Showing posts with label From the desk of. Show all posts
Showing posts with label From the desk of. Show all posts

Friday, August 16, 2013

From the Desk of - Miriam Stone

"The Lost Generation”    

by Jonathan Reed

A poem to be read forward or in reverse. The content of the poem stays the same, but the meaning changes completely.

Submitted to the Yocum Library Blog by Miriam Stone







The Lost Generation –

I am part of the lost generation
And I refuse to believe that I can
Change the World.

I realize that may be a shock, but,
“Happiness comes from within”
Is a lie.
And money will make me happy.

So, in 30 years I will tell my children
They are not the most important
Thing in my life.
My employer will know that
I have my priorities straight because
Work is more important than family.

I tell you this…
Once upon a time families stayed together,
But this will not be true in my era.

This is a quick fix society.

Experts tell me that 30 years from now,
I will be celebrating the 10th anniversary
Of my divorce.

I do not concede that I will live
In a country of my own making.
In the future, environmental destruction
Will be the norm.
No longer can it be said that my peers and I
Care about this earth.
It will be evident that my generation is
Apathetic and lethargic.
It is foolish to presume that
There is hope.

AND ALL OF THIS WILL COME TRUE UNLESS WE CHOOSE TO REVERSE IT.

There is hope.
It is foolish to presume that my generation is
Apathetic and lethargic.

It will be evident that my peers and I
Care about this earth.
No longer can it be said that
Environmental destruction will be the norm.

In the future I will live in a country of
My own making.
I do not concede that
30 years from now
I will be celebrating the
10th anniversary of my divorce.

Experts tell me this is a quick fix society.
But this will not be true in my era.

Families stayed together once upon a time.
I tell you this:
Family is more important than work.
I have my priorities straight because
My employer will know
That they are not the most important thing
In my life.

So in 30 years I will tell my children,
“Money will make me happy”
Is a lie, and
“True happiness comes from within.”

I realize this may be a shock but,
I believe that I can change the world.
And I refuse to believe that I am
Part of a lost generation.



Reed entered his poem in an AARP contest in 2009 called U@50. The contestants were required to create a 2 minute video describing their vision of the future – what life will be like when they are 50. This entry took second place. It can be viewed on YouTube.

Friday, March 22, 2013

From the desk of - Miriam Stone


Film Review by Miriam Stone

 Cyberbully – DVD -  2011 – Family film

This film works on some levels for the majority of viewers. It is rated as a family film as well as a film that can be used as an educational tool in a classroom setting.

This is the gist of the film. There is this beautiful blonde daughter, with beautiful clothes, who lives in a beautiful house, has beautiful friends, and has a beautiful blonde mother who for some unknown reason gives beautiful blonde daughter a computer for her seventeenth birthday and tells her she can keep it in her room where no one will see what she does on it.

The first thing BB daughter does is go into a chat room that a mother could die from and leave her computer unattended long enough for her little brother to go into her room and write something disgusting about her on it.

The rival of BB daughter takes over from there and suggests that BB daughter is a free spirit when it comes to sex and she has given some guys an STD. When the star football player reads that he dumps BB daughter and she falls so hard she hits the ground like a safe.

She tries to kill herself, goes to group counseling, gets better and goes back to school where she proceeds to lecture her classmates about what they say because they can hurt people with their words. Classmates cheer for her, the football star comes back to her – the end.

I have a few problems – big problems – with this film. It isn’t romantic to try to kill yourself and all too often suicide is the one thing that tormented teenagers do successfully. No one rides in on their white horse in real life to make it all better. How many years would a teenager have to go for counseling before she would have the courage to stand up in front of the school cafeteria and lecture her class? How often can you tie up bullying in a pretty ribbon and say the problem is fixed?

You never can. You can watch all the happy ending movies you can find and all your child will get from them is an even greater sense that they can’t make things in their world right. We need to be so careful about what we show to our children. What are we teaching them when we are trying to teach them something else? What do we tell them to do, which way to turn when we aren’t there with them and they can’t take anymore?

Schools are turning their backs in increasing numbers. Their hands are tied because all they have are “guidelines” that they can follow and they walk a thin between doing their jobs or losing their jobs. And then there are those who just don’t care anymore and although they have the rhetoric down pat, it is just repetition. Those are the ones that I imagine spend class time showing films like Cyberbully. After all, it has such a happy ending.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

An Open Letter from Kim Stahler

Vegans are good for your business: An open letter to restaurant owners 

by Kim Stahler

This mock duck made of
seitan is a vegan choice at
Wild Ginger in
Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 
(Photos by Kim Stahler)

Dear restaurant owners,

I need your help, because I think you want my money. And I want to give it to you. I love to eat, but your menu offers nothing for me as a vegan, and there are a lot more people like me than you think.

