OVERLEAF
January/February/March 2006
Volume 41 Number 3
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IN CASE OF A WEATHER EMERGENCY
We urge
you to call (516) 374-1667 during a weather emergency before leaving
for the library. All information regarding
closings and delayed openings will be posted on this taped announcement.
Please note that if the Hewlett-Woodmere UFSD
is closed,
the library will not open
before 1 p.m.
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FROM THE BOARD
During the
ten years (ten years?) since we re-opened the renovated building our
Library has truly become a focal point in the community.
We appreciate our patrons' approval and support for what
we offer, and are delighted by the enormous daily hustle and bustle
throughout our building. But by definition
a dynamic institution like ours can never rest on its laurels, and
neither will we.
For some
months now a Long-Range Planning Committee- composed of our Director,
Susan de Sciora, as well as of community residents and a Library
Trustee- has been working to identify those areas in which new, or
additional focus would substantially enhance our services.
This planning group has already acknowledged the
well-articulated needs expressed by our Teen Advisory Committee (TAC),
which has drawn in teens to active involvement in library programs.
Preliminary
emphasis by the Committee has been on improving communication via Overleaf,
e-mail, a re-designed web site, "blogs", patron feedback, etc., and on
creating better dialogue with all segments of our local community. As the planning progresses, other areas of
concern will naturally come into focus.
The Committee's
initial conclusions will be shared with our residents at a Community
Forum to be announced for a later date. At
that time we will welcome all comments, and, most important, of course,
ideas and suggestions for additional consideration.
Ben Eilbott
Vice President
Board of Trustees
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CONCERTS
AT HEWLETT
WOODMERE
New Talent/New Ideas
East Bay Chamber Players
Sunday, February 5, 2:30 p.m.
Formed in
1991, East Bay Chamber Players has performed distinctive chamber music
programs for piano, clarinet, and trings throughout Long Island. Most recently they were featured in an all
Beethoven program featuring The "Archduke" Trio as part of Hofstra
University's Joseph G. Astman International Concert Series. The group consists of Paul Baer, piano, Arik
Braude, violin, and Amy Camus, cellist.
Tickets
may be picked up beginning Wednesday, January 25 at 10 am & 7 pm.
HIGHLIGHTS
IN JAZZ
PRESENTS
JAZZ SINGING THE GREAT AMERICAN SONG BOOK WITH
MARLENE VERPLANCK, vocalist, Ted Firth, piano, Steve La Spina,
bass, Richard De Rosa, drums
Thursday, February 23, 7:30 p.m.
Throughout her career , Marlene
VerPlanck has stuck to her guns, paying loving care to the great
standards and new songs from our finest composers, while ignoring
mediocre pop tunes. Composers such as Hugh
Martin knew “…our songs are in the safe hands of
Marlene VerPlanck, and she will sing them better than anyone
else.� Early in her career, she
was a busy studio musician backing up Frank Sinatra, Perry Como, Tony
Bennett, and many others. In A Digital Mood, featuring
Marlene, Mel Torm é, and Julius La
Roas with the Glenn Miller Orchestra, became the first big-band CD to
go gold. She is also the voice behind
"Weekends were made for Michelob" and "Mm-mm good, that's what
Campbell's Soups are."
District residents and Friends of the Library may pick up
tickets beginning
Wednesday, February 8 at 10 am & 7 pm
New Talent/New Ideas
Fountain Chamber Music Ensemble
Sunday, March 19, 2:30 p.m.
The
Fountain Chamber Music Ensemble is part of the Fountain Chamber Music
Society,
an innovative group of New York's finest young artists, combining
strings,
winds, voice, piano, and percussion. A
trio of piano, cello, and clarinet will be performing.
Tickets
may be picked up beginning Wednesday, March 8 at 10 am & 7 pm.

WE THREE
A Touch of New Orleans and Songs
of Love
Sunday, March 12, 2:30 p.m.
WE THREE- three people, five
instruments and voice!
An unusually talented trio, playing a variety of instruments
singing songs made famous by the musicians of New Orleans- Jambalaya,
Basin Street Blues, Way Down Yonder in New Orleans, and many more!
District residents
and Friends of the Library may pick up tickets beginning
Wednesday, March 1
at 10 a.m. & 7 p.m.
