you help me with my homework?”
We suppose that there are some parents who might say, “Cool—first check the stoichiometric
coefficients and the molar ration.” If you’re not that parent, then you need to know about
Tutor.com, a premium service offered free by the Library that provides real homework
help from real, live tutors online. Students K -12, college-level students and adult
learners can receive help in math, social studies, English or science—including Chemistry.
Access to Tutor.com is available free through the Web site to all patrons at the
Library, and available to Deerfield Public Library cardholders from home seven days
a week from 2-9 pm.
For Teens Only — We need your feedbflLk!
Do you want to see your input reflected in the soon-to-be remodeled Teen Space? Think of
your absolute favorite place to hang out. Where is it, and what are two things that make it
so awesome?
Surveys are available now! If you are between the ages of 12 and 17, check out the
Library’s Facebook Page for a link to the survey or stop by the Teen Space in the Library
and fill out the survey in person. For more information, contact Nina Varma at teenservices@deerfieldlibrary.org.
�What Are Friends For? Supporting the Deerfield Public Library, of course!!
• Become a Friend of the Deerfield Public Library with an
annual membership! (form below)
• Friends’ funding has recently provided for the expansion of
the Blu-Ray collection, one of the self-checkout stations, and
an additional early literacy station in Youth Services.
• Be sure to browse the wide variety of used books, DVDs and
CDs, sold during regular Library hours in the first floor
meeting room. Please pay for books at the Patron
Services desk.
• The Friends continue to accept gently used hardback and
paperback books, as well as CDs and DVDs (No Textbooks or
Encyclopedias, please). Please bring donations to the Patron
Services Desk.
• The Friends welcome volunteers from the community to
help sort and shelve book donations. Any amount of time
and help is appreciated. Contact the Friends for more
information.
• The Board of the Friends will meet on February 29,2012
and May 23,2012 at 7pm at the Deerfield Village Hall.
Community members and potential new volunteers are
always welcome
• Thanks for participating in the Sazonoff Writing Contest,
sponsored by the Friends of the Library.
The Friends can be contacted at (847) 945-3311, ext 8895
or at friends@deerfieldlibrary.org
FRIENDS OF THE DEERFIELD PUBLIC LIBRARY ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
0%
*
* Please join the Friends of the Deerfield Public Library.
^ ^ Your annual membership will enhance the materials and programs
# at our library so that it will better serve you and your family.
V
I would like to become a member of Friends of the Deerfield Public Library for a year at the following level:
,$15-$29
,$50-$99
,$250-$499
Good Friend
Dear Friend
Loyal Friend
$30-$49
Family Friend
$100-$249 Best Friend
$500 +
Partner
NAME.
ADDRESS.
PHONE.
E-MAIL
□ Please check this box if you do not want your name listed in any publication.
Please make your check payable to: Friends of the Deerfield Public Library and mail or bring the form to:
920 Waukegan Rd. Deerfield, IL 60015
The Friends are a 501(c) (3) nonprofit group. Contributions may be deductible under IRS regulations.
Thank you to our members who have joined for 2011-2012:
Good Friend
Lynn Fradkin
Sue Gottlieb
Susan Karp
Diane Mazur
Kyle Nakazawa
Margo & James Oliff
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Robinson
Family Friend
Dorothy & Ed Collins
Michele & Harvey Felman
Elaine & Frank Haney
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Newhall
Barbara Reich
Jan & John Zobus
Dear Friend
David, Glynis, Quinn &
Jonah Hirsch
Laura & Rick Kempf
Lynn Pivan
Lisa & Brian Schurgin
Ellen G. Wolf
Best Friend
Greta & Brian Davison
Mary Pergander
Eleanor Sylvan
�STORYTIMES Registration begins Monday, March 5
For >our
child'* safety—
Baby Lapsit Storytime
Preschool Pals - Fours
Fridays, April 13 and April 27,10:30
a.m, Ages 0-12 months and their
parent or caregiver
It’s never too early to start reading to
your baby! Join us for a Baby Lapsit
Storytime program with rhymes,
books, and songs for you and your
baby, plus social time after the
program. □
and Fives
Mondays, March 12, March 19,
April 2, and April 9, 2:15 p.m.
OR
Wednesdays, March 14, March 21,
April 4, and April 11,10:45a.m.
Ages 4-5 years, but not yet in
Kindergarten and their parent
or caregiver
Preschoolers and their caregivers
have a program just for them! We’ll
listen to stories, sing songs, and have
fun all while getting ready to read! 13
Fun for Ones
Tuesdays, March 13, March 20,
April 3, and April 10,10:30 am.
Ages 13 - 23 months and their
parent or caregiver
One-year-olds and their parents or
caregivers are invited to a storytime
just for them including stories, songs,
movement activities, rhymes, and
social time after the program. This
action-packed program will engage
new walkers in early literacy activities
and encourage a love of books and
reading. □
Time for Twos
Thursdays, March 15, March 22,
April 5, and April 12,10:30 a.m.
Ages 24-35 months and their
parent or caregiver
T\vo-year-olds and their caregivers are
invited to a special weekly storytime,
including stories, songs, and
movement activities with playtime at
the end. □
Preschool Pals - Threes
Mondays, March 12, March 19,
April 2, and April 9,1:30 p.m. Age 3
years and their parent or caregiver
Preschoolers and their caregivers
have a program just for three-yearolds! We’ll listen to stories, sing songs,
and have fun all while getting ready to
read! □
After School Stories
Thursdays, March 15, March 22,
April 5, and April 12, 4:30 p.m.
Grades K-2
This program is specifically designed
for younger elementary school
children and features stories and
crafts. Caregivers must remain in the
Library. 13
Sensory Storytime: Stories
and Emergent Literacy
Activities for Children with
Special Needs
Saturdays, March 17 and March 24,
2p.m. Children ages4-8with
parent or caregiver
This award-winning series of
storytimes engages all of the senses
through music, movement, stories,
and play. This storytime is designed
for children who have autism, sensory
processing disorder, or difficulties
sitting still, but the program is
inclusion-friendly. □
;>
Would you leave your child
unattended in the bakery
section of the grocery?
Just like the grocery store or a public park, the
Library is open to the general public.
For the safety of all children who visit the
Library, children 8 years of age and younger
must be accompanied and directly supervised by
a responsible caregiver who assumes full
accountability for the children’s safety and
behavior in the library. We ask that parents and
caregivers take their children with them as they
explore other parts of the Library, so that the
children are accompanied by their responsible
caregiver at all times.
Family tours now available!
Whether your family is new to Deerfield or you
have a child with special needs, the Youth
Services Department would like to extend a
friendly welcome to the Library! Have a
personalized tour led by a Youth Services staff
member and the chance to hear about all the
Library has to offer. Please contact Youth Services
Librarian Renee Grassi at 847-945-3311 ext. 8864
to arrange.
Nina Varma, Youth Services
Librarian
We happily welcomed full-time librarian
Nina Varma to the Youth Services department
in October. Nina received her MLIS from
Michigan State University and comes to
Deerfield from the Teen Department at the
Clinton-Macomb Public Library in Clinton
Township, Michigan. Nina is friendly, creative,
and loves working with both children
and teens.
�DROP-IN ACTIVITIES
Annual Bookmark Contest
Monday, March 5 through Monday,
April 9. Grades Preschool - 8
Pick up your entry forms in the Youth
Services department or on the Children’s
page on the Library Web site. Bookmarks
will be on display for voting during the
month of April. The overall favorite will be
given out during our Summer Reading
Program. Please, only one entry per person.
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing
Contest Reception
Saturday, March 10,2p.m. Children and
their parents or caregivers
All children who participated in this year’s
“What are Friends For - Rosemary
Sazonoff Writing Contest” are invited to
this event. First-place winners in each
age category will read their entries and
receive their prizes. Light refreshments
will be served.
Family Times
Saturdays, March 3-April28,11 a.m.
All ages and their parent or caregiver
Come to the Youth Services department for
a drop-in storytime for the whole family.
Drop-in Crafts
10 a.m. - 8p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Stop by the Youth Services department to
make a fun and seasonal craft to take home!
Wednesday, March 7: Happy Birthday,
Dr. Seuss!
Wednesday, March 28: Happy Birthday,
Harry Houdini!
Wednesday, Apnl 4: Happy Birthday,
Sandra Boynton!
Wednesday, Apnl 18: Celebrate Earth Day!
Storytime, Milk & Cookies at
Panera Bannockburn
Tuesdays at 9:30 a.m.
March 6, March 20, April 3, Apnl 17
Children and their caregivers are invited to
Panera Bannockburn for storytime, milk,
and cookies.
FAMILY AND HOMESCHOOL PROGRAMS
Registration begins Monday, March 5. These events are open to children of all ages
with their parent or caregiver. Contact Youth Services Librarian Kate Easley for
more information at keasley@deerfieldlibraiy.org or (847) 945-3311 ext. 8865.
Book Discussion, Storytime, and Craft
Monday, March 19, 2012,1:30-3 p.m.
Older readers will discuss The Viewfrom Saturday by E.L. Konigsburg and younger
readers will discuss by Betty Hicks. After the book discussions, everyone will join in a
fun craft. □
Project Fair
Monday, Apnl 16, 2012,1:30-3p.m.
Children are welcome to share any project they have worked on this school year. Last
year we heard historical speeches, watched science demonstrations, and listened to
children play their instruments. Feel free to share whatever project you epjoyed the
most this year! □
Go Beyond Google... Business Resources Edition
Let the Deerfield Public Library work for you! Your personal or business library
card allows you to access our online resources from the convenience of your office
for FREE. Try ReferenceUSA which provides current information for more than 15
million companies and over 100 million consumers in the United States and
Canada. Find a specific company or person with a Quick Search or customize your
search by zip code, NAICS code, sales volume and more.
Standard & Poor’s NetAdvantage is the library’s newest online subscription.
Use Quick Links to access the most popular content like the S&P 500, MidCap or
SmallCap. Employ the Simple Search to find companies, funds, and the Register of
Corporations, Executives and Directors. Plus, for those just learning about
investments and finance, use the Financial Education tab to learn anything and
everything about investing, obtaining a loan, or creating a budget.
Looking to start a new business? A terrific print resource is the 2011 How to
Wnte a Business Plan by Mike McKeever, located in the adult nonfiction collection.
For reliable FREE websites, try the U.S. Small Business Administration at
www.sba.gov and Illinois Legal Aid at www.illinoislegalaid.org and search for “start
a business.” Both resources also provide free help for established small businesses.
Never in your office and always on the road? We have added mobile services to
facilitate your business needs. Access IM through our online catalog or library
website OR text us at 847-790-4TXT. For more information on more great resources
or business library cards call 847-945-3311, email reference@deerfieldlibrary.org,
IM or text!
Hicks Grants Recipients
The Board of Trustees has announced the spring recipients of the Jack Alan Hicks
Scholarship Fund: Renee Grassi, Kary Henry, Andrew Lorenzi, Claudette Ori,
Kay Palecek, Rebecca Wolf. The fund was established in 2006 to honor the long
and dedicated career of Administrative Librarian Jack Hicks. It provides grants in
amounts of $100 to $500 to assist Deerfield Public Library employees in furthering
their professional development.
�nFJF.RFIKI.l)
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Important. Library Numbers
• Telephone: 847-945-3311
° TTY: 847-945-3372
• Library Home Page and Catalog:
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
• E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibrary.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deeifieldlibraiy.org
• FAX: 847-945-3402
• TEXT US at 847-790-4TXT (4898)
PRINTED WITH
^ SOY INK
Announcements
THE LIBRARY WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY Sunday, April 8
THE LIBRARY WILL OPEN AT 10 A.M. Tuesday, April 24
THE LIBRARY WILL OPEN AT 1 P.M. Friday, March 23
THANK YOU!
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergander, Library Director
Library’ Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretary'
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Sunday Mueller, Treasurer
847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Mary Courtney • 847-945-9460
maiycourtneymail@gmail.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-9404049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg • 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
library Hours
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Mon.-Thurs:
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Friday:
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Saturday:
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday:
Congratulations to all 229 families who participated
in the Library’s “Pop Open a Good Book” Winter
Reading Program to read a combined total of 9,520
hours this winter season! Thank you to McDonalds,
who kindly donated vouchers for free kids’ meals as an
added incentive for kids to achieve their reading goals.
The Youth Services department would like to
acknowledge the S.T.A.R. Volunteers who assisted
with the Winter Reading Program by signing up
families for the program and distributing prizes.
Thank you for all that you do!
Many Deerfield schools have generously shared their
students’ art to the ongoing display in the Youth
Services department this past year. Contributors
include: Deerfield Community Nursery School,
Deerfield Park District Preschool, Holy Cross
School, Kipling Elementary, South Park Elementary,
Walden Elementary, Wilmot Elementary, Caruso
Middle School and Shepard Middle School. Thank
you for sharing your artistic talents with the Deerfield
community!
The Library Board thanks Jack Frigo of Frigo
& Company for his pro bono assistance with our
temporary location.
We Remember.
t •
The Board of
Trustees and
staff of
Deerfield
Public Library
were deeply
saddened to
learn of the sudden passing of our
former, long-time library director
Jack Alan Hicks in late
December. He was hired in 1972
as a Reference Librarian, and
then served as Administrative
Librarian from 1988 until his
retirement in June of 2006. Jack
was a library icon throughout the
State, an early innovator of
library technology, and created an
experience for Deerfield Public
Library patrons which was unique
among Illinois libraries. Our
thoughts are with his family
and friends.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Spring 2012
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 27, No. 4
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
03/2012
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.103
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
March - May 2012
9/11 World Trade Center Attacks
Allegra Goodman
American College Test (ACT)
Amy Waldman
Andrew Lorenzi
Bannockburn Illinois
Barbara Reich
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Betty Hicks
Blu-Ray Format
Brian Davison
Brian Schurgin
Cadwell's Corners
Caruso Middle School
Claudette Ori
Clinton Township Michigan
Clinton-Macomb Public Library
Conor Grennan
David Hirsch
Deerfield Community Nursery School
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Park District
Deerfield Park District Preschool
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Bookmark Contest
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Electronic Book Collection
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Homeschooling Services
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Instant Message Reference
Deerfield Public Library Online Resources
Deerfield Public Library Patron Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library S*T*A*R Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Self Checkout Stations
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Survey
Deerfield Public Library Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Deerfield Public Library Teen Space
Deerfield Public Library Temporary Building
Deerfield Public Library Unattended Child Policy
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Winter Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Family Tours
Deerfield School District #113
Deerfield Village Hall
Diane Mazur
Doctor Seuss
Dorothy Collins
E.L. Konigsburg
Early Literacy Station
eBooks
Ed Collins
Elaine Haney
Eleanor Sylvan
Ellen G. Wolf
English
Frank Haney
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Board
Frigo and Company
Glynis Hirsch
Google
Greta Davison
Harry Houdini
Harvey Felman
Hicks Grants
Holy Cross Catholic School
Honquest Furniture Store
How to Write a Business Plan
Human Trafficking
Illinois Legal Aid
Jack A. Hicks
Jack Frigo
Jack Hicks Scholarship Fund
James Oliff
Jan Zobus
Jeffrey Rivlin
John Zobus
Jonah Hirsch
Kary Henry
Kay Palecek
Kenan Abosch
Kipling Elementary School
Kyle Nakazawa
Laura Kempf
Lisa Schurgin
Little Princes: One Man's Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal
Lynn Fradkin
Lynn Pivan
Margo Oliff
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Pergander
Mary Robinson
Masters in Library and Information Science (MLIS)
McDonalds
Michael K. Goldberg
Michele Felman
Michigan State University
Mike McKeever
Mrs. Robert Newhall
Muslim American
My Media Mall
Nepal
New York City New York
Nina Varma Michael
Panera Bread
Patty Turner Senior Center
Professional Development
Quinn Hirsch
Rebecca Wolf
Reference USA
Renee Grassi
Rick Kempf
Robert Newhall
Rome Italy
Ronald Simon
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest
Running with Books
Sandra Boynton
Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT)
Searchable PDF
Shepard Middle School
South Park School
Standard and Poor's NetAdvantage
Sue Gottlieb
Sunday G. Mueller
Susan Karp
The Cookbook Collector
The Imperfectionists
The Submission
The View From Saturday
Tom Rachman
Tutor.com
Tutor.com Live Homework Help
United States Small Business Administration
Walden School
Wilmot School
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/a0a3508f0506c93bad8382fb4a8b1262.pdf
2c5810642b83047eec76e1acd50bbe6c
PDF Text
Text
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
e<"e
Id Public Lib
>■ ary
<5e
_
' *7
«“/■
Message from the Dii’ector
Building project update
As this newsletter goes to
print, we continue to
evaluate possible sites for
our temporary location,
including creating
preliminary floor plans to
test for suitability, and
exploring lease rates and conditions. Once
the final location is agreed upon and the
lease signed, we will make only the minimal
changes necessary to meet building codes
and make the spaces usable for our
purposes. Nothing fancy! We will also obtain
a special use permit from the Village to
operate the site as a temporary Library.
*r*»;*'m
LAV
Our move from the current building to an
interim site is planned for late spring. Some
meeting room functions and programs will
be curtailed around mid-December, as we
begin packing and preparing for the move.
Be assured that as soon as we know where
we’re going to be, we’ll let the community
know all the details, including—
importantly—how we will continue to
provide great service.
We’re also moving forward with the
renovation of the current Library, including
making final design decisions for the
interior, selecting the color palette with
floor and wall finishes, and creating
construction drawings for the project. We
have selected Mortenson as the
Construction Management firm.
You can follow our progress on our website
and Facebook, or by attending our board
meetings. Please see our website for dates,
times, locations, and prior board meeting
minutes, too.
Mary Pergander
0,«me 27, Numbet
E-book Collection E-xpands
The demand for e-books is skyrocketing, and we are making
a^ustments to better serve you. For example, we are
dedicating more dollars to extra copies of titles for which
there are long waiting lists, and ONLY Deerfield cardholders
will be eligible for those added copies. This will lessen the
time our patrons spend waiting for a popular e-book. We will
also temporarily adjust our materials budget while we are in
the small temporary space to purchase additional e-books to
meet demand.
%
BOOK
On Track for Deerfield’s Winter Celebration December 3rd
A very special run of very special model
trains by our friends at North Central
O’Gaugers is a highlight of Deerfield’s
&
hi
*
Winter
Celebration, Saturday, December
t it *■
3,9
a.m.
to 4 p.m. This must-see model
fy*:
r
railroad exhibit features fictional
favorites like Thomas the Tank Engine
and The Hogwarts Express, as well as
popular regional and historical lines.
The O’Gaugers annual visit is one of the Library’s most popular family
programs, and presenting it over Deerfield’s Winter Celebration makes it
even more special. Children of all ages will er\joy this all-day event!
i
■
P
I
ga
P
jy
m
Trix, Transformers and TRAINS!
The Libraiy is happy to be a designated drop-off spot for both the West
Deerfield Township Food Pantry AND Toys for Tots during Deerfield’s
Winter Celebration on Saturday, December 3rd. So come see the model
trains and—if you choose—take the opportunity to bring a nonperishable food item, personal care or household cleaning product for
the Food Pantry and a new, unwrapped toy for Toys for Tots. Your
generosity helps make the season a little brighter!
Library Trustees in the Lobby
December 3rd, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Stop by and ask questions or share your ideas
�MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
Please register in advance in person, by phone (847-945-3311) or online at
www deerfieldlibrary o rg.
Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2
December 12, 6:30p.m.- 8:45p.m
It only seems fitting to show the final chapter of the Harry Potter series on our
last Monday Night Movie before the long-awaited Library renovation! Watch the
epic finale and the climactic showdown between Hariy and Lord Voldemort.
Rated PG-13 ®
Book Discussions
((l LOVED this book!”
December 8,10:30 a.m.
What better way to end the year than by discussing our faves—the books
we read this year that we loved, that we couldn’t put down, the books that
we told our family and friends that they HAD to read? Please come
prepared to talk about the book—or books—that you loved.
Looking ahead, the Library’s book discussions will be taking a hiatus this
winter as we prepare for our move to the temporary location. Please watch
for information about the dates and locations when the book discussions
resume in the spring. If you are interested in participating in an online
book discussion, please contact Melissa at reference@deerfieldlibrary.org.
Ask Us via Text or Instant Message
You can now contact the reference desk via text and instant message (IM), in
addition to phone or email. Text and IM are perfect for resolving quick factoid
spats like who was Harry Truman’s vice president, what was the name of that
book about the circus magicians or answering that last minute question before
book club. Send an instant message straight from our home page or text us at
847-790-4TXT (4898). We look forward to hearing from you—no matter how you
get in touch!
Want the First Season of Bones? Get it All-in-One!
Have you ever looked for the latest season of your favorite show only to find that
disc one was checked out? This fall we started packaging television seasons
together rather than splitting discs into individual cases for checkout, so you
won’t miss an episode! As always, we welcome your feedback about this and any
other changes here at the Library.
Meeting Room News
Our busy meeting rooms are going to be put to a different use while we gear up
for the move to the interim site. Because both the large meeting room and the
lower level conference room need to be dedicated to staging, sorting, and
storage of moving materials, we have reluctantly decided that we won’t be able
to take reservations for meetings held after December 15th.
Our apologies to all the homeowners associations, non-profit, civic and
educational groups, boy scouts, girl scouts and more that keep our meeting
rooms hopping. We’ll look forward to seeing you back in our newly refurbished
meeting space in 2013!
2
Library Poets
Tuesdays, 6:30 - 8:45p.m.
NOTE: Group meets at the Patty Tuner Center,
375 Elm Street, starting January 3rd.
Local poets are encouraged to share their work,
inspiration, and creative processes. The group is
open to poets 18 and older of all levels of
experience and actively seeks new members.
Great Decisions
Tuesdays, January 24 - March 20, 7:30 - 9 p.?n.
Group will meet at Village Hall, 850 Waukegan
Road, in the Community Confei'ence Room
Tom Jester coordinates thoughtful discussions
and stimulating analyses of some of the great
issues of our time. Discussion guidebooks will be
available for purchase at the Circulation desk
after January 10.
Deerfield Boys in Blue:
A Civil War Program
Tuesday, November 29, 7 p.m.
Step into Deerfield, 1860, with historical
researcher Bill Kiddle, and see what everyday life
was like and how dramatically it would change
when the Civil War broke out. This interactive
program introduces the audience to some of the
Deerfield men who joined the Union army. How
did their families cope? How much information
reached Deerfield from and about their loved
ones? Join us for an hour that will make this
150th anniversary year local and personal. A
partner program of the Library and the Deerfield
Area Historical Society. □
Who Knows What Evil Lurks
in the Hearts of Men???
If you already know the answer to
that question—or if you want to—
check out the Radio Classics
available as e-audiobooks at the
Library. It’s easy:
1. Go to the Library’s home page
and type in Radio Classics in the Search field.
2. In the Format box on the left side of the page,
click on e-audiobooks.
3. When you make your selection, click on the
information located to the right of the first
arrow underneath the title. It will take you to
My Media mall where you can start
downloading to your computer or other device.
If you need help downloading, stop by the
Reference or Multimedia Desks for help!
�Go Beyond Google
• • •
Sometimes, you just need more information—or you need to be sure that the
information you're getting is accurate, current and reliable—than the
results of an “I’m feeling lucky” Google search. Here are two true stories
featuring websites recommended by ourfully-qualified research
professionals, also known as Reference Libranans!
MedlinePlus
Recently, I had a patron ask for information on diabetes. The patron was just diagnosed
and looking for reliable information but without all the medical jargon. In addition to our
books (located in non-fiction, call #616.462), I introduced the patron to my favorite go-to
place for medical information, medlineplus.gov. I love this site for several reasons. First,
it is specifically written for patients, their families, and friends creating one of the most
easily understood medical information sites out there. Second, it is produced by the
National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health making it one of
the most reliable places to obtain information about diseases, conditions, and other
medical issues.
MedlinePlus has three very helpful sections, “Health Topics”, “Drugs & Supplements” and
“Videos and Cool Tools”. “Health Topics” is like an encyclopedia and provides an overview
of the topic including symptoms, treatments, prevention and much more. The “Drugs &
Supplements” section answers questions about why a medication would be prescribed and
how it should be used. The “Video and Cool Tools” portion offers interactive tutorials and
videos regarding specific topics. After reviewing these segments, the patron was thrilled
with the information we discovered! This resource provided the patron with an easy to
understand explanation of diabetes without dumbing down the information. As a bonus,
the patron felt much more confident about what questions to ask the doctor during the
next visit.
CNET
AARP Tax-Aide Moves to
the Patty Turner Center
AARP Tax-Aide—a free tax help
service the Library has hosted for
many years—will relocate to the
Patty Turner Center as the Library
begins its own relocation to an
interim site. Starting February 3,
IRS certified volunteers for the
AARP will be on hand every
Tuesday and Friday through
April 13 from 1-4 p.m. at the
Patty Turner Center, 375 Elm
Street, 847-9404010. You don’t
need to be an older adult, a member
of the AARP, or the Patty Turner
Center to receive assistance. Please
bring copies of last year’s returns
and all tax forms you receive (W-2s,
1099s, etc.). Please call the Patty
Turner at 847-9404010 starting
Monday, January 30, to make
an appointment.
A patron needed some help choosing a tablet computer. She was going on vacation and
needed something that would allow her to watch a movie on the plane, check her e-mail,
and read an e-book, and it still had to fit in her bag. After taking a look at Consumer
Reports online (available free to Deerfield cardholders on the Library’s website), I
introduced her to CNET.com, a website known for its technology reviews and how-tos. She
watched videos of tablet shopping tips and reviews, compared web speed and battery life
of different models, and read thoughtful reviews from CNET editors. She was able to
search through the list of tablets by price range, manufacturer, screen size, and more. She
found two that she really liked and she was going to see what they looked like in person at
the store. She was a happy camper!
CNET is a great way to stay up-to-date with technology. They review everything from cell
phones to GPS systems to digital cameras. Their video reviews are especially informative,
since they spend time going over the whole device, showing off all the buttons and
demonstrating how it actually works. They also offer a lot of information and advice on
what to purchase and how to use it in your daily life. It’s an interactive website with
videos, podcasts, and more traditional articles. They invite readers to post comments and
suggestions, so there’s plenty of real-world feedback as well. The website can seem a little
busy, with all of the different information they’re sharing, but they do make it easy to
search by category or by reviews, videos, and how-tos. I would definitely recommend this
website to anyone interested in up-to-date tech reviews and information, and especially
for people who get more from watching reviews than reading them.
Toys for Tots
Drop off new, unwrapped toys in the
Toys for Tots collection box in the
Library lobby now through
December 15th. This annual drive,
sponsored by the U.S. Marine Corps
Reserve, has been putting smiles on
the faces of needy youngsters for
over 60 years.. .be a part of it!
Hint: Books make GREAT giftsfor
kids of any age!
3
�STORYTIMES Registration begins Monday, November 28
Baby Lapsit Stoiytime
Preschool Pals
Trains in a Winter Wonderland
Fridays, January 6 and January
20,10:30 a.m. Ages 0-12 months
and their parent or caregiver
It’s never too early to start reading to
your baby! Join us for a Baby Lapsit
Storytime program with rhymes,
books, and songs for you and
baby, plus social time after the
program. 13
Mondays, January 2\ January 9,
January 16, and January 23
3’s at 1:30p.m. and 4’s & 5’s at 2:15
p.m.
Or
Wednesdays, January 4, January
11, January 18, and January 25
3’s at 10 a.m, and 4’s& 5’s at 10:45
a.m* Ages 3-5 years, but not yet in
Kindergarten and their parent or
caregiver
Preschoolers and their caregivers
have a program just for them! We’ll
listen to stories, sing songs, and
have fun all while getting ready to
read! 13
Saturday, Decembers, 9 a.m. -4p.m.
All Ages
The North Central
‘0’ Gaugers present a
must-see railroad
exhibit featuring
fictional favorites
like Thomas the Tank
Engine and the Hogwarts Express, as well as
popular regional and historic lines. Children of
all ages will ei\joy this all-day event!