I am officially done with patronizing restaurants that don't put even one plant-based entree on the menu. I am looking at you, seafood restaurant, Italian bistro, everyday diner, and fancy New American place. Isn’t veganism all over the news? What if Bill Clinton or Ellen & Portia come to dine? Trained chefs don’t just learn to cook dairy and meat, right? Creamy, savory, rich, spicy, flavorful food ideas crowd the pages of the plentiful vegan cookbooks out right now. There are French ones too. And don’t forget dessert!

 Why should you accommodate me, when I am the minority? Well, I bring friends, kind and considerate friends who usually want to go somewhere that does not exclude me. In fact, when my colleagues or family plan a meal out, I am often the one asked to pick the spot. Restaurants with nothing for my spouse and me lose out on business not only from us but also from these considerate omnivores, a sort of vegan veto. It happens a lot. We want to pay you for your culinary knowledge and creativity! Just give us a plant-based dish or two or three—we’ll come back for the others and bring our friends.

Before I visit you, I will check out your menu online. If there is nothing I can order right off the menu, I usually move on to another choice. See, you just lost me (and my group), and it didn’t have to happen. I occasionally call or e-mail to see if you have an alternative menu not listed online. I want to know whether there are any vegan entrees, NOT which dishes can be altered. Paying full price for a dish with the savory items removed is not desirable, because I know that chefs create dishes with flavors and textures to complement each other. Vegan food on your menu shows that you get it.

“But we can make you something.” I hear that a lot. I used to be happy about that but no longer am. Going out in times of limited money means, for a few hours, a carefree oasis with friends, and I have no desire to call attention to my diet in this environment, especially with work colleagues or in-laws—or to negotiate when I am trying to relax. There are too many questions to ask and too many dishes that end up falling far short of even my own fledgling cooking skills. I can see from the other items on your menu that there are plenty of ingredients that could combine to make something tasty, but no one should have to rely on my underdeveloped ability to create something. You are the experts.

I have worked in plenty of restaurants, and I know how cooks and servers dread special instructions. It isn’t an unwillingness to accommodate but rather the increased risk that things will be forgotten, misunderstood by the cook, screwed up, be sent back, and so on, risking the tip. I don’t care to put staff through this, nor do I want my dining companions to have to deal with it. Dishes that are ready to go are easier on your staff. If you label the dish as vegan, I will love you even more, because I don't have to pester my server. If I am forced into the position of being the high-maintenance one, I will just go elsewhere.

Restaurant owners may believe that no one will order a vegan dish; I agree that no one will order a boring bland one. Plenty of omnivores enjoy a good vegan meal and seek it out, for the lack of cholesterol, lower calories, and maybe the good karma. My dad has had a heart attack and appreciates a cholesterol-free dish, but he would never ask for one. I know many part-time vegans and vegetarians—some people don't want to be labeled but simply love vegetables and the nutrient blast they pack. But most such people don’t find yet another pasta, salad, or grilled veggie dish appealing, nor do they want to pay $15-20 for it. How depressing that this ends up representing vegan food to them.

Restaurateurs, you don’t have to accommodate us, but you are losing out on a rapidly growing sector of eaters, and their friends, if you don’t. Meat consumption is on the decline. Creative vegan dishes on a traditional restaurant menu wave a flag of welcome to alternative eaters, and you can be sure we will tell everyone we know. So for now, my spouse and I rely on a small group of ethnic restaurants: the local Asian and Middle Eastern places. Special occasions send us to Philadelphia, but we would love to spend our money locally, with you. There are thousands of vegetables, legumes, grains, and nuts out there waiting to be showcased, and you will be contributing to better health in your community. And I will bring my friends, family, and colleagues.



Kim Stahler has been vegetarian since 1990 and vegan since 2009. She works as a college librarian and lives with her spouse and three cats outside Philadelphia. Her other interests include worker advocacy, New Urbanism, buying less stuff, and writing letters with old fountain pens.
*http://newveganage.blogspot.com/2012/06/but-we-can-make-you-something-how-your.html?spref=fb

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

From the desk of - Miriam Stone

And Words Can Hurt Forever – Civility in Action
By Miriam Stone

The RACC Student Government Association sponsored a Civility in Action program at the Miller Center On October 16th of 2012. On that day, Traciana Graves, the founder of “Project Bully Free Zone” spent several hours giving statistics about the effects of bullying.

