Sunday, August 08, 2010

A message from the GSOC

The monthly meeting of the Genealogical Society of Okaloosa County is this coming Saturday, the 14th of August, at 10:00  AM, at the Heritage Museum at 115 Westview Drive, Valparaiso. 
 
The speaker will be fellow GSOC member Hilma Jenus, whose topic is We Are So Connected, the people you connect with when doing genealogical research.

Hilma will talk about how interesting it is to make connections that go far beyond "Name - Date of Birth - Marriage - and Death" (the so-called HATCH, MATCH, and DISPATCH approach). She will discuss ways to connect through everyday experiences as well as through research, while telling family stories to make her points clear; background is a goal of genealogy.

 
You might want to invite a friend or neighbor, for it will be a wonderful presentation.
 
After the meeting, all those interested will enjoy a Dutch Treat lunch at a local resturant.
 
Check out our website at http://members.cox.net/youngjmy/GSOC.html for more details.
Jim Young does an excellent job for us.  See you Saturday.
 
Pat Pruett, GSOC Publicity Chairperson 678-2023

I used the above text to make a wordle.  If you are interested, you may be able to access it at this link:

Wordle: GSOC Meeting

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Camden, N.J., preparing to close all its libraries - New Jersey

The library board in Camden, one of the nation's poorest cities, is preparing to close all three of its branches by the end of the year, saying its funding has been slashed so drastically that it cannot afford to keep operating.

Library officials are hoping enough money surfaces to save the system, but they're preparing for a shutdown and say they're not just threatening it as a ploy.

Budget cuts across the country have caused local officials to close library branches, reduce hours and spend less money on books, computers and other materials. But officials at the American Library Association believe Camden's library system would be the first in the U.S. with multiple branches to check out entirely.

"Of all places, they're one of the places that needs free public libraries the most," said Audra Caplan, president of the Public Library Association.

The city consistently ranks as one of the nation's most impoverished. It's a place where most families don't own computers, where just one big bookstore serves the local colleges and where some of the public schools don't even have librarians.

Camden Free Public Library is a major hub for many residents and draws 150,000 visits a year.

It's a place to get online to do research, type papers, apply for jobs and check Facebook. Homeless people stop by for respite from the weather and to read. Children listen to stories, do crafts and play board games.

"If you close the library, what are the kids going to do?" asked Frank Lee, a hospital security guard who plays chess at the library's main branch nearly daily and teaches youngsters the game. "What are they going to do?"

The problem is money.

The city has a permanent financial crisis. Even when times are good, it relies heavily on the state government for support.

But the state also is in crisis. This year, Gov. Chris Christie filled an $11 billion budget deficit, largely by making cuts. Cities, schools, libraries and just about everything else are getting less from the state.

The effects are especially acute in Camden, which now has to compete with more cities for a smaller pool of special aid.

Camden Mayor Dana Redd has asked all departments in the city to cut costs by nearly one-fourth. Even police and firefighters are bracing for layoffs, though none has been announced yet.

The library received $935,000 from the city and $88,000 from the state last year.

This year, the library asked the city for $823,000 and considered the 12 percent reduction a way to share in the sacrifice, interim library director Jerome Szpila said.

But the mayor offered only $281,666 -- nearly a 70 percent cut. It was too little to qualify for any state assistance, library board member and activist Frank Fulbrook said.

City Hall was closed Friday because it was a furlough day for most city workers, and Redd did not return messages left with two of her top aides.

The only thing the library could do was close, Fulbrook said. The plan, approved by the library board on Thursday, is to shutter one branch next month, then another in October and the system entirely on Dec. 31.

Twenty-one employees would lose their jobs.

Szpila already is starting to work on plans for what to do with the 187,000 books and artifacts the library has acquired since it opened in 1904 with a $100,000 gift from Andrew Carnegie. They would have to be sold, donated or destroyed, he said.

In the meantime, state and national library associations are trying to come up with ways to save the library. And activists are considering where to go to ask for donations big enough to save the system.

The first goal is to try to get the city council to offer up more funding, Fulbrook said. A little over $100,000 more from the city would be enough to qualify for about $40,000 in state aid, available only if there's a minimum level of local support.

