Intro to Computers Genealogy Nuts Thursdays in May Meeting 6:00-7:00 p.m. Monday, May 13th page 7 1:30 p.m. page 10 Never Too Old For YA Book Club page 7 Creative Writing Workshop for Adults Sneak Peek- Saturday, May 18th Summer Reading 10:00 a. m pages 2, 4 & 8 page 7

AMERICAN GIRL PARTY WITH JULIE Sunday, May 5th 2:30-4:30 p.m. (details on p. 2)

DANVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY | 2013

Storytime with McCloud American Girl Party Park Naturalist with Julie Friday, May 3rd Sunday, May 5th 4:00-4:30 p.m. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Girls ages 7 and up are invited Children ages 4-10 are invited to to bring a favorite doll to a take part in animal adventures with groovy party celebrating the 70’s the Hendricks County Parks and Recreation naturalist. with Julie, a girl growing up in a Join us this month as we read Little Beaver and the time of great social change and Echo by Amy MacDonald. A lonely little beaver hears a possibilities. Many issues important to her are still voice calling back to him from across the pond. The voice important to young ladies today and we’ll have crafts sounds lonely, too! Perhaps the little beaver can make and activities to highlight them. We may even learn the friends with the voice-if he can find its owner. Make Hustle, so break out your best Disco clothes! We will friends of your own while we make a themed craft after also have some far out food and prizes. Can you dig the story! it? Space is limited and registration is required by May 2nd. 24-hour cancellation notice is appreciated.

Travel Kits

When planning family trips, remember all that your library has to offer! We can make a free personalized travel kit Summer Reading Program 2013 for your child (ages 2-12). Each kit includes various small games, puzzle pages, a book Preschool-Grade 6 and coloring and activity pages. Please June 1st-August 2nd make your request a week in advance. . Sign up at the Children’s Desk begins June 1st! You can register for summer reading to keep track of either number of books read or time spent read- May 13th-19th is ing to earn valuable prizes! Watch for details on Children’s Book Week! special programs! Cast your vote! www.bookweekonline.com

“There are many little ways to enlarge your child’s world. Love of books is the best of all.” -Jacqueline Kennedy

PAGE 2 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 317-745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG th NEW JUVENILE TITLES 5 Grade Book Club Friday, May 10th The Monsters’ Monster by Patrick McDonnell 4:00-4:45 p.m. Question Boy Meets Little Miss Know-it-All This is a book club for 5th grade students and their by Peter Catalanotto parents. The idea is that this book club will provide a More by I. C. Springman transition between the children's programs and teen Pete the Cat I Love My White Shoes by James Dean and tween programs here at the library. If you have Llama Llama Time to Share by Anna Dewdney questions please contact Kris in the Youth services Llama Llama Holiday Drama by Anna Dewdney department. [email protected] or 317-745-2604. Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson Pirates by David L. Harrison Read one of these two books:

Island by Jason Chin The Green Glass Sea by Ellen Klages Perfect Chemistry by Simone Elkeles The Adventures of Beanboy by Lisa Harkrader or Travel Team by Mike Lupica Let’s Go for a Drive! By Mo Willems Plant a Little Seed by Bonnie Christensen The Ice Dragon by Tony Abbott The Sisters Grimm A Very Grimm Guide by Michael Buckley Big Nate Here Goes Nothing by Lincoln Peirce I Broke My Trunk! By Mo Willems Splat the Cat: The Rain is a Pain by Rob Scotton Bomb by Steve Sheinkin Princess the Essential Guide Take Your Mama to Work Day by Amy Reichert The Quiet Place by Sarah Stewart A Butterfly is Patient by Dianna Hutts Aston Tweens &Teens Bear Says Thanks by Karma Wilson Pete the Cat and His Four Groovy Buttons