She said that women can no longer receive a college education in this country because one third of all women will be assaulted on their way to, from, or on their college campus – not might be assaulted – will be assaulted.

Only 42 % of 12 to 24 year olds who are cyber bullied report the incident.
In a twelve hour time span 24 people who are bullied in the age group of 15 to 24 will attempt suicide.
Cyber bullying is the most prevalent way for children to be bullied.

Ms. Graves cited the tragedy at Rutgers University when student Tyler Clementi committed suicide after his intimate encounter with another student was secretly videotaped by his roommate Dharun Ravi via webcam and posted on the Internet. Ravi was given the harshest sentence possible as an example of what would happen if this was done again and anti-bullying legislation was proposed.

Ms. Graves wandered from her point several times and I came away from this program disappointed because I expected so much more from the “anti-bullying expert.”

She did however, drive one point home. Bullying isn’t a game kids play at recess. Bullying kills kids and it doesn’t stop there. Bullies are everywhere and all of our live they will be where we are and we will have to deal with them.

I have made a list of some of the books we have in The Yocum Library that deal with bullying and I’ve included their call numbers. If you are interested in looking at any of them, you may ask for help in locating them at the Service Desk on the second floor.

And words can hurt forever : how to protect adolescents from bullying, harassment and emotional violence – BF637 .B85 G36 2002

Bullying beyond the schoolyard : preventing and responding to cyberbullying – LB3013.3 .H566 2009

Bully epidemic : not just child’s play – BF637 .B85 B58 2011

Cyberbullying : bullying in the digital age – HV6773 .K69 2008

Bullied : what every parent, teacher, and kid needs to know about ending the cycle of fear –
 BF637 .B85 G63 2012

Taking the bully by the horns – HQ784 .S56 N64 1997

The meanest thing to say – Early Reader

Sunday, November 25, 2012

From the Desk of Pat Nouhra - New DVD's



New DVD's to the
Yocum Library Collection.

21 Jump Street
American Horror Story s.1
People Like Us
Homeland s.1d.1,2,3,4
NCIS s.9
In cold blood
Ruby Sparks
Witness Protection
Magic Mike
What to expect when you're expecting
Batman: The dark knight returns pt.1
Mad Men s.5 d.1-4
Understanding Literature
Understanding Shakespeare


For the full list go to;
http://theyocumlibrary.blogspot.com/p/new-dvds.html

Saturday, November 10, 2012

John A. Zukowski Interview With "Vegucated" Director

Ten questions for “Vegucated” director Marisa Miller Wolfson

By John A. Zukowski

The most emotionally satisfying movie of the recent wave of food documentaries is Vegucated, which chronicles three people adapting to a vegan diet. A single mother, a college student and a bachelor bartender are recruited on craigslist to go vegan.

They face disapproving family members, receive a crash course in vegan cooking, and sometimes collapse into discouragement when they feel overwhelmed by a omnivore-based society.

Whether it’s in feature movies or documentaries, the best films show us convincing realistic moments. In Vegucated, there are a lot of those moments. Director Marisa Miller Wolfson takes us into the private lives of three people and isn’t afraid to show us their most difficult challenges, as well as what gives the characters the motivation to continue—which provides some poignant scenes. It all transcends many of the recent food documentaries that can sometimes be a little too overloaded with factual information and interviews with experts.

Vegucated is a successful piece of realism as well as an informative movie about the health and ethical benefits of a vegan diet. In a recent interview with New Vegan Age's John A. Zukowski, Wolfson says she intended from the beginning to create a realistic and human-centered documentary. She also answers questions ranging from vegan stereotypes in the media to what she makes for dinner when she gets home after a busy day. New Vegan Age: Do you remember the exact moment you decided to make Vegucated? 

Marisa Miller Wolfson: I do, actually. I was sitting in Super Size Me, and I thought, if Morgan Spurlock can use a vegan diet to detox from his burger binge, then I want to see that. Someone should make the opposite of his experiment, where we take someone who eats the standard American diet and have them go vegan for a month and capture it all on camera. Then I was sitting in Candle 79 with Mary Max, my boss at Kind Green Planet, and she said, “Let’s make the film!” So we did.

NVA: Several food-related documentaries have been released in the past few years. Why do you think there’s so much interest now in the subject of food?