That amount should be enough to keep one branch operating, Fulbrook said.

No one could keep their voices at a whisper at the library's main branch on Friday.

Essence Paige, 24, said she stops by the library three or four times a week as she works on her GED. She uses the computers for research and word processing and the reference librarians for all sorts of help, including guiding her to books to assist her with math.

She said she has no idea where she'd get those answers without the library.

Thirty-four-year-old Curtis Williams, who works odd jobs when he can find them and reads at the library when he can't, was sitting at a table with a half-dozen novels.

He remembers eight years ago when the state put $175 million into Camden, much of it to build up the city's hospitals and universities, in an effort to attract private investment.

"You give a city $175 million and they don't even try to save some money for things like this," he lamented. "When it comes down to it -- money or helping the community -- it comes down to money every time."

Children's librarian Robin Guenther runs a summer reading program and always has games and crafts available, making the library the rare free spot where kids can be entertained.

On Friday, 4-year-old David Council, a library regular, gave Guenther a picture he'd made from materials in her craft box. And 5-year-old Jenessa Guzman was listening as her mother read to her from a Highlights magazine.

If the library does close, Guenther said she'll do anything she can to save her department -- maybe by moving with its collection to a community center.

"If I had a room to sit and open up a library, I would," she said.

A sad commentary on culture and education in America in the year 2010.

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Friday, August 06, 2010

The Case of the Missing Blueberries

What do you do when you get home from the grocery store and at some point, discover that an item is missing?  I, having no sense at all, and forgetting that Thursday was the first day of school, entered the familiar doors of Wal-Mart, to "get a few things".  Famous last words, right?  Seriously, though, as I proceeded to get an empty cart (I'm not a cart-stealer, people), saw hoards of folks in long lines at the checkout, with loads of paper, pencil, book bags, etc..  I immediately promised myself that I would limit my purchases to less than 20; the speedy lanes were moving right along.

In order to be true blue to "moi", I focused on two freezer rows and the adjacent produce section.  I needed peaches to make that cobbler that my daughter had told me about; the store had a ton of them and they looked really pretty decent.  I could taste that cobbler already!  I also grabbed two bunches of fresh broccoli -- I had been craving the little green trees, lately.  Then, I bumped into an array or display of wonderful blueberries on sale!  What's more the fruit came not from the distant lands of South America, but from just down the road in Headland, Alabama. I love blueberries with a passion; a pint of them for $1.50 was all I allowed myself.  Even though you can't get too much of a good thing, I didn't want to spoil myself too much.  What more could I want?  Well, I did have to pick up some ice cream to go with the blueberries and I picked three freezer dinners for protein.

I headed for the "20 Items or Under" lane and took my place three people away from the register.  As I stood there, I witnessed two, three, four children with school supplies, fly past me and dump their stuff into their mother's cart, just ahead of me.  Since her cart now held maybe a hundred items, I moved over to another fast lane and commiserated with the lady in front of me who had also seen this what happened.

I made it home safely, the thoughts of blueberries with ice cream soothing my troubled spirit.  My son helped me bring in the groceries (only ten items, mind you), unload and put them up.  Arriving at home is always a shock for me; it's as if all the things that require my attention suddenly rush out at me.  First one thing and then another prevented me from eating my dessert, but finally it was my turn to rest.  I looked in the fridge to get the blueberries but they were nowhere to be found.  I asked my son, Kevin, if he had seen them and put them up.  He thought he had put them in the fridge.  I looked again, moving the milk and mayo, checking the far back corners, and even looking in the freezer and the cabinet.  No blueberries anywhere!

I was so ticked that I ate two of the peaches originally purchased for the cobbler I was going to make.  I ate one peach the old fashioned way (washed, then straight into my mouth); yes, I did take off the little sticker.  The other peach got cut up and put on my ice cream.

Guess where I will be going, tomorrow?  Wally World, here I come.  Blueberries and peaches will be at the top of my list.  

