Newsletter - Friends of the Volusia County Library Center
Transcription
Newsletter - Friends of the Volusia County Library Center
FRIENDS OF THE DAYTONA BEACH REGIONAL LIBRARY Newsletter March 2014 Special Screening of “42” in Jackie Robinson Ballpark! The time has finally come! The Friends of the Daytona Beach Library, the Daytona Cubs, and Cinematique, in conjunction with The Front Porch Friday Festival, will present a special showing of the movie “42” as part of the ongoing Book-and-a-Movie series. The film will be shown at dusk in the Jackie Robinson Ballpark in Daytona Beach on Friday, February 28. No need to bring lawn chairs to this one – filmgoers will watch the movie from the ballpark stands! History was made in 1947, when Jackie Robinson broke the professional baseball race barrier to become the first African American MLB player of the modern era. “42” tells the life story of Robinson and his history-making signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers, under the guidance of team executive Branch Rickey. The film stars Harrison Ford, Chadwick Boseman, Nicole Beharie, Christopher Meloni, Ryan Merriman, Lucas Black, Hamish Linklater, Andre Holland. A book discussion of Blackout: The Untold Story of Jackie Robinson’s First Spring Training, by author Chris Lamb, will be held the following day, Saturday, March 1, at 2:00 p.m. in the auditorium at the City Island Library. Although “42” is not based on Lamb’s title, most of the events discussed in his book are in the film so it makes for a perfect tie-in. Those of you who attended last year’s Author Luncheon will remember Chris’s fascinating discussion of Robinson’s (Jackie Robinson, Continued on page 2) THE FORGOTTEN ARMY THE FRENCH EXPEDITIONARY CORPS IN WORLD WAR II A PRESENTATION BY BROOK WHITE LIBRARIAN, HISTORIAN, AND PARTICULAR FRIEND OF OUR LIBRARY By Mary Fagan and Betty Nelson, Friends of the Library Board Friends and patrons of Daytona Beach Library at City Island did not have an opportunity last August to give a proper sendoff to our former Regional Librarian Brook White when he was reassigned to the Volusia County Library Center as Interim Collection Development and Acquisitions Manager, assuming the duties of our retiring old friend Jan Dudding (Assistant Regional Librarian here for many years). Not knowing what "interim" meant in his case, we held off expressing our appreciation to him for his unstinting service at our center since 2007 and sending him a fond au revoir. With County management's recent decision to change his interim position to a permanent one, we can finally congratulate him and wish him many more (World War II, Continued on page 4) (Jackie Robinson, Continued from page 1) time spent here in Daytona Beach. As Lynn Lempel stated in the luncheon’s program: “Chris Lamb may be a professor with a Ph.D., but he says that while growing up in Dayton, Ohio, ‘School was my prison. Baseball was my escape.’ “His route to academia was circuitous. He got a B.S. in Broadcasting and an M.S. in Communications from the University of Tennessee. During those years, he worked as a reporter for several newspapers and taught news writing at the University of Dayton. “Next came a move to Daytona Beach, where he was a sports writer for the “News-Journal” and professor at Daytona Beach Community College. It was here that his lifelong love of baseball led him to pursue the story of Jackie Robinson’s historic spring training of 1946. “After leaving Daytona Beach, Lamb taught writing courses at Bowling Green State University and Charleston College, and earned a Ph.D. in Mass Communications from Bowling Green. His dissertation focused on political cartoons and was the basis for his 2004 book, Drawn to Extremes: The Use and Abuse of Editorial Cartoons in the United States. Just this January, he started a new job at Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis, where he is a professor in the School of Journalism.” It’s quite exciting to be able to screen this wonderful film in this historic ballpark and then have a discussion about Robinson the next day led by someone who knows him inside and out. City Island Forms a New Knit and Crochet Club Knit one, purl two…now all we need is YOU! Do you enjoy knitting and/or crocheting? Or are you a newcomer to the craft who wouldn’t know a bobble stitch from a triple toe loop? Either way, come join the fun at a new knit and crochet club! Share your expertise with newbies, or just come to relax and spin a yarn or two with other like-minded types! We will be knitting and crocheting for fun and for charity, making personal projects for friends and family, lap blankets and shawls for people in nursing facilities, group homes and Hospice care, along with baby hats, blankets and booties for hospital newborns, and sweaters and hats for children’s services organizations, and more. No need to purchase anything! If you think you might like to knit or crochet, we’ve got everything you need to get started. No need to buy needles and yarn, and then find out it’s not for you. Come give it a try. The club will meet the fourth Wednesday of each month in the auditorium at the Daytona Beach Regional Library at City Island. Our first meeting will be Wednesday, February 26 at 2:00 p.m. The program sponsored by the Friends of the Daytona Beach Library, is free and open to all. For more information call Adult Program Coordinator Deborah Shafer at 257-6036, ext. 16264. 