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OVERLEAF
JULY/AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2006 VOLUME 42
NUMBER 1
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BOARD MESSAGE
Sometime this summer the
Hewlett-Woodmere Public Library will initiate a Museum Pass program
that will allow our resident cardholders to borrow a pass that wil
entitle them and up to four guests to entry to the Museum of Modern
Art. The pass will have a due date just like a Library book.
Why is the Library offering
this service?
Several libraries in the County
are currently offering such a program, and we have received many
requests for this service.
Why the Museum of Modern Art?
This museum has one of the
highest entry fees of any in New York City ($20.00 per person) , and the Library Board felt that it would
offer the best value for our residents.
Will we be expanding the program?
After a trial period of several
months, the staff and Board will evaluate this program and, based on
usage, may expand it to include other institutions. This is a
program that relies completely on the on-time return of the
passes. The continuation and expansion of the program is,
therefore, completely dependent on those who use the service.
When will the service begin?
Final details are still being
worked out with MOMA but we anticipate that it will be operational by
August 1st.
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FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY
Plaza Theatrical Productions, Inc.
The Music Man
By Meredith Willson. Composer
and author
Monday, July 17, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, July 18, 7:30 p.m.
All-American valentine Harold
Hill, a fast-talking salesman, tries to con the residents of River
City, only to be caught by the arms of the beautiful Marian the
Librarian. The outstanding score includes such favorites as Goodnight
My Someone, 76 Trombones, and Till
There Was You. The show premiered on Broadway in 1957. It was
made into a movie starring Shirley Jones and Robert Preston.
Residents &
Friends of the Library may pick up tickets beginning Wednesday, July 5
at 10 a.m. & 7 p.m.
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Highlights in Jazz
Swinging Classic American Music
Phil Flanigan, Hanna Richardson, Chris Flory
Thursday, July 20, 7:30 p.m.
The great American
songbook featuring Gershwin, Berlin, Ellington, to mention a few,
performed Swing style by an internationally acclaimed trio. Hanna
Richardson performs vocals with Phil Flanigan on bass, and Chris Flory on guitar.
District residents
and Friends of the Library may pick up tickets beginning Thursday, July
6 at 10 a.m. & 7 p.m.
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Subscription Databases can be accessed at home
through our website www.hwpl.org.
A few, however, because of licensing agreements, are only available at
the library.
Here are four databases you might like to explore.
All are available at home.
Please do not hesitate to ask our staff for help with
any of our databases.
AP Multimedia Archive provides a sensory journey
of photographs, audio sound bits, graphics, and text spanning over 160
years of history. Students will enhance research projects with
over one million photographs dating back to 1826 and as current as a
few moments ago, tens of thousands of graphics, audio files dating from
the 1920s, and news stories dating from 1997.
ProQuest Historical Newspapers offers full-text
and full-image articles for newspapers dating back to the 18th
century. Presently we are offering The New York Times from its
first issue in 1851 through 2002.
NoveList provides descriptions of fiction for all
ages, including picture books, children's chapter books, young adult
titles, and books for adult readers. Browse book lists by category,
genre, or these at every reading level.
Live Homework Help is a one on one online
tutoring program available to students in grades 4 - 12, available as
an in-library product and/or remote access between 3 p.m. and 9 p.m.
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CONCERTS AT HWPL
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Plaza Theatrical Productions, Inc.
The Complete Works of William
Shakespeare A Comedy
Monday, August 14, 7:30 p.m.
This Off-Broadway comedy is a
delightful mixture of pratfalls, puns, willful misreading of names and
dialogue, clunky female impersonations, and broad burlesque. See
Romeo and Juliet as you've never seen them!
Residents
may pick tickets beginning Wednesday, August 2, 10 a.m. & 7 p.m.
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Town of Hempstead
Senior
Enrichment Chorus
Dominick Giannone, Director
Stu Waterz, piano
Friday, September 8, 1 p.m.
Under the baton of musician Dominick Giannone the
chorus has grown to over 20 members. Come hear this delightful
group of singers perform classic American music.
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It's Never Too
Late to Fall in Love
Jeanette
Reynolds, soprano, Tony Castano,
Baritone, Ann Stevens, piano
Sunday, September 17, 2:30 p.m.
A
light-hearted afternoon of musical theatre and piano solo selections
performed by this talented trio.
