Neill Public Library is honored to receive a beautiful bench
donated by Paul Beckett and Linda Beckett Yost in loving memory of their
mother, Harriett Beckett. “Hattie” was an avid reader and early President
of the Friends of Neill Public Library. Her fundraising efforts were
instrumental to the construction of the 1992 library building. Our deep
gratitude and appreciation go to the Beckett Family.
Showing posts with label In Memorium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label In Memorium. Show all posts
October 21, 2015
February 15, 2015
Happy Birthday Susan B. Anthony!
Happy Birthday to Susan B. Anthony – a brave advocate
and spokesperson who fought for justice, equality and women’s suffrage. Born in Adams, Massachusetts on this date in
1820, Ms. Anthony was raised in a Quaker family which helped instill her early
sense of justice and moral zeal.
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To learn more about this amazingly courageous human being, check out these and other library
resources:
The Art of Public Speaking: Lessons from the Greatest
Speeches in History by Hale
The Susan B. Anthony You Never Knew by Collier
Susan B. Anthony: A Life of Fairness by Boothroyd
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony: Fighting
Together for Women’s Rights by Mattern
Kathleen Ahern
Children's Librarian
January 19, 2015
Martin Luther King Day of Service - a "Day On, Not a Day Off"
The third Monday of January is celebrated as a national holiday in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. However this holiday is different from other holidays, as it is a "day on, not a day off" work. In 1994 the United States Congress passed the King Holiday and Service Act, in recognition of Dr. King's incredible legacy of service to all.
"Life's most persistent and urgent question is: What are you doing for others?" Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said. Dr. King believed in and devoted his life to advancing equality, social justice, and economic opportunity for all Americans. By working together to serve our communities we can continue Dr. King's dream. We will create economic opportunities by improving education, strengthening healthcare services and improving financial literacy.
Service is also a powerful way to improve your own life. Not only does volunteering help your community, but it helps build your skills and your resume. On average volunteers have 27% higher odds of securing a job than non-volunteers; in rural communities that number is even higher at 55%. Also volunteering makes you feel good about yourself!
Do you need some ideas of ways you can help? Here are some links to national and local organizations that coordinate volunteer activities.
Nationally:
http://www.handsonnetwork.org/
http://www.serviceforpeace.org/
http://www.nationalservice.gov/
http://www.idealist.org/
Locally:
http://cce.wsu.edu/
So, go out and serve today!
Lori C. Lewis
Administrative Assistant
"Life's most persistent and urgent question is: What are you doing for others?" Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said. Dr. King believed in and devoted his life to advancing equality, social justice, and economic opportunity for all Americans. By working together to serve our communities we can continue Dr. King's dream. We will create economic opportunities by improving education, strengthening healthcare services and improving financial literacy.
Service is also a powerful way to improve your own life. Not only does volunteering help your community, but it helps build your skills and your resume. On average volunteers have 27% higher odds of securing a job than non-volunteers; in rural communities that number is even higher at 55%. Also volunteering makes you feel good about yourself!
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Nationally:
http://www.handsonnetwork.org/
http://www.serviceforpeace.org/
http://www.nationalservice.gov/
http://www.idealist.org/
Locally:
http://cce.wsu.edu/
So, go out and serve today!
Lori C. Lewis
Administrative Assistant
January 18, 2015
Birthday of A.A. Milne
Happy Birthday to you! Happy Birthday to you! Happy Birthday dear creator of Winnie-the-Pooh! Happy Birthday to you!
Happy 132nd birthday to Mr. A.A. Milne! Can we imagine our childhoods without the beloved Pooh bear, Eeyore, Kanga and Christopher Robin? I, for one, would not want to. It would certainly be less enchanting and oh-so-less endearing, wouldn’t it?
So, today let’s pause to honor the man who created this little boy and his woodland friends. Born January 18, 1882 in Hampstead, London, Milne showed an early interest in both writing and mathematics. After serving in the British Army in World War I, his writing career blossomed. He became both an author and a playwright, but it’s his Winnie-the-Pooh materials for which he is best known and most fondly remembered.
From where did his inspiration come for these delightful stories and poems? Right in his own household! His young son, Christopher Robin Milne served as his muse, which resulted in Pooh and his other characters coming to life.
So make your way to the library today to re-read some or all of Milne’s books. And as you turn the pages, perhaps stop long enough to hum a little birthday tune to Winnie’s creator.
Kathleen Ahern
Children's Librarian
Happy 132nd birthday to Mr. A.A. Milne! Can we imagine our childhoods without the beloved Pooh bear, Eeyore, Kanga and Christopher Robin? I, for one, would not want to. It would certainly be less enchanting and oh-so-less endearing, wouldn’t it?
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From where did his inspiration come for these delightful stories and poems? Right in his own household! His young son, Christopher Robin Milne served as his muse, which resulted in Pooh and his other characters coming to life.
