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https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/0604b7b05a1863a18f5eec2d3f017520.pdf
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CANADA, with particular
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Cities and Towns — Canada
1. St. John’s
2. Sydney
3. Truro
4. Halifax
5. Guysborough
6. Digby
7. Shelburne
8. Saint John
9. Fredericton
10. Charlottetown
11. Quebec
12. Montreal
13. Ottawa
14. Kingston
15. Toronto
16. Hamilton
17. St. Catharines
18. Orillia
19. Mattawa
20. London
2 I. Chatham
22. Windsor
23. North Bay
24. Sault Ste. Marie
25. Ft. William
26. Winnipeg
27. Portage La Proirie
28. Brandon
29. Killarney
30. Emerson
3 I. Regina
32. Moose Jaw
33. Saskatoon
34. Melfort
35. Prince Albert
36. Kinistino
37. North Battleford
38. Eldon
39. Maidstone
40. Wilkie
4>i£ Uoydminster
42. Wawota
43. Kitscoty
44. Edmonton
45. Fort Saskatchewan
46. Athabaska
47. Donatville
48. Amber Valley
49. Clyde
50. Wildwood
5 I. Chip Lake
52. Drayton Valley
53. Breton
54. Drumheller
55. Calgary
NORTH
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56. Brooks
57. Tilley
58. Cordston
59. Peoce River
60. Tete Jaune Cache
6 I. Barkerville
62. Kamloops
63. Yale
64. Hope
65. Penticton
66. New Westminster
67. Burnaby
68. Vancouver
69. Victoria
70. Prince Rupert
7 I. Esquimalt
72. Nanaimo
73. Vesuvius
74. Sidney
75. Saanich
76. Duncan
77. Ganges Harbour
78. Sooke
79. Shawnigon Lake
80. Dawson Creek
81. Whitehorse
82. Dawson
83. Leduc
WEST
TERRITORIES
ALBERTA
Wabumun Lake
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All mops were designed by the author
and were executed by Reproduction
Drawings Limited, Sutton, Surrey.
The maps were made possible by
a grant from the Provost’s Fund of
Yale University.
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Cities and Towns — U.S.A.
1. Portland
2. Concord
3. Montpelier
4. Boston
5. Providence
6. Hartford
7. New Haven
8. Albany
9. Ballston
I0. Schenectady
11. Syracuse
12. Skaneateles
13. Rochester
14. Buffalo
15. Niagara Falls
16. Auburn
17. Utica18. New York City
19. Cleveland
20. Sandusky
2 I. Toledo
22. Oberlin
23. Columbus
24. Cincinnati
2 5. Philadelphia
26. Pittsburgh
27. Harrisburg
28, Indianapolis
29. Fountain City
30. Fort Woyne
3 I. Chicago
32. Springfield
33. Galesburg
34. Detroit
35. Pontiac
36. Flint
37. Lansing
38. Kalamazoo
39. Milwaukee
40. Waukesha
4 I. Duluth
42. St. Paul
43. Pembina
44. Havre
45. Browning
46. Bellingham
47. Seattle
48. San Francisco
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I-----MASSACHUSETTS
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CONNECTICUT
NEW JERSEY
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Ontario and Quebec
Towns — Ontario
1.
2.
3.
A.
5.
6.
7.
Ottowa
Cornwall
Morrisburg
Johnstown
Prescott
Edwordsburgh
Brockville
Towns — Quebec
12.
I 3.
I 4.
15.
16.
17.
18.
Cataraqui
Both
Picton
Thurlow
Adolphustown
Peterborough
Cobourg
1.
2.
3.
A.
Quebec
Trois Rivieres
Sherbrooke
Granby
8.
9.
IO.
11.
Stanstead
Lacolle
St. Armand
Fort Lennox
Towns —New York
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Port Ontario
Utico
Ogdensburg
Rome
Peterboro
Syracuse
Auburn
Oswego
Lewiston
Rochester
Buffalo
Cope Vincent
( N.H. \
5
Towns — Michigan
1. Detroit
2. Pontiac
3. Port Huron
2 3.. Toronto
24. Burnhamthorpe
25. Etobicoke
26. Port Credit
27. Oakville
28. Burlington
29. Homillon
30. Stoney Creek
3 I. Mount Hope
32. Flamboro
33. Niagaro-on-the-Lake
34. St. Catharines
35. Jordan
36. Thorold
St.Clair
37.