Fun for Ones
Tuesdays, January 3, January 10,
January 17, and January 24,10:30
a.m. Ages 13 - 23 months and their
paren t or caregiver
One-year-olds and their parents or
caregivers are invited to a storytime
just for them, including stories,
songs, movement activities, rhymes,
and social time after the program.
This action-packed program will
engage new walkers in early literacy
activities and encourage a love of
books and reading. 13
Time for Twos
After School Stories
Thursdays, January 5, January 12,
January 19, and January 26,
4:30p.m. Grades K-2
This program is specifically designed
for younger elementary school
children and features stories and
crafts. Caregivers must remain in
the Library. 13
Thursdays, January 5, January 12,
Sensory Storytime:
January 19, and January 26,10:30
a.m. Ages 24-35 months and their
Stories and Emergent
parent or caregiver
Literacy Activities for
IWo-year-olds and their caregivers
Special Needs Children
are invited to a special weekly
Saturdays,
January 14 and.
stoiytime, including songs and
movement activities designed just for January 28,2 p.m. Children ages 4
- 8 with parent or caregiver
them in the Storytime Room. 13
This award-winning series of
stoiytimes engages all of the senses
through music, movement, stories,
and play. This stoiytime is designed
for children who have difficulties
with sensoiy processing or simply
sitting still, but the program is
inclusion-friendly. If your child needs
any special accommodations, please
let us know at the time of
registration. 13
4
DROP-IN ACTIVITIES
Family Times
Saturdays, December 3 - January 28,11 a.m.
All ages and their parent or caregiver
Come to the Stoiytime Room for a drop-in
stoiytime for the whole family.
Drop-In Craft
Wednesday, December 14,10 a.m. - 8p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Stop by the Youth Services department to make
a fun and seasonal craft to take home!
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest:
What are Friends For?
Wednesday, February 1 - Wednesday, February 29
The Library’s 16th Annual Creative Writing
Contest welcomes stories, poems, or essays
about friendship. The contest honors the
memory of Library trustee, community activist,
and journalist Rosemaiy Sazonoff. Children
grades 2-8 may submit short, unpublished
pieces of creative writing on the theme “What
are Friends For?” by February 29. First place
winners in each age category will receive a
prize. Entry forms and more information will be
available at the Youth Services desk and online
beginning Wednesday, February 1.
Storytime, Milk & Cookies at
Panera Bannockburn
Tuesdays at 9:30 a.m.
December 6, December 20, January 3, January
17, February 7, and February 21
Children and their caregivers are invited to
Panera Bannockburn for storytime, milk, and
cookies.
�SPECIAL PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN AND FAMILIES Registration begins Monday, November 28
Family Treat Workshop
© Highsmilh. LLC.
Used by Peimission
Wednesday, December 14, 7p.m.
Gmdes K-5 with their parent or
caregiver
Calling all aspiring chefs! Join
professionals from Whole Foods MarketDeerfield as they show you how to make
your very own seasonal treats. You’ll be
taking home your treats to share or keep
for yourself! 10
Family & Homeschool
Programs
These events are open to children of
all ages with their parent or
caregiver. Contact Youth Services
librarian Kate Easley for more
information at
keasley@deerfieldlibrary.org or
(847) 945-3311, ext. 8865.
Pop Open A Good Book! Family Scrapbook This!
Saturday, December 17,11 a.m.
Winter Reading Program
Saturday, December 10 - Saturday,
January 7
In this four-week family program,
eveiyone can contribute toward reaching
the family’s reading goal. In addition to
providing reading incentives, the Library
will host juggler Jason Kollum for a fun
and interactive kick-off show on
Saturday, December 10! 10
■
I
<7)itv-»-
Grades 4-6
Jocelyn Tobias from Defining Moments
will demonstrate how to make a mini
paper bag scrapbook that is perfect to
keep for yourself or give away this
holiday season. Light refreshments will
be served! 10
K-9 Reading Buddies of
the North Shore
Monday January 23, 6:30 - 7:30p.m.
Grades 1-5
Read to four-legged friends in this safe,
non-judgmental program. 10
i
.
.
Book Discussion, Storytime,
and Craft
Monday, January 23,1:30 -3 p.m.
Older readers will discuss “Chasing
Vermeer” by Blue Balliett and younger
readers will discuss “My Father’s
Dragon” by Ruth Stiles Gannett. There
will be stories for the pre-readers.
After the book discussions, everyone
will join in a fun craft. □
Field Trip: Local
Government
0
See A Juggler! Be A Juggler!
Saturday, December' 10,2 p.m.
All ages
Children and adults will love this fun and
interactive program presented by
entertainer Jason Kollum.” First is the
Rock n’ Roll Variety Juggling Show with
tons of audience participation, and huge
balancing and juggling stunts. Then,
everybody participates and gets a chance
to be the juggler! 10
Games
Monday, December 19,1:30 -3 p.m.
Bring your own game or play one of
ours as we gather in the Library for
some fun social time before the
holidays. □
Sundance and Marlee
Cold and flu season is here!
Do you have a child home sick from
school? Don’t worry about dragging them
out of bed to come pick out something to
read. Simply call the Youth Services
department at (847) 580-8962. Youth
Services staff are happy to make recommendations,select materials, put them on
the self-service hold shelves, so that you
can quickly stop by and pick them up.
Monday, February 13,1:30 - 2:30 p.m.
Join us for a tour of the Village Hall
and a discussion about local
government. Please meet at the
Deerfield Village Hall. 10
5
�Library Improvement
Plan FAQ
Q: How are “green” practices and
energy-saving features being
incorporated into the Library
Improvement Project?
The Library—staff and Trustees—and
the professionals at PSA Dewberry, are
all committed to making the renovated
building as green as possible. Here’s a
list of items already incorporated in
the plan:
• We will monitor construction
activities for possible pollution in
and around the site.
• Additional green spaces will be
added to the parking lot.
• Many native and drought tolerant
plants will be used in landscaping.
• There will be secure bike racks near
the building to encourage
fewer cars.
• To reduce heat-island effect the roof
has a high solar-reflectance index.
• The interior lighting will be light
harvesting and occupant-sensing.
• Restroom fixtures will be low-flow.
• We will allocate space for increased
recycling.
• Where possible, building products
and finishes will incorporate
recycled materials.
• Where appropriate, building
materials and products will come
from within 500 miles of the site.
• Adhesives, sealants, primers, paints,
etc. will be low in volatile organic
compounds.
• Where possible, flooring and
furnishings will be low-emitting as
well.
• The design team includes LEED
professionals in architecture,
engineering, and interior design.
What Are Friends For?
2012 Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest
Sponsored by
The Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
The Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest is a Deerfield “exclusive,” as was the
well-known local writer and Library Trustee the contest honors and remembers.
This year, thanks to the generous sponsorship of the Friends of the Deerfield
Public Library, we’ve refreshed and energized this 16 year Library tradition with
several new interesting ideas, including new prizes, a great theme and more.
But first, like all good news stories, let’s start with the facts:
• Theme: “What Are Friends For?”
• Entry forms for both adults and children will be available February 1st at the
Library and online on the Library’s website.
• Deadline for submissions is February 29th.
• Winners will be announced mid-March.
For Adults:
• Adults - including high school students - may submit any unpublished
original story, essay or poem no more than 1,000 words in length that answers
the question “What Are Friends For?” or explores, explains or expresses the
value of friendship.
• Adult entries can be submitted via email at sazonoff@deetfieldlibrary.org or
on paper.
• Cash prizes for adult winners—1st place, $200; 2nd place, $100; and
3rd place, $50.
• An informal public reading of the three winning entries, supported by
local publicity.
• Questions? Contact Jody Wilson at 847-580-8954.
For Children:
• Writers Grades 2-8 may submit short, unpublished pieces of creative writing
on the theme of friendship.
• Entries from writers in Grades 2 - 8 can be submitted on paper OR via email
atyouthservices@deerfieldlibrary.org.
• First place winners in each age category will receive a Barnes & Noble
gift card.
• Questions? Contact Youth Services at 847-580-8962.
^ds °%
*
^
g
*
O
%
'e/</Pub^V
6
Many thanks to the Friends of the Deerfield Public
Library for sponsoring this year’s Rosemary Sazonoff
Writing Contest and for all that they do for the
Library!
�What Are Friends For? Supporting the Deerfield Public Library, of course!!
• Become a Friend of the Deerfield Public Library with an
annual membership! (form below)
• Share your story, participate in the Sazonoff Writing Contest,
sponsored by the Friends of the Library.
• The Friends had a very successful cookbook and children’s
book sale at the Deerfield Farmers’ Market on Saturday
September 17, 2011. Thanks to all who stopped by!
• Friends funding has recently provided for: the expansion of
the Blu-Ray collection, one of the self-checkout stations, and
an additional early literacy station in the children’s library.
• Be sure to browse the wide variety of used books, DVDs and
CDs, sold during regular Library hours in the first floor
meeting room. Please pay for books at the Patron Services
desk.
• The Friends continue to accept gently used hardback and
paperback books, as well as CD’s and DVD’s (No Textbooks
or Encyclopedias, please). Please bring donations to the
Patron Services Desk.
° The Friends welcome volunteers from the community to help
sort and shelve book donations. Any amount of time and
help is appreciated. Contact the Friends for more
information.
0 The Board of the Friends will meet on November 30,2011 at
7 pm at the Deerfield Public Library and on February 29,
2012 (location TBD). Community members and potential
new volunteers are always welcome.
The Friends can be contacted at (847) 945-3311, ext 8895 or at
friends@deerfieldlibrary.org.
FRIENDS OF THE DEERFIELD PUBLIC LIBRARY ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION
v
*
£>
£
>-
Please join the Friends of the Deerfield Public Library.
Your annual membership will enhance the materials and programs
at our library so that it will better serve you and your family.
c/</PubV'c
1 would like to become a member of Friends of the Deerfield Public Library tor a year at the following level:
_$15-$29
_$50-$99
_$250-$499
Good Friend
Dear Friend
Loyal Friend
$30-$49 Family Friend
$100-$249 Best Friend
$500 + Partner
NAME.
ADDRESS.
PHONE.
E-MAIL
□ Please check this box if you do not want your name listed in any publication.
Please make your check payable to: Friends of the Deerfield Public Library and mail or bring the form to:
920 Waukegan Rd. Deerfield, IL 60015
The Friends are a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit group. Contributions may be deductible under IRS regulations.
Thank you to our members who have joined for 2011-2012:
Good Friend
Lynn Fradkin
Sue Gottlieb
Susan Karp
Diane Mazur
Kyle Nakazawa
Margo & James Oliff
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Robinson
Family Friend
Elaine & Frank Haney
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Newell
Barbara Reich
Dorothy & Ed Collins
Jan & John Zobus
Dear Friend
Laura & Rick Kempf
Best Friend
Greta & Brian Davison
Mary Pergander
Eleanor Sylvan
7
�Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
paid
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
DEEKFIKLD
Important Library Numbers
G Telephone: 847-945-3311
• TTY: 847-945-3372
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
• Library Home Page and Catalog:
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
i
° E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibraiy.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfieldlibraiy.org
• FAX: 847-945-3402
• TEXT US at 847-790-4TXT (4898)
7*^7|PHIHTEP with
SOY INK
Announcements
THE LIBRARY WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY Thursday, November 24th
Saturday, December 24th
Sunday, December 25th
Sunday, January 1st
Monday, February 20th
THE LIBRARY WILL CLOSE AT 5 P.M. Wednesday, November 23rd
Saturday, December 31st
THE LIBRARY WILL OPEN AT 10 A.M. Tuesday, November 22nd
Friday, December 16th
Thursday, January 19th
Wednesday, February 22nd
THANK YOU!
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergander, Library Director
Library Board Members value
your opinions!
Thank you to all of our friends at Barnes &
Noble of Deerfield Square for letting
Clifford, Peter, Curious George and the Cat
in the Hat visit the Library this year!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretary
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Sunday Mueller, Treasurer
847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Maiy Courtney • 847-945-9460
maiycourtneymail@aol.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg • 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Library Hours
Mon.-Thurs:
Friday:
Saturday:
Sunday:
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
The Youth Services department is grateful
to Susan Knaack and her team from
Adventures with Bailey for assisting with
Read to Rover: A Special Needs Storytime
program in September.
A big thank you to the volunteers from the
Lake County Astronomical Society for
leading another session of the wildly
popular Moon Over Deerfield program in
September.
Thanks to the Friends of the Deerfield
Public Library for the generous donation of
an iPad, Nook, and Kindle for use in library
demonstrations and programs. Library staff
members are happily using the tablet and
e-readers to show patrons how to download
titles from MyMediaMall and for our e-book
downloading classes.
We are EXTREMELY grateful to the
INCREDIBLY talented and committed
members of this year’s One Book, One Zip
Code committee: David Hirsch, Marisa
Fiorito and Erin Kempf from Deerfield
High School; Cathy KecUic(jian representing
District 109; Andrew Lichterman from the
Village of Deerfield; Jeffrey Marks
representing the Deerfield Fine Arts
Commission; Rita Kirby representing
Bannockburn; Sherry Kaplan representing
Riverwoods; Donna Stupple from the
Deerfield Area Historical Society; Joan
Simonds from The Patty Turner Center;
Lynne Samuels from Grand Times, and Lori
Harris, our wonderful community
representative.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Winter 2011
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 27, No. 3
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
12/2011
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.102
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
December 2011 - February 2012
Adventures with Bailey
Amazon Kindle eReaders
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
American Civil War
Andrew Lichterman
Bannockburn Illinois
Barbara Reich
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Bill Kiddle
Blu-Ray Format
Blue Balliett
Bones
Brian Davison
Cathy Kedjidjian
Chasing Vermeer
Clifford
CNET.com
Construction Managers
Consumer Reports
Curious George
David Hirsch
Deerfield Area Historical Society
Deerfield Farmers Market
Deerfield Fine Arts Commission
Deerfield High School
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees Trustee in the Lobby
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Electronic Book Collection
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Homeschooling Services
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Instant Message Reference
Deerfield Public Library Meeting Rooms
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library Patron Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Poets
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library Self Checkout Stations
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Temporary Building
Deerfield Public Library Text Reference
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Winter Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield School District #109
Deerfield Square
Deerfield Village Hall
Deerfield Winter Celebration
Defining Moments
Diabetes
Diane Mazur
Donna Stupple
Dorothy Collins
Early Literacy Station
eAudiobooks
eBooks
Ed Collins
Elaine Haney
Eleanor Sylvan
Erin Kempf
Facebook
Foreign Policy Association Great Decisions Program
Frank Haney
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Book Sale
Google
Grand Times
Greta Davison
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II
Harry S. Truman
iPad
James Oliff
Jan Zobus
Jason Kollum
Jeffrey Marks
Jeffrey Rivlin
Joan Simonds
Jocelyn Tobias
Jody Wilson
John Zobus
Kate Easley
Kenan Abosch
Kyle Nakazawa
Lake County Astronomical Society
Laura Kempf
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)
Lori Harris
Lynn Fradkin
Lynne Samuels
Margo Oliff
Marisa Florito
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Pergander
Mary Robinson
MedlinePlus
Melissa Stoeger
Michael K. Goldberg
Mortenson
Mrs. Robert Newell
My Father's Dragon
My Media Mall
National Institutes of Health
National Library of Medicine
Nook eReader
North Central O-Gaugers Model Railroad Club
North Shore K-9 Reading Buddies
One Book One Zip Code
Panera Bread
Patty Turner Senior Center
Peter Rabbit
PSADewberry
Radio Classics
Rick Kempf
Rita Kirby
Riverwoods Illinois
Robert Newell
Rock 'n' Roll Variety Juggling Show
Ronald Simon
Rosemary Sazonoff
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest
Ruth Stiles Gannett
Scrapbooking
Searchable PDF
Sherry Kaplan
Sue Gottlieb
Sunday G. Mueller
Susan Karp
Susan Knaack
The Cat in the Hat
The Hogwarts Express
Thomas Jester
Thomas the Tank Engine
Toys for Tots
Union Army
United States Marine Corps Reserve
West Deerfield Township Food Pantry
Whole Foods
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/a5b21607d7bc93720205da3739b32554.pdf
bf650b0b5f4717d9ab6525e0efc1546b
PDF Text
Text
r
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
Message from the Director
We are moving right along in our remodeling and
expansion plans. Currently, we are completing the design
approvals process through the Commissions and the Village Board.
We are also looking for a suitable temporary site during construction.
Here is our estimated calendar:
• September, 2011 — Begin creating construction documents
• January, 2012 — Go out for construction bids
• February, 2012 — Move into temporary site
• April, 2012 — Begin construction on remodeling and expansion
• Late fall 2013 — Return to 920 Waukegan
We appreciate the input and feedback we receive from residents along the way, whether through our public information
sessions, emails and comment cards, visits with our Board members at Farmers Markets or just in line at the grocery store!
In discussions about the building project, we are often asked how the Library is addressing the rapid increase in electronic
formats for books and movies. We already have e-books and e-audios available, along with a limited video selection.
Currently, e-book demand is surpassing our available copies. We will soon make more e-book copies of popular titles
available to our users, while still offering a wide selection of new and beloved print books. We are taking these changes into
account as we plan the new spaces for the Library, allowing MORE to be the dominant word—more books through the
combination of print and e-formats, more space to read in a comfortable chair, more room for individuals using laptops,
more private spaces for small group discussions, more space to spread out study materials.
Throughout the changes to come, we will continue to share our developing plans and progress with residents through our
website, print newsletter, Facebook, and other means. We hope you will follow along!
Mary Pergander
�International Literacy Day @ the Library
Thursday, Septembers10a,m. -2p.m.
Libraries all over the world participate in raising awareness of the joys of
helping people learn to read, improve their reading skills and improve their
lives through literacy. This year, we're joined by our friends from the Literacy
Volunteers of Lake County. Meet them in the Library’s lobby between 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m. to learn more.
Read it Loud and Close!
Thursday September 15, 7p.m.
Join David Hirsch, who teaches the book at
Deerfield High School, for an extremely
interesting and incredibly rewarding reading
experience.
neBook
Zip Code
\
lie Book
Zip Code
Tuesday September 20, 7p.m.
Come to a “byte size” 15 minute overview of how to search and download
e-audiobooks, e-books and videos available through the Library. ID
“Man on Wire”
iwp
\
neBook
Zip Code
m
I
mu
Basic MS Excel 2010
Saturday September 24,10:30 a.m.
Learn the basics of spreadsheet software including how to enter information,
change the look of your document, use formulas, print and save. Basic
computer skills are required. ID
2
I
Saturday October 1, 2:30 p.m.
Find out how to set up your own Facebook
account and join the social networking
revolution. A working email account is
required. ID
“Holy Cow! What was so GREAT
about that Fire??”
e-books @ Your Library—Byte Sized
Thursday, September 22, 7p.m.
This fascinating documentary
■ill A
_If
looks at tightrope walker Philippe
gal Petit's daring, but illegal, highgH wire routine performed between
New York City's World Trade
A
Center's twin towers in 1974. A
V
mood of anticipatory sadness and
1
nostalgia for a pre-9/11 world
suffuses the film and “Man on
Wire” celebrates their most
uplifting, poetic moment. □
Monday, September 26, 7p.m.
Join Jessica Redish, founding artistic
director of The Music Theatre Company,
Highland Park's Professional Theatre, and
performers for an evening of songs and new
works. Redish will also share some of her
experiences in founding a viable musical
theatre on the Northshore. A partner
program of the Deerfield Public Library
and the Deerfield Fine Arts Commission. ID
Facebook
Poets’ 9/11
Sunday, September 18,2 p.m.
Join members of the Library's poetry group as they read
their original work inspired by 9/11 or by the themes in our
One Book, One Zip Code selection “Extremely Loud and
Incredibly Close.” ID
The Music Theatre Company—
Songs and New Works
Saturday, October 8, 2 p.m.
It's the 140th anniversary of the Great
Chicago Fire and Professor David
Groeninger from the College of Lake
County visits the Library for a family
program all about the Fire. Learn just how
much we owe that darn cow. Co-sponsored
by the Deerfield Area Historical Society. ID
Author Visit: Raymond Benson
“The Black Stiletto”
Wednesday October 12, 7p.m.
Raymond Benson, who lives in Buffalo
Grove, will give us the inside story on the
familiar locales—Riverwoods, Buffalo Grove
and Arlington Heights—he uses in his new
book and more. Mr. Benson will have copies
of “The Black Stiletto” available and will be
happy to sign one for you. ID
■>
e-Books @ Your Library
Saturday, October 15,10:30 a.m.
Libraiy staff walks you through finding
compatible devices, looking up titles in our
e-collection, placing holds, and
downloading the Library’s available eaudiobooks, e-books and videos to ereaders, smart phones and computers. ID
�Israel and Germany—
An Unlikely Friendship
Wednesday, November 9, 7p.m.
What at first glance seems to be a rather
unlikely relationship, especially in light of
their shared history, Germany and Israel
have developed both a blossoming friendship
and a successful economic bond. Join
German historian Anette Isaacs—on the
73rd anniversary of K?istallnacht—for a
fascinating discussion of this unlikely
friendship. ID
World Diabetes Day—
Special Presentation
Monday, November 14, 7:00 p.m.
Co-sponsored by Whitehall of Deerfield, local
diabetes expert Steve Freed will discuss how
to prevent diabetes and improve the lives of
those with diabetes. □
e-books @ Your Library—
Byte Sized
Tuesday, November 15, 7p.m.
Come to a “byte size" 15 minute overview of
how to search and download e-audiobooks,
e-books and videos available through
the Library. ID
Organize Your Desktop
Saturday, November 19, 3:30 p.m.
Are your computer files a mess? Do you
spend way too much time trying to find the
documents you need? Come learn how to
create order out of chaos in this introduction
to the best way to organize your computer.
ID
Book Discussions in the Library
Copies of these books will be available at the self-service holds
shelf a month before the discussion.
■ The Reluctant Fundamentalist
by Mohsin Hamid
Thursday, September 8,10:30 a.m.
A young Muslim
\
neBook
American, Changez
is living the
Zip Code
American dream,
with an education at an Ivy League
college and a high-paying job, until
the events of September 11th turn
his life upside down and force
him to confront his personal
allegiances.
■ Extremely Loud and Incredibly
Close by Jonathan Safran Foer
Thursday, September 22, 7:30 p.m.
Our One Book,
One Zip Code
neBook
community wide
Zip Code
reading selection
for 2011 is “Extremely Loud and
Incredibly Close” by Jonathan
Safran Foer. Told in the precocious
voice of 9-year-old Oskar Schell,
this highly original and moving
story is full of the boy’s longing for
his father, killed in the attacks on
the World Trade Center. Oskar is on
a quest to find the lock that fits a
mysterious key. Oskar’s journey
explores what it means to go on
living after such great loss. Led
by popular Readers’ Services
librarian, Melissa Stoeger, this
book discussion is appropriate for
people who have read the book
(spoiler alert!).
■ The Housekeeper and the
Professor by Yoko Ogawa
Thursday, October 13,10:30 a.m.
A strange relationship blossoms
between a brilliant math professor
suffering from short-term memory
problems and the young housekeeper,
the mother of a ten-year-old son,
hired to care for him, in an enchant
ing novel that explores what it
means to live in the present and to
be part of a family.
■ The Lotus Eaters by Tatjana Soli
Thursday, October 20,7:30 p.m.
In the final days of a falling
Saigon, The Lotus Eaters tells
the story of three remarkable
photographers brought together
under the impossible umbrella of
war and how they are transformed
by the conflict they have risked
everything to record.
■ Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand
by Helen Simonson
Thursday, November 10,10:30 a.m.
Major Ernest Pettigrew leads a
quiet life in the village of St. Mary,
England until an unexpected
friendship with Mrs. Ali, the
Pakistani shopkeeper, blossoms
into something more. The Major
and Mrs. Ali find their relationship
challenged by local prejudices that
view Mrs. Ali, a Cambridge native,
as a perpetual foreigner.
■ Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand
Thursday, November 17, 7:30 p.m.
In this best-selling book,
Hillenbrand tells the amazing story
of former Olympic athlete turned
war hero, Louie Zamperini.
Zamperini spent over two years in a
Japanese POW camp after his
plane crashed in the Pacific Ocean
during a routine search mission.
3
�MONDAY NIGHT MOVIES
Please register in advance. All movies—except “The Birds”—start at 6:30p.m.
September 12: “Tron: Legacy” PG
Sam Flynn has been haunted for years by the disappearance of his father. When
he receives a signal from an old video arcade he finds himself pulled into a
digital world where his father has been trapped for 20 years. Can Sam find his
father and find a way for the two of them to escape this world?
October 10: “The King’s Speech” Rated R for language
This is the story of King George VI, who unexpectedly becomes king of England
while battling a serious speech impediment. With the help of an unorthodox
speech therapist he overcomes his problems and leads his country.
October 24: Special Halloween Double Scaiy Double Feature:
“The Birds” (PG) and “Psycho” (R)
‘The Birds” starts at 4:00 p.m. followed by “Psycho” at 6:30 p.m. Comefor both
or take them one at a time.
Join us for a special Halloween screening of two of Alfred Hitchcock’s classic
horror films. Kick start the adrenaline with the still disturbing 1963 film “The
Birds.” You’ll never be able to look a chaffinch in the eye again! If your heart can
stand it, stay for “Psycho,” considered one of the greatest horror and suspense
films of all time. A young woman steals a small fortune, goes on the run, gets lost
in the rain and ends up at the Bates Motel. Don’t get in that shower!
November 7: “Jane Eyre” PG-13
After a tough childhood, Jane Eyre goes out into the world and becomes a
governess for the well-to-do Mr. Rochester. They grow close and soon Jane Eyre
falls in love with her employer. But does Mr. Rochester have a secret that will
keep them apart? The latest (2011) of over two dozen film and television
adaptations of this Gothic classic.
TIEN PROGRAMS
Reading—it’s free, it’s fun
and you can do it anywhere
(except driving, of course!)
ftq
if :1 ’«2
’? " "
si!
This year's Teen Read Week
theme is Picture It @ your
library®, which encourages
teens to read graphic novels
and other illustrated materials,
seek out creative books, or imagine the world through literature. Come check our
growing collection of over 600 graphic novels between October 16 and 22!
icwmM
s
FREE PSAT and SAT Practice Tests
Saturday October 1,10 a.m.-12:30p.m. (PSAT)
Saturday November 19,10 a.m-2:30p.m. (SAT)
Taking full length proctored PSAT and SAT practice tests is the best preparation for
the actual exam. You’ll learn what to expect on test day and receive a complete
analysis of your results. Bring #2 pencils, a calculator, wear comfortable clothing, and
leave your cell phone in the car. Participants will receive their scores via email a
week after the exam. Register for one or both in person, online at deerfieldlibrary.org
or by phone (847) 945-3311.
1
0/f/Pub\^
Get to Know our Friends!
° Through the generous support of the
community by purchasing used books at
the library and annual memberships, the
Friends were able to help fund the new
collection of over 300 Blu-ray discs,
available to check out free.
° Saturday September 17 is our eagerly
awaited used cookbook and children’s
book sale at the Deerfield Farmers
Market.
• Used books are sold during regular
Library hours in the first floor meeting
room. Please pay for books at the Patron
Services desk. The Friends continue to
accept gently used hardback and
paperback books, as well as CDs and
DVDs. Please bring donations to the
Patron Services Desk. Donations of
cookbooks and children’s books are
especially appreciated right now!
• The Friends welcome volunteers from
the community to help sort and shelve
the used book donations. Any amount of
time and help is appreciated. Please
contact the Friends for more
information.
• The Board of the Friends will meet on
November 30 at 7 p.m. at the Deerfield
Public Library. Community members and
potential new volunteers are always
welcome.
• The Friends can be contacted at (847)
945-3311, ext 8895 or at
friends@deeifieldlibrary.org.
• The Board of the Friends recently held
officer elections!
Laura Kempf and Elaine Haney,
Co-Presidents
Mary Oppenheim, Secretary
Barb Reich, Treasurer
A huge thank you to our outgoing officers:
Susan Karp, President
Bonnie Novak, Secretary
�ne Book
Zip Code
9/6 Patty Turner Center
8:45 a.m.
l
Mohawk Ironworkers at the World Trade Center
Mohawk ironworkers were among the many who
built the Twin Towers in the 1960s and would be
among the first to heed the call for workers to
dismantle the wreckage of the terrorist attacks of
9/11.
