Friday, August 4, 2017

Fall Youth Programs!

Family Story time Fall 2017
Wednesday Evenings 6:30-7:15
Enjoy stories songs, finger plays, movement and an easy craft at our Fall story time.  REGISTRATION BEGINS Tuesday August 22, 2017 in person, at the Children’s reference desk, or by phone (734) 721-7832.

September 20                 Things that grow!
September 27                 Hide and Seek
October       4                  Let’s Eat
        October      11                 Blankets
        October      18                 Fall leaves
        October      25                 Halloween
        November    1                 Wind
        November    8                 Pumpkins, Thanksgiving


Fall Craft

Week of November 14th 
Come in November 14th through November 22nd and enjoy a simple craft you can take home and use during the Thanksgiving holiday.

Saturday, May 13, 2017

Teen Summer Reading 2017

Sign up starts on Tuesday, June 6 at the Adult Reference Desk. 


For each book you read, write in the date the book was completed, the book title, the book author, and the number of pages read on your reading log.  Be sure to check in every couple weeks at the Adult Reference Desk to have a librarian initial your log and update your progress for our records. 

For every 100 pages you read, you are entered for a chance to win gift cards and a brand new Kindle Fire!  The teen who reads the most pages wins a $10 Barnes and Nobles gift card.  When you register you will also receive a chance to guess the number of candy pieces in our candy jar, and the closest guess without going over wins the entire jar!   

Reading logs need to be turned at the Adult Reference Desk by Saturday, July 29th at 4:45pm. 

Programs:

Henna Tattoos
Friday, June 16, 2-4pm

Henna is a natural dye that temporarily stains the skin; tattoos last anywhere from 1-3 weeks!


Upcycled Planters
Wednesday, June 28, 2-4pm
Using recycled objects, craft materials, and some pictures for inspiration, we will be making planters that will be perfect for houseplants.  Those that sign up ahead of time will also receive a plant to put in their new planter.

Project Linus Blankets
Wednesday, July 19, 2-4pm
Project Linus is an organization that supplies children who are ill, traumatized, or in need with handmade blankets.   For this program we will be making No-Sew Fleece Blankets to donate to the local chapter. After the blankets are done refreshments will be served. 



To register for any or all of these programs, sign up at the adult reference desk or call (734) 721-7832, ext. 630.


Monday, May 1, 2017

Build a Better World: Summer Reading 2017

Join in the fun and register for
Summer Reading 2017 at the Wayne Public Library.
 Registration begins Tuesday June 6, 2017


Simply come to the Youth Desk at the library to register.  You can win prizes and
enter our Grand Prize drawing, all just for reading your favorite books any where you want!  Sign up early to get a chance at winning a jar full of goodies!

Every Wednesday at 2:00pm  we will offer a Family Storytime from June 21-July 26.
Enjoy stories, songs, and movement in this one hour program.
Weather permitting we will spend time outside using sidewalk chalk, a parachute, or other outdoor fun!

Each week we will have a program for Summer Reading participants.  All are in our large meeting room.

 THIS SUMMER’S PROGRAMS ARE:
 Tuesday, June 20, 1-3 p.m.:    Tattoos and Face Painting in the Library
 Tuesday, June 27, 2-3 p.m.:    Animal Magic with Mark Rosenthal
 Tuesday, July 11, 4-5 p.m.:      Magic with Baffling Bill

 Thursday, July 20, 1-2 p.m.:    Legos with Building Blocks 
(Registration for this program begins June 27, and it is limited to 20 children)
 Tuesday, July 25, 6-7 p.m.:      Build a Bunch of Fun at the Library!

Sunday, April 30, 2017

FREE ANIME SCREENING!!! Tuesday, May 30th, 6:00pm-8:00pm

Our next anime screening will be on Tuesday, May 30th, 6:00pm-8:00pm.  We will be showing episodes of Orange, Fairy Tail, ReLife, and Mob Psycho 100!  And there will be pizza for you to enjoy.  
Be there, or Dimple will be very disappointed.  


Do not disappoint Dimple.