38.
39.
40.
4 I.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
5 I.
52.
Niagara Foils
Port Colborne
Welland
Chippawa
Fori Erie
Queenston
Brantford
Paris
Ancaster
Dundas
Golt
Preston
Woterloo
Conestogo
Guelph
Kitchener
53.
54.
55.
56.
57.
58.
Woolwich
Elora
Stratford
Woodstock
Norwich
Simcoe
59. Chorlotlevllle
60.
6I.
62.
63.
64.
65.
66.
67.
68.
69.
70.
71.
72.
73.
74.
75.
76.
77.
Port Dover
Port Rowan
Port Burwell
Port Bruce
Port Stonley
Port Talbot
St.Thomas
London
Ingersoll
Lucon
Wilberforce
Goderich
Port Elgin
Owen Sound
Mount Forest
Meaford
Coltingwood
Barrie
78. Oro
79.
80.
8 I.
82,
Orillia
Penetanguishene
Sarnia
Petrolio
83.
84.
85.
86.
87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
93.
94.
Oil Springs
Dawn Mills
Port Lampton
Dover Center
Walloceburg
Dawn
Dresden
Shrewsbury
Horwich
Howard
Buxton (Elgin)
Raleigh
95. Chatham
96.
97.
98.
99.
100.
101.
102.
103.
104.
105.
106.
107,
108.
109.
110.
III.
Camden
Blenheim
Rondeau
Belle River
Little River
Puce River
Windsor
Essex
New Canaan
Harrow
Fort Malden
Amherstburg
Colchester
Sandwich
Gosfietd
Otterville
�
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
Lyman Wilmot House
Description
An account of the resource
This collection consists of records related to the Deerfield Public Library's research into whether or not the Wilmot house could be proved to have been a stop on the Underground Railroad.
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
2002
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0013
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
Canada, With Particular Reference to the West (Map)
Description
An account of the resource
Photocopy of maps of Canada with Highlighting
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Reproduction Drawings Limited
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0013.029
Adolphusiown Ontario Canada
Alaska
Albany New York
Alberta Canada
Amber Valley Canada
Amherstburg Ontario Canada
Ancaster Ontario Canada
Athabaska Canada
Auburn New York
Ausable River
Ballston New York
Barkerville Canada
Barrie Ontario Canada
Bath Ontario Canada
Bay of Fundy
Bay of Quinte
Belle River Ontario Canada
Bellingham Montana
Blenheim Ontario Canada
Boston Massachusetts
Brandford Ontario Canada
Brandon Canada
Breton Canada
British Columbia Canada
Brockville Ontario Canada
Brome Quebec Canada
Brooks Canada
Browning Montana
Buffalo New York
Burlington Ontario Canada
Burnaby Canada
Burnhamthorpe Ontario Canada
Buxton Ontario Canada
Calgary Canada
California
Camden Ontario Canada
Canada
Cape Breton Island Canada
Cape Vincent New York
Cardston Canada
Cataraqui Ontario Canada
Charlottetown Canada
Charlotteville Ontario Canada
Chatham Canada
Chatham Ontario Canada
Chicago Illinois
Chip Lake Canada
Chippawa Ontario Canada
Cincinnati Ohio
Clarke Ontario Canada
Cleveland Ohio
Clyde Canada
Cobourg Ontario Canada
Colchester Ontario Canada
Collingwood Ontario Canada
Columbus Ohio
Concord Massachusetts
Conestogo Ontario Canada
Connecticut
Cornwall Ontario Canada
Dawn Mills Ontario Canada
Dawn Ontario Canada
Dawson Canada
Dawson Creek Canada
Delta Ontario Canada
Detroit Michigan
Detroit River
Digby Canada
Donatville Canada
Dover Center Ontario Canada
Drayton Valley Canada
Dresden Ontario Canada
Drumheller Canada
Duluth Minnesota
Duncan Canada
Dundas Ontario Canada
Edmonton Canada
Edwardsburgh Ontario Canada
Elara Ontario Canada
Eldon Canada
Elgin Ontario Canada
Emerson Canada
Esquimalt Canada
Essex Ontario Canada
Etobicoke Ontario Canada
Farnham Quebec Canada
Flamboro Ontario Canada
Flint Michigan
Fort Erie Ontario Canada
Fort Lennox Quebec Canada
Fort Malden Ontario Canada
Fort Saskatchewan Canada
Fort Wayne Indiana