Thursday, August 05, 2010

Tuesday, August 03, 2010

Daniel Levitin on our musical brain | Human World | EarthSky

Daniel Levitin on our musical brain | Human World | EarthSky: "- Sent using Google Toolbar"

Why I don't listen to music more often: Music sounds such a deep chord in my being that I feel that I can't maintain control. Tears and emotional upheaval might be cathartic to my soul, but when the psyche is held together with band-aids and safety pins, I don't want to risk it.

I dearly love music of the right variety and type; it does set the pace for creative juices to flow, but I have to be judicious in which music to listen to. I enjoy lighthearted (but not silly) music, something that will pick me up off the floor and get me going. Marches are so thrilling! Maybe a little military, though, rather than lighthearted. I used to love to listen to Barry Manilow and Roger Whitaker. I can sing along with the ballads those two produced . I am inspired by Josh Groban, exhilarated by certain show tunes (think "Music of the Night"). And Adam Lambert really gets me sometimes; he draws me in on some of his songs.

Friday, July 30, 2010

The Real Intellectual at Beck University

via hnn.us

This particular article is a little long and involved but it is comforting to know that there are some places you can still talk about charity, love, and Biblical principles.

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Thursday, July 29, 2010

How To: Make A Canning Jar Pincushion With Storage | Apartment Therapy Re-Nest

Great gift idea for Young Women going off to college. Or, young men, also!

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Dresses, dresses, dresses! (7 of them--massive post!) - CLOTHING

I just love Addie Marie's styles; the colors and creativity of pattern are super duper! How fun!

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Fabric Organizers by DeNiece's Designs

Here's a solution for those who sew frequently. Though I never remember having this amount of fabric on hand at one time, I think anyone who loves sewing would love to have such an assortment. What, though, to do with the scraps?!!

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Archaeologists Discover Stonehenge's Timber Twin

As exciting as history is, I'm glad I live in a day when the technology is available to uncover the past.

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Summer Reading: The Passage

Can one ever get enough good books? I need to go to the beach so I can read a book and get some exercise walking in the sand!

Posted via email from Margaret's posterous

Friday, February 19, 2010

Missouri Digital Heritage : Birth and Death Records

Missouri Digital Heritage : Birth and Death Records

Thank you, Missouri!

We check the census records, we check ancestry.com, we look for needles in a haystack at worldconnect.com (Rootsweb), but do we remember that the states have vital records info? Check your state web sites (*.gov), check the state library sites, the state archives...see what state records and state owned books are available for you to search. State level resources for genealogists are treasure chests, waiting to be discovered.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

The Northwest Florida Fair Grounds - Fort Walton Beach, Florida

The Northwest Florida Fair Grounds - Fort Walton Beach, Florida

As Spring time moves a little closer each day, we will all be looking for an excuse to get out of the house! Not many folks realize that there is a fun playground park at the fairgrounds location. There is also a local produce market that will be re-positioned closer to the playground. I'm not sure of the days or hours, but thought I would send you this link, anyway. Here you can view the NWFL Fairgrounds schedule to see if there are events in which you are interested in attending.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

In the Know, Now

At
glennbeck.com: the poll of the day is "Should the federal government fund embryonic stem-cell research?" The current results look like this: "Yes" votes are 5.21%. "No" votes are 94.79%.

That Glenn Beck is a conservative is a factor that should remind us that those accessing his web site are most likely conservatives, also. Nevertheless, the results are impressive. The issue of embryonic stem cell research, which has kept a low profile during the Bush years, has been resurrected as a hot topic issue since President Obama has chosen to federally fund stem cell research under specifically restricted guidelines which would prohibit cloning, for example.

The group who opposes this type of research is traditionally, those individuals who oppose abortion. So the real question it would seem, is, "Do you believe that an embryo is human life?" This seems obvious to those of certain religions and moral persuasions.

Embryo's are where human life begins, the end, aim, and task of the procreative process that has no other reason, other than to produce little people who will grow up to be big people who discuss beliefs and values like this.

The embryos obtained for scientific research, however, are "leftovers" straight from the fertility farms. The embryos are viable (living), four to five days old, fertilized for the purpose, originally, and ostensibly for impregnation via the "in vitro" fertilization procedure. Again, the plot thickens. What is the morality of these clinics? What and where in this story is the potential for corruption?

Begin with the value system that says the fetus is a living being. See where it leads you.