by Eric Litwin How to stay up to date with “tween” and teen Oh, No! by Candace Fleming events and materials at the Danville Public The Hero of Little Street by Gregory Rogers Library: Garfield Treasury by Jim Davis The Activity Calendar on the Library website: Revenge of the Scorpion King by Tony Abbott www.dplindiana.org The Battle Begins by Tony Abbott Facebook: “Teens at the Danville Public Library” Twelve Kinds of Ice by Ellen Bryan Obed www.facebook.com/ Bink & Gollie by Kate DiCamillo TeensAtTheDanvillePublicLibrary Dragon’s Keep by Janet Lee Carey The blogs : teensatthedanvillepublic Fact Tracker Horse Heroes by Mary Pope Osborne library.blogspot.com/Or kydds-books- now.blogspot.com/ Email: [email protected] Phone: (317) 745-2604

PAGE 3 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 317-745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG Spine Crackers Teen Advisory Tuesday, June 4th Board Meeting 5:00-6:00 p.m. Wednesday, May 15th 6:00-7:30 p.m. This month we will be reading This is our monthly TAB meet- Looking for Alaska by John Green. This is our ongoing teen book discussion ing. Everyone in grades 6-12 group that meets every other month and is who has an interest in teen for students in grades 6-12. At all book materials collection, programs, discussions, we will have snacks and drinks in addition to a and activities offered for teens lively discussion, games, activities, or crafts. Registration and “tweens” should consider being part of the is encouraged but not required. Contact Kris if you have Teen Advisory Board of the Danville Public any questions @ (317) 745-2604 or [email protected] Library. We are always looking for new members! All of our meetings are open to everyone in grades Teen 6-12. We do fun activities at most meetings, plan Summer Reading future programs and activities, develop a volunteer program, and participate in community service ac- Program 2013 tivities in addition to helping with other programs offered at the Danville Public Library. Serving on “Own the Night” this board looks great on college applications and job applications. Those who participate regularly Signup begins in TAB, for 6 months or more, can request personal June 1st! letters of recommendation from Kris. Please feel free to bring friends with you to meetings. For more information, call or email Kris: 745-2604 or [email protected] TAB Blog: http:// danvillelibraryteenadvisoryboard.blogspot.com/ Never Too Old for a YA Book Club: June 1st-August 2nd Wednesday, May 22nd Grades 6-12 6:00-7:30 p.m. With each reading log completed This is a book club for all us who continue to LOVE you will earn an entry into the teen literature; we are never too old for YA books! grand prize drawing. This program is for those 16 and older. Please contact Kris Kydd for more information! [email protected]. or 745-2604.

Wednesday, May 22th 6:00 p.m. Attend teen Seraphina by Rachel Hartman programs throughout the summer and earn addi- Fantasy and science fiction enthusiasts of tional entries for prizes! all ages will enjoy this bestselling novel set in the mythical kingdom of Goredd, where mathematical dragons and humans coexist, some- what peacefully. Seraphina, a gifted musician, joins More details to come! the royal court just as a member of the royal family is murdered. An investigation ensues and many secrets are unveiled and plots uncovered.

PAGE 4 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 317-745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG Danville Public Library Of Interest During the Month of May:

will be closed on Children’s Book Week– May 13th-19th Sunday, May 12th for Mother’s Day Notable Literary Birthdays During May:

Todd Strasser May 5th Bruce McMillan May 10th Mike Lupica May 11th The Library will be closed Eoin Colfer May 14th on Sunday, May 26th and L. Frank Baum May 15th Monday, May 27th Bruce Coville May 16th in observance of Gary Paulsen May 17th Memorial Day. Lillian Hoban May 18th Jodi Picoult May 19th Mary Pope Osborne May 20th Sir Arthur Conan Doyle May 22nd International Museum Day-May 18th Margaret Wise Brown May 23rd Candace Fleming May 24th Begun in 1977 by the International Council of Andrew Clements May 29th Museums, International Museum Day seeks to promote awareness and appreciation of the special role museums play in our culture. The theme for 2013 is: Museums (memory + creativity)= social change.

Why not spend this day visiting one of Indiana’s many museums.