Fountain City Indiana
Fredericton Canada
Ft. William Canada
Galesburg Illinois
Ganges Harbour Canada
Ganonoque Ontario Canada
Gasfield Ontario Canada
Georgian Bay
Goderich Ontario Canada
Golt Ontario Canada
Granby Quebec Canada
Grand Island
Grand River
Guelph Ontario Canada
Guysborough Canada
Halifax Canada
Hamilton Canada
Hamilton Ontario Canada
Harrisburg Pennsylvania
Harrow Ontario Canada
Hartford Connecticut
Harwich Ontario Canada
Havre Montana
Hope Canada
Howard Ontario Canada
Hudson River
Hull Quebec Canada
Huntingdon Quebec Canada
Idaho
Ile d'Orelans
Illinois
Indiana
Indianapolis Indiana
Ingersoll Ontario Canada
Iowa
Johnstown Ontario Canada
Jordan Ontario Canada
Kalamazoo Michigan
Kamloops Canada
Killarney Canada
Kingston Canada
Kingston Ontario Canada
Kinistino Canada
Kitchener Ontario Canada
Kitscoty Canada
Knowiton Quebec Canada
Labrador Canada
Lacolle Quebec Canada
Lake Erie
Lake Huron
Lake Michigan
Lake Ontario
Lake Simcoe
Lake St. Clair
Lake Superior
Lake Winnepeg
Lansing Michigan
Leduc Canada
Lewiston New York
Little River Ontario Canada
Lloydminster Canada
London Canada
London Ontario Canada
Long Point
Lucan Ontario Canada
Maidstone Canada
Maine
Manitoba Canada
Manitoulin Island
Maryland
Massachusetts
Mattawa Canada
Meaford Ontario Canada
Melfort Canada
Michigan
Milwaukee Wisconsin
Minnesota
Missisquoi Bay
Mississippi River
Montana
Montpelier Vermont
Montreal Canada
Montreal Quebec Canada
Moose Jaw Canada
Morrisburg Ontario Canada
Mount Forest Ontario Canada
Mount Hope Ontario Canada
Nanaimo Canada
Napanee Ontario Canada
New Brunswick Canada
New Canaan Ontario Canada
New Hampshire
New Haven Connecticut
New Jersey
New Westminster Canada
New York
New York City New York
Newfoundland Canada
Niagara Falls New York
Niagara Falls Ontario Canada
Niagara on the Lake Ontario Canada
Niagara River
North Battleford Canada
North Boy Canada
North Dakota
North Saskatchewan River
Northwest Territories Canada
Norwich Ontario Canada
Nova Scotia Canada
Oakville Ontario Canada
Oberlin Ohio
Ogdensburg
Ohio
Ohio River
Oil Springs Ontario Canada
Ontario Canada
Ora Ontario Canada
Oregon
Orillia Canada
Orillia Ontario Canada
Oshawa Ontario Canada
Oswego New York
Ottawa Canada
Ottawa Ontario Canada
Ottawa River
Otterville Ontario Canada
Owen Sound Ontario Canada
Paris Ontario Canada
Peace River Canada
Pembina North Dakota
Pennsylvania
Pentanguishene Ontario Canada
Penticton Canada
Peterboro New York
Petersborough Ontario Canada
Petrolia Ontario Canada
Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Picton Ontario Canada
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
Point Pelee
Pontiac Michigan
Port Bruce Ontario Canada
Port Burwell Ontario Canada
Port Colborne Ontario Canada
Port Credit Ontario Canada
Port Dover Ontario Canada
Port Elgin Ontario Canada
Port Granby Ontario Canada
Port Hope Ontario Canada
Port Huron Michigan
Port Lampton Ontario Canada
Port Ontario New York
Port Rowan Ontario Canada
Port Stanley Ontario Canada
Port Talbot Ontario Canada
Portage La Prairie Canada
Portland Oregon
Prescott Ontario Canada
Preston Ontario Canada
Prince Albert Canada
Prince Edward Island Canada
Prince Rupert Canada
Providence Rhode Island
Puce River Ontario Canada
Quebec Canada
Quebec City Quebec Canada
Queenston Ontario Canada
Raleigh Ontario Canada
Regina Canada
Reproduction Drawings Limited
Rhode Island
Richelieu River
Rochester New York
Rome
Rondeau Ontario Canada
Saanich Canada
Saint John Canada
Saltspring Island Canada
San Francisco California
Sandusky Ohio
Sandwich Ontario Canada
Sarnia Ontario Canada
Saskatchewan Canada
Saskatchewan River
Saskatoon Canada
Sault Ste. Marie Canada
Schenectady New York
Seattle Washington
Shawnigon Lake Canada