2 AT DAYTONA BEACH, ORMOND BEACH AND JOHN H. DICKERSON HERITAGE LIBRARIES MEET SUZAN HOWES, OUR REGIONAL LIBRARIAN By Mary Fagan and Betty Nelson, Friends of the Library Board We are late in acknowledging our new Regional Director Suzan Howes, who has been with us since October 2013, because we have been a little uncertain as to how long she would remain with us. As with her predecessor Brook White, in his new position, the word "interim" had been attached to her title by Volusia County management. But finally all has been clarified, the word has disappeared, the title is official, and we welcome her warmly. Suzan is almost a native Floridian. Though born in New York City, her family moved to Daytona Beach when she was young. They were absorbed into the General Electric community, which made our town such a vibrant place for so many years, until G.E. left Daytona for Orlando. So her education came through our local schools: Mainland High School, Daytona Beach Community College, and then a transfer to the University of Central Florida, where she finished her undergraduate work. After marriage and raising three young children, Suzan eventually earned a master's degree in library science from the University of South Florida. She has been working in the Volusia County Library system for thirty years, moving around among several of the county libraries, gaining experience along the way. In 2000 she was appointed regional librarian at New Smyrna Suzan Howes, Regional Director Beach Library. In 2008 she moved to Deltona Library as regional librarian to watch over its renovation and its partnering with the Parks and Recreation Service in sharing the new building and the amphitheater with the Lyonia Preserve, which makes it a very special environmental facility. And, in 2012, she was reassigned to Ormond Beach Library, which in a (Suzan Howes, Continued on page 6) KUDOS FOR THE VOLUSIA COUNTY LIBRARY! The Online Computer Learning Center conducted a survey on libraries’ utilization of funding resources in relation to the acquisition of paper books, e-books, e-resources, CDs, DVDs, and computers. These are materials available for use by the public. And the results of the survey: The Volusia County Library ranked 85th in the nation out of a pool of some 9,000 library systems! And Volusia County Library ranked fourth in Florida! Just behind the libraries of Palm Beach, Orange, and Lee counties, all quite affluent population centers. Congratulations to Volusia County Library Director Lucinda Colee, and Collection Development and Acquisitions Manager Jan Dudding, who retired last August, and her successor, Brook White. And to all library personnel who participated in the efforts to make acquisitions such a priority in library management and a high budgetary priority. The OCLC was born in 1967 by a group of library leaders who saw the promise of computer networking in helping libraries cooperate to reduce costs and improve services. Today the OCLC has grown into a worldwide organization in which 25,900 libraries, archives and museums in 70 countries are members. The OCLC cooperative is helping libraries define their place in the digital world with new website services that amplify and extend library cooperation 3 even further. (World War II, Continued from page 1) fulfilling years in his career as a public servant with major responsibilities. History, especially military history, has been an abiding interest for Brook. He grew up while the Vietnam War was dominating the newspapers and the evening TV news. He eventually majored in history, with an emphasis in military history, at Ohio State University. The choice of library work as a career path was a natural move for him, since he had worked part-time in a local library while in college and was also attracted by the idea of public service. So he went on to earn a master's degree in library science at Kent State University. But he continued to find history absorbing. For many years, he served as a writer for "Schwerpunkt," a journal of military history, which has allowed him to write about many of the combatants of World War II, such as the armies of the French, the Soviets, the Indians, the Romanians, and the British, to list a few. Now he has added a master’s degree in WEDNESDAY, history earned from the University of Central Florida. MARCH 26, 2014 His presentation on March 26, based on research for his thesis, will examine 4:00 P.M what happened to the French Army when France fell to the Germans. Most of the army simply disintegrated, but a fighting force was kept together that eventually fought against the Germans and Italians in North Africa and Italy. The circumstances for these soldiers were extraordinarily difficult. Italy was collapsing into fragments. North Africa, still under colonial rule, was under complex political constraints. Brook will focus on some very troubling statistics he came upon in his research, in examining the casualties in various areas of conflict. His work on this is cited in the book Monte Casino: Ten Armies in Hell, by Peter Caddick Adams, published in 2013, by Oxford University Press. According to some critiques of his work, he has opened new ground in his probing into the service and sacrifices of the colonial African and the French troops in the Free French Army of World War II. When he can find the time, Brook continues with his research into the segments of the French fighting force which became the Free French Army following the Nazi occupation of France. Finding the time is the key. He has many obligations and responsibilities beyond his job, including the presidency of the school board for St. Peter's Catholic School in DeLand, and, not least, his wife and three children. He has recruited their eldest, Emily, to help obtain some photographs ready for his power-point presentation at the Library. It will be our pleasure to have Brook return to City Island on March 26, for a program we have long awaited. Book and a Movie Program with Cinematique Feb. 28 “42” starring Harrison Ford and Chadwick Boseman (book tie-in Blackout: The Untold Story of Jackie Robinson’s First Spring Training by Chris Lamb). This movie and book presentation is part of our Connecting with the Community grant. Film will be shown inside Jackie Robinson stadium! No need to bring chairs or blankets to sit upon. The Book Discussion with Chris Lamb will take place on Saturday, March 1 at 2:00 PM at the City Island Library. Mar. 28 “Sharknado” starring Tara Reid and Ian Ziering (book tie-in Stormy Weather by Carl Hiaasen) Apr. 25 “The Hunger Games – Catching Fire” starring Jennifer Lawrence and Josh Hutcherson (Based on the book Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins) 4 Bethune-Cookman University Students