9/11 Deerfield Village Hall
2:00 p.m.
What it was Like—A Talk by Rabbi Aaron Melman
Rabbi Melman was a student chaplain for the New
York Fire Department on September 11.
9/12 Deerfield High School
6:30 p.m.
Face Time with Jonathan Safran Foer
Interview with the author (via Skype), conducted
by David Hirsch. Whitehall of Deerfield will host a
drawing for a Nook and Barnes & Noble gift cards.
9/13 The Patty Turner Center
8:45 a.m.
9/11 Retrospective by Prof. Tom Mockaitis
Dr. Mockaitis appears regularly as a terrorism
expert for WGN-TV News.
9/14 The Patty Turner Center
10:30 a.m.
Book Discussion: “Extremely Loud and
Incredibly Close”
9/15 Deerfield Public Library
7 p.m.
Read it Loud and Close program headed by
David Hirsch
9/18 Deerfield Public Library
2 p.m.
Reading of original poetry about 9/11 or the book
9/21 Bannockburn Village Hall
7:30 p.m.
Book Discussion: “Extremely Loud and
Incredibly Close”
Late October
Details TBD Original Readers’ Theatre
Performance Original Readers’ Theatre
performance by the DHS Drama department.
We’re Reading
Together, Again!
Our community-wide reading program, One
Book, One Zip Code, coincides with the 10th
anniversary of September 11,2001, an event
that drives the plot of this year’s selection,
“Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close,” by
Jonathan Safran Foer.
In the book, nine-year-old Oskar Schell embarks
on a secret mission to find the lock that matches
a mysterious key that belonged to his father,
who died in the World Trade Center on the
morning of September 11. This brings Oskar
into contact with survivors of all sorts on an
affecting, often funny, and ultimately healing
journey.
The 10-year anniversary played a big role in the
One Book, One Zip Code committee’s selection.
“One way we learn about the past is through
stories,” says David Hirsch, long time member
of the committee. “Fiction is a powerful vehicle
for us to explore our relationships with each
other and with events like 9/11. One of the most
wonderful things about reading this book at this
time is that it enhances both the experience
of reading and our understanding of the com
plexities of 9/11. We hope that this book adds a
significant layer to the commemoration of 9/11.”
Another way we hope to add a “significant
layer” to this important remembrance is
through our programming. On Sunday,
September 11, following the civic ceremony at
Deerfield Village Hall which starts at 1:30 p.m,
Rabbi Aaron Melman of Temple Beth Shalom
in Northbrook will speak about his personal
experiences as student chaplain of the New
York Fire Department on 9/11. At 6:30 p.m.
on Monday, September 12, at Deerfield High
School, David Hirsch will interview the author
via Skype! Plus, Whitehall of Deerfield will
give away two Nooks and Barnes & Noble
gift cards. Other One Book programs are
highlighted in this issue of BROWSING or at
onebookonezipcode.org.
Special cards for sharing thoughts of 9/11 will
be available at every event, at the Library, at
the Patty Turner Center, at the high school and
elsewhere. People can drop off their cards or
mail them to the Library, which will collect
the cards in a book that will be added to the
collection.
Please join us in reading together, again!
5
�LHOP-IN ACTIVITIES
STORYTIMES Registration begins August 29
Family Times
After School Stories
Saturdays, September 3-November 26,
11 ami All ages and their parent or caregiver
Come to the Storytime Room for a drop-in
storytime for the whole family. ID
Thursdays, September 15, September 22,
October 6, October 13, October 20, October 27,
4:30p.m. Grades K-2
Designed for younger elementary school
children, this program blends stories and crafts.
(Caregivers must remain in the Library) 021
Baby Lapsit Storytime
Fridays, September 9, September 23, October 7,
and October 21,10:30 a.m. Ages 0-12 months
and their paren t or caregiver. Registra tion
begins Monday August 29
It’s never too early to start reading to your baby!
Join us for a Baby Lapsit Storytime program
with rhymes, books, and songs for you and baby,
plus social time after the program. ID
Fun for Ones
Tuesdays, September 13, September 27, October
11, and October 25,10:30 a.m. Ages 13-23
months and their parent or caregiver
This action-packed program will engage new
walkers in early literacy activities and
encourage a love of books and reading. ID
Time for Twos
Thursdays, September 15, September 22,
October 6, October 13, October 20, October 27,
10:30 a.m. Ages 24-35 months and their parent
or caregiver
Come to a special weekly storytime, including
songs and movement activities designed just for
2-year-olds in the Storytime Room. ID
Preschool Pals
Mondays, September 12, September 19, October
3, October 10, October 17, October 24
3’s at 1:30p.m. and 4’s& 5’s at 2:15p.m.
Or
Wednesdays, September14, September 21,
October 5, October 12, October 19, October 26
3’s at 10 a.m. and 4’s & 5’s at 10:45 a.m.
Ages 3-5 years, (but not yet in kindergarten)
and their parent or caregiver
Preschoolers and their caregivers have a
program just for them! We’ll listen to stories,
sing songs, and have fun all while getting ready
to read! ID
6
Storytime, Milk &
Cookies at Panera
Bannockburn
Tuesdays at 9:30 a.m.
September 6, September 20,
October 4, October 18,
November 1, November 15
Children and their
caregivers are invited to
Panera Bannockburn for
storytime, milk, and cookies.
Drop-In Crafts
Read to Rover—A Special Needs
Storytime
Saturday September 17,2 p.m.
Ages 8 and up with their parent or caregiver
Come to the Library for an afternoon of “doggy
tales” with special guest therapy dogs—Bailey,
Kubla, and Sunny from Adventures with Bailey.
These gentle dogs will be the perfect companion
for children with special needs as they listen to
their favorite dog-themed stories. ID
Sensory Storytime:
Stories and Emergent Literacy Activities
for Children with Special Needs
Saturdays, October 29, November 5, November
12, and November 19,2 p.m.
Children ages 4-8 with parent or caregiver
This award-winning series of storytimes engages
all of the senses through music, movement,
stories, and play. Children will interact with
trained staff and teen volunteers to practice
skill-building and build confidence in a multisensory approach. This non-traditional storytime
format is designed for children who have autism,
difficulties with sensory processing, or simply
sitting still. ID
Character Visit: Peter Rabbit
Friday, November 11,4 p.m.
Children with their parent or caregiver
Young children and their caregivers are invited
to meet and greet—and hug and high five—
Peter Rabbit from “The Tale of Peter Rabbit” by
Beatrix Potter. The visit includes a brief
storytime and coloring pages or crafts to do here
or take home. Don’t forget your cameras! ID
Wednesday, September 14,
10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Wednesday, November 9,10
a.m.-8p.m.
Children and their parent
or caregiver
Stop by the Youth Services
department to make a fun
and seasonal craft to take
home!
Trick-or-Treat the
Library
Monday October 31, 3:307 p.m. All ages
Stop in on Halloween to
show off your costume and
get a treat!
Thankful Turkeys
Tuesday, November 1Wednesday November 3
All ages
Stop by the Youth Services
department to share what
you are thankful for this
Thanksgiving!
Unplug the kids
September 18-24
Screen Turnoff Week
■■■
and declare your home
a Screen-Free Zone,
September 18-24. Our
Librarians have lots of great
ideas for screen-free family
fun and games.
�REGISTERED ACTIVITIES Registration for all programs starts Monday, August 29
Moon Over Deerfield
Tuesday.; September 6, 7p.m. All ages
The Lake County Astronomical Society
volunteers bring their knowledge,
enthusiasm and super powerful
telescopes to Jewett Park (just below the
Library’s parking lot) and turn our eyes
to the skies! Moon Over Deerfield is part
of the LCAS “Astronomy Under the City
Lights” program.
Halloween Storytime Fun
Friday, October 10, 4 p.m.
Pre-Kwith their parent or caregiver
Join teachers from Deerfield Community
Nursery School for some Halloween fun!
Sing spooky songs, do pumpkin finger
plays, dance, play instruments, and ei\joy
some Halloween stories!!
Bonding with Books:
Parent/Child Book Group
Saturday, October 15, 2-3:30 p.m.
Grades 2-3 with their parent or caregiver
Read “The Littles” by John Peterson to
your child, and then have your child read
to you.
Bring your Little Sweetie to
the Library
HOMESCHOOL PROGRAMS
These events are open to children of all
ages with their parent or caregiver.
Please register in advance.
Contact Youth Services
youthservices@deerfieldlibrary.org or
(847) 580-8962 for more information.
How to Draw Spooky Stuff:
Witches, Vampires, Werewolves
and Other Monsters
Saturday, October 22,1-2:30p.m.
Grades 4-7
Registration begins Monday, August 29
Picture It @ Your Library! Just in time
for Halloween, join local artist Christine
Thornton for this eerie drawing program
and learn about classic creepy characters
and how to draw them.
K-9 Reading Buddies of the
North Shore
Monday, October 17 or Monday,
November 21, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Grades 1-5
Read to four-legged friends in this safe,
non-judgmental program.
Pajamarama
Sunday, October 16,2-3p.m.
Grandmas and grandpas, did your chewing
gum lose its flavor on the bedpost
overnight, or did you rock around the
clock? Tell your grandkids all about it at
this intergenerational day-after-SweetestDay-sing-along led by Elizabeth Ury and
her ukulele. There will be lots of songs
you used to sing when you were kids and
lots of memories to share.
Thursday, November 17, 7p.m.
Children ages 4-8 with their parents
or caregivers
Children and their caregivers are invited
£0 the Library for a pajama storytime,
where there will be stories and songs
around a “campfire.” Children are invited
to wear their pajamas and bring a stuffed
friend to this fun program.
Cold and flu season is here!
Family tours now available
Do you have a child home sick from
school? Don’t worry about dragging
them out of bed to come pick out
something to read. Simply call the
Youth Services department at
(847) 580-8962. Youth Services staff
are happy to make recommendations,
select materials, put them on the
self-service hold shelves, so that you
can quickly stop by and pick them up.
Is your family new to Deerfield?Do you
have a child with special needs? The
Youth Services Department would like to
extend a friendly welcome to the Library!
Make an appointment for a personalized
tour of the department led by a Youth
Services staff member and learn about all
the Library has to offer. Contact Youth
Services Librarian Renee Grassi at
847-945-3311 ext. 8864 to arrange
a special visit.
Family Froebel Block Workshop
Monday, September 19,1:30-3 p.m.
Froebel blocks were developed in the
1830s by Friedrich Froebel, the father of
kindergarten, who believed that
children learn through play. His series
of smooth, wooden blocks present
geometric shapes and patterns in
increasing complexity. Frank Lloyd
Wright, who played with the blocks
extensively as a child, credited them
with inspiring his innovative Prairie
style. Now your family can discover the
fun and excitement of building with
Froebel blocks at the Library in a
workshop presented by the Frank Lloyd
Wright Preservation Trust. □
Simple Machines Workshop
Monday, October 24,1:30-3 p.m.
Lift a lever, pull a pulley, and grind a
gear to discover the science behind
simple machines! Kids will have fun
while learning in this hands-on
workshop presented by the Discovery
Center Museum. □
Book Discussion, Storytime,
and Craft
Monday, November 21,1:30-3 p.m.
Older readers will discuss ‘The Swiss
Family Robinson” by Johann David Wyss
and younger readers will discuss “Pee
Wee’s Tale” by Johanna Hurwitz. There
will be stories for the pre-readers. After
the book discussions, everyone will join
in a fun craft. Q
7
�DKEKFIKI.D
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Important Library Numbers
I
° Telephone: 847-945-3311
o TTY: 847-945-3372
° Library Home Page and Catalog:
wvw.deeifieldlibraiy.org
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
° E-mail:
DPL@deeifieldlibrary.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfieldlibraiy.org
• FAX: 847-945-3402
PRINTED WITH
SOY INK
Announcements
CLOSED
• The Library will be closed all day Monday, September 5th
• The Library will closed all day Thursday, November 24th
EARLY CLOSING
• The Library will close at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, November 23rd
LATE OPENINGS
• The Library will open at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, September 28th
• The Library will open at 1 p.m. on Friday, October 21st
• The Library will open at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, November 22nd
THANK YOU!
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergander, Library Director
Library Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretaiy
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Sunday Mueller, Treasurer
847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Mary Courtney • 847-945-9460
maiycourtneymail@aol.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg • 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Library Hours
Mon.-Thurs:
Friday:
Saturday:
Sunday:
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
The Youth Services department would like
to thank all of the STAR Volunteers and
Book Buddies Volunteers for their help
this summer! We couldn’t have done it
without you and can’t say how much we
appreciate your time and commitment!
A huge THANKS to all of the local
businesses that supported the children’s
Summer Reading Program by providing
prizes and/or gift cards to encourage kids to
read over the summer. These include:
Auntie Anne’s, Baskin Robbins,
Brunswick Zone, Campus Colors, Chipotle
Mexican GriU, Cookers Red Hots, Dear
Frank’s, Deerfield Bank, Gino’s East of
Deerfield, D-Forno Pizza & Pasta, JewelOsco, Judy’s Pizza, KidSnips, McDonald’s,
Panera Bread, Piero’s Pizza, Rhapsody
Cafe, Target, Trax Tavern & GriU, and
Whole Foods Market.
Many thanks to the Deerfield Optimist
Club whose support helped put a book in
the hands of each and every child who
completed the Summer Reading Program.
A ginormous thanks to Barnes & Noble of
Deerfield Square for sharing their costume
characters with us! Check the Libraiy’s
website for upcoming character visit
storytimes.
r
-rr-p n\
■^g-ajfen8-wafa.ri
>oTT
A big shout out to our friends and neighbors
at Whole Foods of Deerfield Square for
their extremely generous donation of water
for the hydration station at the Library
during the 4th of July Family Days
activities.. .you’re the best!
/
X-
Many thanks to Discover
Financial Services,
neBook
WhitehaU of Deerfield,
Zip Code
Pools Press, and the
Villages of Bannockburn,
Deerfield and Riverwoods for their
financial sponsorship and enthusiastic
support of this year’s One Book, One Zip
Code community-wide reading program.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Fall 2011
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 27, No. 2
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
09/2011
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.101
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
September - November 2011
9/11 World Trade Center Attacks
Aaron Melman
Adventures with Bailey
Alfred Hitchcock
Anette Isaacs
Arlington Heights Illinois
Auntie Anne's
Bannockburn Illinois
Bannockburn Village Hall
Barbara Reich
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Baskin Robbins
Bates Motel
Beatrix Potter
Blu-Ray Format
Bonnie Novak
Brunswick Zone
Buffalo Grove Illinois
Cambridge England
Campus Colors
Chipotle
Christine Thornton
College of Lake County
Cookers Red Hots
David Groeninger
David Hirsch
Dear Franks
Deerfield Area Historical Society
Deerfield Bank and Trust
Deerfield Community Nursery School
Deerfield Farmers Market
Deerfield Fine Arts Commission
Deerfield High School
Deerfield High School Drama Department
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Optimists Club
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Audio Visual Circulation
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Buddies
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Electronic Book Collection
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Homeschooling Services
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library Poets
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library S*T*A*R Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Screen Turnoff Week
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Technology Classes
Deerfield Public Library Temporary Building
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Youth Book Groups
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Family Tours
Deerfield Square
Deerfield Village Board of Trustees
Deerfield Village Commissions
Deerfield Village Hall
Discover Financial Services
Discovery Center Museum
Elaine Haney
Elizabeth Ury
Ernest Pettigrew
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
Facebook
Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Lloyd Wright Prairie School
Frank Lloyd Wright Preservation Trust
Friedrich Froebel
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Board
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Book Sale
Froebel Blocks
George VI
Germany
Gino's East
Graphic Novels
Great Chicago Fire
Halloween
Helen Simonson
Highland Park Illinois
Il Forno Pizza and Pasta
International Literacy Day
Israel
Ivy League College
Jane Eyre
Japan
Jeffrey Rivlin
Jessica Redish
Jewel-Osco
Jewett Park
Johann David Wyss
Johanna Hurwitz
John Peterson
Jonathan Safran Foer
Judy's Pizza
July 4th Activities
Kenan Abosch
KidSnips
Kristallnacht
Lake County Astronomical Society
Lake County Astronomy Under the City Lights Program
Lake County Illinois
Laura Hillenbrand
Laura Kempf
Literacy Volunteers of Lake County
Louie Zamperini
Major Pettigrew's Last Stand
Man on Wire
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Oppenheim
Mary Pergander
McDonalds
Melissa Stoeger
Michael K. Goldberg
Microsoft Excel
Mohawk Ironworkers
Mohsin Hamid
Muslim American
New York City Fire Department
New York City New York
Nook eReader
North Shore
North Shore K-9 Reading Buddies
Northbrook Illinois
Olympic Athletes
One Book One Zip Code
One Book One Zip Code Website
Original Readers' Theatre
Oskar Schell
Pacific Ocean
Pakistan
Panera Bread
Patty Turner Senior Center
Pee Wee's Tale
Peter Rabbit
Philippe Petit
Piero's Pizza
Pools Press
Preliminary Scholastic Assessment Test (PSAT)
Prisoner of War (POW)
PSADewberry
Psycho
Raymond Benson
Renee Grassi
Rhapsody Cafe
Riverwoods Illinois
Ronald Simon
Saigon Vietnam
Sam Flynn
Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT)
Searchable PDF
St. Mary England
Steve Freed
Sunday G. Mueller
Susan Karp
Target
Tatjana Soli
Teen Read Week
Temple Beth Shalom
The Birds
The Black Stiletto
The Housekeeper and the Professor
The King's Speech
The Littles
The Lotus Eaters
The Music Theatre Company
The Reluctant Fundamentalist
The Swiss Family Robinson
The Tale of Peter Rabbit
Tom Mockaitis
Trax Tavern and Grill
Tron: Legacy
Unbroken
WGN
Whitehall of Deerfield
Whole Foods
World Diabetes Day
World Trade Center
Yoko Ogawa
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/1cafa3bc6aaa882de7e4527710c08a6a.pdf
94a81a06cfe4c06136bfa8823b176e83
PDF Text
Text
\ivQ%yn0
; ^
Message from
7^]
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
'
the Director
Changes in the
Library seem to be
everywhere, and the H
remodeling has not even begun!
Interested community members
can learn more about the Library’s
proposed design concepts and
progress through the approvals
process at public information
sessions in June. (See details
below).
i
.
While we are busy designing the
remodeling and expansion, we
have also been installing
improvements and “testing” new
services for the existing Library.
The addition of automated check
out stations and check-in conveyor
system are the most visible
examples. Initial public reaction
has been strongly positive, and
many patrons say they are
surprised by how quick and easy it
is to use. The most frequent patron
concern we have heard is the fear
that our fine staff members may
lose their employment as a result
of automation. This is not the case!
Patrons will continue to see
familiar faces ready to offer
assistance throughout the Libraiy.
Come visit us soon!
ENTRY
VESTIBULE
I I
LOBBY/TRAFFIC j ji
ELEVATOR
DISPERSAL
!
Architect’s conceptual plan, compliments
of PSA-Dewberry Inc.
Public Information Meetings will be held on Sunday, June 12, 3 - 4 p.m., and Thursday,
June 16, 7 - 8 p.m. Come hear the latest!
�r = Please register in advance in person, on line at www.deerfieldlibrary.org
under “Programs and Classes” or by phone at 847.945.3311.
Master Gardeners Plant Clinic
Monday, June 6,10 cum, - 2p.m.
Is there a problem with your garden? Are insects and weeds “bugging” you?
The Master Gardeners from the University of Illinois Extension have the
answers. Bring your questions and appropriately bagged plant, weed, or insect
samples. Everyone who stops by will receive a special giftfrom the Library
and an exciting offer from the Chicago Botanic Garden.
Career Advice
Tuesday, June 7\ 9:30 a.m. - 12p.m.
Tuesday, August 2, 9:30 cum, -12p.nu
Get solid, current career advice from a professional consultant. These
half-hour sessions are free for adults. Q
Library Poets
Tuesdays, 6:30 - 8:30 p.m.
Local poets are encouraged to share their work, inspiration, and creative
processes. The group is open to poets of all levels of experience and actively
seeks new members.
Adult and Teen Summer
Reading Program:
Novel Destinations
Saturday June 11 - Saturday August 6
Explore new destinations this summer
with great books and movies and enter
to win the perfect traveling
companion - an e-reader! Adults and
teens who register for the program
and read, listen to, or watch five titles
from the Library this summer will
receive a reusable book bag. Deerfield
Public Libraiy cardholders will have
their name entered into a drawing for
a Barnes & Noble Nook eReader.
Second and 3rd prize drawings for $50 Barnes & Noble gift cards are open to
all adult and teen (9th grade and up) borrowers. One entry per person, please.
The Unrecognized Migration The Warmth of Other Suns:
The Epic Story ofAmerica’s
Great Migration
Wednesday, June 15, 7 p.m.
United States history explores the
migration of people from afar to our
country, yet it seldom examines “The Great
Migration” that involved waves of internal
mass movements of Americans that
extended for decades. Led by long-time
Deerfield resident Sherman Beverly, Jr.,
Professor Emeritus, Social Studies
Education, Northeastern Illinois University,
and Professor Maria Victoria-Abricka,
Ph.D., Independent Scholar, this discussion
will explore this mass migration and its
impact on US history.
Dr. Beverly and Professor Victoria-Abricka
co-chair the 2011 Program Committee of
the Society for Values in Higher Education.
Isabel Wilkerson, author of The Warmth of
Other Suns: The Epic Stoi'y ofAmerica's
Great Migration will the Society's keynote
speaker at their annual meeting to be held
at Elmhurst College
July 27-31.
3
Basic MS Word 2010
Saturday June 11,10:30. -11:30 a.m.
Learn the basics of word processing software! A Reference Librarian will
demonstrate how to use spell check, change the look of your document, use
MS templates, print and save. Basic computer skills are required. ID
e-books @ Your Library!
Tuesday June 14, 7 - 8p.m.
Learn how to “borrow” e-audiobooks, e-books, and even videos from the
Library. Libraiy staff will walk you through finding compatible devices,
looking up titles, placing holds, and how to download the materials to
various devices from My Media Mall, a special service available on the
Library’s website. ID
2
The Adam Kromelow Trio
Sunday, June 26,2 p.m.
The Adam Kromelow Trio is made up of
some of the most creative and forwardthinking young jazz musicians in New York
City. They’ve performed at prominent jazz
venues like the Iridium and Rockwood
Music Hall, and members have performed
at New York’s Blue Note and Jazz Gallery,
the Monterey Jazz Festival, Chicago’s
Symphony Center and Jazz Showcase. ID
�Facebook for Beginners
Saturday, July 9,10:30 -11:30 a.m.
Every day more people and
organizations sign up on Facebook to
share thoughts, locate information, and
find old friends. Learn how to set up
your own Facebook account and join
the social networking revolution. A
ivorking email account is required to
sign upfor this course. El
Harry Potter for Adults Only
Monday, July 11, 7p.m.
Readers’ Services Librarian Melissa
Stoeger explores the wonderful world of
J. K. Rowling’s popular children’s series
and discusses why Harry Potter has had
such enormous crossover appeal with
adults. □
Master Gardeners
Plant Clinic
Monday, August 15,10 a.m. -2p.m.
Is there a problem with your garden?
Are insects and weeds “bugging” you?
The Master Gardeners from the
University of Illinois Extension have the
answers. Bring your questions and
appropriately bagged plant, weed, or
insect samples.
Google, Yahoo and More!
Tuesday, August 16, 7- 8p.m.
Are you interested in shopping or
booking your next vacation online and
need to know where to get started? Join
one of our librarians to learn the basics
about search engines and how to
navigate them. □
Based on a Book - The Help
Wednesday, August 17, 7 p.m.
Join Librarian Melissa Stoeger and
Multimedia Assistant Jessica for a very
timely talk about how everyone’s
favorite book of 2010 - Kathryn
Stockett’s novel “The Help’’ handles the
transition from blockbuster best-seller
to the big screen. Scheduled for
release August 12, the movie stars
Emma Stone (Skeeter), Viola Davis
(Aibileen), Sissy Spacek (Missus
Walters) and more. Spoiler alert! (For
those who haven’t read the book or
seen the film).
MONDAY NIGHT MOVIES
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part I starts at 6 p.m.
All others start at 6:30 p.m.
June 20: TRUE GRIT » Rated PG-13
A tough U.S. Marshal helps a stubborn young woman track down her father's
murderer in this Coen Brothers remake of the classic western. El
I
July 18: HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 1 • Rated PG-13
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 will be released on July 15th. See
how the story began in the first installment. Harry Potter draws ever closer to
the task he has been preparing for since he entered Hogwarts: the ultimate
final battle with Voldemort. Special start time of 6 p.m. □
August 15: TANGLED <> Rated PG
Disney’s 50th full-length animated feature film is a new twist on the story of
Rapunzel. The animation is beautiful and the story is a fantastic journey that is
funny, exciting, and full of suspense. □
August 29: JUSTIN BIEBER: NEVER SAY NEVER • Rated G
Catch Bieber Fever at the Deerfield Public Library! See the inspiring and enter
taining true story of his start on You Tube to becoming the youngest performer
to ever sell out Madison Square Garden in New York City. El
Book Discussions in
the Library
Copies of these books will be available
at the self-service holds shelf a month
before the discussion.
■ Thursday, June 9,10:30 a.m.
Lie Down in Darkness by William Styron
William Styron traces the betrayals and
infidelities that afflict the members of a
Southern family and that culminate in the
suicide of the beautiful Peyton Loftis.
Si Thursday, June 16,7:30 p.m.
Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier
At the great Cornwall estate of
Manderley, Maxim de Winter and his
frightened new wife try to live with the
haunting legacy of Maxim's first wife,
the beautiful and cold Rebecca, who
died in a sailing accident.
■ Thursday, July 14,10:30 a.m.
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
by Rebecca Skloot
When Henrietta Lacks, a poor African
American, died from an aggressive form
of cancer at the age of 30 in 1951, a
sample of her cancerous tissue was
taken without her knowledge or consent.
This tissue was used to create a human
ceil line that has been kept alive and
has enabled discoveries in research of
cancer, in vitro fertilization, and gene
mapping.
■ Thursday, July 21,7:30 p.m.
A Visit from the Goon Squad
by Jennifer Egan
Bennie Salazar, an aging former punk
rocker and record executive, and Sasha,
the passionate, troubled young woman
he employs, confront their pasts in this
powerful story about how rebellion
ages, influence corrupts, habits turn
to addictions, lifelong friendships
fluctuate and turn, and how art and
music have the power to redeem.
3
�r = Please register in advance in person, on line at www.deerfieldlibrary.org
under “Programs and Classes” or by phone at 847.945.3311.
STORYTIMES
StoryBus
Saturday,; June 25, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Children with their parent or caregiver
Children are invited to experience scenes
from classic children’s stories on the
StoryBus, an interactive, children’s
museum-on-wheels built to a child’s
scale. The StoryBus provides an early
literacy experience in a magical setting.
You won’t want to miss out on the fun
when the StoryBus rolls into the Library
parking lot!
One World, Many Stories
Saturday, June 11 - Saturday, August 6
Children will travel the world this summer when they participate in the One
World, Many Stories Summer Reading Program. Children birth through 8th grade
can register, keep track of what they read, and check in at the Reading Station
in the Youth Services department to win fun prizes! Children who “read around
the world” will receive a paperback book of their choice. When they aren’t busy
reading, children are invited to special programs all summer long. □
Summer Reading Program Kick-off Event
Chris Fascione Presents: Around the World
Saturday, June 11,2 - 2:45 p.m.
Children with their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Wednesday, June 1.
You’ll be laughing out loud as nationally-known
family entertainer Chris Fascione brings folktales
from many lands to life with his high-spirited and
innovative performances. Full of energy, humor,
and imagination, Chris creates colorful characters
through his unique combination of acting,
stoiytelling, comedy, and juggling. A Storytelling
World Award winner, Chris brings out the kid in
everyone, as adults and children alike have fun
participating in the show. □
4
Marimbamania! Music &
Marimbas from Around
the World
Saturday, July 9,2 p.m.