Shelburne Canada
Sherbrooker Quebec Canada
Shrewsbury Ontario Canada
Sidney Canada
Simcoe Ontario Canada
Skaneateles New York
Sooke Canada
South Dakota
South Saskatchewan River
Springfield Illinois
St. Armand Quebec Canada
St. Catharines Canada
St. Catharines Ontario Canada
St. John's Canada
St. Lawrence River
St. Paul Minnesota
St. Thomas Ontario Canada
Stanstead Quebec Canada
Stoney Creek Ontario Canada
Stratford Ontario Canada
Surrey Canada
Sutton Canada
Sydenhorn River
Sydney Canada
Syracuse New York
Tete Jaune Cache Canada
Thames River
Thorold Ontario Canada
Thurlow Ontario Canada
Tilley Canada
Toledo Ohio
Toronto Canada
Toronto Ontario Canada
Trois Riveres Quebec Canada
Truro Canada
Utica New York
Vancouver Canada
Vancouver Island Canada
Vermont
Vesuvius Canada
Victoria Canada
Wabumun Lake
Wallaceburg Ontario Canada
Washington
Waterloo Ontario Canada
Waukesha Wisconsin
Wawota Canada
Welland Canal
Welland Ontario Canada
Westmount Quebec Canada
Whitehorse Canada
Wilberforce Ontario Canada
Wildwood Canada
Wilkie Canada
Windsor Canada
Windsor Ontario Canada
Winnipeg Canada
Wisconsin
Wolfe Island
Woodstock Ontario Canada
Woolwich Ontario Canada
Wyoming
Yale Canada
Yale University
Yale University Provost's Fund
Yukon Territory Canada
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https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/90f524e2bc14b62af8fe92c428355c74.pdf
c66f1d023a492ad37b805e36cde7fe1f
PDF Text
Text
1
S u M m f. r 1997 *
Deerfield Public Library •
Volume 12, Num nf.r 4
Summer Reading Clubs
Go Undercover
JouelG-RogusiS.
L library
Trustees
Elected
On April 1, the Deerfield commu
nity elected Sue BennandKen
■o.u, Abosch each to six
year terms on the
m Deerfield Library Board
*
; • A- ■ifl ofTrustees. Benn, who
recently celebrated
twenty years ofservice
&cm
m 11 was re-elected Library
Board President.
Abosch, Head of Com
pensation Practice at
Hewitt Associates, has
lived in Deerfield for
seven years and looks
forward to his tenure
on the board.
At the April library board meet
ing, David Wolff was re-elected
Board Secretary, and William
Seiden was elected to the post
of Treasurer. Tony Sabato,
who had been Library Board trea
surer, retired from the board after
nineteen years of exemplary service.
The Trustees also gratefully note
that while the library celebrates a
70th anniversary this year, active
board member Jack Anderson
celebrates 20 years of valuable li
brary board service.
Deerfield Library Board meet
ings are held at 8 p.m. the third
Wednesday of every month in the
library conference room and are
open to the public.
Library Closed Sundays
in Summer
July 3-Close at 5 p.m.
Barns never fell down when I was a kid. Yet as
you drive across rural America today that is the com
mon denominator of all states-barns falling down. I
have been struck by this phenomenon for quite some
time and I am pretty sure about what it means. Is it
the rise of absentee landlords, loss of output, lack of
self respect, closing out of the smaller farms, or what
I suspect most: a continued depopulation of rural
America? Actually it is all of these things, and more.
This represents a real change for the heartland
of America. No longer the rock-ribbed center of our
society, rural America now is owned and managed
by large real estate conglomerates, populated during
desirable weather by rich urban rusticators Land not
given over to rustication by urban dudes in their pickup
trucks and useless four-wheel drives has been sec
onded into giant 3000 acre farms churning out a gross
national agricultural product big enough to feed China.
All overseen by banks more interested in the bottom
line than abstractions like rural life.