Music Outreach Saturday, February 22 at 2:00 PM The Bethune-Cookman University Music Department’s Music Outreach Program will present a concert of instrumental classical music featuring students majoring in music, music education and music recording technology. Dr. Rose Grace, Assistant Professor of Piano and chair/founder of the Music Outreach Program, is coordinator of the Music Outreach Program. Performers will include Alexis Astrop and Christy Creecy, flute; Carl Beasley and Elisha Jones, saxophone; DeYante McClay and Ti'Rhon Parks, clarinet; Bryan McCall, Rashaun Cunningham and MichaelAngelo Allen, euphonium; Kevin Lopez, trombone; and Alfonzo Green, bassoon. SONNY & PERLEY PRESENT THE GREAT AMERICAN SONG BOOK Featuring the husband and wife duo, vocalist Perley Rousseau and pianist Sonny Daye, this concert highlights America's composers Gershwin, Berlin, Porter, Ellington and others. Sonny and Perley have received critical acclaim in this country and in Europe for their spontaneity, warmth and broad repertoire. "What an exciting band...their CD is excellent," says NPR's Jim Wilke on his "Jazz After Hours" program. And "Cabaret at the Mount," Mount Vernon, Washington, lauds Daye's "beautiful arrangements" and Rousseau's "voice like silk." On May 7, 2013, Sonny and Perley had the pleasure of opening for Stephen Sondheim Saturday in a prelude concert in Troy, New York. March 8 The "Poughkeepsie Journal" praises them for their "honest, straight up music 2:00 PM with no pretense. Sonny and Perley work their gifts and make their magic in front of and behind the microphone." The tribute of "Nippertown Magazine" must be quoted at length: "It is Rousseau's charismatic presence with that gorgeous and powerful voice that gives the music life and gusto, making tunes written in the 1920s, '30' and '40s both relevant and contemporary. The lady sure knows how to belt it out when needed and then, a splitsecond later, reel it back in to massage it to a smoothness that's simultaneously seductive and playful." The duo is known for blending their American jazz standards with those of International Cabaret and Bossa Nova. Who knows, they might be persuaded to segue from American jazz to offer a Bossa Nova melody of renowned Brazilian songwriter Antonio Carlos Jabim, if the mood of the audience strikes them. 5 (Suzan Howes, Continued from page 3) way was like coming home, since years earlier she had served there for quite a long time. Suzan's umbrella position as regional librarian for three libraries suggests that the county management is experimenting with this form of grouping of libraries under single management, as it has been doing with the county educational system where sometimes two schools will share a single principal. This means a certain amount of traveling for Suzan, as she moves back and forth between the two larger libraries, with occasional visits to the Dickerson Library. Suzan is fortunate to have three highly qualified persons to support her, all with the title of assistant regional librarian: Kristine Crane at Ormond Beach Library, Inez Jeffers at John H. Dickerson Heritage Library, and Stacy Hutchins at Daytona Beach City Island Library. Under this new umbrella system, these assistant librarians have been assigned considerably greater responsibilities. For Stacy Hutchins at City Island Library, this means supervision of staff and coordination of work schedules, management of day to day operations, and, of course, full responsibility on the days when Suzan is not on site. Suzan remarked, as we talked, that she had, in the Stacy Hutchins, Assistant Regional Librarian morning, given a presentation to the DeBary/Deltona Rotary At City Island , Daytona Beach Club on the multiple services our libraries offer. She enjoys giving such talks to several local groups: women's clubs, home owners associations, small business groups, Kiwanis clubs, wherever she is invited. In her presentations she stresses that, in this period of economic troubles, libraries have been utilized more than ever, offering a variety of services, as well as entertainment--movies, crafts, live music, lectures, book discussions, computer classes, e-book classes, etc. She feels our citizens need to know about the scope and richness of these offerings by our libraries. Although it might be hard to conceive, considering all the responsibilities of her professional life, Suzan does have a life outside the environs of libraries. She has three grown daughters, and six grandchildren (ages 12 to 2), with whom she delights in spending time. She loves sewing, arts and crafts, and cooking. She is also a member of JuBellation, a hand-bell choir of Christ Presbyterian Church, Ormond Beach. Last holiday season they played at Bethune-Cookman University's "Gown and Town Christmas Concert." One of the many things Suzan has enjoyed since she has been at City Island is talking to patrons, and now that her position is permanent, she is looking forward to getting to know many more. Join Reina Williams and JoAnn Maurice, healthy living program coordinators for Volusia/Flagler YMCA. They will be presenting two programs at the City Island Library. February 19, 10:00 AM Diabetes Prevention February 26, 10:00 AM Balance & Fall Prevention Take preventive steps now to start living a better, healthier life! 6 ELDER LAW A PRESENTATION BY ATTORNEY MICHAEL PYLE Elder Law is a very broad legal category, and still a very young area of federal and state legislation. As we know it today, it is thought to have been brought into being under President Lyndon Johnson, when the Older Americans Act, along with Medicare, was signed into law in 1965. This law authorized grants to states for research, demonstration projects, community planning and programming for the well-being of elderly persons. Today the term "elder law" encompasses such matters as estate planning and administration, wills and trusts, probate law, protection against elder abuse and fraud, retirement planning, end-of-life planning, nursing home and in-home care, and guardianships. Michael Pyle is well known to our patrons, having given many presentations at City Island Library, on a variety of legal topics. He is a partner with Trisha Dellinger of the Pyle and Dellinger Law Firm, established in 2005. Prior to that he had worked in his father's law office from the time he earned his law degree from the University of Florida in 1983, following which he established his own law firm in 1995. The Pyle and Dellinger firm prides itself on its core Wednesday, values of ethics, compassion and integrity, and in making sure its clients understand all possible outcomes of their decisions. The firm is also proud to say that the majority of March 12, their clients are the result of referrals and repeat business. 