Jeanette Reynolds lives in East
Setauket and has performed extensively in theatre, concert, and cabaret
throughout Long Island. Tony Castano, a California native and
former Pasadena Playhouse actor has performed on both coasts. Ann
Stevens is a concert pianist and musical director, performing since her
professional debut at age 15 as a soloist with the Long Island
Philharmonic.
District
residents and Friends of the Library may pick up tickets beginning
Wednesday, September 6 at 10 a.m. & 7 p.m.
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Plaza Theatrical Productions
Hot 'n' Cole
A Cole Porter Celebration!!
Words and Music by Cole Porter
Thursday, October 12, 7:30 p.m.
The spotlight is on the
timelessness of Cole Porter classics, presented here with wonderful
fresh arrangements and a contemporary twist. Highlights from the
evening feature It's Delovely,
I get A Kick Out of You, I've Got You Under My Skin, Love for Sale, My Heart Belongs To Daddy and Night And Day!
District residents may pick up tickets
beginning
Wednesday, September 27, 10 a.m.
& 7 p.m.
Back to Home Page
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LECTURES AND COURSES
Good
Plants for Spring
through Fall
Lynn Thomson, "The Garden Lady"
Thursday, July 6, 7:30 p.m.
Spring is a spectacular time in
the garden. But in many gardens, what follows during the summer
and fall is rather a letdown. This slide presentation focuses on
plants, bulbs, annuals, perennials, and some woody plants that can add
interest to garden for more than just spring.
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ABC's
of Selling Your Home Successfully
With Suad Smolinsky
Thursday, July 13, 10:30 a.m.
You will learn a step-by-step
approach to selling your home while avoiding the usual pitfalls,
followed by a question and answer period.
Ms. Smolinsky grew up in
Lawrence and has been in real estate for 22 years. She is a
frequent lecturer on real estate issues and an estate appraiser.
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Get
with It: Computer Basics for the Senior
Citizen
with Don Newman
July 17, July 24, July 31
3
Mondays 10
a.m.
Using WordPad, a simple word processing tool, Don will demonstrate his
system for a rewarding computer experience for the senior citizen
who may never have successfully tried to use a personal computer.
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The Man Who Danced with Marlene Dietrich
Written and performed by Robin Hirsch
Tuesday, July 18, 10:30 a.m.
Robin Hirsch is a former Oxford and Fulbright
scholar and the author of the acclaimed memoir Last Dance at the Hotel Kempinski.
The co-owner of the renowned Cornelia Street Café in
Greenwich
Village,
Mr. Hirsch lives in Brooklyn, New York.
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Ancient Bones, Stones, & Art
With Dr. Mary
Ursula Brennan
Thursday, July 27, 10
a.m.
What can ancient bones, tools,
and art tell us about the past and about ourselves as humans? How
do sculptures, engravings, and art illuminate the emergence of symbolic
thought and language that distinguish humans from other animals? These
and many other questions will be part of a slide presentation and
discussion.
Dr. Brennan has taught Human
Evolution and Prehistory, Human Ecology, The Evolution of Biology and
Behavior, and Health and Disease in Human Evolution at NYU since
1988. A Fulbright scholar and National Science Foundation grant
Recipient, she studied health and disease among Neanderthals in
southwestern France between
100,000 to 10,000 years ago.
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Art Lecture
The Beguiling Language of Love
With Paul Jeffries
Tuesday, August 8,10:30 a.m.
The
mysterious phenomena of love wells up powerful creative inspiration
often expressed in paintings, sculpture, stories, and verse.
Sculptor and computer artist, Paul Jeffries has conducted lectures and
seminars at Yale University, the Harvard Club in New York, and the
Hudson River Museum. Using a PowerPoint presentation, Mr.
Jeffries will show illustrations of this theme from the Greeks, Persia
, and Japanese geisha to the Romantics of Europe.
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Joe & Marilyn
The Love Story of Two American Icons:
Joe DiMaggio & Marilyn Monroe
With Marv Schneider
Tuesday, September 12, 2 p.m.
Retired Associated
Press sportswriter and broadcaster and co- author of Di Maggio-
Setting the Record Straight, Mr. Schneider will talk about two of America's
beloved celebrities and their marriage.
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The American Red
Cross Nassau County
National Preparedness Month- September 1- 30th
Together
We Prepare
Thursday, September 14, 2 p.m.
National Preparedness
Month is a coordinated nation-wide effort sponsored by the Department
of Homeland Security and the American Red Cross, to encourage Americans
to take steps to be better prepared for emergencies in their homes,
businesses, schools, and libraries. This presentation will focus
on preparing for emergencies in Nassau County.