These events force more and more rural folks off
the lands, raise their taxes, close them out of land
ownership, and give the most choice parcels to city
July 4- Closed for business,
open for lemonade
continued on page 2
“The Ins and Outs of Real Life as
an FBI Investigator in Today’s So
ciety” will be presented at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, June 17 by Bill Keefe
who was an FBI street agent for 17
years and is now a supervisor of FBI
agents in the Chicago office.
For adults 12 and up.
Ylfoc
Adults, ages 15 and up will be asked
to read six books. Two of the books
must include: 1) espionage fiction,
2)intelligence agencies and espio
nage nonfiction, or 3)an author
who uses a pseudonym. Library staff
will offer suggested titles. Those
who finish the required reading will
receive a “Go Under Cover at the
Library” journal. An August 8 party
will be open to all club members. A
list of members’ recommended
reading will be compiled. Register
and report in the Fiction Room.
Library Kids Go Undercover:
Ages 3-14 may read library books
and visit the library to win prizes.
Preschoolers/kindergartners spin
the Secret Spinner when they come
to report on books read to them.
Grades 1-3 pick from book charac
ters Stellaluna, Bunnicula or Harriet
the Spy to play the Secret Agent
game board. Grades 6-9 may read
from a challange list to earn points
to purchase prizes from the Under
cover Spy Shop. Prizes for all ages
include paperback books.
�sI
II
lilnrian's Desk
continued from pagel
people. Of course they let their barns fall
down. But what is this doing to us as a
society? Seeing my grandparents’ home
town of Rockwell City. Iowa not as a cru
cible of commerce, or trumpet of trade, but
as a forlorn relic really hurts. Where are
all the rural Americans, why did they go.
and where do they live now?
The reasons are almost as simple as
the enclosure laws that preceded the In
dustrial Revolution. Farms expanded in
size as units of service, the 1970's and
1980's bankrupted what was left of the
family farm, herbicides, pesticides and a
liquid nitrogen changed the way anything
is raised in America. When I was a kid, a
large hog farm was 100 porkers. Today,
across America, a large hog operation is
a hundred thousand hogs fouling the air
and water for five hundred square miles.
Not only a change in farming, but a mas
sive incursion into the environment as well
as the social strata of rural America. In
urban Chicago welfare is a code word for
racism; in rural America welfare means
half the shrunken population of any given
county.
Why mourn these changes? I suppose
at the basic level it is a feeling for me of a
personal loss of identity. I knew and iden
tified with a way of life that is gone forever.
But I also mourn the loss of a value sys
tem that placed family first, hard work and
industry second, with education underlay
ing both ideas. Instead of a therapist, a tight
knit circle of relatives and friends provided
support and comfort. I look at my grand
parents' home and remember a college
professor, banker, a head of a Fortune 500
company who grew up there. Now it looks
like someone who married his sister lives
there.
Where they all went is a mystery to me.
Many went on to college and never looked
back, others disappeared into low-paying
industrial jobs in the rust belt. But so many
characters I knew as a kid could never sur
vive in the city—no skills, eccentric beyond
description, independent beyond taming.
A rough-hewn class of rough cobs, who
could shoot out a pheasant’s eye at a hun
dred yards, always willing to help eat a pie
or give a hand to a neighbor down on their
luck, they populated Faulkner's Missis
sippi. Sinclair Lewis'Gopher Prairie, and
were grist for so many other great Ameri
can novelists’ work. To see what I mean
read Faulkner's As I Lay Dying or
Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men Reflecting
a Prairie Town and The Lincoln Highway
photo essays by Drake Hokanson profile
the decline of the small town today. Any
title by Jon Hassler, Staggerford. North of
Hope. Grand Opening and so on accurately portrays current small town life.
Jack Alan Hicks. Administrative Librarian
n
embers of Deerfield American
Legion Post 738 are good library
friends. Recently they presented Jack
Hicks, far left, with Battle ofLeyte Gulf an ad
dition to their previous donations to our WWII
collection. “With books like this” they said,
“young people will become more aware of this
period of history.”