Thursday, April 27, 2017

Piracy on the Great Lakes

PIRACY ON THE GREAT LAKES
TUESDAY, JUNE 13TH, 6:30PM

Chris Gillchrist from the National Museum of the Great Lakes will be here in Wayne to present the history of piracy on the great lakes. Piracy was a serious problem on the great lakes from the 1800’s right up to the 1920’s, in which pirates would steal from shipping freighters and sell the goods on the black market. Common targets were lumber, venison, and illegal alcohol. 


To register for this free program, call the adult reference desk at 734-721-7832, ext. 630.

Thursday, March 9, 2017

What Libraries Mean To The Nation, by Eleanor Roosevelt, First Lady of the United States




April 1, 1936 - Address At The District Of Columbia Library Association Dinner

It has been a great pleasure to be here this evening and to hear all the things that have been said about libraries in the district and in general, and the librarians, without whom the libraries would be of little use, I am afraid. But as I sat here I fear that I have thought a good deal about the fact that there are so many places in the United States that have no libraries and that have no way of getting books.

What the libraries mean to the nation is fairly obvious to all of us, especially to those who are here this evening. We know that without libraries, without education, which is based largely on libraries, we cannot have an educated people who will carry on successfully our form of government, and it seems to me that what we really are interested in is how we can make this country more conscious of what it has not got, because we do pat ourselves on the back for the things that we have and that we do. I was looking over some maps which were sent to me and I longed to have these maps very much enlarged and put up in many, many places throughout this country, because I do not think that many people know how many states do not spend more than ten cents per capita for library books a year, and how many states have large areas, particularly rural areas, where one cannot get books.

One of the things that I have been particularly grateful for in the years of the depression--and, of course, I think, sad as it has been, we have some things to be grateful for--is that we have discovered so many things that we had not known before. These facts have come to the knowledge of a great many people who had simply passed them by before, because they did not happen to think about them, and one of these things, that we used to be able to hide, is the areas of the country which are not served in any way by libraries. I have seen photographs, for instance, of girls going out on horseback with libraries strapped on behind them, taking books to children and grown people in places that have been without libraries. We know a good deal about Mrs. Breckinridge's nursing service in Kentucky, but we know very little about the libraries that go out in the same way that her nurses do, on horseback.

I have lived a great deal in the country, in a state which prides itself in spending much money on education, and I am quite sure that son-.e people think there is no lack of education and no lack of library facilities, and sometimes I long to take people and let them see some of the back country districts that I know, in New York State. I know one place in the northern part of the state where I camped for a while in the summer, and I went to the school and talked to the teachers. They are using school books which have been passed down from one child to another. They have practically no books outside of the textbooks. The children in the district are so poor and some of them so pathetic that I suppose the struggle to live has been so great you could not think much about what you fed the mind, but I came away feeling that right there, in one of the biggest and richest states in the country, we had a big area that needed books and needed libraries to help these schools in the education of the children, and, even more, to help the whole community to learn to live through their minds.

We are doing a tremendous amount through the home economics colleges to help people to learn how to live in their homes, to better their standards of material living. We have got to think in exactly the same way about helping them to live mentally and to attain better standards, and we can do it only through the children. We can do ground work with the children; we must begin with them; but we have got to do a tremendous amount with the older people.

I had a letter the other day which was pathetic. It was from a man who said he was 74 years old. He wrote to ask me to see that the adult education classes in that particular community were not stopped, because it had meant so much to him to learn to read. He did not think that I could understand what it meant never to have been able to understand a word on the printed page. He said, "I am not the only one. My next door neighbor is 81 and he learned to read last winter, and it has just made life over for us." It gave you the feeling that there is a good deal of education that is not being done in this country, in spite of all that is done.

We have come a long way. We have done a great deal, but we still have a lot that can be done to improve our educational system, and we still have a tremendous amount to do with our libraries. We have got to make our libraries the center of a new life in the mind, because people are hungry to use their minds.

A NEW ERA AHEAD

We are facing a great change in civilization, and the responsibility, I think, for what we do with our leisure time is a very great responsibility for all of us who have intellectual interests. Somebody said to me, "I would not be so worried and I would not mind facing the fact that we are working fewer hours, if I only knew what people would do with their free time. I would not know what to do myself if I had only to work six hours a day."