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IN
THE GALLERY
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Advanced Placement Student Art Show
Hewlett High School
Continues through July and August
Senior students
enrolled in the advanced placement art program display their portfolios.
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IN
THE GALLERY & BOEHM ROOM
American Jewish Legacy
From the Mountains to
the Prairie: 350 Years of Kosher and Jewish Life in America
Opening & Reception: Thursday, September 7, 2006,
7:30 p.m.
The American Jewish Legacy, a nonprofit organization
with regional representatives across the United
States , seeks to gather, preserve and disseminate
the history of traditional Jewish life across the U.S.
Working with noted historians, the AJL has gathered
information from public and private archives from across the country to
create this unique historic presentation. The 400-square-foot exhibit
depicts traditional Jewish life through the Colonial period, the Gold
Rush and the Civil War, with special focus on traditional Jewish life
in the prairie and in the West.
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Sunday, September 10, 2:30 p.m.
Exhibit Lecture
Speaker: Rabbi Yaakov Horowitz
Executive Vice President and Founder American Jewish
Legacy |
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SUMMER VACATION LOANS
Summer vacation loans are
available to Hewlett-Woodmere cardholders for books that usually
circulate for 28 days. Ten (10) items may be borrowed on a summer loan.
This service is in effect from June 25, 2006 through
Monday, September 11, 2006.
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Mom's Morning Off
IT'S NEWS TO ME: THE RADIO NEWS BUSINESS THEN AND NOW
With Shelly Strickler
35 year broadcast veteran takes you through the
changes in broadcast news that alter the way you receive and perceive
the news!
Monday, September 25, 10 a.m.
Shelly Strickler is an award winning broadcast
journalist who has worked for more than a quarter century at WOR Radio,
New York City.
Shelly has accumulated more than 50 awards during her
career including several from the prestigious New York Press Club,
Associated Press, the Broadcasters Association and Women in Radio and
TV. She is an active member in the New York Press Club where she
now serves as an awards judge. She is also a director, performer, writer of the Inner Circle, a reporter's
organization that produces an annual musical satire of political and
current events.
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The Library remembers September 11, 2001
Monday, September 11, 9:30 a.m.
The staff will be gathering
in the Main Reading room at 9:30 a.m. for a brief remembrance.
You are welcome to join us.
America's
Heart and Soul 2 p.m.
Documentary Feature
Walt Disney Pictures
Directed by Louis
Schwartzberg
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Great Books Discussion Group 2006-2007
Dr. Allen Lanner and the Great Books
discussion group return for a 10th series.
Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m.
September 26, 2006
Chekhov, Anton Three
Sisters
ISBN 0-486-27544-2 |
October 24
Balzac, Honoré de Pere
Goriot
ISBN 0-486-43698-5 |
November 28
Joyce, James Dubliners
ISBN 0-486-26870-5 |
December 19
Gaskell, Elizabeth Cranford
ISBN 0-486-42681-5 |
February 13, 2007
Austen, Jane Sense and
Sensibility
ISBN 0-486-29049-2 |
March 20
Shelley, Mary Frankenstein
ISBN 0-486-28211-2 |
April 24
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von The
Sorrows of Young Werther
ISBN 0-486-42455-3 |
May 15
Thoreau, Henry David Civil
Disobedience and Other Essays
ISBN 0-486-27563-9 |
All books are from Dover
Publications, 31 E.2nd St. Mineola, New York
11501-3582. 1-800-223-3130.
Fax: 516 294-9758
A LITTLE
SUMMER NIGHT MUSIC IN THE
COURT YARD
Chairs are provided. Evenings start at 7 p.m. in the
courtyard. In case of inclement weather, we move indoors. No
tickets required.
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Eranga
& Prianga
Thursday, July 13
A singing duo of sublime
harmonies and names that rhyme! Originally from Sri
Lanka , they sing songs from all over the world
and in many languages. Switching easily from a Hebrew Legend to a
Calypso to an Italian ballad to Spanish gypsy songs, it is sure to be a
provocative special evening of music on a summer night.
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The
Class Act
Dom Giannone, Stu Waterz, Jerry Noble, and Joe Carbone
Wednesday, August 2
Welcome back The Class
Act! An evening of contemporary music at it�s
best! Saxophone, piano, drums, and guitar with
perhaps a vocalist to put the finishing touches to this class act.