Librarians and Legislators
Share Concerns
Rep. Lauren Gash, District 60, top row third
from left, Rep. Terry Link, District 30 top row,
second from right and other Illinois legislators
and librarians met with (seated from left)
Deerfield Library Adminis
trator Jack Hicks, librarian
i
Baiba Rosenkranz, board
IS
trustees Diane Kraus and
The Deerfield Area HisA formal plan for renovation
Jack Anderson. This annual
torical Society has
of the library’s main floor
legislative breakfast, spon
awarded the Deerfield Pubhas been accepted with only
sored by the North Subur
lie Library the “Key to the
a few details remaining.
ban Library System, offered
Cabin Award” for contriSoon you will start seeing
library staff/trustees the op
butions furthering the
moves and changes in the
portunity to acquaint legis
library.
goals of the historical soci
lators with important library
ety. The library has coop
issues. Further, Mrs. Kraus
erated successfully with the local historical sowas awarded an American Library Association
ciety on annual events, displays, many proscholarship to attend a National Legislative Day
grams and combined publicity efforts.
in Washington D.C.
Partoefsliip fluiard
tfosr Sticgo’icSiccagdBS^cB
Our new handicapped access front door swings open at the push of a button for those
who are unable to manage other doorways. It is dangerous to touch the automatic door
itself or to play with the large button that opens the door. Please use the handicapped
access door only for the purpose for which it Is built.
We're on
Web
The Village of Deerfield now has a new, complete website at www.deerfieldil.org.
For library information, services and programs, find our home page by clicking
on the “Community” box on the opening screen of the Deerfield website. For
comments, our e-mail address is deerfield.library@usa.net.
We^e on TV
You can also locate library programs and services on Deerfield’s TV Cable
Infochannel 3.
V/e'ye In Print
Pick up a brand new “gold” For All Your Book and Information Needs library services brochure for all you need to know about the Deerfield Public Library.
�Youth
Ticketed Eweiite
Rodert's Marionettes Present
"Beauty and file Beast"
Ages 3-12
Monday, June 16, 7-7:45 p.m.
Beauty? Beast? Will love between them tri
umph? Come see the wonder of this age-old
story for yourself. Tickets available Monday,
June 9.
Muncfifiin Music Wiffi Jennifer
Rrmslrono
Ages 2-8
Saturday, June 28, 10-10:45 a.m.
Come along and enjoy various rhythms and
songs created especially for our music lovers.
Tickets available Saturday, June 21.
Professor Gsdgef's Magical
Nonsense Shoui
Ages 4 & Up
Thursday, July 10, 7-7:45 p.m.
Gadgets, magic and nonsense. What a perfect
combination for aThursday evening of fun and
enlightenment. Come see what the Professor
has up his sleeve. Tickets available Monday,
june 3Q.
Services
Punch and Judy Puppet Players
Ages 2 & Up
Saturday, August 9
10:00-10:43 a.m. or 2:00-2:45 p.m.
The library staff is at it again. Beginning their
26th year at the library, The Punch and Judy
players will top off our summer reading pro
gram with a puppet show specifically designed
for our Undercover Library Kids. Tickets avail
able Saturday, August 2.
All participants must have program cards on
File in order to register for the following pro
grams.
Secref Code WorHsiiop
Grades 1-3
Wednesday, June 18, 4:00-5:00 p.m.
Learn the secrets of the spies as you create and
decipher your own secret codes. Registration
begins Monday, June 9.
Undercover Action
Grades K-2
Monday, June 30, 10:00-11:00 a.m.
Heres a game of pretending and puzzle-solving for those who like action! Registration be
gins Monday, June 23.
Comets. Collisions & Catastrophes
"Brave Hearts and Faithful Friends"
Ages 5 & Up
Monday, July 21, 7-7:45 p.m.
Nancy Donoval, Storyteller, leads us into ad
venture and danger with stories about courage
from around the world. Tickets available Monday, July 14.
✓*35
SS.i
l3fj|i
Oaring Detective Hits
Tuesdays, 10:00-10:30 a.m.
Wednesdays, 7:00-7:30 p.m.
Thursdays, 1:30- 2:00 p.m.
June 17—July 24 join us at the library during
any of these time periods for stories, songs,
fingerplays and more. No age limits and no
registration necessary.
E-ibrary Kids ©o
W n da® ?cover 5
Registered
Ages 5 & Up
Tuesday, July 15, 7:30-8:30 p.m.
For those fascinated by the heavens, Greg
Lopatkas multimedia show will light up the
night sky. Don’t forget to bring your binocu
lars. Tickets available Tuesday, July 8.
EFcaaniB-y
Sfonr^as-aacts
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Grades 3-5
Monday, July 14, 4:00-5:00 p.m.
Calling all sleuths! Make your own detective
kit and learn the secrets of the pros. Registra
tion begins Monday, July 7.
Murder!
Grades 6-9
Friday, August 1, 3:30-5:00 p.m.