That is a challenge. We, here in this country, ought to know what to do with our time, if we have it. I do not know whether we are going to have it, but if we are going to have more leisure time, it is the library, and people who live in the libraries and work in libraries, who are going to lead the way, who are going to give other people the curiosity and the vision of useful things, and pleasant things, and amusing things which can be done in those hours in which we may not have to work in the ways in which we have worked before. It is a very great responsibility, but it is also a very great interest.

Now, I think here in the city of Washington, and in nearly all big cities, the problem is a different one from the one I know so well in the country districts. I think that perhaps there are more facilities and, for that reason, there are more stimulating people engaged in solving the different problems that affect education in cities. But there is a great need, a very great need, in rural America. There is a great need for imagination in the ways used to stir the interest of old and young to use what library facilities they have, and to insist that they shall have more and to make them willing to pay for more, because, in the end, they will get something that they want out of it.

The more I have thought about the problem, the more I have felt that we do not use all our opportunities to stimulate an interest in books. Everything today in which people are interested, the radio, the movies--all of these--should, if properly used, stimulate the use of books. For instance, if there is a remarkably good movie, like The life of Pasteur, it seems to me that it should be used by people in our rural schools and rural libraries to create an interest in the life of Pasteur, the things that Pasteur did, the people around him, and all the discoveries that have come from that time on. I am sure that if we put our minds on it, there are a great many ways in which we can use the things which are coming constantly into the lives of people throughout the country to stimulate an interest in the oldest and most interesting recreation there is.

But you do have to learn to love books, you do have to learn how to read them, you do have to learn that a book is a companion, and this is done in a great many different ways. I think we can do a great deal by having more copies of the same book, perhaps less expensive books, in the libraries so that we can have a good many people reading the same books and coming together for discussion.

I know, for instance, that even in a small group, like a family, we all want to read one book at the same time, and we all want to tear each other's hair out when we can't get a copy. It seems to me that here is something we should be thinking about, to stimulate the reading of books in families and large groups of people. I think the CCC has made me realize this. One boy said to me, "Do you know about that book? I am so glad to be able to talk about it.... You know, it takes such a long time to get a book around." Now, if there had been a dozen or more copies of that book, the group would have talked about that book and it would have been a valuable contribution. It would have stimulated their intellectual thought.

I feel that the care of libraries and the use of books, and the knowledge of books, is a tremendously vital thing, and that we who deal with books and who love books have a great opportunity to bring about something in this country which is more vital here than anywhere else, because we have the chance to make a democracy that will be a real democracy, that will fulfill the vision that Senator King has just given us. It will take on our part imagination and patience and constant interest in awakening interest in other people. But, if we do, I think we shall find that our love of books will bring us a constantly widening audience and constantly more interesting contacts in whatever part of the country we may go.


Copyright information: Gifts of Speech believes that for copyright purposes, this speech is in the public domain since it was made by a quasi U.S. government official. Any use of this speech, however, should show proper attribution to its author.

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Easter Craft

Beginning Tuesday April 11th.






Come in the Week of April 11, 2017 and make an Easter craft for someone special. 
All supplies will be provided. Children ages 4-12.

Friday, February 17, 2017

Join author Irene Miller in discussing her book: Into No Man’s Land: A Historical Memoir

WEDNESDAY, MAY 3RD
6:30 PM



Irene Miller, a Holocaust survivor, will take you on a survival journey little written and known about. You will sleep in the winter under an open sky on the no man’s land; you will freeze in a Siberian labor camp where the bears come to your door front. In Uzbekistan, you will live on boiled grass or broiled onions, and shiver with malaria. You will spend years in orphanages. When this is over you will wonder how a child with this background grows up to become a positive, creative, accomplished woman with  a joy of living and love to share.


To register for this free program, please call the Adult Reference  Desk:
 734-721-7832, ext. 630.

Join Detroit native and local author Dan Grajek in discussing his new book: The Last Hobo

TUESDAY, APRIL 11TH
6:30 PM



In the summer of 1979, 19-year-old Ted acts out his dream of being a hobo by hitchhiking (and hopping a train) across the U.S.. Ted’s fantasy-fueled trip often collides with reality. The results are hilarious, nerve-racking, and inspiring.