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Let's
Do it!
Written and directed by David Houston
Starring David Houston as Noel Coward and
Rick Heuthe
as Cole Porter
Sunday, March 26, 2:30 p.m.
Imagine
it's 1954 , Noel Coward
needs a triumph for his first American cabaret, to insure his financial
future. He turns to his friend and
contemporary, Cole Porter to help him put together his show. Meeting in Coward's hotel room in Paris, the
two begin to work. It soon becomes
apparent, Sir Noel has
a preconceived idea for his showstopper- write parody lyrics to
Porter's famous
songs!
District
residents may pick up tickets beginning Wednesday, March 15 at 10 a.m.
& 7
p.m.
New Talent/New Ideas
Intergenerational
Concert
Moog to Mac
The History of the Moog synthesizer and Computerized
Music today
With Professor Herbert Deutsch, Hofstra University
Sunday, April 2, 2:30 p.m.
From
Moog to Mac is a performance/lecture on the most exciting
period in
the history of Electronic Music. Herb
Deutsch collaborated with Dr. Robert Moog (May 23, 1934 - August 21,
2005) on
the development and design of the first Moog Synthesizer.
His work as a pioneer in the field has been
documented in the book Analog Days. Prof.
Deutsch was featured in a 2001 History Channel
program on
the topic and in a 2004 full-length film MOOG.
The program will
include a live performance of Jazz Images, the first
composition ever to use the sounds of a Moog Synthesizer (1964),
compositions
by Deutsch and others in classical and popular styles.
You will also hear and see a demonstration
of the Theremin, one of the oldest and most dramatic electronic
instruments,
played without touching since the performer moves both arms in space
within the
range of two antennae. Also, the role
of computers in today's music will be explored. This
is a lot of fun for music and science lovers of all ages.
Tickets may be picked up beginning
Wednesday, March 22 at 10 am & 7pm.

SEATED
AEROBICS
With Fran Machida, DanceAerobics
Wednesdays, 11 am
January
4 & 11
All classes are choreographed to enjoyable music.
This is a complete workout, from head to toe. Wear comfortable clothes.
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INTERNATIONAL
DANCE AND LINE DANCING
With Miriam Sharin
6 Thursdays, 2 p.m.
January 19 & 26, February 2 & 16, March 2 & 16
Join us
for international dance and line dancing with Miriam Sharin and dance
the winter blues away.
SCRABBLE
Wednesdays, 2 p.m.
January 25, February 8, March 22
Scrabble
has once again become a popular game for those who love words and
language. Games are provided but you are
welcome to bring your own. Stop by alone
and join in or bring a friend for a game or two of Scrabble.
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Continental Cuisine with French Flair!
Soigne
Restaurant
Tuesday, January 17, 2 p.m.
Join us for a cooking
demonstration by
Chef/Owner of SoigneRestaurant, George Echeverra. Dishes being
prepared are Tartar of Ahi Tuna with tropical
fruit
chutney and yuzu marinade and cognac, apple, and currant purses with
caramel
sauce wrapped in phyllo dough.

Seating preference will
be given to Hewlett-Woodmere Library members and Friends of the
Hewlett-Woodmere Library.
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Art Lecture
Professor Thomas Germano
Representations
of Venus and Cupid in Classical Art
Tuesday, February 14, 10:30 a.m.
In celebration of
Valentine’s Day, a slide lecture on two infamous
Valentine’s Day personalities, Venus and Cupid. We
will look at artwork and sculpture by Titian, Raphael,
Bronzino, Botticelli, Rubens, and others.
Thomas Germano is
an art professor at SUNY Farmingdale and a professional artist.
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Journal
Writing Workshop
With Rhoda Ferber
Tuesday, February 7, 10 a.m.
Having a journal has become a way of life for
many people. A journal is a record of where you are, who you are, and
where you are going. There are travel
journals, food journals, thoughts- for- the- day journals, funny
sayings journals, pocket journals, grief journals, wedding journals,
parenting journals - the list is endless. Many
people have found journals helpful in working through difficult times. There is something magical about re-reading a
journal and journeying back to a certain time in your life. Bring a pen and a notebook.