Are You a Collector?

Do you have a special collection you would like to display at the library? The library is in need of dis- Library Trivia plays for both the Children and Young Adult Services. If you would like to set up a display, please contact 1. What are the names of the two marble lions the Children’s desk. standing in front of the New York Public Library? 2. Which first lady established the White House Public Library? 3. Who was the founder of the first circulating “I find television very educating. Every time somebody library in the United States? turns on the set, I go into the other room and read a book .”

(Answers on page 10) -Groucho Marx

PAGE 5 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 317-745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG Thanks 2013 Open Closet to all of the Book Sales Friends of the Library Volunteers Upcoming sales:

who helped make the Saturday, June 15th Spring FOL Book & Rummage Sale & Saturday, A Success! November 23rd 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Note the new day and time!

Join the Friends of the Library

Pick up a membership form at the Adult Circulation Desk

Memberships Friends Jam Individual— $5 Family— $10 Every Thursday from 6 pm to 8:30 pm Business/Organization— $25 At the Train Station in Ellis Park Life Member— $75

Friends Jam is a collection of local musicians who perform every Thursday night at Ellis Park. Primarily using acoustic instruments, they play and sing a variety of music. Please join us if you enjoy listening to great music performed by local talent. Every member receives a Membership Card & Book Bucks (5 coupons for a free book at book sale

and 2 coupons for overdue book fines up to $1)

Join us at the Coffee Klatch

Wednesday, May 8th 10:00 a.m.

Please note the new time!

The Friends of the Library’s Coffee Klatch is on the second Wednesday each month at 10:00 a.m. Along with the interesting conversation, the Donations received go to Friends of the volunteers help with various Library and Friends of the Park. projects for FOL and the library. So join us at the next Coffee Klatch !

PAGE 6 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 317-745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG

Book & Dessert a Meal & a Book

Jack 1939 Wild by Francine Mathews by Cheryl Strayed Thursday, May 23rd Thursday, May 9th 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 6:00-7:00 p.m.

It’s the spring of 1939, and the Cheryl Strayed’s life was in meltdown. prospect of War in Europe “I was living alone in a studio apart- looms large. The United ment in Minneapolis, separated from States has no intelligence service. In Washington my husband and working as a D.C., President Franklin Roosevelt may run for an waitress, as low and mixed-up as I’d ever been,” the author unprecedented 3rd term and needs someone he writes. Her mother had recently died, effectively rendering her can trust to find out what the Nazis are up to. His an orphan. (Her father had vanished when she was 6.) She choice: 22 year old John F. Kennedy who is travel- was using heroin and making other poor choices. So despite ing through Europe to gather research for his difficult odds, Cheryl began a hike of the Pacific Coast Trail. Harvard senior thesis. Francine Mathews has This fascinating book shows how she survived the hike, met written a gripping espionage tale that explores other hikers, and got her life back. Join us as we discuss what might happen when a young Jack Kennedy Cheryl’s journey. is let loose in Europe as the world careens toward war. Join us as we discuss this exciting new novel.

Intro to Computers Thursdays, May 2nd, 9th, 16th and 23rd 6:00-7:00 p.m.

Do you think a mouse is just a furry animal? Is a keyboard just for music? If you can answer “yes“ to either of these questions, this is the class for you! Learn the basics to computing in a four-week Creative Writing Workshop course. Registration is required. for Adults with Jessica Reed Saturday, May 18th 10:00 a. m. - 1:00 p.m. May’s Art Display Join Jessica Reed, MFA, writer, and creative writing instructor. Writing great dialogue. will be the The art display for May will be focus of this Saturday morning workshop. Dialogue presented by the Indiana Heart Gallery is a critical aspect of characterization in fiction. This and will feature portraits of children in workshop will cover the essentials of writing believ- Indiana waiting for adoption. Be sure able, well-crafted dialogue, from the mechanics of to see this inspiring and impactful attribution to quirky dialect. This program is for all exhibition. levels. Beginning and experienced writers are welcome! Registration is required.