3:00 P.M. Pyle is one of a small group of attorneys in the Daytona Beach area chosen by the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) to provide services to clients in conformity with AARP's Legal Services Network. He has a number of professional associations, most notably, for his presentation on March 12, the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys, 1995 to the present; and the Board of Directors of the Academy of Florida Elder Law Attorneys, 2000 to the present (he was President 2006 to 2007). He is also fluent in Spanish. The Friends of the Daytona Beach Regional Library at City Island is very pleased to welcome him back. On April 2, he will be giving another library talk, an encore presentation on the topic "Financial Planning for Long-Term Care," updating the material he presented on the subject in February last year. In this, he will be reviewing how one can pay for long-term nursing care, whether in an assisted living facility or home care; and will touch on the choice of long-term care insurance. He will also review in depth the applicability, qualification, and details of the different Medicaid-related programs. Genealogy Update By Kim E. Dolce, Genealogy Librarian Greetings from the Genealogy Room! Did you know the Volusia County Public Library has four genealogy databases? I’ll be doing two genealogy programs in March at the Daytona Beach Regional Library. In the first one, on March12th, I’ll show you how to use our historical newspaper database. Perhaps you can find some of your ancestors listed in old newspapers! In the second one on March 19th, I’ll explain Fold3, which encompasses a few different databases, including Revolutionary War, Native American, African American, and Holocaust Archives. These two programs are one hour each, and will be held at 10:00AM in the library auditorium. I hope you’ll consider coming to one or both of these programs. As with everything offered by VCPL, these programs are free and open to the public. Reservations are not required, but if you want more information or have questions, you can contact me at 257-6036, ext. 15315, or email me at kdolce@volusia.org. 7 Panel to Discuss Civil Rights Era in Daytona Beach Part of Our “Connecting with the Community” Programming By Deborah Shafer, Adult Program Coordinator On Saturday, March 22 at 2 p.m. in the library’s auditorium, a panel of distinguished Daytona Beach citizens and honored guests will relive through anecdotes and historical references, events related to reporting on the activities of the civil rights movement in our area. The discussion will be broken into three time frames: Part I will cover from the movement’s inception through 1969 Part II will cover the 70s and the alternative press Part III will concentrate on unresolved issues. We are very fortunate to have among our panelists members of the African American community who actually were involved in the Daytona Beach movement in the 60s and 70s. Our panelists are: Bill Maxwell, who is currently a columnist for the “Tampa Bay Times,” and Elaine Smith, a native Floridian and retired professor of Alabama State University, and James Daniels, who went from caddie at a country club to owner of an insurance business, and Lois Frey Sessoms, a retired Bethune-Cookman educator and prolific writer, and Charles Cherry II, who is an attorney and into the media world, and Leonard Lempel, a retired professor, a writer, and a noted historian, and Michael Pyle, a Daytona Beach native, practicing attorney, and writer of both fiction and non-fiction works. Further information on each panelist appears with a brief bio on these three pages. There will also be prominent members of the community in the audience who will be sharing their personal stories as well, so the program is sure to be informative and enlightening. Our city, our county, our country have come a long way in 50 years. Come hear these folks share history, and then share in the discussions. Bill Maxwell: During the 1960--70s Civil Rights movement in Daytona Beach, Bill Maxwell, an English major at Bethune-Cookman College, was the editor of the free “underground” newspaper known as the “Westside Rapper.” This anti-establishment newspaper was organized under the leadership of Charles Cherry, Senior, as part of the Citizens Coordinating Committee’s efforts to bring the “War on Poverty” to Volusia County. Maxwell remains a journalist who is currently an opinion columnist for the “Tampa Bay Times.” He has authored a collection of his columns entitled Maximum Insight (available at the library). Elaine Smith: Historian Elaine M. Smith, an Alabama State University retired professor, is a volunteer at the ASU Archives. For more than thirty-five years, she and husband Alfred S. Smith have resided in Montgomery, Alabama, where they reared two sons. Mrs. Smith is a native Floridian, moving with her family from Panama City, Florida to Daytona Beach, when her father became the president of Bethune-Cookman College in 1947. She is the fifth of nine children born to Richard V. Moore and B.J. Moore. Historian Smith has a record of research and publishing. She has presented papers at a dozen professional organizations, among which are the Florida Historical Society, Florida Women’s History Symposium, and Rhetoric Society of America. She authored the Historic Resource Study for the National Park Services’ Bethune Council House in Washington, D.C. In addition to the Journal of Negro History, she has articles in each of the five guides to the microfilm editions of the Mary McLeod Bethune Papers; articles in eight encyclopedias, with multiple entries in Black Women in America, and two other encyclopedias; and a chapter in Clio Was a Woman: Studies in the History of American Women and chapters in four other books. She is an editor of Creating Community: Life and Learning at Montgomery’s Black University, and editor, with Audrey McCluskey, of the acclaimed Mary McLeod Bethune: Building a Better World. 