Rhoda Ferber is a resident of Hewlett, retired teacher and writing
coach, and an owner of many journals.
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History of the New York
City Police Department
With James L. Coll, professor Nassau Community College,
Detective, NYPD
Tuesday, February 28, 2 p.m.
From the
colonial era to the modern-day NYPD, policing in New York has an
engrossing
history, in which front-page scandals are countered by remarkable
successes. James Coll, professor, NYPD
detective, brings his unique perspective to this epic story.
This
program has been made possible in part by a grant from the New York
Council for
the Humanities.
Art Lecture
ROLES OF WOMEN BY MALE ARTISTS
With Louise Cello Caruso
Tuesday, March 7, 10:30 a.m.
This
lavishly illustrated slide show/lecture will focus on the many roles of
women as depicted by male artists- Vermeer, Velasquez, Rockwell,
Modigliani, Manet, and many others.
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Andrew
Lloyd Webber
With James Kolb
Thursday, March 9, 10:30 a.m.
Andrew
Lloyd Webber's career spans the last four decades of the 20 th
century, beginning with Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat,
followed by Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita, Cats, Starlight
Express,
The Phantom of the Opera, and many more.
Music Lecture
Ella Fitzgerald
With Prof. Herbert Deutsch, Hofstra University
Thursday, March 16, 7:30 p.m.
Ella Fitzgerald, dubbed "The First Lady
of Song", was the most popular female jazz singer in the United States
for more than half a century. She won 13 Grammy Awards and sold over 40
million albums during her career. No one
can forget her sensuous, flexible voice and the art form she made of
scat singing. Using recordings of this great singer, Prof. Herbert
Deutsch will add insight to our understanding of this amazing artist.
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Key
Trends in International and Domestic Affairs
With Adrian Peracchio
Tuesday, March 21, 2 p.m.
A lively
discussion of the most current developments in foreign and domestic
affairs,
with an emphasis on the situation in the Middle East.
Special Presentation by the
National Council of Jewish Women
Maria, Full of Grace
Directed by Joshua Marston
Starring Catalina Sandino Moreno,Jaime Orsonio Gomez,Guilied Lopez
Rated R,101 minutes, subtitles
Sunday, January 8, 2 p.m.
Speaker to be announced
Winner of the
Dramatic Audience Award at the 2004 Sundance Film
Festival, two major awards at the Berlin Film Festival
and six awards at the Cartagena Film Festival, Joshua Marston's Maria Full Of Grace
follows a bright, gutsy young woman on a life-changing - and
life-threatening - journey. The film sweeps us along on its heroine's
unpredictable odyssey from Colombia to New York, weaving a gripping
narrative of risk, determination and survival. Confronting crises that
test her to the very core, Maria finally emerges at the threshold of a
new future, one that will be defined by what she wants rather than what
she rejects. The risks are great but for Maria and the two other drug
˜mules", transporting 60 or more pellets of heroin in their stomachs to
the United States, this is an opportunity for freedom.
District residents may pick up tickets beginning Tuesday,
January 3, 10 am & 7 pm.
Members of NCJW who are not members of H-W PL may pick their
tickets up at NCJW office.
This program is co-
sponsored by the National Council of Jewish Women, Dr. Irving Zimmerman
Community Service Fund and The Advocacy Group of Peninsula Section,
NCJW.
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BILLY WILDER CENTENNIAL FILM FESTIVAL

Billy Wilder was born Samuel Wilder in 1906 in Vienna. His mother began calling him Billy because of
her girlhood experiences in America where she had a crush on
“Wild Bill� Cody and loved anything American.
In 1933, when Hitler came to power, Wilder left for Paris, then on to
Hollywood. His family died in the
concentration camps. He had many
screenwriting partners throughout his career but it was his
collaboration with Charles Brackett at Paramount Studios in 1942 that
his career began to take off. They won
Oscars for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Screenplay for The
Lost Weekend (1945) and Best Screenplay for Sunset Boulevard (1950). In 1957, after he had parted ways with
Brackett, he co-wrote Love in the Afternoon with I.A.L.
Diamond, who became his co-writer for the remainder of his career. Billy Wilder retired in 1981 and died in March
2002.
In case of a
cancellation due to weather, the film will be rescheduled during the
week.