So make your way to the library today to re-read some or all of Milne’s books. And as you turn the pages, perhaps stop long enough to hum a little birthday tune to Winnie’s creator.
Kathleen Ahern
Children's Librarian
March 12, 2011
Announcing the Friends of NPL Celebration Program
In recent years, the Walk of Fame at the heart of Pullman’s downtown has given us all a chance to regularly learn or recall the names of those instrumental to the development, leadership, and prominence of our community. While doing errands downtown, I often find myself reminded that our lives have been influenced by these individuals. The paving stones allow us to recognize a figurative truth: that we stand on their accomplishments.
You now have a similar opportunity to honor those individuals who have made a difference in your life and the life of your family, and to have these individuals recognized by our community at one of its public centers—Neill Public Library. The new Celebration Program sponsored by the Friends of Neill Public Library allows you to donate funds for the purchase of library materials in honor or memory of someone special to you. These items will be furnished with a bookplate so that every future user will know that the item in their hands honors the person whom you have designated.
Maybe you have a best friend who adores crime thrillers or books on gardening. Maybe you have a family friend who loves movies. Maybe you’ve recently lost a senior important to your life who relied on audiobooks to continue a lifelong love of books. Certainly we all have teachers and mentors whose influence on our own lives or the lives of our children has been profound. What better way to honor or memorialize these people than by making their passion—and their influence—available and visible to our community in a way that will serve so many others. What’s more, every time someone takes that item off the shelf or checks it out, they will see the name of your honoree and know that that person made an impact on someone. Like our Walk of Fame, the people you cherish in your life will be honored in very real and practical ways.
For example, this kind of program can be a way for families in the community to celebrate the birthdays of their children and of their children’s friends. Rather than purchasing toys for birthday parties, the birthday child and his or her parents can request donations for children’s books for their local library, which then would note the name of the birthday child on the book plate.
Celebration donations of any amount will be honored, but the approximate purchase price of a variety of library materials will soon be available, along with a donation card, both on the Friends of Neill Public Library website and at the service desks at the library. The process is easy, the donation is tax deductible, and the legacy is lasting. I encourage you to celebrate someone and make our public library a place where the impact of others on your life adds another layer of meaning to the community resources we share!
You now have a similar opportunity to honor those individuals who have made a difference in your life and the life of your family, and to have these individuals recognized by our community at one of its public centers—Neill Public Library. The new Celebration Program sponsored by the Friends of Neill Public Library allows you to donate funds for the purchase of library materials in honor or memory of someone special to you. These items will be furnished with a bookplate so that every future user will know that the item in their hands honors the person whom you have designated.
Maybe you have a best friend who adores crime thrillers or books on gardening. Maybe you have a family friend who loves movies. Maybe you’ve recently lost a senior important to your life who relied on audiobooks to continue a lifelong love of books. Certainly we all have teachers and mentors whose influence on our own lives or the lives of our children has been profound. What better way to honor or memorialize these people than by making their passion—and their influence—available and visible to our community in a way that will serve so many others. What’s more, every time someone takes that item off the shelf or checks it out, they will see the name of your honoree and know that that person made an impact on someone. Like our Walk of Fame, the people you cherish in your life will be honored in very real and practical ways.
For example, this kind of program can be a way for families in the community to celebrate the birthdays of their children and of their children’s friends. Rather than purchasing toys for birthday parties, the birthday child and his or her parents can request donations for children’s books for their local library, which then would note the name of the birthday child on the book plate.
Celebration donations of any amount will be honored, but the approximate purchase price of a variety of library materials will soon be available, along with a donation card, both on the Friends of Neill Public Library website and at the service desks at the library. The process is easy, the donation is tax deductible, and the legacy is lasting. I encourage you to celebrate someone and make our public library a place where the impact of others on your life adds another layer of meaning to the community resources we share!
by Karen Weathermon,
President, Friends of Neill Public Library
Published in Moscow-Pullman Daily News
Published in Moscow-Pullman Daily News
August 21, 2010
Bronzed books donated to NPL in loving memory of James D. Maguire
Janet Maguire, sitting next to the bronzed books installed
in memory of her husband.
Jan wrote in a letter regarding the bronzed books...
Jim and I met at the WSC library in 1951. He was a senior and I was a freshman. Our friendship grew into 50 years of marriage and four sons, Jeffrey, Peter, Gary and Christopher, all WSU grads.
We were frequent patrons at our Pullman Library and now I can sit on a bench, with Jim’s books. Perhaps the top book is his autobiography. The second book has “007” on its spine. Many people thought that with his short grey beard and mustache, he resembled Sean Connery. Mystery books were his favorite.
The books were cast in bronze, to my specifications, by Roark Congdon, an M.F.A. graduate at WSU.
Jim, I’ll sit beside your books and think of you.
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