8 (Civil Rights, Continued from page 8) James Daniels Mr. Daniels came to the Daytona Beach area as a child in 1939. His first jobs were with the Ormond Beach Country Club as a caddy, and as an elevator operator at the Ormond Hotel. Mr. Daniels worked as an insurance agent for the Atlanta Life Insurance Company, and later owned and operated his own insurance business. He also owned two other establishments in Daytona Beach: Quinn Fish Market and a restaurant, “Chicken, Shrimp, and Fish: Box Lunches to Go.” During the 1960s, while president of the Volusia County chapter of the NAACP (He is a founding member of the Volusia County chapter), Mr. Daniels played an instrumental role in desegregating public facilities when he participated in the sit-in of Daytona Beach’s Woolworth’s store. He remains a lifetime member of the NAACP. Mr. Daniels also directed a voter registration program that resulted in over 1,100 new voters. In addition, he organized a Community Action Program (CAP) in Daytona Beach during the 1960s that provided funding for Head Start and for programs to combat drug abuse and street crime. Mr. Daniels is active in St. Timothy’s Episcopal Church in Daytona Beach, to which he has belonged since 1958. He serves as Senior Warden, Priest Representative to St. Timothy’s Learning Center and leads the weekly Bible study class. He is also a member of the Episcopal Diocese of Central Florida’s Congregation Development Commission. Mr. Daniels currently serves on the Daytona Beach Historic Preservation and the Daytona Beach Nuisance and Abatement Boards. Mr. Daniels is co-founder and president of the Rigby School Reunion Committee, president of the Highland Neighborhood Watch Group, and a member of the Oakridge Cemetery Committee. He has also been a volunteer member of the Florida Healthcare Auxiliary for the past 23 years, and is a former ambassador for the Daytona Beach Airport. Lois Frey Sessoms Lois Sessoms is presently Chairwoman of our Friends programming committee. She came to Daytona in 1967 to accept a teaching position at Bethune-Cookman College, later became Professor of English and Reading at Bethune-Cookman, and in 1990 she was promoted to Dean of the School of General Studies, a position she held until 2003. She retired in 2006. Sessoms’ academic accomplishments include: Salzburg Fellow, Seminar in American Studies, April 2003; University of Miami, Ph.D. Reading & Related Disabilities; Arizona State University, M.A. English Queens College of the University of the City of New York, B.A. Other professional activities include: founder, editor, and sponsor of the B-CU literary magazine, 1975-2006; Oxford Roundtable Conference on Women's Leadership, August 2007; and author of, I Leave You Love: The Legacy of Mary McLeod Bethune, 2005-07. Charles Cherry II Charles Cherry is publisher of the “Florida Courier,” his family-owned statewide African-American newspaper that reaches more than 180,000 readers weekly. He is also a speaker, writer, radio broadcaster, and a practicing attorney. A Daytona Beach native, Cherry is a graduate of Morehouse College (B.A., Journalism with honors, 1978). For two years, starting as a sophomore intern, Cherry wrote and produced the 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. weekend sportscasts for WAGA-TV 5, then Atlanta’s CBS affiliate. He left the television industry for the law and business world, graduating in 1982 from the University of Florida’s Holland Law Center (now Levin College of Law) and Graduate School of Business with both Juris Doctor and Master of Business Administration degrees, respectively. He is a former Fort Lauderdale city and South Florida state prosecutor, and practiced law for 21 years before returning to journalism and newspaper publishing as his primary occupation upon the death of his father Charles, Sr. in 2004. Since 1990, he has served in various capacities in radio stations in which he has ownership interests, from part-time deejay to general manager. For the past 25 years, he has written commentaries, editorials, and stories for his other family-owned 9 (Continued on page 10) (Civil Rights, Continued from page 9) newspaper, the “Daytona Times.” In 1993, as a result of his experience as a prosecutor, he wrote Excellence Without Excuse: The Black Student’s Guide To Academic Excellence, one of the best books ever written on improving academic performance for Black students. It is still used as a textbook in college-preparation classes and seminars. Leonard Lempel Len was born in New York City and grew up in Northern New Jersey. He received a B.A. in History from the University of Akron, and both an M.A. and Ph.D. in Social Science from Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. A Professor of History since 1996 at Daytona State College, Len teaches courses in United States and African American history. Len has numerous publications and has made several presentations at professional conferences and community forums, mostly on the history of Daytona Beach’s African American community, race relations, and political activity. Currently he is co-producing (with Eric Breitenbach) a full length documentary film titled: Hoppin’ Rattlesnakes: Oral Histories of Beach Racing in Volusia County 1903-1958. Len is President -Elect of the Florida Historical Society, a member of the Southern Historical Association, and serves on the Board of Directors of the Halifax Historical Society. He is a founding member of Sister Cities of Volusia County and serves as the