Some Like It Hot
(1959) 122
min.
Sunday, January 22, 2 p.m.
Starring Marilyn Monroe, Jack
Lemmon,
Tony Curtis, Joe E. Brown
One
of the funniest movies ever made.
Two musicians witness the St. Valentine's Day massacre, and dress up as
women,
joining an all-female band who's
heading south to hide from the
gangsters.
Witness for the
Prosecution (1957) 116 min.
Tuesday, February 7, 2
p.m.
Starring Charles Laughton,
Tyrone Power, Marlene Dietrich,
Elsa Lanchester
Based on the book by Agatha Christie,
Power plays a
man arrested in London for murdering an elderly widow. Laughton plays
his
ailing barrister, attempting to prove his innocence.
One of the great courtroom dramas with a twist
ending that
beats
all twist endings.
One, Two, Three (1961)115
min.
Sunday, February 12, 2 p.m.
Starring James Cagney, Horst Bucholtz, Pamela Tiffin
A
fast-paced, hilarious comedy about a Coca-Cola executive in Berlin
(Cagney)
dealing with the communists on one hand and an out-of-control bosses
daughter
on the other.
The Lost Weekend (1945) 101
min.
Sunday, February 26, 2 p.m.
Starring Ray Milland, Jane Wyman, Howard Da Silva
Alcoholism
was a taboo subject in 1945. Milland is
would-be writer who drinks to avoid facing his mediocrity.
Jane Wyman plays the love interest that
stands by him through thick and thin. A
favorite line: when Milland pathetically begs a bartender for just one
more
drink, the bartender replies "Yeah,
one's too many and a
hundred's not
enough." Brilliantly
acted by Ray Milland, this film has stood the test of time.
The Apartment
(1960) 125 min.
Sunday, March 5, 2 p.m.
Starring Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray
Lemmon
is
just another employee in a big insurance company until he begins to
lend out
his apartment to his superiors for the extra-marital affairs.
Sunset
Boulevard (1950)
110 min.
Tuesday March 28, 2 p.m.
Starring William Holden, Gloria Swanson, Erich Von
Stroheim
The
greatest movie made about Hollywood. A washed up screenwriter meets a
washed up
silent film star who deludes herself into believing she is ready for a
comeback. Many cameos of people playing themselves such as Cecil B. De
Mille,
Hedda Hopper, and Buster Keaton to name a few. Can
you guess who is the actor playing Artie Green,
Holden’s friend?
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Domestic Violence
Terror
at Home: Domestic Violence in America
Lifetime Entertainment, Directed by Maryanne De Leo with
Michael Bolton
Speaker to be announced
Wednesday, March 15, 2 p.m.
The
horror of physical, verbal or sexual abuse is
something women from all walks of life face on a daily basis. And
regardless of
socioeconomic status, ethnicity or age, one thing is true among all
abused
women: they often stay
silent about what happened because of fear,
shame or
both.
To give
these women a voice and to spread
awareness about this shocking epidemic, Lifetime has teamed up
with
Academy Award-winning
filmmaker Maryanne De Leo (HBO's "Chernobyl
Heart") and Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter and
antiviolence
activist Michael Bolton to create the powerful documentary "Terror
at
Home: Domestic Violence in America." It offers a very rare
and
intimate look into the lives of several women as they try to break free
of
their abusive relationships for good.
District
residents may
pick up
tickets beginning
Wednesday, March 1,at 10 am & 7 pm.
Members
of NCJW who are not members of H-W PL may pick
their tickets up
at NCJW office.
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Tax Help is Available
Tuesdays, February 21-
April 11, 2006
10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
By appointment only
Tax
help is available for senior citizens with simple tax returns. This service is available through the auspices
of the Town of Hempstead's Office of Senior Enrichment.
Please bring last year's tax return, 1099s or W-2s and any other
pertinent documents. Beginning Wednesday,
January 11, 2006 at 10 am, call 374-1967, extension 31, to schedule an
appointment.
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Mom's Morning Off!
Monday,
March 20, 10 a.m.
A
Mom's
day, as we know, is a busy one, full of doing for others.