Children with their parent or caregiver
Experience music and marimbas from
around the world in this lively, interactive
and entertaining musical program
presented by “Marimbaman” David Hall.
Registration begins Monday, June 6.
Space is limited, so please reserve your
place in person, by phone, or online.
DROP-IN ACTIVITIES
Drop-In Crafts
Wednesday, June 15 and Wednesday, July IS,
10 a.m. - 8p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Stop by the Youth Services department to
make a fun craft to take home!
Picnic Stories
Thursdays, June 16-August 4,12p.m.
All ages welcome
Bring a bag lunch and er\joy stories for the
whole family al fresco in the park (or in the
Storytime Room at the Library if it rains).
�REGISTERED ACTIVITIES
Registration begins Monday, June 6.
Royalty Around the World
Saturday; June 18, 2 p.m.
Children ages 4-6 and their
parent or caregiver
Young princes and princesses, join our
majestic tour around the world! The royal
decree includes stories, a craft, curtsy
practice, and dance! A glamorous table will
be set with the finest food and drink. ID
Harry Potter Book Discussion
Thursday, June23, 7p.m. Gi'ades4-8
Calling all Muggles! In celebration of this
summer’s release of the last (sob!) Harry
Potter film, join us for an evening book
discussion of Book 7 of the Harry Potter
series: Harry Potter and the Deathly
Hallows. ID
Campfire Stories
Wednesdays, June 29 and July 20, 7p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Come dressed in your pajamas and bring
your favorite stuffed animal to share in
the fun! Cl
Bonding With Books
Saturday, July 23,2 - 3:30p.m.
Grades 2-3 and their parent or caregiver
Read Gooseberry Park by Cynthia Rylant
to your child and have them read
to you! □
It’s a Zoo!
Saturday, July 16, 2p.m.
Children ages 5-7 and their parent
or caregiver
All aboard for an exciting, around-theworld tour of animals! We’ll roar through
Africa, hop to Australia, and waddle in
Antarctica with crafts, games and stories.
A snack will be served to fuel our trip. El
Guest Star Storytimes
Young children and their caregivers
are invited to meet and greet—and
hug and high five—their favorite
storybook characters at these special
Guest Star Storytimes. Includes a
brief stoiytime and coloring pages or
crafts to do here or take home. Don’t
forget your cameras!
Read to Rover - A Special
Needs Stoiytime
Saturday, August 20,2 p.m.
Ages 5 and up with their parent
or caregiver
Come to the Library for an afternoon of
“doggy tales” with special guest therapy
dogs—Bailey, Kubla, and Sunny from
Adventures with Bailey. These gentle dogs
will be the perfect companion for children
with special needs as they listen to their
favorite dog-themed stories. □
Book Buddies: A Summer
Literacy Program
Tuesday, July 5 - Tuesday,
August2, 7-8pm
Wednesday, July 6 - Wednesday,
Augusts, 7-8pm
Thursday, July 7 - Thursday,
August 4,11 am - 12 pm
OR Thursday, July 7 - Thursday
August 4, 7-8pm
Readers going into Grades 1-3
Volunteers in Grades 7 through 12 will be
matched with young readers to help them
retain skills during the summer. Buddies
will meet once a week for five weeks to
read aloud together, talk about the stories
and do an activity. Children must be able
to attend at least four sessions to
participate in the program. To register
your child, complete an application form
and return it to the Youth Services
Department. Copies of the application are
available online or in the Youth Services
Department. Space is limited; registration
is taken on a first come, first served basis.
Curious George
(from the Curious George books by
Margret and HA. Rey)
Friday, June 10, 4 p.m.
The Cat in the Hat
(from the Cat in the Hat books by
Dr. Seuss)
Friday, August 12, 4 p.m.
When in the course of
human events
.. .you need a break from all the
great Deerfield Family Days
activities, chill out at the Library.
Eryoy cool refreshments, clean
restrooms and more (much more!) in
the Library’s lobby and meeting room
between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. on
July 4th.
5
�•
i
11Ifyou have a garden
and a library, you have
eveiything you need. ”
With a Little Help
from our Friends
»
— Cicero
e/(f PubVv-
Here’s Susan Karp,
president of the
Friends of the
Deerfield Public
Library, checking out
the new Self-Checkout
station donated by
the Friends.
Cicero would envy us.. .a world class garden
and two great libraries almost within walking
distance. Plan to put it all together on
Sunday, June 12, from noon - 4:00 p.m. at the
Chicago Botanic Garden when showing your
Deerfield Public Library card will allow you to
park for free while you explore the treasures
of the great garden—including the Lenhardt
Library. This gem—as bright and aiiy as a
greenhouse—houses an extensive specialized
collection of almost 30,000 titles, including
books, DVDs, periodicals, nursery catalogs
and the archives of the Chicago Horticultural
Society. Get to know the Lenhardt, and spend
the day exploring the Botanic Garden free
just by showing your Deerfield Public Library
card when you pull up to the entiy gate.
Farmers Market Visits
• Through the generous support of the community by purchasing used
books at the Library and annual memberships, the Friends were able
to fund one of the new Self-Checkout Stations.
• Mark your calendar for the annual used cookbook and children’s book
sale at the Deerfield Farmers Market on Saturday, September 17,
2011.
• Used books are sold during regular Library hours in the first floor
meeting room. Please pay for books at the Patron Services desk. The
Friends continue to accept gently used hardback and paperback
books, as well as CD’s and DVD’s. We ask that households donate only
two shopping bags or boxes per week. Please bring donations to the
Patron Services Desk.
• The Friends need volunteers from the community to help sort and
shelve the used book donations. Any amount of time and help is
appreciated. Please contact the Friends for more information.
• The Board of the Friends will meet on August 24 at 7 p.m. at the
Deerfield Public Library. Community members and potential new
volunteers are always welcome. Please contact the Friends at
(847) 945-3311, ext. 8895 or at friends@deerfieldlibrary.org.
6
Library Trustees
June 25, July 30, and October 1
Stop by and ask questions or share your
ideas.
Storytime at the Farmers Market
June 18, 8:30 -11:30 a.m.
A Youth Services Librarian will read
special stories.
Books for Cooks and Food
for Thought
July 16, 8:30 -11:30 a.m.
Stop by and get some great recommenda
tions on the latest “foodie” books and
more.
Get the Low Down on
Downloadable Books
August 27, 8:30 -11:30 a.m.
Get a quick course on how to download
books, music and more on your e-reader,
iPad or iPhone.
�“Once upon a time there was a BIG Winnebago • • • •
The StoryBus - 37 feet of literacy fun and
17,000 pounds of early childhood
development - will be rolling into the
Library’s parking lot on Saturday, June
25. Basically an interactive children’smuseum-on-wheels built to a child’s
scale, the StoryBus was launched by the
Delores Kohl - as in Kohl Children’s
Museum - Education Foundation and
aimed at pre-readers Pre-K through
Kindergarten. A visit to the StoryBus
immerses children in four popular
stories, including “Goldilocks and the
Three Bears,” “The Little Red Hen,”
“The Gingerbread Man,” and “The Three
Little Pigs.” The kids participate in the
creation of each story, helping the
characters and even providing
alternative endings. Plus, there are great
follow-up activities and suggestions on
their website, including how to keep
storytime at home active, fresh, and fun.
For other ideas on how to encourage
children to want to read, ask any of our
Youth Services staff for ideas - they’re
the experts!
The StoryBus, a project of the Delores Kohl Education
Foundation, ivill be in the Deerfield Public Library’s
parking lot on Saturday, June 25th from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
IT JUST MAKES SENSE
Teen Study Lounge
Saturday, June 4 - Wednesday June 8, available
all hours the Library is open
High school students looking for a place to study for exams can make themselves at
home in the Library’s Meeting Room and Teen Space during finals week. The Library
will provide large tables for group study, snacks and beverages, free Wi-Fi, and help
using the Library’s extensive collection of print and online resources.
Volunteer Opportunities @ the Library
Teen Advisory Board
Join the Teen Advisory Board! As a TAB member you can help come up with
programming ideas for teens at the Library, talk about books, magazines, movies, and
music with other Deerfield teens, help create content for the library’s website, and
more. If you are interested in becoming a member call or email
reference@deerfieldlibrary.org and ask for Madeline, the teen services liaison.
A public library is—among
many other good things—
public. Common sense (and
Library policy, by the way)
says that parents and
caregivers must stay with
children under nine. In
addition, be mindful of
purses, backpacks, laptops,
or anything else of value; and
let Library staff know of any
suspicious activities right
away. Have you noticed we
have added security cameras
at each Library entrance?
7
�IH-.KKI- 11 1 11
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Important Library Numbers
• Telephone: 847-945-3311
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
• TTY: 847-945-3372
• Library Home Page and Catalog:
wvw.deerfieldlibrary.org
9 E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibrary.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deeifieldlibraiy.org
° FAX: 847-945-3402
Announcements
Closed
Late Openings
The Library will be closed all day Monday, July 4th
The Library will open at 10 a.m. on -
The Library will be closed all day Monday, September 5th
• Wednesday, June 22
• Tuesday, July 26
• Thursday, August 25
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergander, Library Director
Library Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretary
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Sunday Mueller, TYeasurer
*847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Maiy Courtney • 847-945-9460
maiycourtneymail@aol.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg • 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Library' Hours
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Mon.-Thurs:
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Friday:
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Saturday:
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday:
THANK YOU!
A special shout-out to our friends at Barnes
& Noble of Deerfield Square for generously
sharing their costume characters with
the Library.
Big thanks to all the Deerfield schools that
have generously shared their students’
artwork in the ongoing display in the Youth
Services department.
Thank you to everyone who entered the
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest and
congratulations to our Adult winners Keith
Sanderson, Lynda Krause, and Laura
Ashman (adult) and Youth winners
Margaret Weiner and Laney Lebovitz, and
Honorable Mention winners Jordan Levitt
and Amy Lisitza. Special thanks to our
two-legged friends at Orphans of the Storm
who helped to get the word out!
PRINTED WITH
SOY INK
Sincere thanks to the Friends of the
Deerfield Public Library for funding one of
the three new self-check stations!
Very special thanks to very special
education teachers Heather Heavey and
Lynn Clarke for volunteering their time and
energy to plan and assist with the Sensory
Storytime and Read to Rover programs. We
would also like to thank the North
Suburban Special Education District for
their continued support!
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Summer 2011
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 27, No. 1
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
06/2011
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.100
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
June - August 2011
A Visit from the Goon Squad
Adam Kromelow Trio
Adventures with Bailey
Africa
African Americans
Amy Lisitza
Antarctica
Australia
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Bennie Salazar
Blue Note and Jazz Gallery
Cancer
Career Advice
Chicago Botanic Gardens
Chicago Botanic Gardens Lenhardt Library
Chicago Horticultural Society
Chicago Symphony Center and Jazz Showcase
Chris Fascione
Cicero
Coen Brothers
Cornwall England
Curious George
Cynthia Rylant
Daphne Du Maurier
David Hall
Deerfield Family Days
Deerfield Farmers Market
Deerfield High School
Deerfield High School Finals Week
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Buddies
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Electronic Book Collection
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Meeting Rooms
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library Poets
Deerfield Public Library Policies
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library Public Information Meetings
Deerfield Public Library Self Checkout Stations
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Technology Classes
Deerfield Public Library Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Deerfield Public Library Teen Study Lounge
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield School District
Deerfield Square
Delores Kohl
Delores Kohl Education Foundation
Disney
Doctor Seuss
Elmhurst College
Emma Stone
Facebook
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Board
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Book Sale
Gardening
Goldilocks and the Three Bears
Google
Gooseberry Park
H.A. Rey
Harry Potter
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II
Heather Heavey
Henrietta Lacks
Isabel Wilkerson
J.K. Rowling
Jeffrey Rivlin
Jennifer Egan
Jessica Berger
Jordan Levitt
July 4th Activities
Justin Bieber
Justin Bieber: Never Say Never
Kathryn Stockett
Keith Sanderson
Kenan Abosch
Kohl Children's Museum
Laney Lebovitz
Laura Ashman
Lie Down in Darkness
Lynda Michele Kruse
Lynn Clarke
Madeline Solein Dahlman
Madison Square Garden
Margaret Weiner
Margret Rey
Maria Victoria-Abricka
Marimbas
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Pergander
Maxim de Winter
Melissa Stoeger
Michael K. Goldberg
Microsoft Word
Monterey Jazz Festival
My Media Mall
New York City New York
Nook eReader
North Suburban Special Education District
Northeastern Illinois University
Orphans of the Storm
Peyton Loftis
PSADewberry
Rapunzel
Rebecca
Rebecca Skloot
Rockwood Music Hall
Ronald Simon
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest
Royalty
Searchable PDF
Sherman Beverly
Sissy Spacek
Society for Values in Higher Education
Society for Values in Higher Education Program Committee
StoryBus
Storytelling World Award
Sunday G. Mueller
Susan Karp
Tangled
The Cat in the Hat
The Gingerbread Man
The Great Migration
The Help
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
The Iridium
The Little Red Hen
The Three Little Pigs
The Warmth of Other Suns
True Grit
United States Marshall
University of Illinois Extension
University of Illinois Extension Master Gardeners
Viola Davis
Voldemort
WiFi
William Styron
Winnebago
Yahoo
YouTube
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/cb88c0771978410ef5cc8ef19100359d.pdf
9525e6afcec0b567d9e7e556cfcb54db
PDF Text
Text
www. dee rfi eldlibra ry. o rg
(i
■A
What’s Next? That is a P'
A
question I field many
times a day from
residents interested in
knowing how our construction plans are
coming along. Our design process is just
kicking off. The Library Board is seeking
input from a variety of sources to refine
the design concepts. In the near future,
we will also begin the Village Commissions
approval process. Consistent with our
commitment to keep residents informed
and involved, we are planning a community
meeting this spring to share the renderings
of the design to that stage. This would
include the interior, exterior, landscaping,
and energy plans. Please watch for
announcements of the date and time.
At
Although actual construction is still far
off, there are sounds of construction near
our Circulation department as we install a
RFID system for patron convenience and
improved accuracy. A new interior “window”
has been created. Library materials returned
through that window are automatically
checked in, reducing error and getting
materials back to the shelves more quickly.
We are also combining our Teen and Media
service desks into one unit at a more
convenient location for improved service.
Look for our new, welcoming Information
desk and hot beverage vending near the
Library entrance, and patron-oriented
checkout stations in Youth Services as
well as at the Circulation desk. (Thanks
to the Friends for purchasing the first of
three new stations!) We welcome resident
feedback to make these services even
better in the new construction.
Bottom line: We never stop seeking ways
to better serve our library patrons and
community.
Faster, More Accurate Service
with RFID and Self Check
As the Library plans for a large-scale renovation
project, we are making a series of service
improvements that will have immediate benefits
for our patrons before implementing them in a
reconfigured building.
We have recently put Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags in all of our
materials to increase the speed and accuracy of checking items in and out of
the Library. RFID will check in items instantaneously, with nearly 100%
accuracy. Items will automatically be sorted upon check-in and get back on the
shelves and into circulation more quickly.
RFID tags will also allow patrons to quickly and easily use new checkout
machines installed on the Library’s upper and lower levels. Self-check stations
help patrons get their selections out the door and home to eqjoy sooner. Staff
members will be available all hours of operation to assist patrons with these
new stations.
Patrons who require assistance with library card registration or questions about
their account will now be able to take their time working with a circulation
staff member away from busy checkout lanes. In addition, an Information desk
near the front gates will also help patrons get speedy responses to our most
frequently asked questions.
Implementing RFID at this time will also greatly improve the Library’s ability to
keep track of materials during an extensive renovation project. Read more
about the Library’s next steps in the Message from the Director.
Where’s One Book, One Zip Code?
Discussions and events tailored to the 2011 community-wide \
reading program selection, Extremely Loud and Incredibly
Close by Jonathan Safran Foer, will take place this fall to
bii© 8@©Ss
coincide with the 10-year anniversary of September 11, 2001.
This year’s remarkable selection introduces Oskar Schell, the
Zipcode
nine-year-old son of a man killed in the World Trade Center
attacks, as he searches the five boroughs of New York City for a
lock that fits a black key his father left behind.
The OBOZ Steering Committee is in the process of planning this year’s
supporting events, including a live, teleconferenced interview with the author.
If you are interested in sponsoring or presenting a program of interest to the
community, please contact Karen Kleckner at (847) 580-8950.
�Programs are free and open to the public. Please r Hi
www.deerfieldlibrary.org under “Programs & Classes
ence
Author Visit: Marilyn Brant
WWII Naval
Sunday, March 6,2 p.m.
Meet award winning local author Marilyn Brant who
will read selections from, and sign copies of, her new
book Friday Mornings at Nine. Marilyn’s first book
According to Jane is listed by Buzzle.com as one of
the best romance novels of all time.
Wednesday April 20, 7p.m.
Phyllis Soybel, CLC Political Science Professor,
will discuss WWII naval intelligence, from signal
intelligence to counter espionage to the rescue
of POWs from occupied territory Co-sponsored
by the Deerfield Area Historical Society.
Adult Rosemary Sazoitoff
Writing Contest Reception
Native Uses of Native Plants
Sunday March 13,2 p.m.
Celebrate the winners of the adult portion of the Rosemary Sazonoff
Writing Contest as they read their winning entries, and then er\joy a light,
catered buffet. All entrants, guests, and other creative writing fans are
welcome to attend, but please register in advance.
Wednesday May 4, 7p.m.
Go back to a time when there wasn’t a grocery
store and pharmacy on every corner. A
representative from Lake County Forest Preserve
District will share how some native plants were
used by Native Peoples and settlers for food,
medicine, and other purposes.
Goodbye Snail Mail - Hello, E-mail • • •
Saturday, March 19,10:30 a.m.
Part of our Basic Computer Skills series, a Reference Librarian will
discuss the basics of setting up and using e-mail. Learn free, easy ways to
keep up with family and friends online.
Launching Millennials
Wednesday, March 23, 7p.m.
Millennials (that generation bom between 1980-2000) have a unique set
of expectations, values, and challenges when looking for a job. Dave
Gladstein shares tips for bridging the gap between college and the
work world.
Basic Financial Literacy @ DPL
Tuesday, April 5, 7p.m.
Stock Options! Roth IRA! Ever wonder what these financial terms mean?
DPL celebrates National Financial Literacy Month with this program to
explain basic financial and economic terms. Join a Reference Librarian
for great resources and Carl Birkelbach, President at an investment
advisory firm for more than 40 years, to learn more about this topic.
Improv Commandos
Saturday, April 9,2 p.m.
Share the excitement of a live, unscripted comedy performance created
entirely from audience suggestions and featuring improv games similar to
those seen on Whose Line is it Anyway? You can even volunteer to join the
Improv Commandos onstage! This show is best suited for ages 13 and up.
My Media Mall!
Saturday, April 16,10:30 a.m.
A great program for all of those with new e-readers! Learn more about the
Library’s FREE downloadable audiobooks, eBooks, and even videos.
Library staff will walk you through finding compatible devices, looking up
titles, placing holds, and downloading the materials to various devices.
2
Peter Nye and the Chicago
Bluegrass Band
Sunday, May 15, 2 p.m.
Lively instrumentals and soulful vocals provide a
feel-good romp for music lovers of all ages.
Deerfield resident Peter Nye and his band will
have you tapping your toes and slapping knees in
no time!
Digital Photos Galore!
Saturday, May 28,10:30 a.m.
Wondering how to share your digital pictures?
Learn how to use different online digital photo
programs. A Reference Librarian will
demonstrate how to use programs such as
Snapfish, Shutterfly, and Picasa to share your
pictures with friends and family!
AARP Tax Aide Programs
Tuesdays and Fridays, through April 15,1 - 4 p.m.
IRS-certified volunteers for the AARP will
provide help in completing simple tax returns.
You don’t have to be an AARP member or a
senior citizen to receive assistance. Please bring
copies of your returns from last year and all tax
forms you receive (W-2s, 1099s, etc.). No
appointment needed.
�___
MONDAY NIGHT MOVIES
Book Discussions in the Library
Allfilms will start at 6:30 p.m.
Please register in advance.
March 14: SECRETARIAT • Rated PG
Diane Lane stars in the story of Penny
Chenery, a housewife who agrees to care
for her ill father’s stables. Despite her
inexperience, Penny raises Secretariat to
be one of the most famous thoroughbred
race horses of all time.
March 28: THE SOCIAL NETWORK
Rated PG-13
Mark Zuckerberg launched Facebook in
2004, and the controversy over the social
networking site’s beginnings continues to
this day. Social Network is one interpreta
tion of Zuckerberg’s quick rise to extraordi
nary success.
April 11: HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON
Rated PG
Based on the popular children’s book,
How to Train Your Dragon follows the
adventures of a young Viking who has to
mark his passage to manhood by capturing
a dragon!
April 25: WAITING FOR SUPERMAN • Rated PG
From the Academy Award-winning director
of An Inconvenient Truth, this documentary
explores the American public education
system by following the stories of five
young students and their families.
May 9: PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN:
THE CURSE OF THE BLACK PEARL
Rated PG-13
See how it all began in this first install
ment of the Pirates series and gear up for
the May release of Pirates of the
Caribbean: On Stranger Tides.
May 23: INCEPTION • Rated PG-13
In this action-packed psychological
thriller, Leonardo DiCaprio plays a thief
who possesses the power to enter other
people’s dreams.
■Hmm
You canfind copies of the discussion books at the Circulation desk
one month prior to discussion.
0
1
l
°
o
o
□ Thursday, March 10,10:30 a.m.
True Grit by Charles Portis
Pursuing a murderer who has escaped into Indian Territory, U.S.
Marshal Rooster J. Cogburn teams up with a bounty-hunting
Texas Ranger and Mattie Ross, a cantankerous young lady
bent on avenging the murder of her father.
0
°
1
j
o
□ Thursday, March 17, 7:30 p.m.
Dubliners by James Joyce
Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with a discussion of this classic
collection of short stories that evokes the character and
atmosphere of the Irish city at the turn of the 20th century.
o
o
0
1
l
°
□ Thursday, April 14,10:30 a.m.
Brooklyn by Colm Toibin
Leaving her home in post-World War II Ireland to work as a
bookkeeper in Brooklyn, Eilis Lacey reluctantly parts with her
mother and sister and discovers a new romance in America,
until devastating news from home threatens her happiness.
°
o
0
1
l
°
□ Thursday, April 21, 7:30 p.m.
The Lost City of Z by David Grann
In 1925, Percy Fawcett vowed to find El Dorado in one of
the most daring expeditions of the time. Fawcett was never
seen again. David Grann has written an incredible story of
adventure, intrigue, and obsession.
o
o
0
1
l
°
o
□ Thursday, May 12,10:30 a.m.
The Monster of Florence by Douglas Preston
When Douglas Preston moved to a lovely farmhouse in
Florence with his family he discovered his dream villa was
the site of gruesome double murder. Teaming up with
journalist Mario Spezi to investigate the murders, the two
became suspects themselves.
o
0
1
o°
l
o
□ Thursday, May 19, 7:30 p.m.
Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand by Helen Simonson
Major Ernest Pettigrew leads a quiet life in the English
village of St. Mary, until an unexpected friendship with
Mrs. Ali, the Pakistani shopkeeper, blossoms into
something more.
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Career Advice
Library Poets
Great Decisions
Tuesday, April 5
9:30 a.m. - 12p.m.
Career Counselor Roberta Glick of
Jewish Vocational Service offers free,
half-hour consulting sessions for adults.
Please register in advance.
Wednesdays, March 2-23
Tuesdays, March 29 - May 31
6:30 - 8:30 p.m.
Local poets are encouraged to share
their work, inspiration, and creative
processes. The group is open to poets of
all levels of experience and actively seeks
new members.
Tuesdays, March 1-22, 7:30 p.m.
Tom Jester coordinates thoughtful
discussions and stimulating analyses of
some of the great issues of our time.
Purchase discussion guidebooks at the
Circulation desk.
3
�Children’s Programs
All children’s activities - except those designated “drop-in” - require
www.deerfieldlibrary.org under “Programs and Classes,” or by calling
________ __ __ . ____ -___ ________________
EUBHi
STORYTIMES
Registration begins Monday, February 28.
ramiiv
Baby Lapsit Storjtime
Saluidays, March 5 - May 28,11 a.m. All ages
Come to the Picture Book Room for a drop-in
stoiytime for the whole family.
Fridays, March 25, April 8, April 22, and
May 6,10:30 a.m. Ages 0-12 months
It’s never too early to start reading to
your baby! Join us for a Baby
Lapsit Stoiytime program
with rhymes, books, and
songs for you and baby,
plus social time after the
program.
Fun for Ones
Tuesdays, March 22, April 5, April 19, and May 3,10:30 a.m.
Ages 13 - 23 mon ths and their parent or caregiver
One-year-olds and their parents or caregivers are invited to a storytime just for
them, including stories, songs, movement activities, rhymes, and social time
after the program. This action-packed program will engage new walkers in early
literacy activities and encourage a love of books and reading.
Annua
ookmark Contest
i
Tuesday March 1 through Thursday March
31. Grades Preschool - 8
Pick up your entry forms in the Youth Sendees
department or on the Children’s page on the
Library Web site. Bookmarks will be on display
for voting during the month of April. The
winning bookmark will be given out during the
Summer Reading Program. Please, only one
entiy per person.
Time for Twos
Thursdays, March 17, March 24, April 7, April 14, April 21, andApnl 28,10:30 a.m
Ages 24-35 months and their parent or caregiver
Two-year-olds and their caregivers are invited to a special weekly stoiytime,
including songs and movement activities designed just for them in the
Stoiytime Room.
Preschool Pals
Mondays, March 14, March 21, April 4, April 11, April 18, and April 25,
1:30p.m. Or Wednesdays, March 16, March 23, April 6, April 13, April 20, and
April27,10 a.m. Ages 3-5years, but not yet in Kindergarten, and their
parent or caregiver
Preschoolers and their caregivers have a program just for them! We’ll listen to
stories, sing songs, and have fun, all while getting ready to read!
After School Stories
Thursdays, March 17, March 24, April 7, April 14, April 21, and April 28,
4:30p.m. Grades K-2
This program is specifically designed for younger elementary school children
and features stories and crafts. Caregivers must remain in the Library.
Storytime, Milk, and Cookies at
Panera Bannockburn
Tuesdays, March 1, March 15, April 5, April 19,
May 3, and May 17, 9:30 a.m.
Children and their caregivers are invited to
Panera Bread in Bannockburn for storytime,
milk, and cookies.
4
Celebrate Read Across America Day!
Wednesday March 2, All Day
Children and their parent or caregiver
Read Across America Day is a national
celebration of reading that takes place each
year on March 2, Dr. Seuss’ birthday. Celebrate
by visiting the Youth Services department,
reading a Dr. Seuss book, and doing a drop-in
craft.
Guest Star Storytimes
Biscuit • Friday, March 11,4-5 p.m.
Cookie Mouse • Friday, April 8,4 - 5 p.m.
Clifford • Friday, May 13,4 - 5 p.m.
Young children and their caregivers
The stars of classic children’s books continue
their trips to the Library this spring! Each visit
includes a brief storytime followed by a meetand-greet with the character and coloring pages
to do at the Library or to take home. (Don’t
forget to bring your cameras!)
i
:
�registration. Please register in advance in person, online at
(847) 945-3311.
REGISTERED ACTIVITIES
Registration begins Monday,
February 28.
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing
Contest Reception
Saturday; March 12, 2p.m.
Children and their parents or caregivers
All children who participated in this
year’s “A Dog’s Life: Animal Essays,
Stories, and Poems—Rosemary Sazonoff
Writing Contest” are invited to this
event. First-place winners in each age
category will read their entries and
receive their prizes. Light refreshments
will be served.
Go, Dog, Go!
Saturday, March 26,1 -2p.m.
Ages 3-5 and their parent or caregiver
Celebrate the 50th anniversary of the
beloved classic, Go, Dog, Go! with crafts,
games, songs, and stories. We’ll have a
woof-derful time! A puppy-licious snack
will be served to all humans who attend.