PAGE 7 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 317-745 -2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG Adult Summer Reading NEW FICTION

Program Private Berlin by James Patterson The Power Trip by Jackie Collins June 1st-August 2nd Suspect by Robert Crais Collateral Damage by Stuart Woods Sign up at the Adult Desk The Striker by Clive Cussler Night Moves by Randy Wayne White For every five hundred pages you The Accursed by Joyce Carol Oates The Storyteller by Jodi Picoult read, you will receive an entry form Forbidden Sister by V. C. Andrews for one of the prize drawings. Alex Cross, Run by James Patterson There will be a variety of prizes for Next of Kin by Sharon Sala you to choose from. For more Something Wicked by Lisa Jackson information please call or visit the The First Prophet by Kay Hooper Adult Circulation Desk. The Merchant of Dreams by Anne Lyle A Winter Wonderland by Fern Michaels Bared to You by Sylvia Day Never Too Old for a YA Book Club: Reflected In You by Sylvia Day Sea Glass Winter by JoAnn Ross Wednesday, May 22nd Siren Song by Cat Adams 6:00-7:30 p.m. Standoff at Mustang Ridge by Delores Fossen True Love at Silver Creek Ranch by Emma Cane This book club is for all us who con- Chance of a Lifetime by Jodi Thomas tinue to LOVE teen literature; we are The Dark Lady by Maire Claremont never too old for YA books! We will Josh by R. C. Ryan meet on the following dates: The One That Got Away by Kelly Hunter 5/22/2013, 7/24/2013, 9/25/2013, The Hogarth Conspiracy by Alexandra Connor 11/27/2013. This program is for Target Lancer by Max Collins those 16 and older. Please contact Against the Odds by Kat Martin Kris Kydd for more information! Aftershock by Jill Sorenson [email protected]. or Forbidden by Kelley Armstrong 745-2604. A Killer in the Wind by Andrew Klavan Big Sky River by Linda Lael Miller NEW MYSTERIES Unspoken by Lisa Jackson

The Seventh Victim by Mary Burton Deadly Stakes by Judith A. Jance The Affair by Colette Freedman Calculated In Death Beach House No. 9 by Christie Ridgway by J. D. Robb Domino Falls by Steven Barnes Red Velvet Cupcake Murder Here I Go Again by Jen Lancaster by Joanne Fluke Kalimpura by Jay Lake Bad Blood by Dana Stabenow The Last Runaway by Tracy Chevalier The Sound of Broken Glass The List by Karin Tanabe by Deborah Crombie Little Wolves by Thomas Maltman Hand For a Hand by Frank Muir Dreams and Shadows by C. Robert Cargill Illegally Iced by Jessica Beck Snow White Must Die by Nele Neuhaus Bear is Broken by Lachlan Smith Truth in Advertising by John Kenney Cold Feet by Karen Pullen The Typewriter Girl by Alison Atlee Merciless by Lori Armstrong Wise Men by Stuart Nadler The Midwife’s Tale by Samuel S. Thomas Wyoming Bride by John Johnston Miss Dimple Suspects by Mignon Franklin Ballard Finding Perfect by Susan Mallery Revenge of the Crafty Corpse by Lois Winston Above All Things by Tanis Rideout Watching the Dark by Peter Robinson Bungalow Nights by Christie Ridgway Out of the Black Land by Kerry Greenwood The House on Willow Street by Cathy Kelly