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Naomi
Zeitlin: From Belting Broadway to Soulful Jazz
Thursday, August 10
Singer Naomi Zeitlin will
perform jazz favorites, Broadway show tunes, the blues, favorite songs
from movie scores, and an assortment of international favorites. In
fact, she sings it all!
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The Hewlett-Woodmere Public Library Readers
A Monthly
Reading Group
The Sixth Season
SUMMER SESSION
District
Residents may reserve copies of the books well in advance of the
meetings.
Review packets are available at the Information Desk.
NOTE:
July & August, discussion at 11 a.m. September we return to 2 p.m.
Blackbird House
by Alice Hoffman
Discussion leader: Karen Porcella
Tuesday, July 11, 11 a.m.
In this collection of tales,
author Alice Hoffman enters the lives of the inhabitants of Blackbird
House, tracing back from the present time to the American
Revolution. Located on a farm on Cape Cod, Blackbird House
residents, ranging in age from 10 to 30 years old, experience
sorrow and personal loss, yet are rescued by the power of love.
You will meet Violet, the voracious reader, Jamie, a young boy helping
a neighbor deal with the consequences of a secret, and Emma, a leukemia
survivor, lamenting the person she might have been if she hadn't been
so sick. The book is filled with ghost sightings and symbolic
touches of magical realism.
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The Glass Castle:
A Memoir
By Jeannette Walls
Discussion leader: Edna Ritzenberg
Tuesday, August 15, 11 a.m.
Freelance writer Jeannette
Walls portrays a poignant tale of a child brought up by two eccentric
parents whose child raising style would be considered today abusive and
neglectful. The Walls children learn to support themselves by eating
out of trashcans at school or painting their skins so the holes in
their pants don�t show. As the parents
continue to self-destruct
the children are left to their own devices. Told with fascinating
detail, Walls never plays the victim and respects her parents for
making their hardships feel like adventures. Despite their overwhelming
self-absorption, her love for them resonates from cover to cover.
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The Year of Magical
Thinking
By Joan Didion
Discussion leader: Karen Porcella
Monday, September 18, 2 p.m.
This is a heart-wrenching
memoir of Joan Didion's husband's sudden death told with surprising
candor and elegance. Joan Didion and husband, fellow writer, John
Gregory Dunne worked side by side for nearly 40 years. With her
husband's sudden death and their only daughter lying unconscious in a
nearby hospital from pneumonia and septic shock, Didion is propelled
into a state she calls 'magical thinking'. '
We might expect that we will be prostrate, inconsolable, crazy
with loss,' she writes. 'We do not expect to be literally crazy, cool
customers who believe that their husband is about to return and need
his shoes.' It is poignant tale of a person's grief, coming to
grips and moving on, and a tribute to an extraordinary marriage. |

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BLOOD DRIVE AT THE LIBRARY
Tuesday, August
22, 3 p.m.to 8 p.m.
Long Island Blood Services
Long
Island Blood Services
needs nearly 800 donations every day to meet the life saving
transfusion requirements of patients in 50 area hospitals. The
summer months are always critical with shortages and a need to
replenish the community blood supply. You can help.
Volunteer to give blood at the
Library on August 22nd. You must be age 17-75 and in good
general health. Long Island Blood Services provides the specially
trained staff that performs free mini-physicals, sterile equipment, and
post-donation refreshments. The entire process takes less than
one hour and your generous gift will help up to five people.
This is an important
community event.
Please schedule your appointment beginning Monday, August 7 at the Information
Desk at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Donate blood now. People can't live without it!
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FILMS
| Wednesday |
July 5 |
2:00 p.m. and 7:30
p.m.
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| Wednesday |
July 26 |
2:00 p.m. and 7:30
p.m. |
| Wednesday |
August 9 |
2:00 p.m. and 7:30
p.m. |
Wednesday
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August 23 |
2:00 p.m. and 7:30
p.m. |
Wednesday
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September 6 |
2:00 p.m. and 7:30
p.m. |
For film details, please call the Library's Information Desk at
(516) 374-1967 or refer to the print version of Overleaf.
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Library Trustees' Meetings
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55 Alive/Mature
Driving Course
55 Alive Mature
Driving Courses are given for Hewlett-Woodmere Union Free School
District residents on a regular basis.
A schedule of
upcoming courses and registration dates is available in the
Administration Office and at the Information Desk.
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