K-9 Reading Buddies of the
North Shore
Monday, March 21 and Monday April
18, 6:30 - 7:30p.m. Gi'ades 1- 5
Read to four-legged friends in this safe,
non-judgmental program. Caregivers
must remain in the Library.
Bonding With Books:
Parent/Child Book Group
HOMESCHOQL PROGRAMS
telescopes and viewing guidance in
Jewett Park where participants can see
the Moon’s mountains and craters and
other planets of our solar system.
Pajamarama
Wednesday, April 13, 7p.m.
Ages 4-8 with their parent or caregiver
Children and their caregivers are invited
to the Library for a pajama storytime,
where there will be stories and songs
around a “campfire.” Children are
invited to wear their psyamas and bring
a stuffed friend to this fun program.
Calling All Superheroes!
*Saturday April 30,1 p.m. Grades K-2
Bring your superpowers to the Library
for an hour of world-saving fun! We will
have superhero-in-training games,
crafts, and a powerful snack!
Read to Rover - A Special
Needs Storytime
Saturday, May 14,2 p.m. Ages 5 and up
with their parent or caregiver
Come to the Library for an afternoon of
“doggy tales” with special guest therapy
dogs—Bailey, Kubla, and Sunny from
Adventures with Bailey. These gentle
dogs will be the perfect companion for
children with special needs as they
listen to their favorite dog-themed
stories.
Monday, Apnl 11, 7p.m., Rain date:
Tuesday, Apnl 12, 7p.m. All ages
The Astronomy Under the City Lights
program of Lake County introduces
children and adults to the spectacular
views of the night sky. Lake County
Astronomical Society members offer
Monday, March 21,1 - 2:30 p.m.
« Project Fair
Monday, April 11,1 - 2:30 p.m.
• KidTrekkers: Italy!
Monday, May 16,1 - 2:30 p.m.
These events are open to children of all ages
with their parent or caregiver. Contact Kate
Easley for more information:
keasley@deerfieldlibrary.org or
(847) 945-3311, ext. 8865.
S.T.A.R. Volunteer Program
Looking for something fun to do this
summer? Come be a part of the S.T.A.R.
Volunteer Program at the Library! S.T.A.R.
Volunteers assist the Youth Services
department by taking reports from
Summer Reading participants, passing out
prizes, and engaging children in
discussion about books. If you are
between the ages of 12 -17, fill out the
application and register for the training.
Applications are due to the Youth Services
desk by Friday, June 10. Volunteers must
attend one of the following training
sessions:
Thursday, June 2, 4-5 p.m.
Saturday, June 4, 2-3 p.m.
Monday,
June 6, 4-5 p.m.
Tuesday, June 7, 4-5 p.m.
Wednesday, June 8, 4-5 p.m.
Thursday, June 9, 4-5 p.m.
Book Buddies Volunteer Program
Saturday, Apnl 9,11 a.m. Gi'ades2-3
with their parent or caregiver
Read to your child, and then have your
child read to you. Mercy Watson to the
Rescue by Kate DiCamillo.
Astronomy Under the
City Lights
° Discovery Center Museum presents:
Invention Workshop
Mad Hatters
Saturday, May 21,1 p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Join the fun as members of the Junior
League of Chicago present a zany bookbased play that will have the whole
family in stitches!
The Youth Services department is looking
for volunteers to be Big Buddies for the
Book Buddies summer program. Book
Buddies will work with children entering
grades 1 - 3 to read aloud together and
talk about stories. These volunteers will
play a vital part in helping new readers
retain their skills during summer
vacation. If you are interested in
volunteering and between the ages of
12 -17, stop by the Youth Services
department to pick up an application.
Please note that one hour of service per
week for five weeks is required.
Completed applications are due to the
Youth Services desk by Sunday, June 12.
5
�Coming Soon: Blu-ray
Thanks to a generous donation from the Friends of the Deerfield Public Library,
we are currently building a collection of Blu-ray films! The new format will be
available this spring.
Attention Local Histoiy Bull'-:
/e/<?PubVc
The Friends of the Deerfield Public
Libraiy are happy to report that through
the community’s support purchasing
books from the Used Book Sale and
annual memberships, we are able to
fund the following items in 2011: partial
funding for a New Early Childhood
Literacy Station in Youth Sendees, a
substantial collection of Blu-ray discs,
and a Self-Checkout Station.
The Friends want to thank the
community for their used book
donations. The Friends continue to
accept gently used hardback,
paperback, and children’s books, as well
as DVDs and CDs. Please bring
donations to the Circulation desk at the
Library7 during regular business hours.
Volunteers sort and shelve these
donations, and we ask households to
donate only two shopping bags or boxes
per week.
We continue to need the support from
the community with Annual
Memberships. A Friends’ membership is
$15 per year, but any amount is welcome.
Please make checks payable to the
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library,
920 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield, IL 60015.
The Board of the Friends next meeting
will be held on April 27, 7 p.m. at the
Deerfield Public Library. Community
members and potential new volunteers
are always welcome. Please contact the
Friends at (847) 945-3311, ext. 8895 or
at friends@deerfieldlibrary.org.
The Friends plan on selling used
cookbooks again this year at the 2011
Deerfield Farmers Market. Look for us
this summer!
6
Recently, the Libraiy acquired nearly 60 years’ worth of bound Deerfield Review
newspapers, dating back to 1945. Each volume includes original articles,
photographs, obituaries, and advertisements.
Coffee, Tea, and Quiet
A new hot beverage station on the Library’s upper level now offers a wider variety
of coffee options. Coffee will sell for 25$ per cup and cups of cappuccino, mocha,
or hot chocolate are only 50$ each. This unit replaces the carafes of coffee that
were available in the Fiction Room.
Moving the busy beverage station out of the Fiction Room will help reclaim that
space for patrons looking for a quiet place to study, read, or just relax. Readers’
Sendees staff still look fonvard to talking to patrons about books; they’ll just be
using their “library voices.” Please help us keep this space one where peace and
quiet are a priority.
Did You Know? TV Turnoff Week is April 18 - 24, 2011
The Youth Services department offers a variety of games, puzzles, and coloring
pages to make your visit to the Libraiy an enjoyable one. Of course, there are also
books, recorded books, and music to check out and keep you busy without turning
on the TV! Need a recommendation? Stop by the Youth Services department!
Did You Know? Print from Home
The Library offers remote printing from any computer with Internet access.
Simply click on “Remote Printing” on the Library’s home page and send your
document to one of our print/copy stations to retrieve when you come in. Black
and white printing is 10$ a page; 25$ for color.
For the first part of this ACT Prep program, students will take a fully-proctored
practice ACT test and will learn what to expect in a test-like environment. Students
will receive a comprehensive analysis of their performance on the test, detailing
individual strengths and weaknesses. Be sure to bring a calculator, two #2 pencils,
and wear comfortable clothes. Cell phones will not be allowed.
I
\r.
UfffliT
iih.
In the second part of this ACT prep series, both parents and students are invited to
learn how to score higher on the ACT test. The format and content of the test are
explored, including ways to take advantage of the test format to maximize efficiency
on the exam. This is an ideal follow-up to the practice test. Seating is limited, so be
sure to register now.
�■load Your Favorite Books
'me, Anywhere
For such a mobile society, we’ve sure got a lot to carry around.
Keys, cell phone, wallet, backpack, laptop bag, purse, car seat,
cane. Whatever it is you’re lugging around, the Deerfield Public
Library wants to lighten your load. You can now download your
favorite books to read or listen to on your favorite electronic
gadget or gizmo.
umtmmmrm
T
:
DOWNLOAD
Audiobooks,
eBooks,
& more
:!
for your computer
cell phone, iPod0
or eBook reader
Downloadable audio and eBooks are the epitome of convenience.
You can download titles 24/7 from anywhere you have Internet
access. Titles will automatically expire at the end of the lending
period. There are no late fees!
Downloadable audiobooks are digital versions of the same Books
on CD you currently borrow and listen to in your car or on the
treadmill. You just download the audio files like you do your
favorite music. Some audio titles can also be burned to CD to
listen to on-the-go.
An eBook is an electronic version of a traditional print book that
can be read by using a personal computer, smartphone or other
mobile device, or a dedicated eBook reader. Titles can be er\joyed
immediately or transferred to a variety of devices, including
iPod®, Sony® Reader™, Barnes & Noble NOOK™ and many
others. (Sorry, Kindle users. Amazon.com’s device is not
compatible with our free downloads.)
It's Easy!
Browse
Checkout
Download
your library's
website
with a valid
library card
to PC, Mac®/ &
many mobile devices
To check out and download you need...
ov
• A current Deerfield Public Library card
a$>ooic
Vo youv
«t\c) oVC\tv c.o^«Vi(?lc. c)<»viICAC.
° Internet access
° A computer or device that meets the system
requirements for the type(s) of materials you wish
to download
o Free software for the computer or device on which
you wish to use the materials
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCIOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
With hundreds of popular fiction and non-fiction titles to choose
from, this popular collection is guaranteed to have something for
everyone. You can download best-selling novels, well-known
classics, self-improvement guides, and much more.
You will also see digital versions of your favorite books listed in
our online catalog. Click on the version you would like to
download, and you will be taken directly to the MyMediaMall site.
This exciting service, powered by OverDrive, is free with your
library card. To get started downloading audiobooks, eBooks, and
more, visit www.deeifieldlibrary.org and click on MyMediaMall or
go directly to www.mymediamall.net.
http://www.deerfieldlibrary.org
Need Help? Our Reference and Multimedia staff
are happy to answer your questions or schedule a
one-on-one training session. Contact Reference
directly at (847) 580-8933 or email
reference@deerfieldlibrary.org.
7
�Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfiei i\ II ! 1NOJS 60015
Non Profit Org.
U-S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Telephone: 847-945-3311
TTY: 847-945-3372
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
Library Home Page and Catalog:
www.deerfieldlibraiy.org
E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibrary.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfieldlibraty.org
FAX: 847-945-3402
Announcements
The Library will open at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, March 22.
The Library will be closed all day Monday, May 30.
The Library will open at 1 p.m. on Friday, April 29.
The Deerfield Public Library Board meets at 7 p.m. on the third
Wednesday of each month.
The Library will be closed all day Sunday, April 24
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergander, Library Director
Library Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretaiy
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Sunday Mueller, Treasurer
847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Maty Courtney • 847-945-9460
maiycourtneymail@aol.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg • 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Library Hours
Mon.—Thurs:
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Friday:
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Saturday:
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday:
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thank to local residents Fred Gold and
Richard Hams for donating their time and
talent to present exciting programs at the
Libraiy this winter.
Congratulations to everyone who
participated in Reading Is Cool!, the third
annual Winter Reading Program for young
people. Incentives for the program were
generously provided by the Chicago Wolves,
who also sent one of their players, Peter
Mannrno, to visit the Libraiy to motivate
kids to read. Panera Bread in Bannockburn
kindly donated vouchers for free kids’ meals
as an added incentive for kids to achieve
their reading goals.
The Youth Services department would like
to acknowledge the S.T.A.R. Volunteers
who assisted with the Winter Reading
Program by signing up participants,
distributing prizes, and helping out at
special Youth Services programs. Thank you
for all that you do!
Thank you to Barnes & Noble at Deerfield
Square for continuing to share their
costumed characters with us! Check the
Libraiy’s Web site for upcoming Character
Visit stoiytimes.
The Youth Services department would like
to thank the Friends of the Deerfield
Public Library and The Texas Friends of
Michelle Root McDaniel daughter of
honoree Mr. Allen Root for generously
sponsoring the purchase of an additional
Early Literacy Station. Located in the Youth
Services department, the station is loaded
with more than 45 fun and educational
software titles for kids.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Spring 2011
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 26, No. 4
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
03/2011
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.099
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
March - May 2011
9/11 World Trade Center Attacks
Academy Awards
According to Jane
Adventures with Bailey
Allen Root
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
American College Test (ACT)
An Inconvenient Truth
Bannockburn Illinois
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Biscuit
Blu-Ray Format
Brooklyn
Buzzle.com
Career Advice
Carl Birkelbach
Charles Portis
Chicago Bluegrass Band
Chicago Junior League
Chicago Wolves Hockey Team
Clifford
College of Lake County
College of Lake County Political Science Department
Colm Toibin
Cookie Mouse
Counter Espionage
Dave Gladstein
David Grann
Deerfield Area Historical Society
Deerfield Farmers Market
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Audio Visual Circulation
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Buddies
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Bookmark Contest
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Circulation Department
Deerfield Public Library Electronic Book Collection
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Homeschooling Services
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library One-on-One Training Sessions
Deerfield Public Library Poets
Deerfield Public Library Printing
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library S*T*A*R Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Self Checkout Stations
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Technology Classes
Deerfield Public Library TV Tune Out Week
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Winter Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Youth Book Groups
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Review
Deerfield Review Archives
Deerfield Square
Deerfield Village Commissions
Diane Lane
Digital Photos
Doctor Seuss
Douglas Preston
Dubliners
Early Literacy Station
eAudiobooks
eBooks
El Dorado
Ellis Lacey
Email
eReaders
Ernest Pettigrew
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
Facebook
Financial Literacy
Florence Italy
Foreign Policy Association Great Decisions Program
Fred Gold
Friday Mornings at Nine
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Board
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Book Sale
Go Dog Go
Helen Simonson
How to Train Your Dragon
Improv
Improv Commandos
Inception
Income Tax Assistance
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
Internet
Investment Advisory Firms
Ireland
James Joyce
Jeffrey Rivlin
Jewish Vocational Service (JVS) Career Planning Center
Jonathan Safran Foer
Karen Kleckner Keefe
Kate Easley
Kenan Abosch
Lake County Astronomical Society
Lake County Astronomy Under the City Lights Program
Lake County Forest Preserves
Leonardo DiCaprio
Local History
Mad Hatters
Major Pettigrew's Last Stand
Marilyn Brant
Mario Spezi
Mark Zuckerberg
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Pergander
Mattie Ross
Michael K. Goldberg
Millennials
My Media Mall
National Financial Literacy Month
Native Plants
New York City New York
North Shore K-9 Reading Buddies
One Book One Zip Code
One Book One Zip Code Steering Committee
Oskar Schell
Overdrive
Panera Bread
Penny Cherny
Percy Fawcett
Peter Mannino
Peter Nye
Phyllis Soybel
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID)
Read Across America Day
Richard Harris
Roberta Glick
Romance Novels
Ronald Simon
Rooster J. Cogburn
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest
Roth IRAs
Searchable PDF
Secretariat
Signal Intelligence
St. Patrick's Day
Stocks
Sunday G. Mueller
Texas Rangers
The Lost City of Z
The Monster of Florence
The Social Network
The Texas Friends of Michelle Root McDaniel
Thomas Jester
True Grit
United States Marshall
United States Navy
United States Navy Intelligence
Waiting for Superman
Whose Line is it Anyway?
World War II
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/71dd90bb1a9c9426d7387766d2c14eb8.pdf
f0dd8be834eeb89be037cbbb8db53e25
PDF Text
Text
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
0
)
yd Public Lib
s>e
r*ry .
- *,
%
^07
70
Message from
the Director
Thank you, Deerfield!
The recent approval of
the Library’s request for
funding for the Library
Improvement Plan is a win for everyone
in Deerfield. This gives us the
opportunity to improve our library
building and services, which will benefit
the entire community.
We have begun to get questions about
how soon we will proceed. There are
many steps to be completed and
approvals to be obtained as we move
forward. For example, we need to complete
the architectural designs, and then
share them with Village Commissions as
part of the approval process. Certain
questions or concerns may require some
adjustments to the design or other
changes. When the approval process is
final, we will need to go out to bid for
construction, then evaluate the bids to
assure we are getting the best value and
quality for the project. At best this
process will take several seasons, if all
goes smoothly.
We appreciate the ongoing interest of
our residents, and we will continue to
keep you updated via our Facebook and
Website pages. We received very positive
feedback about our openness during the
referendum, and we plan to continue
sharing our progress with you along the
way. Of course you are also welcome to
attend Library Board meetings, or read
the minutes of these meetings on our
website. Keeping you informed and
involved is important to us, so please
share your questions and comments
along the way.
Mary Pergander
Library Director
'lift
| THANK YOU, DEERFIELD
mm
■
i r»Y
ft
II/
rjkLk
FA
wn
.
‘
Lr -
_U
ft’ :
Library Improvement Plans Move Forward
The November 2 referendum for $11,775 million to fund the Library Improvement
Plan was approved! Over 58.4% of Deerfield voters voted yes, with 41.5% voting against.
The plan calls for improvements to the Library building and services, in order to
meet the needs of Deerfield residents for the next 20 years or more. Space will be
reorganized, remodeled, and expanded. The building layout will become more open
and flexible to allow for changing needs and multi-purpose uses. Adults will have
more quiet reading areas. Additional computers will be added for adults and children,
and a new Technology Lab will offer instruction and workshops. The Youth Services
area will be improved, along with a larger and better designed Youth Program Room.
All restrooms will be ADA compliant. Self-check kiosks and a convenience center will
be added, and the meeting room will be enlarged. The building’s aging infrastructure
will be upgraded or replaced, and the parking lot will be improved.
“The vote is a win for everyone in Deerfield. This gives us the opportunity to improve
our Library building and services, which will benefit the entire community,” said Ken
Abosch, President of the Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees. “The Library
Board is grateful to eveiyone who provided ideas and feedback as we developed the
Library Improvement Plan. We also want to thank Deerfield residents for the time
they took to become informed about the referendum.”
The Board will proceed with the Libraiy Improvement Plan in the most expedient
and efficient manner possible. There are many steps involved, including finalizing
architectural design, reviewing of the plans by Village commissions, completing
construction documents, and bidding the various phases of construction work. It’s not
possible at this time to say exactly when construction will begin.
Please check the Library’s Web site for the latest information about implementation
of the Library Improvement Plan.
�Programs are free and open to the public. Please register in advance at
www.deerfieldlibrary.org under “Programs & Classes” or by calling (847) 945-3311.
Preserving Holiday Recipes: A Scrap-Cookbook Event
Part of Deerfield’s Winter Celebration
Saturday, December 4, 2 p.m.
Amy Alessio shows you how to combine food and scrapbooking to make
holiday themed scrap-cookbooks! Audience members will sample treats
and leave with mini albums and recipes. Everyone should bring a copy of
a favorite holiday recipe.
My Media Mall!
Saturday, January 8,10:30 -11:30 cum.
A great program for all of you with brand new e-readers! Learn more
about the Library’s FREE downloadable audiobooks, e-books, and even
videos. Library staff will walk you through finding compatible devices,
looking up titles, placing holds, and downloading materials to various
devices. You are welcome to bring your ebook or audiobook device.
Collage and the Human Anatomy
Tuesday January 11, 7p.m.
Riverwoods resident Richard Harris shares images and explanations
behind the anatomical collages he commissioned from artist Balint Zsako.
The collection of original pieces will be displayed at a one-man show at
the Loyola Museum of Art from February 12 - May 1.
Inside Your PC: The Magic Box Revealed!
Tuesday January 25,10:30 -11:30 a.m.
Join Rebecca, Head of Automation, and Julie, Reference Librarian, for a
look into the guts of a typical desktop PC. This is a great
opportunity to demystify the inner workings and uses
of a computer.
Arizona: The Roads Less Traveled
Wednesday January 26, 7p.m.
Many winter travelers visit Arizona for great
weather, spring baseball, and golf. Learn why
else we go west as Nancy McCully’s slide lecture
takes you down the roads less traveled to visit
Mesa, the frontier town of Wickenburg,
Goldfield ghost town, and Besh-Ba-Gowah Archaeological Park.
My Media Mall - Byte Sized
Thursday January 27, 4 p.m. and Tuesday February 8, 7p.m.
A brief 15 minute overview of how to search and download the Library’s
FREE audiobooks, e-books, and videos. You are welcome to bring your
ebook or audiobook device.
Buying and Selling on eBay
Wednesday February 2,10:30 a.m.
Beginners can learn the low-risk tricks to buying and selling on eBay.
Cleaning house? This is the perfect time to determine the value of those
closet-shelf treasures and the prospects for successful online sales.
2
Job Hunting @ DPL
Thursday, February 3, 4 -5 p.m.
Struggling to find a job or want a career change?
Learn how to use the Libraiy to jump start your
search! A Reference Librarian will provide
helpful resources and tips to help you find the
job of your dreams.
Google, Yahoo and More!
Saturday, February 5, 10:30 -11:30 a.m.
The first in a series of basic computer skills
classes, a Reference Librarian discusses search
engines and how to navigate them. You are
welcome to bring your laptop for hands-on
practice.
Keep Fit While Keeping Warm!
Thursday February 10, 7 - 8 p.m.
Feeling sluggish and out of shape? Learn some
basic indoor exercises to keep fit during the cold
months! An exercise professional will discuss
tips for staying fit and healthy in the comfort of
your home. A signed Participation Waiver is
required and can be found when registering at
www.deeifieldlibrary.org.
Basic MS Word 2007
Saturday, February 12,10:30 -11:30 a.m.
Learn the basics of word processing software! A
Reference Librarian will demonstrate how to use
spell check, change the look of your document,
use MS templates, print, and save. You are
welcome to bring your laptop for hands-on
practice. Basic computer skills are required.
Chicago Music Scene
Sunday, February 13,2 p.m.
Dean Milano’s Chicago Music
Scene incorporates a slide show
of images from his book and live
music that celebrate the
unforgettable songs of Chicago
musicians of the 1960s and ‘70s.
m
iStSaB
3• •
Facebook for Beginners
Saturday, February 19,10.30 -11:30 a.m.
Facebook remains one of the fastest growing
sites on the Internet. Find out how to set up your
own Facebook account and join the social
networking revolution. You are welcome to bring
your laptop for hands-on practice. A working
email account is required to sign up for this
course.
Hr-.
iHv
£
�AAJRP TaxAide Programs
Trains in a Winter Wonderland
Saturday, February 26, 9 a.m. -4 p.m.
The North Central ‘O’ Gaugers present a
must-see model railroad exhibit featuring
fictional favorites like Thomas the Tank
Engine and The Hogwarts Express, as well
as popular regional and historical lines.
Children of all ages will er\joy this all-day
event!
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing
Contest for Adults:
A Dog’s Life—Animal Essays,
Stories, and Poems
Tuesday, February 1 - Monday February 28
The Library’s 15th Annual Creative
Writing Contest welcomes stories, poems,
or essays about an amazing, amusing, or
wonderfully average animal. The contest
honors the memory of Library trustee,
community activist, and journalist
Rosemary Sazonoff. High school students
and adults may submit short, unpublished
pieces of creative wilting on the theme “A
Dog’s Life—Animal Essays, Stories, and
Poems” by February 28. The Library will
honor winners at a reading and reception
on Sunday, March 13. Get entry forms and
more information in all departments and
online beginning Tuesday, February 1.
Tuesday and Fridays, Starting February
1 -April 15,1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
IRS-certified volunteers for the AARP will
provide help in completing simple tax
returns. You don’t have to be an AARP
member or a senior citizen to receive
assistance. Please bring copies of last
year’s returns and all tax forms you
receive (W-2s, 1099s, etc.). No
appointment needed.
Career Advice
Tuesdays, December 7, January 4, and
February 1, 9:30 a.m. - 12p.m.
Career Counselor Roberta Glick of Jewish
Vocational Service offers free, half-hour
consulting sessions for adults. Please
register in advance.
Library Poets
6:30 - 8:45p.m.
Tuesdays, December 7,14, and 21,
January 4,11 and 18
Wednesdays, January 26,
Febmary 2, 9, and 23
Local poets are encouraged to share their
work, inspiration, and creative processes.
The group is open to poets of all levels of
experience and actively seeks new
members.
Great Decisions
Tuesdays, January 25 - March 22, 7:30p.m.
Tom Jester coordinates thoughtful
discussions and stimulating analyses of
some of the great issues of our time.
Purchase discussion guidebooks at the
Circulation desk.
Monday Night Movies Allfilms will start at 6:30 p.m. Please register in advance.
□ December 13: TOY STORY 3 • Rated G
When Andy leaves for college his treasured
childhood toys are accidentally sent to the
Sunnyside Day Care Center. Will they settle in
with new children, or try to find their way
back to their beloved owner?
m January 10: DESPICABLE ME • Rated PG
Gru’s latest scheme is to shrink and steal the
moon so he can clinch the World’s Greatest
Villain title, but three little girls may derail
his plan.
■ January 24: SORCERER’S APPRENTICE
Rated PG
Dave, your average nerdy college student,
finds out he is the inheritor of Merlin’s powers and must help the great Balthazar battle
the equally powerful but evil Horvath to save
Manhattan.
■ February 28: EAT, PRAY, LOVE
Rated PG-13
Join Elizabeth Gilbert as she discovers the
wonders of food in Italy, prayer in India, and
love in Bali.
Book Discussions
in the Library
You canfind copies of the discussion
books at the Circulation desk one
month prior to discussion.
■ Thursday, January 13,10:30 a.m.
Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates
The devastating effects of work, adul
tery, rebellion, and self-deception slowly
destroy the once successful marriage of
Frank and April Wheeler, a suburban
American couple.
!
■ Thursday, January 20, 7:30 p.m.
Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
In a future North America, where the
rulers of Panem maintain control through
an annual televised survival competition
pitting young people from each of the 12
districts against one another, 16-year-old
Katniss’s skills are put to the test when
she voluntarily takes her younger sister’s
place.
■ Thursday, February 10,10:30 a.m.
Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into
Opportunity for Women Worldwide by
Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn
David Groeninger, Ph.D., Instructor of
History at the College of Lake County,
will lead a discussion of Half the Sky:
Turning Oppression into Opportunity for
Women Worldwide. The book is a moving
exploration of the abuses faced by
women in the developing world: sex
trafficking and forced prostitution;
gender-based violence, including honor
killings and mass rape; and maternal
mortality. Half the Sky also provides
inspiring stories of how some of these
same women, with the help of concerned
people everywhere, are overcoming
these brutalities and injustices.
Participants will have the opportunity to
receive tickets to a public speaking
event by Sheryl WuDunn at CLC in the
spring.
■ Thursday, February 17,7:30 p.m.
The Girls from Ames: A Story of Women
and a Forty-Year Friendship by Jeffrey
Zaslow
Eleven women detail their 40-year friend
ship to Jeffrey Zaslow. They describe
how their friendship survived moving to
eight different states, untimely deaths,
marriages, divorces, and children.
3
�Children’s Programs
<11
activities - except a» MpM
online at www deerfieldlibrary.org under “Programs and Classes, or Dy caning (B47) 94S-JJ1 1.
Registration for all of the programs listed here begins Monday, November 29.
Baby Lapsit Storytime
Fridays, January 14, January 28, February 11, and February 25,10:30 a.m.
Ages 0-12 months and their parent or caregiver
It’s never too early to start reading to your baby! Join us for a Baby Lapsit
Storytime program with rhymes, books, and songs for you and baby, plus social
time after the program.
Fun for Ones
Tuesdays, January 11, January 25, February 8, and February 22,10:30 a.m.
Ages 13 - 23 months and. their parent or caregiver
One-year-olds and their parents or caregivers are invited to a stoiytime just for
them, including stories, songs, movement activities, rhymes, and social time
after the program. This action-packed program will engage new walkers in early
literacy activities and encourage a love of books and reading.
Time for Twos
Thursdays, January 13 - February 17,10:30 a.m. Ages 24-35 months and
their parent or caregiver
Two-year-olds and their caregivers are invited to a special weekly storytime,
including songs and movement activities designed just for them in the Stoiytime
Room.
Preschool Pals
Mondays, January 10 - February 14,
1:30p.m. Or Wednesdays, January 12February 16,10 a.m. Ages 3-5 years,
but not yet in Kindergarten, and their par
ent or caregiver
Preschoolers and their caregivers have a
program just for them! We’ll listen to stories,
sing songs, and have fun all while getting
ready to read!
After School Stories
Thursdays, January 13 - February 17, 4:30p.m.Grades K-2
This program is specifically designed for younger elementary school children
and features stories and crafts. Caregivers must remain in the Library.