Based on a true story, The Last Hobo is a colorful portrait of America and its people during the dramatic transition from the seventies to the eighties.
An older-and-wiser Ted narrates the tale with a unique perspective: He’s from Detroit, the icon of America’s highest dreams and its worst nightmares.

 To register for this free program, please call the Adult Reference  Desk:
 734-721-7832, ext. 630.

Yamasaki in Detroit with John Gallagher

6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 14

 Join us in hearing about the architect behind several of
Detroit’s most iconic and memorable buildings

Best-known for the World Trade Center in New York City, Japanese American architect Minoru Yamasaki (1912-1986) worked to create moments of surprise, serenity, and delight in distinctive buildings around the world. In his adopted home of Detroit, Yamasaki produced many important designs that range from public buildings to offices and private residences. In Yamasaki in Detroit: A Search for Serenity, author John Gallagher presents both a biography of Yamasaki and surveys select projects spanning from the late 1940s to the end of Yamasaki's life.




John Gallagher is a veteran journalist and author whose book Reimagining Detroit: Opportunities for Redefining an American City was named by the Huffington Post as among the best social and political books of 2010.  His most recent book prior to Yamasaki in Detroit was Revolution Detroit: Strategies for Urban Reinvention.  John was born in New York City and joined the Detroit Free Press in 1987 to cover urban and economic redevelopment efforts in Detroit and Michigan, a post he still holds. His other books include Great Architecture of Michigan and, as co-author, AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture. John and his wife, Sheu-Jane, live along Detroit’s east riverfront.

 To register for this free program, please call the Adult Reference  Desk:
 734-721-7832, ext. 630.



Thursday, November 10, 2016

Anime screening 11/30!!!

Attention Anime fans!!!

The Wayne Public Library will be having our third anime screening on Wednesday, November 30th, 6:00pm-8:00pm.  We will be showing the third episodes of Orange, Fairy Tail, ReLife, and Mob Psycho 100!  We'll be watching on the library's big screen, with our awesome audio system.  Come enjoy some of the newest and greatest via Crunchyroll!  See you there!

Valentine’s Day Craft

Week of February 7th


Come in the Week of February 7th, 2017 and make a Valentine’s Day card for someone special.  All supplies will be provided.  Children ages 4-12.

Family Story time Winter 2017

Wednesday Evenings 6:30-7:15

Enjoy stories songs, finger plays, movement and an easy craft at our winter story time.  REGISTRATION BEGINS Tuesday, December 27, 2016 in person, at the Children’s reference desk, or by phone (734) 721-7832.

January 18 My Favorite Fairy Tales
January 25 Winter/Snow
February 1 Mice, and Groundhogs                    
February 8 Valentine’s Day/Hearts
February 15 Babies
February 22 Cars, Trucks and thing that go

Thursday, August 4, 2016

Family Story time Fall 2016

Family Story time Fall 2016
Wednesday Evenings 6:30-7:15

Enjoy stories songs, finger plays, movement and an easy craft at our Fall story time.  REGISTRATION BEGINS Tuesday, August 16, 2016 in person, at the Children’s reference desk, or by phone (734) 721-7832.

September 14                 Apples
September 21                 Bears
September 28                 Bugs                     
        October       5                  Clothes
        October      12                 Hats
        October      19                 Fall
        October      26                 Halloween
        November    2                 Monkeys
        November    9                 Pumpkins, Thanksgiving


Fall Craft

Week of November 15th
Come in the Week of November 15th and enjoy a simple craft you can take home and use during the holidays.


Thursday, July 14, 2016

Attention Anime Fans!!!!

The Wayne Public Library will be having its first ever FREE ANIME SCREENING on July 27th from 6:00pm - 8:00pm.  We’ll be showing some of the latest and greatest via Crunchyroll.  
This screening will include the first episodes of…


Orange
During the spring of her second year of high school, Naho receives a letter. Its sender is herself from ten years in the future. Naho thinks it's a prank at first, but when the things written in the letter start to come true one by one, she realizes that the letter is telling her events that will happen in her future. It tells her that she'll fall in love with Kakeru, a new student who transfers to her school, and that he'll die in the winter of his 17th year. After learning the regrets and wishes of the 26-year-old Naho following Kakeru's death, what can the 16-year-old Naho do differently?