But perhaps you and a friend may have an
hour for yourselves to experience beautiful art and a lecture, learn
something
new, or watch an interesting documentary. Perhaps
you have wanted to come to a library program but
the time
listed, well, you know you will be picking up and driving at that time
of
day. Around 10 am might be the perfect
time for you.
This
series is for you. It won't be
every
month, so don't worry
about another commitment but once every newsletter.
Take an hour off on Monday and join us.
Visions of Peru
With photographer, Doug Going and Conny Brunner
A
digital
multimedia presentation, Visions of Peru offers sights and
sounds beyond
compare.
Feel the rhythms of everyday
life as stunning photography is set to the richly authentic music of
the Andes,
accompanied by insightful narrative.
See
the breathtaking ancient ruins of Machu Picchu , soar
on the wings
of the majestic condor, go to the depths of Colca Canyon and to the
heights of
Lake Titicaca!
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Great Books Discussion Group 2005-2006
We welcome back Dr. Allen Lanner and the Great
Books
discussion
group for a 9th series. Please join us for discussions of these
provocative
literary works. Following are the dates and books that will be
covered.
All Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m.
- September 27,
deMaupassant, Guy The Necklace &
Other Short
Stories
ISBN27064-5
- October 25,
James, Henry The Turn of the Screw
ISBN26684-2
- November 29,Flaubert,
Gustave Madame Bovary
ISBN29257-6
- December 20,
Austen, Jane Persuasion
ISBN29555-9
- February 28,
Proust, Marcel, Swann's Way
ISBN42123-6
- March 28, Stevenson,
Robert Louis The Master of
Ballantrae
ISBN42685-8
- April 25,
Emerson, Ralph Waldo Self-Reliance
and Other
Essays
ISBN27790-9
- May 23, Shaw,
George Bernard Heartbreak House
ISBN29291-6
All books are from
Dover Publications, 31 E. 2nd St.
Mineola, New
York 11501-3582. 1-800-223-3130. fax: 516-294-9758.
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IN THE GALLERY
ARTISTS
NETWORK OF GREAT NECK
January 6- April 26, 2006
Reception: Saturday, January 21, 2 p.m.
In
1986, a
call for artists to form a networking community drew a large crowd of
interested artists. Great Neck may be
in the name but members come from a wide geographical area.
Our members
have
won numerous awards, in various mediums; painters, sculptor,
printmaking,
photography, papermaking, collage artists, etc.
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IN THE BOEHM ROOM
ART TEACHERS OF THE
HEWLETT-WOODMERE SCHOOL DISTRICT
March 2-April 26,
2006
A show
featuring the talented and dedicated art teachers of the school
district.
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REMNANTS OF CHILDHOOD
Images and Impressions of Children from Faraway Lands
Photographer,
Doug Going
March 2 - April 26, 2006
Reception: Saturday, March 4, 2 p.m.
Doug
Going
did a beautiful digital multimedia presentation last year entitled "For
Now".
This new exhibit focuses on the life of children in countries from
South
America, Africa, and South and South-East Asia.
Mr.
Going will also be doing a digital multimedia
presentation entitled Visions of Peru, Monday, March 20, 10 a.m.
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IN THE DISPLAY CASES
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Dr. J.
Zachary Dule
December
2, 2005- January 26,2006
A professional dentist,
Dr. Dule began studying
silversmithing and jewelry making in 1978,
and continued his studies at
the 92nd
St. Y, Parson's School of Design, FIT, and privately.
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Be A Friend
The Friends of the Hewlett-Woodmere Public Library take
pride
and pleasure
in enhancing the library experience for the community through cultural
programs, concerts, children's programs, book bags, and giving gifts
to enhance the facility beyond the budgeting process.
So, be a Friend, and join today! All are welcomed
to
volunteer
for Friends' activities. As a Friend you will have the
satisfaction
of knowing you are helping your community. Members also
participate
in advance ticket distribution days for all Friends’ ticketed
events
such
as concerts and special programs. Out-of-district supporters are
welcomed! Friends' programs and concerts are identified
In
Overleaf
with an symbol.
To join, fill out forms available at the Information
Desk, in
the Lobby,
or at Friends' programs.