Sensory Storytime: Stories and Emergent Literacy Activities
for Special Needs Children
Saturdays, January 15, January 29, February 12, and February 26,2p.m.
Children ages 4-8 with parent or caregiver
This non-traditional stoiytime is designed to engage all of the senses through
music, movement, stories, and play. Funded by a grant from Target Foundation,
children will interact with trained staff and teen volunteers to practice skill
building in a multi-sensory approach. This stoiytime is designed for children
who have difficulties with sensory processing or simply sitting still, but the
program is inclusion-friendly. If your child needs any special accommodations,
please let us know at the time of registration.
4
p““’
Storytime, Milk & Cookies at
Panera Bread in Bannockburn
Tuesdays at 9:30 cum.
December 7, December 21, January 4,
January 18, February 1, February 15
Children and their caregivers are invited to
Panera Bread in Bannockburn for storytime,
milk, and cookies.
Cocoa and Cuddles Stoiytime
Wednesday, Febmary 16, 4:30 p.m.
and 7p.m.
Children and their caregivers are invited to
Panera Bread in Bannockburn for a special
storytime with cocoa and cookies!
Holiday Treat Workshop
Tuesday, December 14, 4:30 - 5:30 p.m.
Grades K-2
oo\
Warm up with some
holiday cheer! Join
°
professionals from Whole
Foods Market-Deerfield as '
n V/?w
p°^\
they show you how to make J
your very own holiday
JPB I!
4 °o \v
desserts. You’ll be taking
:
home your holiday-themed
treats to share or keep for
yourself. All participants will take home
decorated sugar cookies, snowmen on a stick
and sparkly “snowpops”.
Spruce Up Your Space!
Grades 5 - 8
Wednesday, January 5, 7-8p.m.
Brighten up the winter blues by making some
fabulous accessories for your room, locker, or
wherever else in your life needs a little
renewal.
Winter Wonderland Jam
Children ages birth - 5 and their parent or
caregiver
Wednesday, January 19,1:30 - 2:30p.m.
Shake your sillies out at this action-packed
dance program. Children will find their
rhythm with shakers and tambourines while
singing along to their favorite songs!
�Preschool Picassos
Sunday; January 23, 2 - 3 p.m.
Ages 4-5 and their parent or caregiver
Do you have a Monet-maniac? Is there a
raging-Renoir in your house? Join other
Preschool Picassos as we read stories and
then create masterpieces together!
K-9 Reading Buddies of the
North Shore
Monday, January 24 and Monday,
Febmary 28, 6:30- 7:30p.m.Grades 1-5
Registration begins Monday, November
29for both sessions
Read to four-legged friends in this safe,
non-judgmental program. Caregivers must
remain in the Library.
Backwards Day Storytime
Monday, January 31, 7 p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Storytime fun this with Day Backwards
celebrate! (Celebrate Backwards Day with
this fun storytime!) Storytime will be in
reverse at this program that the whole
family is sure to er\joy.
Family Storytime
Monday, Febmary 14, 7p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Join us in celebrating Read to Your Child
Day. Families will share in the joy of
reading through stories and songs! As you
leave, browse some of your favorite books
to check out and ei\joy with someone
you love.
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing
Contest: A Dog’s Life—Animal
Essays, Stories and Poems
Tuesday, February 1 -Monday February 28
The Library’s 15th Annual Creative
Writing Contest welcomes stories, poems,
or essays about an amazing, amusing, or
wonderfully average animal. The contest
honors the memory of Library trustee,
community activist, and journalist
Rosemary Sazonoff. Children grades 2-8
may submit short, unpublished pieces of
creative writing on the theme “A Dog’s
Life—Animal Essays, Stories and
Poems” by February 28. First place
winners in each age category will receive
a prize. Get entry forms and more
information at the Youth Services desk
and online beginning Tuesday, February 1.
Trains in a Winter Wonderland
4p
4
4>
Reading is Cool! Family Winter
Reading Program
Monday, December 13 - Monday
January 10
The Deerfield Public Library is excited to
once again be partnering with the Chicago
Wolves for the Winter Reading Program. In
this four-week family program, everyone can
contribute toward reaching the family’s read
ing goal. In addition to providing reading
incentives, the Library will host a visit with a
Chicago Wolves hockey player on Thursday,
January 6, and the finale program, Andy
Head: Wonderful Wacky Juggler, on Sunday,
January 9.
Visit With a Chicago Wolves Player
Thursday January 6, 4:30 p.m.
All ages and their caregivers
Registration begins Monday November 29
Celebrate the Family Winter Reading
Program with a Chicago Wolves Player! A
brief presentation will be followed by Q &
A, autographs, and prizes for kids.
All ages
Saturday, Febmary 26, 9 a.m. to 4p.m.
The North Central ‘O’ Gaugers present a
must-see model railroad exhibit featuring
fictional favorites like Thomas the Tank
Engine and The Hogwarts Express, as well
as popular regional and historical lines.
Children of all ages will er\joy this all-day
event!
DROP-IN ACTIVITIES
Family Times
Homeschool Programs
Saturdays, December 4 - February 26,11 am,
All ages and their parent or caregiver
Come to the Storytime Room for a drop-in
storytime for the whole family.
Games
Monday December 13,1 - 2:30 p.m.
Creative Writing Program
Monday January 24,1- 2:30p.m.
Special guest, Jenny Meyerhoff
Book Discussion & Storytime
Monday Febmary 28,1 - 2:30p.m.
These events are open to children of all
ages with their parent or caregiver.
Please register in advance.
Contact Kate Easley for more information:
keasley@deerfieldlibrary.org or
(847) 945-3311, ext. 8865.
Drop-In Crafts
Saturday, December 4,10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Wednesday January 12,10 a.m. -8 p.m.
Wednesday Febmary 23,10 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Stop by the Youth Services department to
make a fun and seasonal craft to take
home!
Family Winter Reading Program
Finale—Andy Head: Wonderful
Wacky Juggler
Sunday January 9,2- 3 p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday November 29
You won’t want to miss this hilarious,
high-energy performance packed with
juggling, comedy, unicycling, audience
participation, and lots of surprises! Get
ready to laugh until your face hurts with
Andy’s wonderful, wacky show!
5
�mrm
l
Children’s Book
Groups
Books are available in the Youth
Services department Registration
begins Monday November 29.
Caudill Book Group
The Rebecca Caudill Young Readers’
Book Award is given annually to the
author of the book voted most
outstanding by students in grades
4-8. The Caudill Book Group will be
reading a selection of the 2011 kids’
choice award nominees.
Teen Programs
Teen Study Lounge
Friday, January 14 - Thursday January 20, available all hours the Library is open
High school students looking for a place to study for exams can make themselves at home in
the Library’s Meeting Room and Teen Space during finals week. The Library will provide
large tables for group study, snacks and beverages, improved Wi-Fi access, and help using the
Library’s extensive collection of print and online resources.
ACT Practice Test and Test Strategies 101 Workshop: a Two-Part
Program presented by Kaplan Test Prep & Admissions
Part I: Practice ACT Test Saturday, March 5,10 a.m. -2p.m.
Part II: Test Strategies 101 Workshop, Saturday, March 12,10 -11ami
For the first part of this ACT Prep program, students will take a fully-proctored practice ACT
test and will experience what to expect in a test-like environment. Students will receive a
comprehensive analysis of their performance on the test, detailing individual strengths and
weaknesses. Be sure to bring a calculator, two #2 pencils, and wear comfortable clothes. Cell
phones will not be allowed.
Grades 4-6
In the second part, both parents and students are invited to learn how to score higher on the
ACT test. The format and content of the test are explored, including ways to take advantage
of the test format to maximize efficiency on the exam. This is an ideal follow-up to the
practice test. Seating is limited, so be sure to register now.
■ Saturday, December 11,2-3 p.m.
All Shook Up by Shelly Pearsall
Sweet! Cupcakes with Gale Gand
■ Saturday, January 8, 2 - 3 p.m.
The Great Wide Sea by M.E. Herlong
■ Saturday, February 5, 2 - 3 p.m.
Yellow Star by Jennifer Roy & The Mozart
Question by Michael Morpurgo
Saturday February 12, 2 - 3 p.m. Grades 6 -12.
Just in time for Valentine’s Day—make something sweet for a special
someone! Learn how to frost like a pro with renowned chef and cookbook
author Gale Gand. Discover the fun of decorating cupcakes and create your
own edible masterpieces to take home. Please register in advance.
Teen Craft Club
Caudill Voting Party: A Special
Meeting of the Caudill Book
Group
Grades 4-6
Saturday February 19,2 - 3p.m.
Cast a ballot for your favorite kids’
choice award nominee! Read 4 titles
from the list of this year's nominees
and join kids from all over Illinois in
choosing the state favorite! Chat
about your favorites and er\joy a snack
and activities.
Bonding with Books:
Parent/Child Book Group
Saturday January 29,11 am. - 12p.m.
Grades 2-3 with their parents or
caregivers
Read to your child, and then have
your child read to you. Mr. Popper’s
Penguins by Richard Atwater.
6
KaAaM
TB6Y) Cfrtft Club
Grades 9-12
Friday, December3,4-5p.m.
Get your craft on at our first Teen Craft Club meeting in the
Library’s Teen space! Teens interested in crafting can come
together to create cool things and exchange craft ideas and
techniques.
My Media Mall!
Saturday, January 8, 10:30 - 11:30 a.m.
A great program for all of you with brand new e-readers! Learn more about the
Library’s FREE downloadable audiobooks, e-books, and even videos. Library staff will
walk you through finding compatible devices, looking up titles, placing holds, and
downloading materials to various devices. You are welcome to bring your ebook or
audiobook device.
My Media Mall - Byte Sized
Thursday, January 27, 4 p.m.
Tuesday, February 8, 7 p.m.
A brief 15 minute overview of how to search and download the Library’s FREE
audiobooks, e-books, and videos. You are welcome to bring your ebook or audiobook
device.
I
�In The Library
m
(
for a chance to win S10,000 for our library.
The Deerfield Public Library SUPER SIZE
Playaway display in the Youth Services
department was selected as one of 10 finalists
in the “Playaway Picture This Contest.” The
winning library will receive a check for
$10,000! Help us win the $10,000 by going to
vote.playaway.com/deerfield and vote before
December 17.
BTW-A Playaway is a small MP3 player, preloaded with an audiobook. No cassettes. No CDs.
No downloading. The Library has Playawaysfor
adults and kids.
Staff News
There is a new face at the reference desk! Ted Gray, librarian extraordinaire, joined
the Reference Department in September. He has experience building music and book
collections, assisting with research, and teaching people about the newest
technological wonders. Welcome, Ted!
Toys for Tots
The Library will be a drop-off point for Toys for Tots through December 15. Please, new
and unwrapped gifts only. This year, no stuffed animals unless they are in original
factory-sealed packaging. PS. New books make great giftsfor kids!
Library Board openings
Three Library Trustee terms are expiring and will appear on the April, 2011, ballot. All
are six-year terms. Interested persons may obtain candidate petition packets at the
Village Hall. In addition, packets of supplemental information about the Library and
Library Trustee responsibilities may be obtained by contacting Mary Pergander,
Library Director. Current board members are also available to speak with interested
candidates, if desired.
I’m Reading a Book on my Phone!
Downloadable books are more popular than ever. It is estimated that the number of
ebook readers owned by Americans is now well into the millions. The Library has more
than 8,000 ebooks and audiobooks that you can download for free right at home and
transfer to your phone, ebook reader, or MP3 player.
Ebooks can be read on your PC or MAC, or your ebook reader, such as the Barnes &
Noble Nook or Sony Reader. The audiobooks are compatible with most MP3 players,
iPods, iPads, iPhones, Androids and Blackberries. Some titles can even be transferred
to a CD. The best part? You don’t have to worry about returning the books or accruing
late fees!
Visit the Library’s website at www.deerfieldlibrary.org and look for the MY MEDIA
MALL logo and be sure to register for one of the “My Media Mall” programs held at the
Library in January and February.
<^ds °%
*
*
oO
*—
C>,
^/Pub^V'
The Friends of the Deerfield Public
Library is a non-for-profit 501(c)(3)
organization, dedicated to enriching
the Library’s materials, services, and
programs for the members of the
community.
The Friends 2010 activities and
community involvement included
managing the on-going Used Book
Sale in the Library’s first floor
meeting room, stocking the book
spinner each week at the Deerfield
Train Station with free used paper
books, and selling used cookbooks at
the Deerfield Farmers Market.
You can help support the Library by
joining the Friends. Your annual
membership contribution helps the
Friends fund items such as the
Outdoor Drop Boxes, Early
Childhood Literacy Station and
other materials, services, and
programs. Beginning memberships
start at $15, but every contribution
is helpful. Please make checks
payable to Friends of the Deerfield
Public Library, 920 Waukegan Rd.,
Deerfield, IL 60015.
The Friends are always seeking new
volunteers. The time commitment
can be as little a few hours every
other month, and gives you the
opportunity to give back to your
Library in a fun new way. Please
contact the Friends at (847) 9453311, ext. 8895 or at
friends@deerfieldlibrary.org.
The Board of the Friends meetings
will be held on January 26 and April
27,2011,7:00 p.m., Deerfield Public
Library. Community members and
potential new volunteers are always
welcome.
7
�Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Important Library Numbers
° Telephone: 847-945-3311
° TTY: 847-945-3372
° Library Home Page and Catalog:
www.deerfieldlibraty.org
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
° E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibraiy.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfieldlibraiy.org
° FAX: 847-945-3402
Announcements
The Library will be closed all day Friday, December 24 and Saturday,
December 25.
The Library will close at 5 p.m. on Friday, December 31.
The Library will be closed all day Saturday, January 1.
The Library will open at 10 a.m. on Thursday, January 27.
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergander, Library Director
Library Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretary
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Sunday Mueller, Treasurer
847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Maiy Courtney • 847-945-9460
maiycourtneymail@aol.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg • 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Library Hours
Mon.-Thurs:
Friday:
Saturday:
Sunday:
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
The Library will be closed all day Monday, February 21.
The Library will open at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, February 23.
The Deerfield Public Library Board meets at 7 p.m. on the third
Wednesday of each month.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The Youth Services
department would like to
thank the Chicago Wolves
for once again sponsoring
the Family Winter Reading
Program. As part of the program, they
generously provide incentives and a visit
with a Chicago Wolves Player.
Thank you to Barnes & Noble of Deerfield
Square for continuing to share their
costume characters with us! Check the
Library’s Web site for upcoming visits and
stoiytimes.
Thank you to Sunset Foods of Highland
Park for donating most of the food items for
the Sweet! Cupcakes With Gale Gand
program. We really appreciate your
continued support!
The Youth Services department received a
generous Early Childhood Reading Grant
from the Target Foundation. These grants
are awarded to schools, libraries, and
nonprofit organizations to support reading
programs and foster a love of
reading in children and their
families. The $2000 award was
used to create a series of
stoiytimes for children with
special needs and their parents
or caregivers. The Sensory
Storytime will engage all of the senses
through music, movement, stories, and play
for children who have difficulties with
sensory processing.
'JillULiL
a ljos aii ij
r: 111- ’ 'Mi
alUUi '_X‘
. At
»- -
AMI
B" *
</
t*
*S4**
Stay cozy at the Library!
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Winter 2010
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 26, No. 3
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
12/2010
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.098
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
December 2010 - February 2011
All Shook Up
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
American College Test (ACT)
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
Amy Alessio
Android Phones
Andy Head
Apple Mac Computers
April Wheeler
Arizona
Balint Zsako
Bannockburn Illinois
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Besh-Ba-Gowah Archaeological Park
Blackberry Phones
Career Advice
Cell Phone
Chicago Illinois
Chicago Music Scene
Chicago Wolves Hockey Team
Claude Monet
Collage
College of Lake County
College of Lake County History Department
David Groeninger
Dean Milano
Deerfield Farmers Market
Deerfield High School
Deerfield High School Finals Week
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Planning Commission
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Book Drop Boxes
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Early Childhood Literacy Stations
Deerfield Public Library Electronic Book Collection
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Facebook Page
Deerfield Public Library Homeschooling Services
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Meeting Rooms
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library Online Resources
Deerfield Public Library Poets
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library Referendum
Deerfield Public Library Self Checkout Stations
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Technology Classes
Deerfield Public Library Teen Study Lounge
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Winter Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Youth Book Groups
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Square
Deerfield Train Station
Deerfield Village Hall
Deerfield Winter Celebration
Despicable Me
Eat Pray Love
eAudiobooks
eBay
eBooks
Elizabeth Gilbert
Exercise
Facebook
Foreign Policy Association Great Decisions Program
Frank Wheeler
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Board
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Book Sale
Gale Gand
Goldfield Arizona
Google
Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide
Highland Park Illinois
Human Anatomy
Hunger Games
Illinois
Income Tax Assistance
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
Internet
iPads
iPhones
iPods
Jeffrey Rivlin
Jeffrey Zaslow
Jennifer Roy
Jewish Vocational Service (JVS) Career Planning Center
Job Hunting
Julie Rhea
Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions
Kate Easley
Katniss Everdeen
Kenan Abosch
Loyola Museum of Art
M.E. Herlong
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Pergander
Mesa Arizona
Michael K. Goldberg
Michael Morpurgo
Microsoft Word
MP3 Player
Mr.Popper's Penguins
My Media Mall
Nancy McCully
Nicholas Kristof
Nook eReader
North America
North Central O-Gaugers Model Railroad Club
North Shore K-9 Reading Buddies
Pablo Picasso
Panera Bread
Personal Computers (PCs)
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Playaway Audiobooks
Rebecca Caudill Award
Rebecca Wolf
Revolutionary Road
Richard Atwater
Richard Harris
Richard Yates
Riverwoods Illinois
Roberta Glick
Ronald Simon
Rosemary Sazonoff
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest
Searchable PDF
Shelly Pearsall
Sheryl WuDunn
Sony eReader
Sorcerer's Apprentice
Sunday G. Mueller
Sunnyside Day Care Center
Sunset Foods
Suzanne Collins
Target Foundation
Target Foundation Early Childhood Reading Grant
Ted Gray
The Girls from Ames
The Great Wide Sea
The Hogwarts Express
The Mozart Question
Thomas Jester
Thomas the Tank Engine
Toy Story 3
Toys for Tots
Whole Foods
Wickenburg Arizona
WiFi
Yahoo
Yellow Star
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/2d0b83b4962b3c9ae7bda9f21654991d.pdf
053dfc2a6f0a22b1529f57961306f086
PDF Text
Text
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
Vd Public Lib
To Deerfield Residents
From Ken Abosch, President
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
On July 21, the Library Board unanimously
agreed to take the next step toward a plan to
improve the Deerfield Public Library. Trustees
voted to put a referendum on the November
2010 general election ballot asking for funds
for the Library Improvement Plan. (See related
article.)
As President of the Deerfield Public Library
Board of Trustees, I am proud of the public
process used to develop the plan. A 23-member
Citizens Input Group (CIG) helped the Library
Board gather and evaluate feedback about
Library needs and options through a series of
seven community open houses in March and
June. The Board also sought input about
improvement options through an independent
telephone survey of community residents, as
well as one-on-one conversations.
As a result of what we heard, Library Trustees
combined elements from several options and
downsized the most ambitious improvement
suggestions. The Library Improvement Plan
expands on what is now available and possible.
It will bring our Library into the 21st centuiy
in order to provide Deerfield with the greatest
possible value from this important community
asset.
On behalf of the Libraiy Board, I want to thank
everyone who participated in this process by
sharing ideas, feedback, and questions.
Especially, we want to thank the members of
the Citizens Input Group for being the
additional eyes and ears for the Libraiy Board,
by helping trustees gather input from Deerfield
residents.
We look forward to talking with community
members over the next few months as we
provide more details about the Libraiy
Improvement Plan.
"•WS.
*6' Number 2
Library Improvement Plan
Over the past year, the Libraiy Board has carefully evaluated options for
improving our nearly 40-year-old libraiy building and its capacity to serve
Deerfield residents. Libraiy Trustees sought input from Deerfield residents and
studied how best to meet the libraiy service needs of our community now and
into the future.
At its July 21,2010 meeting, Libraiy Trustees reviewed all these findings and
voted unanimously to seek funding through a November 2010 referendum for a
Libraiy Improvement Plan. The plan will upgrade infrastructure, reconfigure
and renovate existing space, and expand the Libraiy by about 10,000 square feet.
The Deerfield Public Libraiy has been well used since the building opened
more than 39 years ago. Since 1971, Deerfield’s population has changed and
usage has increased. New types of materials, services, and technology have
expanded the ways residents can use and benefit from the Libraiy.
“While we’ve been able to update some services to meet changing needs, we
face challenges in delivering 21st-century service from a building that was built
in the last centuiy. Our residents deserve a full-service library that is better
able to meet the growing demands and changing needs of our community,” said
Ken Abosch, Library Board President.
After considering a range of options and reviewing community input, the
Libraiy Board developed a Libraiy Improvement Plan that it feels offers the
greatest value in the most cost-effective manner. The project is significantly
downsized from a 2004 referendum which sought to build a new libraiy. The
2010 referendum amount of $11,775 million is less than half of the amount
sought in 2004. The existing building will be renovated and expanded, providing
new and better spaces at a more economical cost. Exciting new areas and
features will be designed for flexibility to meet changing space and patron
needs into the future.
The Libraiy Board plans to spend $2 million of its reserves on the project. The
reserves were accumulated specifically for this type of need: to update and
replace infrastructure, or other capital project needs related to the building.
More information about the proposed Libraiy Improvement Plan is available on
the Library’s website at www.deerfieldlibraiy.org. In addition, Public
Information Meetings in September and October will provide architectural
conceptual drawings and more information about the project.
Public Information Meetings
Thursday, September 30 at 7 p.m. and Saturday,
October 2 at 3 p.m.
Lri“rrr#rrrr*rrrrrrr»»rrrrrrrrrrri'rrrrrrrrt-rr
�1 he Art oi Spain
Tuesdays, September 14,21,28,
October 5,12, 7p.m.
Through slides and discussion, Alice
Kosnik discusses five of Spain’s most
famous artists: El Greco, Diego Vel&squez,
Francisco Goya, Pablo Picasso, and
Salvador Dali. The emphasis wall be on
how wrorld events and the artists’ personal
lives shaped and influenced their art. Co
sponsored by the Deerfield Fine Arts
Commission.
The Sound of Their Music:
The Music of Rodgers, Hart & Hammerstein
Sunday September 19,2 p.m.
Beckie Menzie and Tom Michael showcase two successful songwriting
partnerships, from Rodgers & Hart’s wit and urban sophistication, to the
hit shows of Rodgers & Hammerstein. Presented in cooperation with
“From Page to Stage,” a Writers’ Theatre initiative.
x\
Master Gardeners Plant Clinic
k
Monday September 20,10 a.m. -2p.m.
Is there a problem in your garden? Are insects and
weeds “bugging” you? The Master Gardeners from the
University of Illinois Extension have the answers. Bring
your questions and plant, weed, or insect samples.
Authentic Chinese Cuisine at Home
Wednesday October 20, 7 p.m.
Are you one of those people who love Chinese v
food but have trouble getting it right at home?
After this tasty demonstration, you will be able to
make delicious and healthy dishes like chicken
vegetable stir fry and sweet & sour chicken in the
comfort of your own kitchen.
Silent Movie Music: Phantom of the Opera
Sunday October 24,2 p.m.
Pianist and composer Dave Drazin is renowned for his piano
improvisations accompanying silent films. The whole family can enjoy
silent movie magic with this live accompaniment to Lon Chaney’s classic
performance in Phantom of the Opera.
Classic Monster
Mash
Saturday, October 30,
2 p.m.
Whether reliving a
favorite fright or
meeting these creepies
for the first time, Steve
Frenzel’s collection of
clips from classic
monster movies will
have viewers on the edge of their seats.
Traditional Holiday Classics
Tuesday November 23, 7 p.m.
Just in time for Thanksgiving, audience members
will learn the secrets to timeless side dishes that
will become a treasured part of your holiday table.
Preserving Holiday Recipes:
A Scrap-Cookbook Event
Saturday December 4, 2 p.m.
Amy Alessio shows you how to combine food and
scrapbooking to make holiday themed scrapcookbooks! Audience members will sample treats
and leave with mini albums and recipes. Everyone
should bring a copy of a favorite holiday recipe.
Career Advice
Tuesdays, September 7, October 5, November 2
9:30 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Career Counselor Robert Glick of Jewish Vocational
Service offers free, half-hour consulting sessions for
adults. Please register in advance.
Library Poets
Tuesdays, 6:30 - 8:45p.m.
Local poets are encouraged to share their work,
inspiration, and creative processes. The group is
open to poets at all levels of experience - and is
always seeking new members.
VOTER REGISTRATION
Saturdays, September 11 and 25, October 2,10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
The League of Women Voters will register voters in the Library lobby Saturdays this fall. Please bring two forms of
identification, at least one of which must show your name and a current address. Only one form of identification
can be a piece of mail for a contractual service addressed and delivered to you.
2
�Monday Night Movies
Book Discussions in the Library
Allfilms will start at 6:30 p.m.
Please register in advance.
You caiifind copies of the discussion books at the Circulation desk
one month prior to discussion.
■ Thursday, September 2,10:30 a.m.
A Short History of Women by Kate Walbert
Inspired by a suffragist ancestor who starved herself to
promote the integration of Cambridge University, Evie refuses
to marry and Dorothy defies a ban on photographing the bodies
of her dead Iraq war soldier sons, a choice that embarrasses
Dorothy’s daughters.
lA s**rt
H'ST*Ry
or
Wr^L“DO„,
■ Thursday, September 16, 7:30 p.m.
in Other Rooms, Other Wonders by Daniyal Mueenuddin
A volume of linked stories describes the intertwined lives of
landowners and their retainers on the Gurmani family farm in
Pakistan, in a collection that explores themes of culture, class
power, and desire.
■ Thursday, October 14,10:30 a.m.
The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind by William Kamkwamba
Kamkwamba’s true story takes place in Malawi, a region
decimated by drought, famine, and inept leaders. Determined
to save his family from starvation, Kamkwamba builds a
windmill to provide electricity for his village, creating a new
world of possibilities, for himself and his people.
in o
«Oi
o Tl
WHnlHC 101
r8f hiho
!« v
:T
■ Thursday, November 18,7:30 p.m.
Honeymoon with My Brother by Franz Wisner
Just when Franz Wisner thought his life was on track, things
take a major detour. Trying to recover from being left at the
altar, Wisner invites his brother on a honeymoon of a lifetime.
The two brothers travel the globe, renewing their friendship
and finding themselves in the process.
■K
'&k{
FPS®
jy t
October 4: MONSTERS, INC.
Rated G
Gear up for Halloween with this hilarious
Pixar film about two Monsters, Inc.
staffers who accidentally let a human girl
into the city of Monstropolis!
October 18: HOCUS POCUS
Rated PG
The frightful fun continues when three
17th- century witches are accidentally
coloured up by modern-day students on
Halloween night!
November 1: EXTRAORDINARY
MEASURES
Rated PG
Extraordinary Measures is based on the
true and heartwarming story of a
dedicated father who joins forces with a
rogue scientist in hopes of finding a cure
for his fatally ill children.
■ Thursday, October 21, 7:30 p.m.
The Housekeeper and the Professor by Yoko Ogawa
A relationship blossoms between a brilliant math
professor suffering from short-term memory problems and the ' /.*
young housekeeper, a mother of a ten-year-old son, hired to
ft?
care for him.
Hi
■ Thursday, November 11,10:30 a.m.
Honolulu by Alan Brennert
Journeying to 1914 Hawaii as a mail-order bride, Korean-born
Jin finds her hopes devastated by the realities of a rushed
marriage to a bitter laborer, a situation forcing her to
overcome limited opportunities.
September 20: COCO BEFORE
CHANEL
Rated PG-13
The story of how Gabrielle Chanel, an
orphan-turned cabaret singer-turned
seamstress, became the legendary
fashion designer Coco Chanel.