Fairy Tail
The story follows a teenage girl named Lucy Heartfilla who is determined to join the notorious magical Fairy Tail Guild. During a daring rescue, she encounters Natsu who is part of the guild and eventually offers her a place. They become teammates performing various missions for the Fairy Tail Guild. Be prepared for an action-packed adventure!


ReLIFE
Arata Kaizaki (27) quit the job he landed after graduation in only three months. His life did not go well after that. Now his parents are threatening to stop sending money, and want him to come back to the country. He has no friend or girlfriend to share his troubles with...as he hits rock bottom a strange man named Ryo Yoake appears. Yoake invites Kaizaki to join a societal rehabilitation program for NEETs called ReLife. This program uses a mysterious drug to make him look younger, and sends him back to high school for a year…


Mob Psycho 100
Kageyama Shigeo, a.k.a. "Mob," is a boy who has trouble expressing himself, but who happens to be a powerful esper. Mob is determined to live a normal life and keeps his ESP suppressed, but when his emotions surge to a level of 100%, something terrible happens to him! As he's surrounded by false espers, evil spirits, and mysterious organizations, what will Mob think? What choices will he make? The anime based on the original story by ONE, the idol of the webcomic world and creator of One-Punch Man, is coming your way with animation by leading animation studio Bones!

WARNING: SOME MATERIAL NOT SUITABLE FOR CHILDREN
PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED CHILDREN UNDER 13 


Tuesday, June 28, 2016

NEED MONEY?

Carola Fisher wishes to remind our patrons about our
 Small Business Resource Center.

The Library has made very many resources readily available.  However, for those who are not the entrepreneurial type we shelve such sources as:
     USA Today’s Running a side business: how to create a second income.
    (SB 658.421 STI)
     or,
     Put more cash in your pocket: turning what you know into dough. (Loral  Langemeier, a regular financial expert on Dr. Phil, SB 658.11 LAN)
     Also:
     The complete idiot’s guide to selling your crafts on ETSY.
 (Marcy Layton  Turner, a seasoned ETSY seller and shop owner.
 SB 745.506 TUR)
     or
     The official eBAY bible.   (Jim Griffith, Dean of eBAY education.
 SB 658.87  GRI) 

For those who ARE the entrepreneurial type, and who have always wanted to start a business and be their own boss:

    The economy of YOU: discover your inner entrepreneur and recession-    
    proof your life. (Kimberly Palmer, Senior Money Editor at U.S. News and &  
    World Report. SB 658.11 PAL)
    or:
    The small business bible: everything you need to know to succeed in your    
    small business. (Steven D. Strauss, USA Today small business columnist.
     SB 658.022 STR)

In addition there are links to such invaluable websites as:
   “Business owner’s toolkit: guides, tools and templates for small business.”
    And links to powerful business resources like the State of Michigan’s
     Michigan Business One Stop
     or the Michigan Small Business Economic Development Centers at Schoolcraft College and Eastern Michigan University.

Notices of upcoming workshops and seminars are available, and brochures for the Centers as well as our own.  The excellent booklet Guide to starting and operating a small business.   from The Michigan Economic Development Corporation  can be picked up without charge.



Become a stay-at-home mom with a home-based business, or start a retirement business. Your future is yours!  Check it out!  You really can take charge of your financial security and even prosperity.

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

2016 Youth Summer Reading Program! On your mark, get set, READ!

We are SO excited about this year’s Summer Reading Program at The Wayne Public Library!  Register at the Youth Reference Desk beginning Tuesday, June 7, 2016.  Readers and Read-to-Me’s will keep a record of their reading time on the Reading Log provided in the bag you receive when you register.  One prize will be awarded for each 10 hours read,  two prizes for 20 hours, and three prizes for 30 hours.  A grand prize entry will be added for each 10 hours. You can win extra prizes by completing one of the activity sheets available to all ages.  Solve a puzzle, color a picture, make a craft, and other fun and win a prize! There will be an activity for each week, so stop by often and do them all!  Only one extra prize per week per child for activities.  All hours must be recorded by 4:45 p.m. Friday, July 29.  Grand prize drawing will be announced August 3.