organization’s Historian. Len is Past President of Volusia County’s United Nations Association (UNA-USA), and a past member of the Daytona Beach Historic Preservation and Community Development Boards. He is also a former Vice President of the Halifax Historical Society, is Editor of the Society’s journal, The Halifax Herald, and is a frequent contributor of articles to that publication. Michael Pyle Pyle is the founding partner of Pyle and Dellinger Law Firm here in Daytona Beach. He is a Daytona Beach native who was admitted to the Florida Bar in 1983 after having received his J.D. degree from the University of Florida. Pyle is also an author who in 2012 published his first book, White Sugar, Brown Sugar. This book is based to some extent on Pyle’s own experiences growing up in a still segregated Daytona Beach, in the 50s, 60s and 70s. The central characters of White Sugar, Brown Sugar are two boys: Jude, who is white and loosely based on Pyle himself, and Roosevelt, who is black and entirely fictitious. The family circumstances of the two are wide apart, affluent, in Jude's case, impoverished, in Roosevelt's. Yet they form a bond. In a report on Pyle and his novel by James Harper in “The Daytona Times,” February 23, featuring Black History Month, Pyle states that in his youth he had little understanding of the racial tensions in the community and hardly any contact with blacks while growing up. This was a time in Daytona Beach when, on the beach side, where Pyle's family lived, black people were not permitted after dark. Yet one activity brought the two races together-fishing. As told by Harper in his article, Pyle remembered seeing fishermen of both races near the old Halifax River Yacht Club, whites on the dock, blacks on the banks. Brownie, a black worker at the club, would give anyone fishing advice. From such memories, Michael Pyle has constructed his book. It should be noted that White Sugar, Brown Sugar was voted #2 in the Wall Street Journal’s Readers Choice poll conducted in the Fall of 2013. Additionally, Pyle had his essay on civil rights in Daytona Beach accepted for submission in Elizabeth Coursen’s anthology, Shade in the Sunshine State. Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America What Page Are You On? Checking with Community Read Folks All copies of our community read project have been “checked out.” With each book there was a wrapper around the title page, instructing readers on how to reserve a seat for the book discussion to be held on Saturday, April 12, at 2:00PM at City Island Library auditorium. Please be sure to contact Deborah Shafer to reserve your seat and be part of the discussion with author Gilbert King. Seating is limited; reservations are required. We want our “community readers” to have first chance on seating. Call Deborah at 257-6036, ext. 16264. 10 THE ADAMS FAMILY JOHN AND ABIGAIL AND SON JOHN QUINCY COME TO LIFE By Kathy Maloney Johnson Following her performance as Abigail Adams at the Daytona Beach Library on January 25, Joan Fenton returns, with her husband M. William, to play Abigail and her son John Quincy, the sixth president of the United States, in a dramatic presentation. They will be accompanied by their friend Jay Thompson in the role of Abigail's husband John, our second president. Based on letters, diaries and documents of John and Abigail presented to the Massachusetts Historical Society in the early 1950s by the Adams descendants, the presentation will take us through John Adams' presidency and the retirement years of the famous couple. John Adams, but not Abigail, lived long enough to see their son elected and presiding as the sixth president of the country they had helped to bring into existence. The presentation ends with John's death and a coda in which their son John Quincy mourns their passing and reflects on their meaning for his own and future times. In 1976, Joan Fenton had performed as Abigail all over the Miami area, where she was living at the time, in a play she had written about her famous ancestors. Since moving to Daytona Beach Shores, she was encouraged by her friend Winston Stewart to "resurrect Abigail." Winston and Joan together persuaded Joan's husband and Jay Thompson to join in the recreation of the famous Adams threesome, and for the last five years they have been performing throughout Volusia County, for groups and organizations, in private homes, wherever they find an interest. Joan's inspiration for her work in developing these dramatic presentations has been her own lineage as a direct descendant of Peter Adams, brother of John, as well as the research she was able to do into the history of her family when the Massachusetts Historical Society came into possession of the immense treasure trove of Adams documents. These amounted to more than a thousand letters and eighteen volumes of John Adams's papers, personal correspondence and writings on public life. The material has been carefully recorded on 608 reels of microfilm and has been passed on to libraries across the country. The enormously popular Broadway play "1776" and the television miniseries of the 1970s, "the Adams Chronicles," came out of this vault of material, as did David McCullough's biography of John Adams. We certainly look forward to meeting all three members of the Adams Family on March 15. Saturday March 15 2:00 P.M. Wednesday March 5, 2014 at 4:00 PM—Reading in Action Program Dr. Lynn Hawkins will return in March to discuss the Reading Action Program as part of Literacy Month. Hawkins, professor of English at Daytona State College includes a service-learning component in her class which puts a research focus into dealing with social problems in the community. Students identify a community need and do extensive academic research to develop project proposals that will solve the problem. This program has donated more than 1,000 books to Chiles Academy in Daytona Beach, which serves more than 140 pregnant teens, teen mothers and children. 