November 15: HARRY POTTER AND
THE HALF BLOOD PRINCE
Rated PG
Part one of the two-part Harry Potter
finale will be released in theaters
November 19. Join us for a showing of
the last magical blockbuster to celebrate
the occasion.
November 29: CLASH OF THE TITANS
Rated PG
This remake of the classic 1980’s film
imagines demigod Perseus’ adventures
with witches, giant scorpions, Medusa,
and of course, the kraken!
3
�leen Programs
College Application Essay Workshop by
Kaplan Test Prep & Admissions
Wednesday, Septembers, 7p.m.
This one-hour workshop is designed to show students and parents what
college admissions officers want to see in an essay. The workshop will
examine the types of topics students will encounter, cover the four steps to
writing a winning essay, and critique a sample admissions essay. Please
register in advance.
Find Books with Beat at your Library!
Teen Read Week:
October 17-23
“Mom, can you help me with my
homework?”
Stop by the Deerfield Public
Library during Teen Read Week to
read books with beat! Check out
materials that rock your world,
audiobooks to entertain your ears,
or poetry that makes some noise.
“Okay, here’s the problem. Acetylene gas
(C2 H2) undergoes a combustion to
produce carbon dioxide and water vapor.
T\vo C2 (g) + 5 02 (g) yields to 4C02 (g) +
2H2 0 (g). What volume of H2 0 is
produced if 35 (g) of acetylene combust?”
Teen Poetry Cafe Tuesday, October 19, 7p.m.
If you’re a teen and you eryoy reciting poetiy, listening to poetiy, or drinking
free coffee or hot chocolate, then come to the Library’s Teen Poetiy Cafd, in
the Teen Space. Poets who wish to read and audience members who want to
listen can just walk in to the Teen Space to participate!
Teen Open Mic Night (minus the mic)
Thursday, October 21, 7p.m.
wr
*
.'**v
Teens wishing to perform
acoustically can take the stage and
perform in the Libraiy’s Main
Meeting room. Performance slots
are limited, so please reserve your
15-minute time slot by contacting
the Teen Services Librarian at
teenservices@deerfieldlibrary.org
or calling (847) 580-8957. No
registration needed for audience
members, so be sure to stop in and
listen.
Harry Potter Costume Party
Thursday, November 18, 7p.m.
Teens that have grown up with the Harry Potter series can dress as their
favorite character and come to the Library and celebrate the release of the
first half of the final movie. Prizes will be awarded for best costumes, treats
will be served, and games and crafts will be provided.
4
Stoichiometric Coefficients and
the Molar Ratios
“Sure.”
We suppose that there are some parents
who might say, “Cool - first check the
stoichiometric coefficients and the molar
ratios.” If you are that parent, skip this
article and go on to the next. If you’re not,
you need to know about Live Homework
Help from Tutor.com, a premium service
offered free by the Library that provides
real homework help from real, live tutors
online. Students K - 12, college-level
students and adult learners can receive
help in math, social studies, English or
science-including chemistiy. In fact, in
June, lOth-grade chemistiy students used
Tutor.com to ask questions just like the one
described above. Here’s one of the
comments from a chemistiy student about
the service: “My tutor was incredible. She
was able to help me out with a difficult
chem concept and she continued to give me
practice problems when she realized I was
still shaky.”
Access to Tutor.com is available free
through the Web site to all patrons at the
Library and available to Deerfield Public
Library cardholders from home seven
days a week from 2-9 p.m.
TEENS: You may be
interested in our Classic
Monster Mash program.
See page 2 for details!
�Children’s Programs
REGISTERED ACTIVITIES
39 Clues Party
Giggles, Jumps & Squeals
Guest Star Storytime
Friday, September 10, 4:30 - 5:30 p.m.
Grades 4-6
Register in advance
Don’t be left clueless! Join us as we
celebrate the release of the final book in
the 39 Clues series with activities, trivia
challenges, and surprises around
(literally) every corner!
Saturday1 October 23, 2 - 2:45p.m.
Ages 4-9 and their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, October 4
A whole lot of Halloween fun and a little
spooky, too! Join us for family-friendly
stories to celebrate the season with just
enough shivers to delight listeners of all
ages.
Peter Rabbit (from the beloved
picture books by Beatrix Potter)
Back-to-School Bash
Ghosts, Shivers & Screams
Monday, September 13, 4:30 - 5:30 p.m. or
Tuesday, September 14, 7-8p.m.
Children ages K-2 and their parent
or caregiver
Register in advance
Start the new school year off on the right
foot with a back-to-school party! Share in
the fun with a TumbleBooks storytime,
games, and a tour of the Youth Services
department to learn how the Library can
help you succeed!
Saturday, October 23, 3:15 -4 p.m.
Ages 10 and up
Registration begins Monday, October 4
A witches’ brew of spine-tingling stories!
These stories send shivers down your
spine and cause those little hairs on the
back of your neck to rise. You might want
to bring a friend—it will be dark when
you go home!
Preschool Picassos
Saturday September 18,10 -11 a.m.
Ages 4-5 and their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday September 13
Do you have a Monet-maniac? Is there a
raging-Renoir in your house? Join other
Preschool Picassos as we read stories and
then create masterpieces together!
Lunch & a Movie:
Babe: The Gallant Pig
Monday October 11,11:30 a.m. -1 p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday September 13
Bring a sack lunch. Beverages and dessert
will be provided.
K-9 Reading Buddies of the
North Shore
Monday October 18 and Monday
November 15, 6:30 - 7:30 p.m.
Gi'ades 1-5
Registration for both sessions begins
Monday, September 13
Read to four-legged friends in this safe,
non-judgmental program. Caregivers must
remain in the Library.
Teddy Bear Sleepover
Wednesday October 27, 7 - 7:45p.m.
Children ages 4 - 7 and their
parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, October 4
Wednesday, October 27
Friday, November 12, 4 p.m.
Young children and their parent
or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, October 4
The visit includes a brief storytime
followed by a meet-and-greet with the
character and worksheets or crafts to do
here or take home. (Don’t forget to bring
your cameras!)
Astronomy Under the City Lights
Tuesday November 16, 7p.m. All ages
Registration begins Monday, October 4
The Astronomy Under the City Lights
program of Lake County introduces
children and adults to the spectacular
views of the night sky. LCAS members
offer telescopes and viewing guidance in
Jewett Park where participants can see
the moon’s mountains and craters and
other planets of our solar system.
Family Reading Night 2010:
a
Community Storytime
is Teddy Bear Day.
Saturday November 20, 2 - 3 p.m.
Bring a stuffed animal
Children and their parent or caregiver
or doll to the Library for Registration begins Monday, October 4
a sleepover! Listen to a
Families are invited to the Library for a
storytime together and
fun afternoon of stories from the
then tuck the toys in for TumbleBook Library, an online collection
the night. Come back to 0f anjmateci picture books. Special guest
the Library on Thursday readers will include Mayor Harriet
to pick up your toy and
Rosenthal, Chef Gale Gand, and members
see what adventures it
of the Deerfield Police and Fire departments.
had in the night.
Crafty Cookies
Thursday November 11,1 -2 p.m.
Grades 5-8
Registration begins Monday October 4
On your day off school, learn how to mix
up batches of delicious treats that can be
given as gifts, shared with friends, or
enjoyed by yourself! A snack will be
served, and participants will come away
with one jar of cookie mix as well as great
ideas for more edible crafts.
5
�REGISTERED ACTIVITIES
DROP-IN ACTIVITIES
Registrationfor the following programs begins Monday, September 13:
Family Times
Baby Lapsit Storytime
Saturdays, September 4 - November 27,11 a.m.
All ages and their parent or caregiver
Come to the Storytime Room for a drop-in
storytime for the whole family.
Fridays, September 24, Octobers, October 22, and November 5,10:30 a.m,
Ages 0-12 months and their parent or caregiver
It’s never too early to start reading to your baby! Join us for a Baby Lapsit
Storytime program with rhymes, books, and songs for you and baby, plus social
time after the program.
Fun for Ones
Tuesdays, September 21, Octobers, October 19, and November 2,10:30 a.m.
Ages 13 - 23 months and their paren t or caregiver
One-year-olds and their parents or caregivers are invited to a storytime just for
them, including stories, songs, movement activities, rhymes, and social time
after the program. This action-packed program will engage new walkers in
early literacy activities and encourage a love of books and reading.
Time for Twos
Drop-In Crafts
Wednesday, September 22, 9 a.m. - 8p.m.
Wednesday October 20, 9 a.m. -8p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Stop by the Youth Services department to make
a fun and seasonal craft to take home!
Trick-or-Treat the Library
Sunday October 31, 3:30 -5p.m., all ages
Stop in on Halloween to show off your costume
and get a treat!
Gwe
Thursdays, September 30 - November 4,10:30 a.m.
Ages 24 - 35 months and their parent or caregiver
TWo-year-olds and their parents or caregivers ate invited to a special weekly
storytime, including songs and movement activities designed just for them in
the Stoiytime Room.
).
Preschool Pals
Mondays, September 27 - November 1,1:30 p.m.
or Wednesdays, September 29 - November 3,10 a.m.
Ages 3-5 years, but not yet in Kindergarten and their parent or caregiver
Preschoolers and their parents or caregivers have a program just for them!
We’ll listen to stories, sing songs, and have fun, all while getting ready to read!
After School Stories
Thursdays, September 30 - November 4, 4:30p.m. Gi'ades K-2
This program is specifically designed for younger elementary school children
and features stories and crafts. Caregivers must remain in the Library.
Storytime, Milk, & Cookies at Panera Bread - Bannockburn
Tuesdays at 9:30 a.m.
September 7, September 21, October 5, October 19, November 2, November 16
Children and their caregivers are invited to Panera Bread in Bannockburn for
stoiytime, milk, and cookies.
Tmnks
9
Thankful Turkeys
Monday November 1 - Wednesday, November
24, All ages
Stop by the Youth Services department to share
what you are thankful for this Thanksgiving.
H0MESCH00L PROGRAMS
Deerfield Historical Society
Program
Monday September 20,1-2:30 p.m.
Book Discussion & Storytime
Monday October 18, 1 -2:30 p.m.
Fun for the Whole Family
Check out these programs that the whole family can enjoy! Advanced
registration is required for each of these programs. Please see the
program descriptions in this issue for more information.
LUNCH & A MOVIE: BABE: THE GALLANT PM
Monday, October 11,11:30 a.m. -1 p.m.
HIDDEN HARRY POTTER
Sunday, November 14,2 - 3.-30 p.m.
6
THE CITY LIGHTS
Tuesday, November 16,7 p.m.
> ;
jf,
2010: A
Saturday, November 20,2 - 3 p.m.
i
Book Discussion & Storytime
Monday November 15,1 -2:30 p.m.
Games
Monday, December 13,1-2:30 p.m.
These events are open to children of all ages
with their parent or caregiver. Please register in
advance. Contact Kate Easley for more
information: keasley@deerfieldlibraiy.org or
(847) 945-3311, ext. 8865.
�BOOK GROUPS
Harry Potter Book Discussion
Hidden Harry Potter
Wednesday, November 10, 7-8p.m.
Sunday, November 14, 2 - 3:30 p.m.
Grades 4-8
All ages and their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, October 4
A Registration begins Monday,
/I October 4
Night owls are invited to this evening book
discussion of Book Seven of the Harry
/ A Enter the magical world of Harry
LA l \ Potter with this thrilling
Potter series, Harry Potter and the
Deathly Hallows. Celebrate the arrival of
insider’s peek at one of the
part one of the final movie by answering
most treasured film series of
trivia questions from the book and
all time. You’ll hear hilarious
enter a raffle for a movie gift card!
/
inside jokes and uncover
behind-the-scenes tidbits
k and other fascinating facts
Magic For Muggles
/
1 sure to delight film buffs
Saturday, November 13,
/
^
and Potter fans alike
1 - 3 p.m.
.
"■^3
as you eqjoy a
Ages 7 and up
__
collection
of the most
Registration begins
exciting
scenes
from
the
first
six
films.
Monday, October 4
*
'a
Come to this exciting
magic trick workshop for Harry Potter
fans! Following in Harry’s footsteps,
children will learn to make things vanish
and reappear, read minds, and make
objects move just by wiggling their fingers.
All of the props are supplied, and each
wizard-in-training will go home with a
“bag of tricks,” including a magic wand!
Caregivers must remain in the Library.
Harry Potter and the
Half-Blood Prince
Monday, November 15, 6:30 p.m.
Rated PG. Register in advance
Part one of the two-part finale Harry
Potter and the Deathly Hallows is
released in theaters November 19. Join us
for a showing of the last Harry Potter
blockbuster to celebrate the occasion.
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
ofy
The Friends raise money by selling used books in the first
floor meeting room during regular library hours. All hardback * ^
books, CD's, DVD's are $1.00 and paperbacks are $.50.
^ U
*
£>
The Friends stock the book spinner weekly at the Deerfield
^
train station with free, used paperback books for the
Pub^°
commuters. Gently used paperback book donations are welcome
from the community to help stock the train station spinner. Please bring the
donations to the Circulation Desk at the library.
The Friends also receive support through membership dollars. Basic membership
is $15 per year. Checks should be made payable to the Friends of the Deerfield
Public Library. Membership forms are available on the Friends' page of the
Library's Web site.
The Friends' fall meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, October 13 at 7:00 PM.
Members of the community are welcome to come. To contact the Friends please
call 847-945-3311, ext. 8895 or email friends@deerfieldlibrary.org.
There are several ways to sign up for Library programs: by phone, In person, or online. By
navigating to the Library’s Web site, www.deerfieldlibrary.org, and clicking on “Programs &
Classes’’ you can quickly and easily register for Library programs online!
Books are available in the Youth
Services department.
Caudill Book Group
The Rebecca Caudill Young Readers’
Book Award is given annually to the
author of the book voted most
outstanding by students in grades 4-8.
The Caudill Book Group will be reading
a selection of the 2011 kids’ choice
award nominees.
Grades 4-6
Registration begins Monday,
September 13for all three sessions
Saturday, September 18, 2 - 3 p.m.
Found by Margaret Peterson Haddix
Saturday, October 9, 2 - 3 p.m.
Schooled by Gordon Korman
Saturday, November 6,2 - 3 p.m.
A Friendship for Today by Patricia
McKissack
Bonding with Books:
Parent/Child Book Group
Saturday, September 25,2 - 3:30p.m.
Grades 2-3 with their parents or
caregivers
Register in advance
Read to your child, and then have your
child read to you.
Stuart Goes to School by Sara
Pennypacker.
Did you know?
TV Turnoff Week is September 19-25,
2010. The Youth Services department
offers a variety of games, puzzles, and
coloring pages to make your visit to
the Library an enjoyable one. Of
course, there are also books, and
music to check-out and keep you busy
without turning on the TV! Need a
recommendation? Stop by the Youth
Services department!
7
�i)H!;:ni-iEi,'i)
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Important Library Numbers
° Telephone: 847-945-3311
° TTY: 847-945-3372
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
° Library Home Page and Catalog:
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
° E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibraty.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deeifieldlibraiy.org
° FAX: 847-945-3402
Announcements
The Library will
The Library will
The Library will
The Library will
be closed all day Monday, September 6.
open at 1 p.m. on Friday, October 15.
open at 10 a.m. on Friday, November 19.
close at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, November 24.
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergandcr, Library Director
Library Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretaiy
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Sunday Mueller, TYeasurer
847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Mary Courtney • 847-945-9460
marycourtneymail@aol.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg •847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Jeff Rivlin • 847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Library Hours
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Mon.-Thurs:
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Friday:
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Saturday:
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday:
The Library will be closed all day Thursday, November 25.
The Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees meets at 7 p.m. on
the third Wednesday of each month.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The Teen Services Department would like to
thank Rust, Gino’s East, Panera Bread, the
Deerfield Park District, and Rhapsody
Cafe for their generous donations of
incentives for the Teen Summer Reading
Program. These incentives helped encourage
teens to register and continue their partici
pation in the Teen Summer Reading Program.
The Youth Services department would like to
thank all of the STAR Volunteers and Book
Buddies Volunteers for their efforts in
assisting with summer programming. We
couldn’t have done it without you and we
appreciate your time and commitment!
Thank you to all of the local businesses that
supported the children’s summer reading
program by providing prizes and/or gift cards
that were incentives for kids to read over the
summer. These include: Baskin Robbins,
Campus Colors, Chipotle Mexican Grill,
Cookers Red Hots, Gino’s East of Chicago,
D Fomo Pizzeria, Jewel-Osco, Judy’s
Pizza, McDonalds, Panera Bread, Piero’s
Pizza, Rhapsody Cafe, Target, Trax Tavern
and Grill, and Whole Foods Market. A
special thank-you to Barb Ender from Lewis
Floor and Home for arranging the donation
of a carpet tube, which became the mast for
our sailboat this summer!
A very special shout-out to the Deerfield
Optimist Club. Thanks to the club’s
donation, each child that completed the
Summer Reading Program received a
paperback book of their choice.
Thank you to Barnes & Noble of Deerfield
Square for continuing to share their
costume characters with us! Check the
Library’s Web site for upcoming Character
Visit storytimes.
Thanks to the Friends of the Deerfield
Public Library for sponsoring activities and
prizes for our Adult, Teen, and Youth
summer reading programs!
Thank you to the Adler Planetarium for
donating passes to our Adult Summer
Reading Program.
Thanks to our good friends at Whole Foods
Market in Deerfield Square and Sunset
Foods in Highland Park for their very
generous donation of bottled water for a very
hot Fourth of July!
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Fall 2010
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 26, No. 1
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
09/2010
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.097
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
September - November 2010
39 Clues Series
A Friendship for Today
A Short History of Women
Adler Planetarium
Alan Brennert
Alice Kosnik
Amy Alessio
Babe the Gallant Pig
Bannockburn Illinois
Barb Ender
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Baskin Robbins
Beatrix Potter
Beckie Menzie
Cambridge University
Campus Colors
Career Advice
China
Chipotle
Clash of the Titans
Claude Monet
Coco Before Chanel
Coco Chanel
Cookers Red Hots
Daniyal Mueenuddin
Dave Drazin
Deerfield Area Historical Society
Deerfield Bannockburn Fire Prevention Department
Deerfield Fine Arts Commission
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Optimists Club
Deerfield Park District
Deerfield Police Department
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Buddies
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Events Calendar
Deerfield Public Library Homeschooling Services
Deerfield Public Library Improvement Plan
Deerfield Public Library Meeting Rooms
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library Online Resources
Deerfield Public Library Poets
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library Public Information Meetings
Deerfield Public Library Referendum
Deerfield Public Library Renovations
Deerfield Public Library S*T*A*R Volunteers
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library TV Tune Out Week
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Youth Book Groups
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Train Station
Diego Velasquez
El Greco
Extraordinary Measures
Found
Francisco Goya
Franz Wisner
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Gabrielle Chanel
Gale Gand
Gardening
Gino's East
Gordon Korman
Harriet Rosenthal
Harry Potter
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Hawaii
Hocus Pocus
Honeymoon With My Brother
Honolulu
Il Forno Pizza and Pasta
Illinois Family Reading Night
In Other Rooms Other Wonders
Iraq War
Jeffrey Rivlin
Jewel-Osco
Jewett Park
Jewish Vocational Service (JVS) Career Planning Center
Judy's Pizza
July 4th Activities
Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions
Kate Easley
Kate Walbert
Kenan Abosch
Korea
Kraken
Lake County Astronomical Society
Lake County Astronomy Under the City Lights Program
Lake County Illinois
League of Women Voters Deerfield - Lincolnshire
Lewis Floor and Home
Lon Chaney
Lorenz Hart
Malawi
Margaret Peterson Haddix
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Pergander
McDonalds
Medusa
Michael K. Goldberg
Molar Ratios
Monsters Inc.
North Shore K-9 Reading Buddies
Oscar Hammerstein II
Pablo Picasso
Pakistan
Panera Bread
Patricia McKissack
Perseus
Peter Rabbit
Phantom of the Opera
Piero's Pizza
Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Rebecca Caudill Award
Rhapsody Cafe
Richard Rodgers
Roberta Glick
Rodgers and Hammerstein
Rodgers and Hart
Ronald Simon
Rust
Salvador Dali
Sara Pennypacker
Schooled
Scrapbooking
Searchable PDF
Spain
Steve Frenzel
Stoichiometric Coefficients
Stuart Goes to School
Sunday G. Mueller
Sunset Foods
Target Corporation
Teen Read Week
The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind
The Housekeeper and the Professor
Tom Michael
Trax Tavern and Grill
TumbleBooks
Tutor.com
Tutor.com Live Homework Help
University of Illinois Extension Master Gardeners
Voter Registration
Whole Foods
William Kamkwamba
Writers Theatre from Page to Stage Program
Yoko Ogawa
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/9d8fd1774d202109ae9a8efe2c649052.pdf
c4f738b975f2842a20e8138fbde7348e
PDF Text
Text
■
M%yncs
,
Message from
the Director
' JTf-, " ^
We deeply appreciate the t
feedback from the
community as the Library
Board seeks input about
the possible building improvement
project. The March series of Public Open
Houses, the April/May telephone survey,
and the Citizen Input Group have all
contributed to our understanding of the
perspectives, concerns, and suggestions
about the future of the Library in
our village.
What’s next? The Library Board will
review the feedback from the Open
Houses, telephone survey, and Citizen
Input Group. Based on these and other
resources, the Library Board will select
one of the original four options and begin
to develop it further. They will determine
a preferred course of action, and share it
with the Village Board. Then, the
preferred option will be shared with the
community through the second series of
Public Open Houses. Once again, public
feedback will be collected and reviewed
with the Citizen Input Group. By late
summer, the Library Board will
determine whether to proceed with a
possible referendum.
Want to learn more? Have an opinion to
share? The Library Board will continue to
invite participation through the next
series of Public Open Houses. (See
“Planning for the Future” for dates and
times of the sessions.) Take a behind-thescenes tour. Learn about the issues.
Compare us to other libraries. Consider
the costs. To contact a Board member,
call or email them using the contact
information provided on the back cover
of the newsletter, or the Library website.
www. d eerfi e Id li bra ry.org
6- Number i
Planning for the Future
The Library Board is committed to keeping Deerfield residents informed about,
and involved in, the future of the Library. Based upon feedback from the March
series of Public Open Houses and the telephone survey conducted in April, the
Library Board will select one of the four building improvement options presented
and ask the architects and financial consultant to develop it further. During the
next series of Public Open Houses, the selected option will be presented in more
detail and additional public feedback will be sought. Each event in the series
will follow the same agenda, offering residents a variety of convenient times to
attend. One-hour Open Houses will be held Saturday, June 26 at 3 p.m. and
Tuesday, June 29 at 7 p.m.
Results of March Public Open Houses
Five Public Open Houses were held in March to familiarize Deerfield residents
with the Library building history and needs, additional expressed needs of the
community, four possible building improvement options, and the costs projected
for each option—including possible effects on a resident’s real estate taxes.
About 42 members of the general public attended the sessions, and 30 completed
feedback forms. In addition, members of the Citizen Input Group assisted the
Board in evaluating the community feedback and provided their own perspectives
at a special Board meeting held April 24. Of the four options presented, 35%
preferred Option 3—Remodel and Expand, while 60% selected Option 4—Build a
New Library. The remaining 5% chose Option 1 or Option 2 which provide for
changes necessary to meet code, and limited other improvements.
The Library Board continues to receive valuable input from the Citizen Input Group.
Members are: Christine Barr, John Bartok, Cookie Center, Lorraine Clark, Lisa
Crist, Betsy Eisenhauer, Luisa Ellenbogen, Brooke Fogt, Mark Fox, Mike Gruenhut,
Laurie Leibowitz, Rick Lynn, Nancy O’Neill, Jean Reuther, Bob Rosenbacher, Judy
Smith, Amy Thale, Jane Weinstein-Jacobson and Bruce Zimmerman.
Results of Telephone Survey
The Library Board hired the Northern Illinois University (NIU) Public Opinion
Laboratory to conduct a telephone survey of 400 residents of Deerfield. Phone
numbers were chosen at random from those assigned to the Deerfield area—they
were not provided by the Library, nor did NIU have any access to the Library’s
patron database. The survey was developed by NIU with Libraiy input. Results
will appear on the Library's web site. The Library Board will use the findings,
combined with feedback from the Open Houses and other sources, to make a
decision about which building option to pursue, if any.
Updates on the surveys, reports, and Board actions are available at
http://www.deerfieldlibrary.org/deeifield/planning.asp.
�Adult Programs
Programs are free and open to the public. Please register in advance at
www.deerfieldlibrary.org under “Programs & Classes'’ or by calling (847) 945-3311.
Water Your Mind: READ!
American Bandstand
Saturday, June 19 - Saturday August 14
Keep that grey matter growing with award-winning books and movies
this summer. Read, watch, or listen to five highly-honored titles and win
a custom flower-pot mug. All participants are invited to share their
favorites at a book-lovers brunch on Friday, August 13 at 11 a.m.
Sunday, July 25, 2p.m.
Heather Braoudakis returns to
celebrate the early years of
American Bandstand with the
music of Perry Como, Patsy
Cline, Johnny Mathis, Jerry
Lee Lewis, and many more.
Come ei\joy the great songs of
a legendary era.
Wii Bowling for Grown Ups
Friday June 11,2-4p.m.
Stop by the Library to epjoy a few frames of bowling on the Nintendo Wii
system. A great opportunity for a little exercise and a lot of fun!
Movers and Shakers, Part Two
Wednesday June 23, 7p.m,
Hy Speck is back! See the larger than life Mies van der Rohe, John
Dillinger, Sally Rand, and Jane Byrne come to life in a multi-media
program presented by this popular historian.
Virtuoso Violinist Oliver Colbentson
Sunday June 27,2 p.m.
A native of Chicago, Colbentson began playing
the violin at age 5. At 16 he won the Chicago
Musical College Competition and went on to
become Concertmaster of the Metropolitan Opera
Orchestra. Now the Concertmaster and Soloist
with the Nuremburg Symphony, Colebentson
returns annually to perform in America.
Master Gardeners Plant Clinic
Monday June 28,10 a.m. -2p.m.
Is there a problem with your garden? Are insects and weeds “bugging”
you? The Master Gardeners from the University of Illinois Extension
have the answers. Bring your questions and plant, weed, or insect
samples.
Auto Detailing: Do It Like a Pro!
Tuesday July 13, 7 p.m.
In this fun and informative class, Gary
Kouba, former owner of Perfect Auto
Finish, shares his secrets on how to
keep your car looking new. All aspects
k of interior and exterior care are
^ covered, including how to put a
\ _ synthetic paint sealant on your
;0s car for as little as $3. (Most
dealers charge $900 or more!)
2
Adult. Summer Reading Brunch
Friday August 13,11 a.m.
All participants in the adult summer reading
program are invited to share their favorite books,
movies, and more at a special brunch.
Career Advice
Tuesdays, June 1 and August 3, 9:30 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Career Counselor Roberta Glick of Jewish
Vocational Service offers free, half-hour consulting
sessions for anyone ages 18-80. Please register in
advance.
Library Poets
Tuesdays, 6:30 - 8:45 p.m.
Local poets are encouraged to share their work,
inspiration, and creative processes. The group is
open to poets at all levels of experience—and is
always actively seeking members.
Notional Endowment tor tho Humanities
the People
The Deerfield Public Library is one of 4,000
libraries nationwide selected to receive a
Including free
hardcover editions of 17 classic books for
young readers. The grants, presented by the
National Endowment for the Humanities in
cooperation with the American Library
Association, are provided to support the
teaching, study, and understanding of
American history and culture in our library.
�?•
Book Discussions
in the Library
You canfind copies of the discussion
books at the Circulation desk one month
prior to discussion.
B Thursday, June 10,10:30 a.m.
The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox
by Maggie O’Farrell
Iris Lockhart learns that her great-aunt
Esme is being released from the hospital
where she has been confined for more than
60 years and discovers that Esme holds the
key to family secrets that could change
her life forever.
B Thursday, June 17, 7:30 p.m.
The Help by Kathryn Stockett
In 1962 Jackson, MS, where black women
were trusted to raise white children but
not to polish the household silver, Skeeter
Phelan comes home from college and
begins collecting the stories of the women
on whom the country club set relies.