PAGE 8 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 317-745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG NEW SCIENCE FICTION NEW NONFICTION The Boys of ’67 by Andrew Wiest Star Wars, Scoundrels by Timothy Zahn The Great Railroad Revolution by Christian Wolmar The Cassandra Project by Jack McDevitt The Click Moment by Frans Johansson Great North Road by Peter Hamilton Buy Shoes on Wednesday and Tweet at 4:00 The Hermetic Millennia by John C. Wright by Mark Di Vincenzo Argo by Antonio Mendez “HEARD” A GOOD BOOK LATELY? The Great Pearl Heist by Molly Crosby Taste of Home Annual Recipes Private Berlin by James Patterson Antarctica by Gabrielle Walker Ghostman by Roger Hobbs Bad Pharma by Ben Goldacre American Chronicles: Women’s Equality The Big Truck That Went By by Jonathan Katz American Chronicles: World War II Catastrophic Care by David Goldhill American Chronicles: Civil Rights The Fall of the House of Dixie by Bruce Levine Until the End of Time by Danielle Steel The Girls of Atomic City by Denise Kiernan The Fifth Assassin by Brad Meltzer Good Prose: The Art of Nonfiction by Tracy Kidder Guilt by Jonathan Kellerman Help, Thanks, Wow by Anne Lamott Benediction by Kent Haruf The Lady and Her Monsters by Rosanne Montillo Alone On the Ice by David Roberts The Missing Ink by Philip Hensher Calling Me Home By Julie Kibler Nobody Walks by Dennis Walsh Did You Miss Me? by Karen Rose Wedding Planning For Dummies by Marcy Blum Great North Road by Peter Hamilton Extinction by Mark Alpert NEW INSPIRATIONAL READING Farside by Ben Bova The Trouble With Charlie by Merry Jones The Icecutter’s Daughter by Tracie Peterson The Ocean Between Us by Susan Wiggs The Guardian by Beverly Lewis The Sound of It All My Music, My Life Truth-Stained Lies by Terri Blackstock by Michael Bolten The Silence of Winter by Wanda Brunstetter For Crew and Country by John Wukovits The Chance by Karen Kingsbury The Blood Gospel by James Rollins Summer of Promise by Amanda Cabot Touch & Go by Lisa Gardner Keeping Secrets by Linda Byler Calculated In Death by J. D. Robb Her Amish Man by Erin Bates The Vietnam War by Audie Cornish Be Still My Soul by Joanne Bischof Heart In Hand by Barbara Cameron NEW DVDS Vanished by Irene Hannon When the Heart Heals by Ann Shorey Coming Soon! Waiting For Spring by Amanda Cabot Firefly Island by Lisa Wingate Doc McStuffins: Friendship is the Best Medicine Swept Away by Mary Connealy Veggie Tales: The Little House That Stood Unrivaled by Siri Mitchell A Monster In Paris The Sky Beneath My Feet by Lisa Samson Thunderstruck The Hobbit NEW BIOGRAPHY Rust and Bone Safety Not Guaranteed What Are You Looking At? Will Gompertz To the Arctic When Doctors Don’t Listen by Leana Wen Cirque Du Soleil – Worlds Away The Age of Edison by Ernest Freeberg The Borgias: The Second Season Animal Wise by Virginia Morell Django Unchained Extreme Couponing by Joni Meyer-Crothers Les Miserables The Modern Day Pioneer by Charlotte Denholtz Filming the Undead by Rod Durick Zero Dark Thirty The Vatican by Michael Collins Parental Guidance Fruit and Vegetables in Pots by Jo Whittingham Lincoln The Fashion Careers Guidebook by Julia Yates

PAGE 9 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 317-745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG

Genealogy Nuts May Display May 13 at 1:30 p.m. Indiana Room Display Cases

Your family did not begin in Indiana. We are The cases will display military records located too far inland for our ancestors to have and medals from the wars of WW II gotten off the boat and become citizens in and the Korean Conflict of a Danville Indiana. Today some ancestors may have flown resident, Tom Roscoe “Rocky” to Indiana from another country, but most of us Armstrong. He graduated from Danville have a generation or more living in states prior to High School in 1932 and became a their arrival in Indiana. For this meeting we will short haul truck driver. He was the look at possible digital records that exist to help second man in Indiana to be drafted in us locate our ancestors in states they lived in 1940 and made a career in the army before reaching Indiana. until he retired in 1960. After his retirement Tom worked Do you have a plan for your research? We will for the post office and lived in St. Petersburg, Florida. In look at some ways to develop a plan for research- 1992 he and his wife moved to Sun City, Florida where ing the elusive ancestor we all have. they were active golfers until they could not physically walk the course.