Someone has murdered the Administrative Li
brarian. It’s up to you to solve the mystery.
Registration begins Friday, July 25.
Summer reading for ages 3 through 14;
June 16-August 9.
Read library books to play the Secret Spinner,
the Secret Agent game board, or to purchase
prizes from the Undercover Spy Shop. Visit the
library for more information.
S*T*A*R
1
33# © €*
Grades 6-8
We need you! Volunteers needed to help in the
Youth Services Department. Registration be
gins June 9.
Friends of the Library
Donated $1,750 to the Youth Services
Department at the library’s 70th birth
day spring celebration. Library Friends
also co-sponsored the lively event.
Steve Neulander, president,
encourages community members to be
come active. Friends membership is $5,
good through December, 1998. Appli
cations are in the library.
Future plans include a fall program,
Friends Tea, and a fund raising event.
Ideas welcome. For information: Steve
Neulander, P.O. Box 25, Deerfield, IL
60015
¥oter Registration
Deerfield Area League of Women Voters will
hold Voter Registration at the library from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturdays, July 19 and Au
gust 16.
�People MOWSSS
; Administrative Librar
ian, was keynote speaker for the Wiscon
sin Library Associations Annual Confer
ence May 1 in Eau Claire. Hicks’s talk TJje
Post Modern Library; Libraries at the
bend in the learning curve, will be pub
lished in Illinois Libraries.
reports 228
people used the library’s AARP/IRS free
income tax service.
Winners of the Rosemary Sazonoff Cre
ative Writing Contest were: Adults-1st
Prize, a:.i •
: . - 2nd
Prize,
•/. •; : 3rd Prize,
Youth
Services: AH .
and /■/.
Prizes were made possible from the Rose
mary Sazonoff Memorial Fund. The suc
cessful contest assures a 2nd annual in
1998.
Assistant Prin
cipal, Charles J. Caruso Jr. High thanks
us for another successful year of training
eighth graders to use research materials
in a joint school/library venture.
Deerfield
resident, trustee and library user has writ
ten a new book on his World War II ex
periences, Upfront with Charlie Company
a combat history ofCompany C, 395th In
fantry Regiment, 99th Infantry Division.
Copies are available in the library.
Adult Book Discussions
in the Library
Thursdays, 10:30 a.m.
■■
June 12 The Grass Dancer by Susan Power. Set on a North Dakota reservation,
this multi-layered novel reveals how our lives are affected by the actions of our ancestors.
July 10 Readers Choice! We encourage you to select any book with an undercover
theme (spies and spying, espionage, international intrigue). Come prepared to
share your book and discuss the genre.
V
August 14 The Color of Water by James McBride. The prize winning journalist
writes about his white mother and her commitment to successful
child-rearing in racially intolerant times.
Hot
Meg. h\ Sic.
The last carcharodon
megaldon (prehistoric ancestor to the
shark) rises to surface of this Jaws-like
thriller. When scientists learn the jurassic
giant is pregnant, journalists and vendors
gather to document the story of the century.
, v by Philip Kerr. The skull Jack Furness
finds while mountain climbing becomes
the centerpiece in a quest for the Yeti—
Himalayan Abominable Snowpeople. To
track this link to human evolution, Jack
combats hostilities between India and
Pakistan as well as interference from the
Pentagon.
The Art of Breaking Glass by Matthew
Hall. A Bellevue nurse who allows a pa- The Tenth Justice by Brad Melczer. In this
tient obsessed with New York City’s ar- twenty-something legal thriller, a young
chitecture to escape must help the FBI to clerk for the Supreme Court enlists the
track him down.
help of friends when he is blackmailed.
Los Alamos by Joseph Kanon. When a security officer for the Manhattan Project
is murdered, Michael Connolly is called
in to investigate; he makes some startling
discoveries on his own.
Nimitz Class by Patrick Robinson. U. S.
Navy joins forces with Israeli and Soviet
intelligence services to track down a rogue
submarine which has sunk an important
American carrier.