11 WRITERS WORKSHOP ON GRAPHIC NOVELS By Carrie Radam, Reference Librarian Graphic depictions of stories have been around for a very long time. The earliest known European cave paintings by prehistoric artists date to 32,000 years ago. Many millennia later, in 1978 the first modern graphic novel appeared with the publication of Will Eisner’s A Contract with God and Other Tenement Stories. Graphic novels have been continuously evolving and gaining respect, credibility and sophistication ever since as more cartoonists and comics artists experiment with the genre. Graphic novels aren’t just for kids. In fact, most graphic novels are not kiddie material at all. In 2007 Allison Bechdel’s graphic novel, Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic, an autobiographical story about her complex relationship with her father and her dysfunctional family, won an Eisner Award for creative achievement in the comics industry. Likewise, Art Spiegelman’s graphic novel Maus tells the story of his father’s experiences as a Polish Jew and Holocaust survivor. The book has been described variously as memoir, biography, history, fiction, and autobiography, and in 1992 it became the first graphic novel to win a Pulitzer Prize. My own interest in graphic novels comes from a lifelong love of cartoons and newspaper comic strips. In the mid-1980s, while an undergraduate at the University of North Carolina-Asheville, I wrangled a meeting with a syndicated newspaper cartoonist who lived in the area to critique some of my own cartoon work. He liked it and invited me to write occasional Sunday comics copy for him. It was great fun and a good experience. All these years later, I still feel passionate about cartoon art and am currently working on a graphic novel that I hope to publish. Library staff member Ben Trotter shares my interest in graphic novels. Ben has a BA in film from the University of Central Florida and has written and illustrated a graphic novel called Poe Beetle. You can preview it on the web at kickstarter.com/poebeetle, facebook, or poebeetle.webs.com. Ben and I will offer a free program on graphic novels on Wednesday, March 19 at 2PM in the auditorium at the Daytona Beach Regional Library at City Island. The program is part of the Writers Workshop Series, and is open to the public. Ken Burns Documentary Series Ben’s Classic Movies– Tuesdays at 2:00pm Tuesdays at 10:00am Feb 18 In The Heat Of The Night Feb 18 Horatio’s Drive: America’s First Road Trip Feb 25 Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner Feb 25 Frank Lloyd Wright Mar 4 The Godfather Mar 4 Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony Mar 11 The Godfather Part II Mar 11 Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony Mar 18 Annie Hall Mar 18 Civil War Mar 25 The Sound Of Music Mar 25 Civil War Apr 8 Star Wars Apr 8 Civil War Apr 15 Chinatown Apr 15 Civil War 12 Film Festival Added to Connecting with the Community Calendar of Events By Deborah Shafer, Adult Program Coordinator With additional funds available through our special grant from the Florida Humanities Council, we can offer a mini film festival at Cinematique theater featuring two films that deal with the civil rights movement and one that looks at the plight of African-Americans in a post-civil rights era. This two-day event begins on Saturday, March 8 at 7:30PM with the showing of Lee Daniels’ “The Butler. “ Inspired by a true story, Cecil Gaines was a devoted husband, father, and White House butler who served eight Presidential administrations during the turbulent politics and civil rights battles of twentieth century America. The film contains some violence and disturbing images, language, sexual material, thematic elements and smoking. The cast of stars include Forest Whitaker, Oprah Winfrey, Mariah Carey, John Cusack, Jane Fonda, Cuba Gooding Jr., Terence Howard, Lenny Kravitz, James Marsden, David Oyelowo, Alan Rickman, Liev Schreiber, and Robin Williams. On Sunday, March 9 at 2:30PM, we will be showing a family friendly film titled “Selma, Lord, Selma.” This is a Disney film based on the book by Sheyann Webb and Rachel West Nelson as told to Frank Sikora. In 1965, during the turbulent early days of the right-to-vote movement, a young Alabama schoolgirl (Smollett) is inspired by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (Powell) to resist the degradation that her fellow African-Americans are suffering. Along with a White seminary student (Astin) from the North, and against the ever-increasing threat of racial violence, she promises to do what she can to help Dr. King's efforts. The film stars Mackenzie Astin, Jurnee Smollett, Clifton Powell, Ella Joyce, Yolanda King, Elizabeth and Afemo Omilami, Brett Rice, Tom Nowicki, Margo Moorer, Von Coulter, Danny Nelson. On Sunday evening at 5:30PM the series will conclude with “Fruitvale Station.” Oscar Grant III, a 22-year-old Bay Area resident, crosses paths with friends, enemies, family, and strangers on the last day of 2008. Based on a true story, the film includes some violence, language throughout and some drug use. The cast includes Michael B. Jordan, Melonie Diaz, Kevin Durand, Chad Michael Murray, Ahna O'Reilly, Octavia Spencer. After each film, attendees will be invited to join in a discussion of the film led by the library’s own, Ben Trotter! Given the popularity of Ben’s Essentials these discussions are sure to be stimulating. Tickets for these events will be paid out of our grant proceeds but seating is limited. Contact Deborah at dshafer@volusia.org or 386-257-6036 EXT. 16264 to obtain your ticket. Tickets will be allocated on a first come first serve basis. Adults attending Sunday’s matinee film with their children will be given priority for that event. Food and beverages are available at the theater. 