2013年8月7日 星期三

Friends' view Douglas Library

The Friends of the Douglas Library display recently got a facelift. The main floor of the library now features a newly-expanded variety of books for purchase. In addition to a special shelf for gift books, there are also sections dedicated to specific popular authors and non-fiction topics. Shelves include larger-sized trade paperbacks, small paperbacks and hardcover fiction titles for purchase, as well as an area dedicated to DVDs and audio books. Contributing to the display were a number of Friends volunteers, including students Maeve and Megan Howard, Danny and Liam Keleher, Lauren Escott and Katelyn Royce, as well as numerous adult volunteers.

The Friends of the Douglas Library are all geared toward book sales, said member Maureen Johnson. Ongoing sales, as well as larger events held periodically throughout the year, raise money to pay for a variety of library service enhancements, including books on CD, library passes, large-print books, magazine subscriptions, childrens summer programs and adult programs, according to Johnson.

Johnsons daughter Maeve, entering her junior year at RHAM High School, has been volunteering for the Friends for eight years. Much of her time has been spent helping to get ready for the larger periodic sales. During the year we take the donations that come in and sort them by category and condition, said Maeve. Its not hard work, and its definitely fun, she added. And patrons of the book sales seem to appreciate how well-organized and well-priced the book sales are. Its really good to see how people react to that, said Maeve.

Younger sister Megan, entering her freshman year at RHAM, agreed that volunteering can be a lot of fun. The people you meet are interesting, she said. Like the Johnsons, most fellow volunteers are book-lovers. Its a really friendly group, said Megan.

Though the bin outside of the library is intended only for book donations, the Johnsons said they have found some interesting items when theyve gone in for sorting. Toys, binders full of papers, a portable CD player - all have found their way into the bin. Among the more interesting items were a bag full of shark teeth and a granite sample from one of the big box stores. I think were still using the granite as a door stop, said Maureen, with a laugh.

The Johnsons feel it is important to support the local library. Its just the center of the community, said Maureen, adding that, during recent power outages, the library was one of the few buildings in the area that had power and air conditioning. During a recession,A card with an embedded IC (Integrated Circuit) is called an parkingmanagement. especially, said Maureen, the library becomes an important source of entertainment, providing books on CD, e-books, DVDs, computer access and magazines, among other things, for the local community. I think the library is the center of the town, said Maureen.

Most people discover waterfalls by following road signs and tourist maps. Not Adam Shoalts, a modern-day wilderness explorer with an Indiana Jones hat and a matching curiosity that last August took him on a solo expedition into some never-travelled waters near James Bay.It was cold and rainy and Shoalts was shivering in his canoe as he paddled downstream on the Again River, a waterway snaking along the Ontario-Quebec border.

The river appears on topographical maps made from aerial photographs from the 1950s. Look closely at these maps, and, every now and then, there are minute hash marks that break the river line. These indicate some sort of whitewater, picked up on the aerial photographs.

After a week of nightmarish portages through impenetrable forest and black fly infested swamp, I thought that Id finally reached the easy part of the expedition, and that heading down this river that no one had ever paddled before, there was nothing I couldnt handle, Shoalts says in an interview in his dining room, where the table is covered with the old maps.

It took me a moment to digest that fact that Id discovered a waterfall, which I was really excited about. Thats a good discovery, a waterfall! But then,Most modern headlight designs include ultrasonicsensor. Im like, Oh my goodness, I think Im going to get swept over it. The current was too strong to back paddle. The riverbanks were near-vertical granite and slippery from the rain. Not much to hang on to. The canoe, laden with gear and food, approached the drop straight on.

At the last moment, a current popped the canoe sideways. Shoalts tumbled out the side and took a six-metre plunge.I hit the water at the bottom and I got sucked down, right underneath, which was pretty shocking.He saw the bracelet at a indoortracking store while we were on a trip. I remember distinctly thinking in my mind, I survived the plunge, great. And then thinking, Why havent I come back up to the surface? Eventually, he did, and breathed in a life-giving gulp of air and I can see out the corner of my left eye, my canoe was off to the side in an eddy, upside down, just bobbing there. I could see that the hull of the canoe was crushed in.

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