Deerfield Public Library
920 Waukegan Road
Deerfield, Illinois 60015
Non Profit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield, IL
Permit No. 196
Phone: 847/945/3311
Telecirc; renew by phone: 847/676/1846
Jack Hicks, Administrative Librarian
Library Board
Sue Benn, President
David Wolff, Secretary
William Seiden, Treasurer
Ken Abosch
Jack Anderson
Diane Kraus
Yvonne Sharpe
Library Hours
Mon.-Thurs: 9:00AM - 9:00PM
9:00AM - 5:00PM
Fri.-Sat:
Closed for Summer
Sundays:
Editor: Sally Seifert
Carrier Route Presort
Deerfield Postal Patron
�
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 1997
Description
An account of the resource
Vol. 12, No. 4
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Seifert, Sally Brickman
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
06/1997
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.0010.045
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 1997
Ally Yura
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
American Legion
American Legion Deerfield Post 738
American Library Association (ALA)
American Library Association National Legislative Day
Anthony G. Sabato
As I Lay Dying
Baiba Rosenkranz
Battle of Leyte Gulf
Bill Keefe
Brad Meltzer
Bunnicula
Caruso Middle School
Charles J. Caruso
Chicago FBI Office
Chicago Illinois
China
Chris Dessent
David B. Wolff
Deerfield Area Historical Society
Deerfield Area Historical Society Key to the Cabin Award
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Infochannel
Deerfield Public Library
Deerfield Public Library 70th Anniversary
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 Programming
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 Youth Services Department
Deerfield Website
Diane Kraus
Drake Hokanson
Eau Claire Wisconsin
Ellen Reagan
Esau
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Fortune 500 Companies
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library
Friends of the Deerfield Public Library Tea
Gerri Spinella
Gopher Prairie
Grand Opening
Greg Lopatka
Handicapped Library Access
Harriet the Spy
Hewitt Associates
Himalayan Mountains
Illinois House District 60
Illinois Libraries
India
Industrial Revolution
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
Israeli Intelligence Services
Jack A. Hicks
Jack Furness
James McBride
Jennifer Armstrong
Joe Lerman
John A. Anderson
John Steinbeck
Jon Hassler
Joseph Kanon
Kenan Abosch
Lauren Beth Gash
League of Women Voters Deerfield
Library Legislation Day
Los Alamos
Manhattan Project
Mary Gillespie
Mary Lou Murphy
Matthew Hall
Meg
Michael Connolly
Mississippi
Nancy Donoval
New York City New York
Nimitz Class
North Dakota
North of Hope
North Suburban Library System
North Suburban Library System Legislative Meetings
Of Mice and Men
Pakistan
Patrick Robinson
Pentagon
Philip Kerr
Punch and Judy Players
Reflecting a Prairie Town
Robert's Marionettes
Rockwell City Iowa
Rosemary Sazonoff Memorial Fund
Rosemary Sazonoff Writing Contest
Sally Brickman Seifert
Searchable PDF
Sinclair Lewis
Soviet Intelligence Services
Staggerford
Stellaluna
Stephen Neulander
Steve Alten
Susan L. Benn
Susan Power
Terry Link
The Art of Breaking Glass
The Color of Water
The Grass Dancer
The Lincoln Highway
The Tenth Justice
United States Navy
United States Supreme Court
Upfront with Charlie Company
Vernon Swanson
Voter Registration
Washington D.C.
William Cormier
William Faulkner
William S. Seiden
Wisconsin Library Association
Wisconsin Library Association Annual Conference
Wisconsin Public Library Association Conference
World War II
Yeti
Yvonne Sharpe
-
https://archives.deerfieldlibrary.org/files/original/40b036fd84347e637ed53f7b2d1327c0.pdf
9ab6f1ac7897984b77486029a8aaaa4c
PDF Text
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
Deerfield Review Obituaries
Subject
The topic of the resource
Obituaries
Death Notices
Description
An account of the resource
The obituaries and death notices that appeared in the Deerfield Review newspaper
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Deerfield Review
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Review
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Review
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1945, 1947-1995
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0007.002
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
1945-1995
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
Jessie Mae Carlisle Pettis Obituary
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Deerfield Review
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Deerfield Review
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
03/08/1945
Language
A language of the resource
English
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
DPL.0007.002.023
Bernard E. Vanderbeek
C.W. Pettis
Cremation
Deerfield Illinois
Deerfield Review
Elmer Pettis
First Presbyterian Church
Hampshire Illinois
Iowa
Jessie Mae Carlisle Pettis
Lake County General Hospital
Lauterburg and Oehler Funeral Home
Mrs. C.W. Pettis
Mrs. Smith Carlisle
North Dakota
Obituary
Smith Carlisle
South Dakota
Waukegan Illinois
Whittemore Iowa