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Windows On Maine

I was poking around the MARVEL database recently – and I found something new!

Windows On Maine
This looks like a very interesting database to work with.  It is a collaboration of Maine Public Broadcasting, the University of Maine, the Maine State Museum, and others.  I like the sounds of that!
The home page has a click-able window What is Windows on Maine? Click to view.  I try this – it’s a very short video showing the variety of information available in this database.  There are streaming videos, maps, sound files, resources for teachers, and related databases to name a few.  More interesting with each click I take!
At the top of the screen there are two search buttons – Subject/Topic that has a drop down window with about thirty choices.  The other search button QuickSearch is the one I try first.  I type in “Gardiner”.  Three resources found – one Moving Image and two Artifacts. 
Hmmm . . . 
The Moving Image is titled The Frontier Wars.  It is an MPBN resource, and about twenty-seven minutes long.  There is a short description, as well as a list of subjects to search.  These subjects appear to come from the Subject/Topic drop down window.  The last place on the citation is Find Similar Resources.  Clicking here brings up fifty resources.  I’m not quite sure what this database uses for criteria to find similar resources.  There are many Moving Images, but also Artifacts, Text, Service, Map, and Still Image, but I don’t seem to see a clear relationship between my search, and the “similar resources”.  Next I click on the title itself The Frontier Wars.  I see that this is a downloadable media file.  The video has beautiful images, but for whatever reason, no sound – at least not on the computer I’m working on.  I’ll have to check this out on a different computer.
The two Artifacts  are Quill Box and Box, birchbark.  Each of these are Maine State Museum resources.  These each have the same type of information as the Moving Image.
Okay, time to click on one of the resources.  I choose to click on Quill Box.  This doesn’t really give me much more information. I am told where it “lives” – the Maine State Museum, that it is part of their collection, and they have the rights to it.  Again, I see Find Similar Resources, though I don’t click at this point.  I’m given the option to Download, which I do.  This is a very nice picture (.jpg) of the box.  It looks like it could be a great addition to a school report.
Back to the home page I go.  Next I check out the Advanced Search button on the left side of the page.  This time I type “Augusta” in the search box.  I opt to leave the Keyword box as Any, though the options include Title, Subject, Description and Transcript.  In the Year From and To boxes I put 1890 and 1900.  Leaving the other options as they are, I click the Find Itbutton.
Four resources appear, one Still Image and three Moving Images.  I don’t take the time to check each of these out, as my Gardiner search earlier showed similar results.
Back on the Advanced Search page, there is a spot to Find the history of town names in Maine.  This time I choose “Randolph” from the drop down menu.  The information given tells me that Randolph was incorporated from a portion of West Pittston in 1887 and has been Randolph since then.
The last thing I see on the Advanced Search page is Search with Maps.  There are two maps at the bottom of the page – State of Maine and Gulf of Maine. Clicking on either map makes it larger, then clicking on the map itself, a region or county pops into the search box.  Clicking the Find Itbutton brings me to similar results, as previous searches.
Back on the home page the last feature I check is FAQ for Teachers.  This page answers questions about web browsers, downloading videos and other resources, as well as lesson plans.
I still see lots of potential for this database but am not completely sure how I’ll use it.  There are pieces that will be helpful for reference questions about Maine, but it probably won’t be the first resource I use.

Ann Russell, Technology Librarian

FAVORITE OLD BOOKS INTO FAVORITE OLD MOVIES

These books have lost their covers over the years and consequently don’t catch your eye as they sit on the library shelves but please pick them up and take a chance.  They were such good reads back when they were published that they were made into pretty good movies too.

Keep them alive; give them a try.  Borrow the book or the movie from the library and see what I mean.
Gentleman’s Agreement (by Laura Hobson)  A magazine writer looks for a new angle when he agrees to write a series of articles on anti-Semitism.  He pretends to be Jewish, and his new identity pervades his life in unexpected ways, almost destroying his relationships.
The Magnificent Ambersons (by Booth Tarkington)  A wealthy turn of the century family collapses under the changing currents of progress.
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (by B. Traven)  Three prospectors in search of gold in Mexico find suspicion, treachery, and greed.
Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (by Eric Hodgkins) A city boy wants to become a suburbanite and the Blandings decide to build their dream house – with many complications.

 

Drums Along the Mohawk (by Walter Edmonds)  This details the trails of a colonial newlywed couple as their village in Mohawk Valley is besieged by Indians.
From here to eternity (by James Jones)  Complex, hard-hitting look at the on and off-duty life of soldiers at the Army base in Honolulu in the days before the Pearl Harbor attack.
An American Tragedy (by Theodore Dreiser) – the movie is A Place in the Sun.  An ambitious laborer whose aspirations to the high life with a gorgeous debutante are threatened by his lower-class lover’s pregnancy.
Title descriptions are taken from VideoHound’s Golden Movie Retriever.
Scott Handville, Assistant Library Director

Programs in the Children’s Room

We have some great children’s groups that meet during the week. Maybe you can join us sometime.

Tuesday @ 10:30 is Storytime. I read 3 to 4 books and have a song to go along with the stories. Then we do a craft each week with the help of a volunteer. This helps the children with their fine motor skills. We cut or paste or paint. Anything to keep our hands and minds busy.  
Tuesday, February 16th, @ 10:30 we have a special event by Tina Wood. She will tell a fishy tale of the alewives swimming home on Cobbossee Stream here in Gardiner. Everyone is invited to paint a fish that will be part of an outdoor community sculpture. Wear old clothes and come join the creative fun!
 A big thank you goes out to the Gardiner Creativity Fund for the support of this specific program.
Friday @ 10:00 is Babies Loves Babies. This program socializes younger children through play and music. Familiar songs that are played through the morning will acquaint the toddlers with the melodies and words.
We are planning to start a Lego group soon! Please consider donating your gently used Legos to the Gardiner Public Library’s Children’s room.
See you in the Children’s Room!
Ginni Nichols, Children’s Librarian