13 Hope to see you there! Annual Author’s Luncheon Coming Soon The Friends of the Library Author’s Luncheon features Jessie Knadler. Jessie’s quirky tale of her adventure morphing from NYC hipster/sophisticated writer-editor to farm wife/chicken breeder/mom AND writer comes out this month in paperback form entitled Rurally Screwed: My Life Off the Grid with the Cowboy I Love.” Knadler also writes two blogs, one also titled “Rurally Screwed” and “Heartlandia,” which she writes for Babble.com, a Disney-owned site. She is known for her very personal, often acerbic and unsentimental humor as she adapts to new challenges in her country world. She describes her own book as “wry and twitchy” – though what she means by twitchy isn’t quite clear. When not working on her books or her blogs, she writes for magazines and newspapers, from “Self” to the “Wall Street Journal.” When she left New York for the hills of Virginia, she felt she was leaving her career behind – instead she’s taken it into a new, original direction. On April 4 at the Halifax Yacht Club, she’ll be sharing her distinct, often hilarious perspective on motherhood, country life vs. city life, finding your “authentic self,” mice in the house, décor, mothers and mothers-in-law, adopting a dog from Afghanistan, chicken breeding and book peddling. Tickets at $30 are available now at the Daytona Beach Regional Library Center, 105 E. Magnolia Ave., City Island, Daytona Beach and from Friends of the Library board members. LET”S TALK ABOUT LITERATURE The long-standing book discussion group known as “Let’s Talk About Literature” has compiled the reading list for 2014. Meetings are held at 5PM on the third Tuesday of each month in the Board Room of the City Island Library. All discussions are free and open to the public. 18 February—And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini 18 March—The Daughters of Mars by Thomas Keneally 15 April—The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom 20 May—The Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers 17 June—The Round House by Louise Erdrich Need Help? Our Librarians can help show you how to take full advantage of these free services. A valid Volusia County Public Library card, in good standing, and a pin code are required for downloadable media services. Half-hour, personalized sessions are available Mondays through Thursdays by appointment at the Daytona Beach Regional Library. Schedule your appointment by stopping by the library’s Reference desk or calling 386-257-6036, ext. 16166. 14 Third Annual F.R.E.S.H. Book Festival held in Daytona By Deborah Shafer, Adult Program Coordinator I had the opportunity to represent the library on January 3 rd and 4th, at the F.R.E.S.H. Book Festival, and I was very impressed. Last summer, while I was compiling information for the Florida Humanities Council Partnership grant, I heard about the festival, and that’s when I met the festival’s founder Donna Gray-Bank. She shared how conversations with Dr. Michelle Donice Thompson, another local author, led to the idea of an event that might include ways for authors to learn how to promote themselves, while also presenting their own works and networking. From the first book festival held in 2012 at the Hilton, Donna learned much in relation to timing of the event, the venue, and the expenses involved. There was an unbelievable upside: Ms. Janis Kearney, diarist to William Jefferson Clinton, was one of the featured authors, and Donna built a relationship with her. Ms. Kearney returned in January 2013 for the second festival held at the Midtown Cultural and Education Center at 925 George Engram Blvd. in Daytona Beach. With major sponsors and community support, along with completion of the Yvonne Scarlett Golden Cultural and Educational Center, Donna and others were able to beat the drums for literacy. The time was right to speak loudly about literacy, and there would be people who would listen. The second festival was held early in January 2013 at the Midtown Cultural and Educational Center located at 925 George Engram Blvd. in Daytona Beach. With the 2014 festival held recently, Donna described how she was both humbled and overwhelmed by the experience. Special guest Omar Tyree was extremely personable and gracious. Other featured authors included Michael Pyle, Michael Beckford, Dr. Evelyn Bethune, Dr. Michelle Donice Thompson and Mr. James Bennett –all brilliant and each brought a different flavor of literacy to the events that also attracted 25 other authors with some traveling from as far away as Texas. Donna Gray-Banks founder of Donna Gray-Banks is a mother, sister, author, and the Fresh Book Festival entrepreneur. She was born and raised in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania in the small African-American community of Homewood. Gray-Banks spent most of her working career in Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia. She has one son, Gregory Taylor Banks and an extremely supportive extended family. She gives all the credit for her successes to the Creator. 15 NON PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID DAYTONA BEACH, FL PERMIT NO. 58 105 E. Magnolia Ave. City Island Daytona Beach, FL 32114 Phone: 386-257-6037 Fax: 386-257-6026 www.daytonabeachfol.org CALENDAR Feb 11- “To Kill a Mockingbird” Mar 9—Film Festival Showing “Fruitvale Station” - Feb. 12 – Estate Planning with Michael Pyle Page 13 Feb 15 – Lynn Hawkins presents Zora Mar 12—Historical Newspaper Program—Page 7 Feb 18 - “Horatio’s Drive; America’s First Road Trip” - Mar 12—Elder Law with Michael Pyle—Page 7 Page 12 Mar 15—Abigail, John, and John Quincy Adams Feb 19 – Diabetes Prevention programs—Page 6 Reenactment-Page 11 Feb 22 – Music in the Library featuring B-CU Music Outreach Program –Page 5 Feb 26 – Balance and Fall Prevention program– Page6 Mar 19—Fold3 Program-Page 7 Mar 19—Writer’s Workshop—Graphic Novels– Page 12 Mar 22—Panel Discussion: Civil Rights Era in Daytona Feb 26—Knit & Crochet Club—Page 2 Beach as portrayed in the press—Page 8 Feb 28 - Community showing of “42” in the Jackie Mar 26—World War II by Brook White-Page 1 Robinson ball park! – Page 1 Mar 28—Cinematique—”Sharknado”- Page 4 Mar 1 - Chris Lamb discusses “Blackout”- Page 1 Mar 29—Book Discussion- Stormy Weather by Hiaasen. Mar 5—Reading Action Program with Lynn Hawkins – Apr 4— Author Luncheon – Page 14 Page 11 Apr 12— Gilbert King– Devil in the Grove—Page 10 Mar 8—Music in The Library—Sonny & Perley-Page5 www.daytonabeachfol.org