Executive Board of the Friends
Frank Zaret, Lenore Kramer, Florence Hoffman, Claire Zimmerman, Iris
Gorenberg, June Firestone, Jerry Prisyon (past president)
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H-W PL READERS
A Monthly Afternoon
Discussion Group
Our Sixth Season of Good Reading!
All are welcome. District
residents may reserve copies of
the books well in advance of the meetings. Review
packets are available at the Information Desk. Join
us for an afternoon discussion of good
books.
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THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF
THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME
By Mark Haddon
Discussion leader: Candace Plotsker-Herman
Monday, January 23, 2 p.m.
An
original
and clever debut novel, The Curious Incident of the Dog in
the
Night-Time is an engaging tale of a 15-year-old autistic man who
embarks on
a journey of self-discovery. Late one night, Christopher comes across his
neighbor's poodle, Wellington, impaled on a garden fork. Wellington's
owner
finds him cradling her dead dog in his arms, and has him arrested.
After
spending a night in jail, Christopher resolves--against the objection
of his
father and neighbors--to discover just who has murdered Wellington.
Siobhan, a
social worker at his school, encourages him to write a book about his
investigations, and the result--quirkily illustrated, with each chapter
given
its own prime number--is The Curious Incident of the Dog in the
Night-Time.
The novel brims with touching, ironic humor. The
result is an eye-opening work in a unique and
compelling literary
voice.
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THE GRANDMOTHERS: FOUR
NOVELS
By Doris Lessing
Discussion leader: Edna Ritzenberg
Monday, February 6, 2 p.m.
The
Grandmothers is a about intimacy among family, friends, and lovers. Written in four short novellas, the title
novella is about Roz and Lil, girlhood friends who as adults have sex
with each
other's sons. Victoria and Staveney,
another novella, is a masterpiece about social realism involving a
young
black
girl's chance encounter in London with a family of wealthy, white
liberals. A Love Child tells a
rare
World War II story of troops in India and one soldier's passionate
affair. And
lastly, The Reason For It is an allegory of civilization's
decline
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NEVER LET ME GO
By Kauzo Ishiguro
Discussion leader: Karen Porcella
Monday, March 6, 2 p.m.
Set in late 1990s England, in a
parallel universe in which humans are cloned and raised expressly to
"donate" their healthy organs and thus eradicate disease from the
normal population, this is an epic ethical horror story. By age 31,
narrator (and clone) Kathy H. has spent nearly 12 years as a "carer" to
dozens of "donors." Knowing that
her number is sure to come up soon, she recounts--in excruciating
detail--the dramas of her happily sheltered childhood and adolescence
at Hailsham, an idyllic, isolated school/orphanage where clone-students
are encouraged to make art and feel special. Ishiguro
spins a stinging cautionary tale of science outpacing ethics.
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FILMS
Please refer to Overleaf in print or call the Information Desk (516)
374-1967 for further information
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January 11
February 15
March 8
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2 & 7:30 p.m.
2 & 7:30 p.m.
2 & 7:00 p.m.(please note time change
for evening showing) |
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BUDGET INFORMATION
Hewlett-Woodmere
Public Library
Annual Library Vote
And Election
Wednesday, April
5, 2006
7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
The Boehm Five Towns Forum
Meeting Room
PROPOSITION 1:
Proposed 2006/2007 Library
Budget
PROPOSITION 2
Election of
Library Trustee
Qualifications for Voting
Registration
is required only if a resident has not voted in a Hewlett-Woodmere
Union Free School District or Library referendum within the last 4
years. In order to be eligible to
register, you must be 18 years of age or older by April 5, 2006, and
you must have been a legal resident of our district for at least 30
days prior to the referendum. U.S.
citizenship is also required.
Voting Information
Voting
in the Boehm Meeting Room of the Hewlett-Woodmere Public Library, 1125
Broadway, Hewlett, New York, for all registered voters, Wednesday,
April 5, 2006 from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
For further information, telephone Susan de Sciora, Library Director
at: 374-1967.
Registration for Budget Vote:
Wednesday, March
29, 2006, 1-9 p.m.
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Library Trustees' Meetings
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7:45 pm |
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7:45 pm |
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7:45 p.m. |
Open budget meetings
will be held at 7:15 p.m., followed by Board Meeting at 7:45 p.m.
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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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