As you complete your hours of reading, come to the library and we will pull your registration and record your log entries.  Your reading may be any book that you can get.  You can read anywhere you like, but we love to see you checking out library books.

On Winning Wednesdays from June 21-July 26 at 2:00 p.m. there will be a Family Storytime for everyone. Below is a list of Special Programs all taking place at 2:00 p.m.  in our Community Room for Summer Reading Participants.

 THIS SUMMER’S PROGRAMS ARE:

 Tuesday, June 21: Healthy Me with Lynn Hartwig  
 Tuesday, June 28: Magic with Jeff  Wawrzaszek
 Friday, July 15: Flying Aces Pro Frisbee Team for ALL AGES—Registration required
 Tuesday, July 19: Summer Olympics—Library Style for ALL AGES—Registration Required
 Tuesday, July 26: Shake, Rattle, and Roll an Interactive Concert—for ALL AGES

To register, please call 734-721-7832 or visit the Youth Reference Desk.

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

December-January 2015 Blog Post Roundup

Minecraft.edu NOW AVAILABLE on Youth computers!

Potato Chip Manufacturing in Southeast Michigan

Family Story Times, Winter 2016

FROSTY THE SNOWMAN – A Very Special Holiday Event at the Wayne Public Library! 

Valentine’s Day Cards Kids Craft

Wayne Public Library’s Annual Mini Golf!

New Career Building Resource

The Fascinating Growth of Technology

The Fascinating Growth of Technology by Adrianne M. Schinkai

I recently returned to my position at the Wayne Public Library after a three week hiatus. I ended up in the hospital for an emergency gallbladder removal. Throughout my recovery (as I couldn’t do much else), I observed many different types of technology in our world today at work and I honestly marveled at how far we have come in such a short amount of time. Not only has technology caught up with us, but in some ways it is surpassing us and developing at an insanely rapid pace to a point that some of the world’s population cannot keep up.

Here’s a perfect example. A hundred years ago, if a doctor told a patient, “I am going to put you to sleep and remove an organ from your body that I believe is useless,” the patient would have ran for the hills. This wasn’t the case with me nearly a month ago. I was told that my gallbladder was full of stones, which was causing tremendous pain, and by removing this infected organ, I would be able to recover with a better standard of health. While I did have the jitters as the doctors were preparing to put me under for the procedure, I was confident that all would go well and I would wake up with a better bill of health. Three weeks later, this has been the case. I am back to work, healed, and pain free.

From diagnosing my gallbladder, to performing the surgery, to the instruments used during the surgery, to the medications used during recovery, all of this has developed more in the last hundred years than ever before. And this is just in the field of medicine.

What about some of the gadgets we use on a daily basis? A hundred years ago, computers didn’t even exist. When they were first invented, they took up the space of an entire building. Now we carry them in our pocket on a daily basis in the form of a cell phone. There is more developed technology on a typical smartphone today than what was available to the astronauts of the Apollo missions. More technology exists in our hands than the Voyager 1 satellite, which now floats in interstellar space.

We now have machines in our homes that clean and dry our dishes and clothes for us. We can view events from the other side of the globe live on our television screens, even though we are thousands upon thousands of miles away. Paper messaging is nearly obsolete as messages, texts, and literature are sent and viewed via email and tablet reading devices. We have even broken the barrier of sound.

And yet, there are few of us that are astounded by these facts! Am I getting old as I’m fascinated by what I see develop around me while my daughter wonders what the big deal is? Perhaps. But the fact remains that there are still a number of us who do not realize what this means.

What does it mean exactly? It means that we, as a people, have a responsibility to be vigilant with that technology and use it properly. For those who don’t know how to, there are ways to learn at little to no cost to the user. Books are written every few months about programs and applications and how to get the most out of them. Classes and programs are available at local libraries for patrons to bone up on their skills with using computers and the internet. There are even simple tutorials online showing viewers how to take care of certain tasks, from beginners crochet to repairing household fixtures.

In short, we have come to a point where technology even teaches you how to use technology in today’s world. And to have done so in such a short span of time is an amazing thing!