June Meeting Memorial Day is a day to remember the men and June 10 at 12:00 p.m. women of the military.

Please note the meeting time change. At this meeting we have a pitch-in luncheon and bring an item for show and tell. The item can belong to an ancestor or just be something old you have. In some cases, members of the Nuts identified Daughters of the American Revolution what the item was Membership Research Help for the owner. The food is excellent and Members of the Wa-Pe-Ke-Way chapter of the DAR the show and tell is will be available in the Indiana Room to help potential fun. members with their family research on July 20th, 2013 from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. They will answer questions and assist with the research needed to In addition to eating, the Genealogy Nuts group trav- become a DAR member. This help is one-on-one. els to Fort Wayne each year for two days of research You will be guided through the DAR Internet site for at the largest public genealogy library in the country. help with your research if you already have a family We will be taking a trip again this fall. If you would like member in the DAR or think you have a family to join us on this trip, please read the future newslet- ters for when we have the member in the organization. Gentlemen are also dates set. Perhaps you welcome as the research will help you join the SAR. cannot attend the meetings If you would like more information, please contact because of your schedule but Rose Ann in the Indiana Room as she is a member of would like to have someone the DAR. Rose Ann can help you with your research to travel with to do your if this date is not convenient for you. research. We are the group.

We welcome anyone Answers to library trivia– interested in genealogy 1. Patience and Fortitude research. 2. Abigail Powers Fillmore 3. Benjamin Franklin

PAGE 10 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG New Books They call Me Mister 500 by Anthony (Andy) Meredith Thompson has created some more great Granatelli indexes to help the genealogy researcher with find- Granatelli was a success in a business where the ing those illusive ancestors.  Divorce Cases Filed in Hendricks County, criterion is often mere survival. He made it the tough Indiana 1912-1992 2 volumes way: through a life dedicated to speed; to the perils of  Directory of Businesses in Hendricks County, hot-rod racing, of careening across the Utah salt-flats in Indiana (1876) stock cars; and as a race promoter. He survived terrible  List of Voters in Hendricks County, Indiana (August 1847) crashes that left him battered and scarred for life.  List of Voters in Hendricks County, Indiana (August, 1845) The : The Story of the World’s Greatest College Weekend by John Schwarb Indiana Agricultural Statistics 2011-2012 In 1951 a group of Indiana University students founded Hodson-Thompson Family History — Sylvia the event, a bicycle race patterned after the Indianapolis Thompson Thomas 500, in an effort to raise scholarship money for working students. The first race was a great success and the The Month of May in the race continues to this day. Indianapolis Area The race has evolved into an entire weekend of activi- 100 Years, 500 Miles: A History of the ties. Events include everything from a tricycle race to Indianapolis 500 by the Photographers and renowned stars. There is a chapter on “Breaking Away”, Writers Who Have Chronicled the Race for the the popular award-winning film based on the race. Indianapolis Star Since 1911. The one-hundred Official History of the Indianapolis 500 year period of the race track covers 17 U.S. by Donald Davidson and Rich Shaffer presidents, four states added to the union and two The Indianapolis “500” is much more than the best world wars. When the first 500 was run in 1911, known automobile race in the world. It is a cherished there wasn’t a blood bank in time-honored institution. It has been held every year the country. Fenway Park except during WW I and WW II. and Wrigley Field were just For the participants it has been a saga of dreams, fields of dreams. Adolf Hitler innovation, ingenuity, bravery, triumph and tragedy. Paupers became millionaires, young men from small hadn’t ruled. There was not penicillin, affirmative action, towns and broken homes became international celebri- Disneyland, NASA or even ties, and some of them gave their lives. NASCAR. The Beatles and Eddie Rickenbacker: An American Hero in the the Rolling Stones hadn’t Twentieth Century by W. David Lewis performed. Watergate hadn’t Eddie Rickenbacker epitomized the American spirit been schemed. These are in the twentieth century. Daring, skilled and rugged – just a few of the major events moving fast and defying death – he drove race cars in that have occurred after the the early days of the automobile, then flew canvas-over- first 500 race. wooden-frame aeroplanes in WW I downing 26 enemy fliers. He joined Eastern Airlines in 1934, and quickly Vintage & Historic Indianapolis Race by Dan Owen reached the top of the corporate ladder. Most of the greatest cars in racing, both foreign and domestic, have run at Indy: Marmon, Stutz, . Peugot, Frontenac, Duesenberg, Miller, Maserati, Novi, Lotus, and Penske. This book captures a few of the best of these. It traces the evolution of Indy cars as well as sprint cars and midgets, as each made its contribution to racing and to the cars parked in our own driveways.