B Thursday, July 8,10:30 a.m.
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
by Barbara Kingsolver
After spending years living in sun-baked
Arizona, Kingsolver and her family decide
to move to a farm in Virginia. They commit
themselves to being locavores and
consuming only seasonal, locally
produced foods.
B Thursday, July 15, 7:30 p.m.
The Story of a Marriage
by Andrew Sean Greer
Caring for her ailing husband and child in
1953 San Francisco, Pearlie questions how
well she ever knew her husband when a
stranger offers her a large sum of money in
exchange for the unimaginable.
Monday Night Movies
Popcorn and beverages will be provided. Allfilms will start at 6:30 p.m.
(New Time!) Please register in advance.
JUNE 14: IT’S COMPLICATED Rated R for some drug content and sexuality
Even after ten years of being divorced, two exes find themselves oddly attracted to
each other when brought together at their son’s college graduation. Stars Meryl
Streep, Alec Baldwin, and Steve Martin.
JUNE 21: UP IN THE AIR Rated R for language and some sexual content
George Clooney stars as Ryan Bingham, a corporate downsizing expert whose
cherished life on the road is threatened just after he’s met the frequent-traveler
woman of his dreams.
JULY 12: ALICE IN WONDERLAND Rated PG
A young Alice falls down a rabbit hole and finds herself in a magical world of talking
animals, magic potions, a demanding queen, and an excitable Mad Hatter. A Tim
Burton adaptation of fantastical proportions.
JULY 26: YOUNG VICTORIA Rated PG
Queen Victoria shows her willful determination as a teenager on the verge of power.
The story follows her early reign and the love story that builds between the Queen and
her future Prince.
AUGUST 9: WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE Rated PG
In this Spike Jonze adaptation, Max decides to run away from home after being upset
with his mother. He finds himself surrounded by large wild beasts with temperaments
similar to his own. Instead of eating him, they form a bond and crown Max their king.
AUGUST 23: THE BLIND SIDE Rated PG-13 for one scene involving brief violence,
drug and sexual references
Sandra Bullock has an Oscar winning performance in this true story of a family who
welcomes a high school boy from a tough neighborhood into their home. Michael Oher
shows his determination to make it to the big leagues on the football field and off.
Wednesday Afternoon Movies
Popcorn and beverages will be provided. Allfilms will start at 1:00 p.m. Please
register in advance.
JUNE 2: AN EDUCATION Rated PG-13 for sexual content and for smoking
Carey Mulligan turns in an Oscar-nominated performance as Jenny, a young woman full
of promise, intent on studying at Oxford. Meeting an older man leads Jenny to believe
that she can learn things outside the classroom, casting doubt on her future plans.
JUNE 16: SHERLOCK HOLMES Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of violence, startling
images and suggestive material
Revealing fighting skills as lethal as his legendary intellect, Holmes will battle as
never before to bring down a new nemesis and unravel a deadly plot that could destroy
the country.
JUNE 30: INVICTUS Rated PG-13 for brief strong language
The inspiring true story of how Nelson Mandela sought to unite South Africans, divided
by race and economics, through the universal language of sport.
i JtVcVett
JULY 28: CORALINE Rated PG
Coraline finds a secret door in her house that leads to an alternate world similar to her
own—except much better! She is tempted to stay until she realizes that it is all a trick
and she must escape in time to get back to her family.
AUGUST 25: FINDING NEMO Rated G
A clownfish named Marlin must make the journey to Sydney, Australia, to find his son,
Nemo, after he is accidently captured in the open sea.
3
�Teen Study Lounge
Friday June 4 - Wednesday June 9,
available all hours the Libraiy is open.
Grades 9-12
High school students looking for a place to
study for exams can make themselves at
home in the Library’s Meeting Room and
Teen Space during finals week. The
Library will provide large tables for group
study, snacks and beverages, improved Wi
Fi access, and help using the Library’s
extensive collection of print and online
resources.
Teen Summer Reading Program
o
&
o
o.
mm
Saturday June 19 - Saturday August 14
Grades 9-12
Join us for the second annual Teen
Summer Reading program. Teens entering
grades 9-12 can participate in a drawing
to win a 16GB iTouch. This year we have
more chances to win with monthly gift
card drawings and a contest to create a
playlist for your favorite book. Visit
www.deerfieldlibraiy.org and click on the
Teen Events tab for more information.
Create a Playlist for Your
Favorite Book
Contest opens on Saturday June 19 and
ends Saturday August 14
Grades 9-12
Using Playlist.com, create a playlist for
your favorite book and email it to the Teen
Librarian—cseisser@deerfieldlibrary.org.
The Teen Advisory Board will vote on the
best playlist and the first place winner
will receive a $50 flbnes gift card, second
place a $25 ffimes gift card, and third
place a $15 fl\ines gift card. Playlist.com
should not be used by persons under the
age of 14. Look for more information
about this contest on the Teen Events Web
page. Limit one entry per person and be
sure to include your name and email
address when submitting your entry!
4
Accept e i: Getting Into Your
First Ghoice School presented
bv Ka •; Test Prep &
Admissions
V
Gaming ill the Teen Space
Thursdays, 1 - 3 p.m.
June 17, June 24, July 15, July 22,
August 5, August 12
Grades 9-12
High school students can play Wii games
like Guitar Hero and Mario Kart on the big
screen in the comfort of the Teen Space.
Recycled Crafts in the
Teen Space
Tuesdays, 1 - 3 p.m.
June 15, June 22, June 29, July 13, July
20, August 3, Grades 9-12
Drop in to the Teen space and craft with
recycled materials this summer. Make a
different craft each time and learn how to
be green by creatively reusing everyday
materials.
Teen Murder Mystery Night:
Murder on the High Seas
Thursday August 19, meet and mingle
5:30 -6 p.m. Mystery begins at 6 p.m.
Grades 9-12
Get into character
as a passenger
aboard a cruise to
the Bahamas where
one of your fellow
shipmates has gone overboard. Solve the
mystery correctly and win a prize. And
don’t forget to dress up in your best cruise
wear! (Food will be served.)
Twilight Saga: Eclipse
Take Sides at the Library
Celebrate the release of Eclipse, the third
movie installment of the livilight Saga, in
June. Take your photo with Team Edward
or Team Jacob (the cardboard versions)
and then vote for your favorite. We will
announce Deerfield’s choice on June 30,
the fay Eclipse premieres.
Tuesday1 July 27\ 7p.m.
This one-hour workshop is designed to
show students and parents what college
admissions officers expect from
applicants’ high school experiences.
Topics covered include a variety of
admissions policies and the key factors
used by admissions officers when making
admissions decisions.
Paying for College 101
presented by Kaplan Test
Prep & Admissions
Tuesday, August 10, 7 p.m.
This one-hour workshop will include the
basics of applying for financial aid,
important dates and terminology, how
financial need is determined, and the
difference between various award types.
College Application Essay
Workshop by Kaplan Test Prep
& Admissions
Wednesday September 8, 7p.m.
This one-hour workshop is designed to
show students and parents what college
admissions officers want to see in an
essay. The workshop will examine the
types of topics students will encounter,
cover the four steps to writing a winning
essay, and critique a sample admissions
essay.
Teen Advisory Board
Check the Teen Events pagefor meeting
dates and times.
Grades 8-12
As a Teen Advisory Board member you can
talk about books, video games, movies,
and music with other members; come up
with programming ideas for Teens at the
Library; help create content for the
Library’s Teen Web site and blog; help out
with Teen programs at the Library; and
give your input and ideas for the new Teen
Space. For more information, contact
Colleen Seisser (847) 945-3311 or
cseisser@deerfieldlibrary.org.
?
�New improvements to Selection and Service
LINKin
You can now search and request an additional 1.8 million items from our
partner libraries in the LINKin network with your Deerfield Public Library
card. LINKin connects the library catalogs of Deerfield Public Library,
Arlington Heights Memorial Library, Cook Memorial Library, Gail Borden Public
Library, and Skokie Public Library. If an item is not available for checkout at
Deerfield Public Library and is available at one of the partner libraries, the
item will be sent to Deerfield Public Library within three or four days. Patrons
will be notified by phone or email when the item is ready for pickup.
On-Shelf Holds
Deerfield Public Library cardholders may now request “on-shelf’ items through
the Library’s online catalog. When a request is placed, Library staff will retrieve
the item from the shelf within 24 hours (excluding Sundays) and put it on the
new self-service holdshelf for the patron to pick up within 5 days. Due to their
high demand, the Library cannot pull DVDs, videos, or video games.
Self-Service Holdshelf
All holds (LINKin books coming from other libraries, on-shelf holds,
Interlibrary Loan items, and regular holds) are now kept on the self-service
holdshelf to the east of the Circulation desk, by the elevator. Items are arranged
alphabetically by patron last name. These books are not checked out to the
patron and still need to be brought to the Circulation desk for check out.
Enotification Contest
All Deerfield cardholders who have signed up for enotification by Saturday, June 19,
will be entered in a drawing for free Ravinia lawn passes. Enotification allows you to
receive notices about holds and overdue items via email rather than by phone. Visit
the Library’s online catalog and log in to your account, click on the “Modify Personal
Info” button and enter your email address. Need help? Stop by any service desk for
assistance.
Staff News
Reference Librarian John Kelsey retired in mid-April. He will certainly be missed
by patrons and staff alike! Madeline Solien, who started as a Library Science
Practicum student, has been hired as a Reference Librarian.
The Multimedia and Reference/Adult Non-fiction departments have been combined
under the leadership of Emily Compton-Dzak. Assistant Circulation Manager
Lindsay Zabel, working on her MLS degree, has accepted the role of Library
Assistant in this reconfigured department. Also joining the department as Reference
Assistant is Kay Palecek.
Red, White, and Water!
Cool off in the Library Meeting Room between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. on July 4th. Eryoy
cool refreshments and clean restrooms on your way to or from watching the
Deerfield Family Days parade!
The Friends continue to sort, shelve, and
sell used books in the first floor meeting
room. All books, CDs, DVDs, and audio
books are priced at $1.00 or $.50. Please
pay for items at the Circulation Desk.
The Friends will be selling used cookbooks
at the Deerfield Farmer’s Market on
Saturday, August 7. Come meet the
members of the Friends and support the
group by purchasing a book. This is a great
opportunity to talk with members of the
group and sign up to be a volunteer.
The Friends also receive support through
membership dollars. Basic membership is
$15 per year. (But every contribution
helps!) Checks should be made payable to
the Friends of the Deerfield Public Library.
Membership forms are available on the
Friends’ page of the Library’s Web site.
The Friends’ next meetings will be
Wednesday, June 30 and Wednesday,
October 13 at 7 p.m. Members of the
community are always welcome to the
meetings. To contact the Friends please
call (847) 945-3311, ext. 8895 or email,
friends@deerfieldlibrary. org.
Farmers Market Visits
Library Trustees
July 31, September 25, and October 16.
Stop by and ask questions or share your
ideas about Library services.
[i hi
Kamishibai Stories & Summer Reading
Program Sign-up
ilgil
Train Stories
Saturday, August 21, 8:30 -11:30 a.m.
Back to School Stories
5
�Umldrervs Programs
REGISTERED ACTIVITIES
Registration begins Monday. June 7. Space is limited, so please reserve your piano In person, by phone, or online.
Pack-a-Picnic
Bubble Babies
Beach Combers
Saturday June 12,10-11 a.m.
Children with their paren t or caregiver
An expert from Whole Foods in Deerfield
will demonstrate the fun of packing a
healthy picnic. Once you’ve honed your
picnic-packing skills, don’t forget to
register for the Picnic Dinner & Movie
programs at the Library!
Friday July 2, 9:30 -10:15 a.m.
Babies 0-12 months and their parent or
caregiver
Babies are invited to make a splash in our
summer reading program. Join us for
stories, songs, and oceans of fun!
Tuesday, July 27
Grades 1-3
There is nothing more
°°.
exciting than walking /N° O
o
along the beach
<=>o °
picking up seashells IL^
IV
and noticing all of J|g|
the creatures and
sea life! Kids will
ei\joy discovering nature’s
treasures during this scavenger
hunt adventure.
Having Fun with Hula!
Octopus’s Garden
Saturday July 17,1 -2p.m.
Grades K-2
lTd like to be...under the sea...in an
Octopus’s Garden...with YOU!” Join us as
we explore the undersea world of the
octopus through music, crafts, and stories!
Saturday June 26,1 -2 p.m.
Grades 3-6
f
Learn how to do the Hula '
with easy step-by-step
lessons from your favorite
gg§ Shark Attack!
Youth Librarians. See how fun ,
Wednesday July 21,7-8p.m.
this traditional form of
Hawaiian dance can be! Grass YjPr Gi'ades 3-6
Dive into a fun-filled program with shark
skirts and leis will be provided. f / /
;1
trivia, jokes, games, crafts, and snacks!
Flip Flops 4 Tweens
Thursday July 1,6- 7p.m.
Grades 5-8
Want to stand out from the crowd this
summer? Come decorate your own unique
flip flops! We will design and create flip
flops that can be worn home that day.
Please give your shoe size when
registering.
Dog Days of Summer
Open House
6
Saturday August21,1-3p.m. All ages
Families are invited to our drop-in Open
House in support of Orphans of the
Storm, a local animal shelter that finds
adoptive homes for stray and abandoned
dogs and cats. Learn about the shelter
from an Orphans representative, do a
craft, and donate items to help dogs and
cats in need. On August 21, the Library
will be accepting the following donations
on behalf of Orphans:
• Diy and canned food for dogs and cats
• Treats and toys for dogs and cats
• Chew toys and rawhide
• Sturdy dog and cat combs and brushes
• Cat litter
• Towels
• Cleaning supplies
Picnic Dinner & a Movie
Finding Nemo (G)
Monday July 12, 6 - 7:30 p.m.
Princess and the Frog (G)
Monday August 9,6- 7:30 p.m.
Children and their parent or caregivei'
Bring a picnic dinner. Beverages and
dessert will be provided.
Trained therapy dogs and their handlers
from K-9 Reading Buddies of the North
Shore will also be on site to discuss their
literacy-based program.
Robin’s Dog Stars:
Dog Trick Show
Sunday August 22, 2 - 2:45p.m.
Children and their parent or caregivei'
Registration begins Monday, July 12.
Come watch Robin’s Dog Stars jump
through hoops, climb a ladder, get a tissue
when Robin sneezes, and more!
E
la
Photo Permission
Library staff may take pictures at
programs and events to use in our
Newsletter and other publicity.
Photographers and camera crews
from newspapers or television
stations may also document events
at the Library. If you prefer not to
have Library staff or reporters
photograph or film you or a member
of your family, please feel free to
decline at that time. We respect
your privacy.
Book Buddies:
A NEW SUMMER
LITERACY PROGRAM
Tuesdays or Wednesdays for 5 weeks
June 29 - July 28; 11 a.m. -12 p.m.
or 7-8p.m.
Readers going into Grades 1-3
Help your new readers retain skills
during summer vacation with this new
summer literacy program. Volunteers in
Grades 7 through 12 will be matched
with young readers. Buddies will meet
once a week for five weeks to read
aloud together, talk about the stories,
and do an activity. Children must be able
to attend at least four sessions to
participate in the program. Completed
program application forms are due to the
Youth Services desk by Sunday, June 13.
I
�Eureka Discoveries Presents:
The Sea & Me
Children s Summer
Reading Program
Saturday, June 19 - Saturday, August 14
Young children can join in the fun by
“diving” into the Library’s Summer Reading
Program. Children ages birth through
eighth grade can register, keep track of
what they read, and check in at the
“Reader’s Reef’ in the Youth Services
department to win fun prizes! Children who
finish the Summer Reading Program will
receive a paperback book of their choice
made possible by a generous donation from
the Deerfield Optimist Club. When they
aren’t busy “fishing” for a good book, kids can
come to special programs all summer long.
Special Make a Splash programs spon
sored by the Friends of the Library:
Flute Sweet & Tickletoon
Presents: Green Golly & Her
Golden Flute
Saturday, June 19, 2 - 3 p.m.
Children ages 5+ with their parent
or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, June 7.
Rapunzel may have been horrified to spend
her days trapped in that big old tower but
not Green Golly - she was delighted! So
inspired by all that whizzed past her
window she couldn’t help but make music.
This funny, musical event features the
music of Mozart, Mendelssohn, Schubert,
Gossec, Elgar, Bizet, Chopin and Copland.
Stories and Sweets with
Gale Gand
Saturday, July 10,1-2:30 p.m.
Children ages 4-8 and their parent
or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, June 7
Children and their caregivers are invited to
sail out to sea with renowned Chef Gale
Gand. Listen to stories and create your own
edible underwater scene with cookies,
frosting, and decorating candies.
Sunday, July 11,2 - 3:15 p.m.
Grades K- 8
Registration begins Monday, June 7
Come find out about some
of the unusual
inhabitants of the
deep and even touch
creatures like a
lobster, sea cucumber,
sea urchin, and serpent
starfish. You will see
microscopic phytoplankton that congregate
wherever there’s light and fish that glow in
the dark! Finally, learn how fish are able to
sink and rise by constructing your very own
Cartesian diver, to take home!
m
Funny & Freaky Fish in the
Caribbean Sea
Saturday, July 31,10 a.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, July 12
Explore
undersea
environments,
get to know
some of the
Caribbean’s
most
interesting
inhabitants,
and learn how
fish play hideand-seek!
Beautiful underwater photography makes
kids feel as though they’ve jumped in the
water and gone on an expedition scuba
dive! At the end of the program, kids will
have an opportunity to try on SCUBA
equipment.
Summer Reading Wrap-Up Party
Saturday, August 14, all day
Children and their parent or caregiver
This is the last day of the Summer Reading
program, so stop by the Youth Services
department to celebrate all the fun we had
this summer! There will be cool crafts,
trivia, and prizes! Stop by to see water
science demonstrations at 11 a.m., 1 p.m.,
and 3 p.m. Don’t forget: this is also the last
day to check-in at the Reader’s Reef.
STORYTIMES
B5AC*i J: A?J:v,:7 STORIES
Thursdays, June 17-August 12, 12p.m.
All ages welcome
Bring a bag lunch and enjoy stories for the
whole family al fresco in the park (or in the
Storytime Room at the Library if it rains.)
i-iSOY & DOUGHNUTS STORYTIME
Friday, June 18, 9:30 - 10:30 a.m.
Children with their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, June 7.
“BONFIRE” STORIES
Wednesdays, June 16, June 30, July 14,
July 28, August 11, 7 p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Come dressed in your pajamas and bring your
favorite stuffed animal to share in the fun!
GUEST STAR STORYTIMES
Includes a brief storytime followed by a
meet-and-greet with the character and work
sheets or crafts to do here or take home.
Young children and their caregivers
CLIFFORD (from the Clifford books
by Norman Bridwell)
Friday, July 9, 3:30 p.m.
Registration begins Monday, June 14.
COOKIE MOUSE (from If You Give A Mouse
A Cookie by Laura Numeroff)
Friday, August 13, 3:30 p.m.
Registration begins Monday, July 12.
BONDING WITH BOOKS
Saturday, July 24, 2 - 3:30 pm
Grades 2-3 with their parent or caregiver
Registration begins Monday, June 7.
Read to your child and have them
read to you!
Gym Shorts: Swimming with Sharks
by Betty Hicks.
DROP-IN ACTIVITIES
DROP-IN CRAFTS
Tuesday, June 15, 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Wednesday, July 14, 9 a.m. -9 p.m.
Thursday, August 19, 9 a.m. -9 p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Stop by the Youth Services department to
make a fun craft to take home!
DROP-IN GAMING
Tuesday, June22,4-8p.m.
Tuesday, July20,4-8p.m.
Tuesday, August3, 4-8p.m.
Children and their parent or caregiver
Too hot to play outside? Drop by the
Library to play Wii games and board
games, put together puzzles, and enjoy
some cool refreshments.
7
�Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield. Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Important Library Numbers
Telephone: 847-945-3311
• TTY: 847-945-3372
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
Library Home Page and Catalog:
www.deerfieldlibrary.org
• E-mail:
DPL@deerfieldlibrary.org
To ask a reference question:
reference@deerfieldlibrary.org
• FAX: 847-945-3402
Announcements
CLOSED
The Library will be closed all day Sunday, July 4.
The Library will be closed all day Monday, September 6.
Deerfield Public Library
Mary Pergander, Library Director
Library Board Members value
your opinions!
Ken Abosch, President
847-948-5390
ksabosch@aol.com
Ron Simon, Secretary
847-317-0116
simon.ronald@yahoo.com
Jeff Rivlin, Treasurer
847-374-0709
jeff.rivlin@comcast.net
Mary Courtney • 847-945-9460
marycourtneymail@aol.com
Marla Bark Dembitz • 847-940-4049
marbar46@aol.com
Mike Goldberg • 847-945-0076
mikegoldberg@mac.com
Sunday Mueller • 847-940-7431
muellers@umich.edu
Library Hours
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Mon.-Thurs:
9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Friday:
9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Saturday:
1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sunday:
LATE OPENING
The Library will open at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, July 27.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Congratulations to the winners of our
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest. Adult
winners were Lynda M. Kruse, Jerry Levy,
and Joe Arzac. Youth winners were
Hannah Keen, Francesca Vena-Pedersen,
and Adrien Mulholland.
Bob McGreevy and his AARP colleagues
assisted community members in filling out
their income tax forms again this spring.
Thanks, volunteers!
The Great Decisions Foreign Policy
Discussion Group enjoyed another lively
session thanks to coordinator Tom Jester.
Thanks to the Villages of Bannockburn
and Riverwoods for their financial support
of this year’s One Book, One Zip Code
program. And thanks to steering committee
members David Hirsch, Sherry Kaplan,
Lucy Kempton, Rita Kirby, Lynn Samuels,
and Joan Simonds.
Thank you to the John G. Shedd Aquarium,
Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum, The Art
Institute of Chicago, and The Field
Museum for donating passes to our Adult
Summer Reading Program.
The Friends of the Library
of
generously sponsored the
special Make a Splash:
READ! programs this
summer, including the
%
v
%
Summer Reading Program
e/c/Pub\'v
kick-off event: Flute Sweet &
Tickletoon presents: Green Golly & Her
Golden Flute, Stories & Sweets with Gale
Gand, Eureka Discoveries Presents: The Sea
& Me, Funny & Freaky Fish in the
Caribbean Sea, and the Summer Reading
Wrap-Up Party. The Friends also sponsored
prizes and a special summer’s end brunch
for adult readers and the grand prize for
teens.
;03;
We would like to acknowledge Barnes &
Noble BookseUers of Deerfield for
generously sharing their costume characters
with the Library.
Thank you to all the Deerfield schools that
have generously shared their students’ art
in the ongoing display in the Youth Services
department.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletters
Description
An account of the resource
The historical archive of the Browsing newsletter, which is the quarterly newsletter put out by the Deerfield Public Library and lists all of the programming as well as news for the library.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1986-present
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Browsing | Deerfield Public Library | Summer 2010
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 26, No. 1
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Public Library
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Public Library
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Public Library
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
06/2010
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Searchable PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0010.096
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
June - August 2010
Aaron Copland
Academy Awards
Adrien Mulholland
Alec Baldwin
Alice in Wonderland
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
American Bandstand
American Library Association (ALA)
Amy Thale
An Education
Andrew Sean Greer
Animal Vegetable Miracle
Arizona
Arlington Heights Public Library
Art Institute of Chicago
Bahamas
Bannockburn Illinois
Barbara Kingsolver
Barnes and Noble Book Store
Betsy Eisenhauer
Betty Hicks
Bob McGreevy
Bob Rosenbacher
Brooke Fogt
Bruce Zimmerman
Career Advice
Carey Mulligan
Caribbean Sea
Chicago Illinois
Chicago Musical College Competition
Christine Barr
Clifford
Colleen Seisser
College Admissions
Cook Memorial Public Library
Cookie Center
Cookie Mouse
Coraline
David Hirsch
Deerfield Farmers Market
Deerfield High School
Deerfield High School Finals Week
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Optimists Club
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library Adult Services Department
Deerfield Public Library Board of Trustees
Deerfield Public Library Book Buddies
Deerfield Public Library Book Discussions
Deerfield Public Library Browsing Newsletter
Deerfield Public Library Email
Deerfield Public Library Email Notification System
Deerfield Public Library Holds Policy
Deerfield Public Library Meeting Rooms
Deerfield Public Library Movie Showings
Deerfield Public Library Online Public Catalog
Deerfield Public Library Open Houses
Deerfield Public Library Poets
Deerfield Public Library Programming
Deerfield Public Library Referendum
Deerfield Public Library Renovations
Deerfield Public Library Storytimes
Deerfield Public Library Summer Reading Programs
Deerfield Public Library Survey
Deerfield Public Library Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
Deerfield Public Library Teen Study Lounge
Deerfield Public Library Website
Deerfield Public Library Youth Services Department
Deerfield Schools
Deerfield Village Board of Trustees
Eclipse
Edward Elgar
Emily Compton-Dzak
Esme Lennox
Eureka Discoveries
Felix Mendelssohn
Field Museum of Natural History
Finding Nemo
Foreign Policy Association Great Decisions Program
Francesca Vena-Pedersen
Francois-Joseph Gossec
Franz Schubert
Frederic Chopin
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Gail Borden Public Library
Gale Gand
Gardening
Gary Kouba
George Clooney
Georges Bizet
Green Golly
Green Golly and Her Golden Flute
Guitar Hero
Gym Shorts: Swimming with Sharks
Hannah Keen
Heather Braoudakis
Hula
Hy Speck
If You Give a Mouse a Gookie
Income Tax Assistance
Invictus
iPod Touch
Iris Lockhart
It's Complicated
iTunes
Jackson Mississippi
Jane Byrne
Jane Weinstein-Jacobson
Jean Reuther
Jeffrey Rivlin
Jerry Lee Lewis
Jerry Levy
Jewish Vocational Service (JVS) Career Planning Center
Joan Simonds
Joe Arzac
John Bartok
John Dillinger
John G. Shedd
John Kelsey
Johnny Mathis
Judy Smith
Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions
Kathryn Stockett
Kay Palecek
Kenan Abosch
Laura Numeroff
Laurie Leibowitz
Lindsay Zabel
Linkin Consortium
Lisa Crist
Lorraine Clark
Lucy Kempton
Luisa Ellenbogen
Lynda Michele Kruse
Lynn Samuels
Madeline Solein Dahlman
Maggie O'Farrell
Mario Kart
Mark Fox
Marla Bark Dembitz
Mary Courtney
Mary Pergander
Masters in Library and Information Science (MLIS)
Meryl Streep
Metropolitan Opera
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra Concertmaster
Michael K. Goldberg
Michael Oher
Mies Van der Rohe
Mike Gruenhut
Murder Mystery Night
Nancy O'Neill
National Endowment for the Humanities
Nelson Mandela
Nintendo Wii
Nintendo Wii Bowling
Norman Bridwell
North Shore K-9 Reading Buddies
Northern Illinois University
Nuremberg Symphony
Nuremberg Symphony Concertmaster
Oliver Colbentson
One Book One Zip Code
Orphans of the Storm
Oxford University
Patsy Cline
Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum
Perfect Auto Finish
Perry Como
Playlist.com
Princess and the Frog
Public Opinion Laboratory
Rapunzel
Ravinia
Rick Lynn
Rita Kirby
Riverwoods Illinois
Roberta Glick
Robin's Dog Stars
Ronald Simon
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest
Ryan Bingham
Sally Rand
Sandra Bullock
Searchable PDF
Shedd Aquarium
Sherlock Holmes
Sherry Kaplan
Skeeter Phelan
Skokie Public Library
South Africa
Spike Jonze
Steve Martin
Sunday G. Mueller
Sydney Australia
The Blind Side
The Help
The Story of a Marriage
The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox
Thomas Jester
Tim Burton
Twilight
United States
University of Illinois Extension
University of Illinois Extension Master Gardeners
Up in the Air
Virginia
We the People Bookshelf Grant
Where the Wild Things Are
Whole Foods
WiFi
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Young Victoria