PAGE 11 TO REGISTER FOR ANY EVENT CALL 745-2604 OR GO ONLINE AT WWW.DPLINDIANA.ORG Danville Public Library

Jane Hazelton, Editor 101 S. Indiana Street Danville, IN 46122-1809

Phone: 317-745-2604 Fax: 317-745-0756

HOURS Monday - Thursday 9 - 8

Friday - Saturday 9 - 5 MISSION STATEMENT Sunday 2 - 5 The Danville Public Library will provide its users access to a variety of media for the intellectual, educational and recreational needs of the community. We’re on the web! www.dplindiana.org VOLUME 10, ISSUE 4 Children’s programs: May 2013  Preschool Storytime Tuesdays-6:30-7:00 p.m. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Wednesdays 9:30-10:00 a.m. & 1:00-1:30 p.m. Lawrence Nilles, President Andy Kult, Vice-President Thursdays 9:30-10:00 a. m. David Kroll, Secretary  Wiggleworms Keith Gill, Treasurer Fridays, 9:30-10:00 a.m. Susan Boles  Cuddlebugs Helen Corbitt Fridays, 10:30-11:00 a.m. Ann Tussey  Toddler Tales

STAFF Fridays, 11:30a.m.-12:00 p.m. Loren Malloy  Animal Tales Director Friday, May 3rd - 4:00-4:30 p.m. Gary Simpson  American Girl Party with Julie Deputy-Treasurer Janet Woodrum Sunday, May 5th-2:30-4:30 p.m. Manager Adult Services Jodi Stockton Tweens & Teens Manager Youth Services  5th Grade Book Club Rose Ann Sigborn Friday, May 10th-4:00-4:45 p.m. Manager Indiana Room Quentin Edwards  TAB Meeting Computer Technician Wednesday, May 15th– 6:00-7:30 p.m. Helen Dolder  Never Too Old for YA Book Club Mary Stoutenour Wednesday, May 22nd Miriam McCubbin 6:00-7:00 p.m. Jane Hazelton Mindy Tuceryan Adult Programs Christie Sinclair Debbie Deckard  Intro to Computers Kiera Donahue Thursday, May 2nd, 9th,16th & 23rd Steve Smith 6:00-7:00 p.m. Susan Jones  Dessert and a Book Jenny Duncan Thursday, May 9th- 6:00-7:00 p.m. Kris Kydd  Creative Workshop for Adults with Jessica Reed Julie Drennan Saturday, May 18th- 10:00-a.m.-1:00 p.m. Farah Ahmed  Never Too Old for YA Book Club INSIDE THIS ISSUE Wednesday, May 22nd Youth Service…………....2-4 6:00-7:00 p.m. Extra! Extra!...... 5  A Book and a Meal Friends of the Library…....6 Thursday, May 23rd-11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Adult Services…….….....7-9 Indiana Room…………10-11 Indiana Room Programs Calendar……………….…..12  Genealogy Nuts Meeting-Monday, May 13th- 1:00 p.m.