 MMW: There sure have been. We’re grappling with so many diet- and lifestyle-related health crises, and we’re trying to make sense of why that is and what we can do about it. Meanwhile, it seems that almost every month there’s a new undercover investigation or news story coming out about the horrors of what goes on behind closed doors in the food industry, from animal abuse to pink slime used in school lunches. Books about food consistently land on the bestseller lists, so it only makes sense that people want to watch movies on these topics as well.

NVA: Vegucated covers both the health aspects and the ethical issues of being a vegan. Do you find that people are interested in both of those issues? Or are they generally interested in one more than the other? 

MMW: It varies. I’d say most people are interested in both, although some care much more about one than the other, with the majority of those who care leaning towards the health side because it's in their own interest. Just anecdotally, I've found women respond more to the animal compassion argument and men are more resistant to it. Overall, people who watch Vegucated react more to the ethical arguments, which makes sense given that the focus of the film is more on animals. All film subjects enjoy health benefits from the vegan lifestyle, but it’s really their concern about what happens to animals in the industry that jumps off the screen.

NVA: When I talk to vegans and vegetarians who’ve seen Vegucated, they relate to it because they say it’s so realistic. They like seeing how the three people change over the course of the film and the challenges they face. Was it always your intent to show that human side of being a vegan instead of just convincing people with just statistics and information? It may require more cooking at home if you want to be a vegan in a non- metropolitan area, Wolfson says. But more people are taking the steps.

MMW: Absolutely. What made Super Size Me so popular? Everyone loves to hate McDonalds, but really, it's about seeing the charming Morgan Spurlock put himself through that nutty experiment and watching his ups and downs along the way that make it entertaining and compelling. Also, how many times have you thought, “If people only knew the truth, they would change,” but then you’re shocked when they do have the information and then they don’t change? It’s about so much more than information. It’s tied up in questions of self-identity—“but I’m not a vegan!”—and beliefs about what you can or cannot do—“but I could never give up cheese!”—so that once you see everyday people making the shift for very good reasons and overcoming challenges, you start to ask yourself, “Hey, maybe I could do that; maybe I could be like him or her.”

NVA: Something interesting in your movie was that you showed the resistance that people who want to be vegans sometimes get from friends and family. Many people I talked to related to that! Based on your experiences with the film and in your own life, why do you think there sometimes is that resistance? And what advice do you have for vegans to handle it?

MMW: As soon as you start to walk out of step with your friends and family in any way, the change can lead them to question their own actions. You’re inadvertently holding a mirror to their face, and they’re asking themselves, “Do I like what I see here? Or should I be making the same changes as so-and-so?” 

Even if you never ever ask them about their choices or even want to bring it up, they will inevitably think about it and talk about it in terms of their own choices. And if they don’t have the same inspiration or information as you, and/or they have their own psychological blocks, they will do whatever is in their power to discredit your position so they can stay in their safe zone and not feel the need to change.

 My advice is to have compassion for the people around you, even if you’re sick of the jokes and the jabs, and to be patient. It will pass as people become used to the new you and learn how to navigate around this issue. Sometimes, especially with parents and partners, the discomfort can be tied to not knowing how to take care of you in one of the most basic ways they know how: through cooking for you. So, sharing recipes and bringing food to share will help there. So will sharing your reasons for going veg in a non-judgmental way.

 Sharing books is great; people can read the information in their own voice, which psychologically makes things more digestible for people than hearing it through the filter of your voice and everything they think about you. Sharing movies can be incredibly effective because you’re asking them to commit an hour or two of their time, not days, as might be the case with a book. Just yesterday we got a review on Amazon from someone who said that she lives with a vegan and has had trouble grasping what it was all about, but now she gets it after watching the film. Anything that can create greater understanding is a positive thing.

 NVA: We’re soon publishing a piece on images of vegans and vegetarians in pop culture. It’s kind of interesting to see it all—from Lisa Simpson, to the character Phoebe from “Friends.” Whether it’s characters in pop culture or information in the news, how do you think veganism and vegetarianism is usually shown in the mainstream media? Do you think there are stereotypes? And did you hope to change it or add to the images of vegans with your film? Wolfson has a busy schedule, too, and shared with us in this interview one quick meal she made after a hectic day.

MMW: That sounds like a great piece. Unfortunately, there are still strong negative stereotypes of vegans in the news and mainstream media. It's presented as radical or extreme and very limiting. Yes, I did hope to change the stereotypes by having a bit of fun sharing my own old stereotypes of vegans at the beginning of the film and then dispelling these stereotypes by choosing three very normal people with whom everyone can relate and showing them becoming vegan. One of the goals certainly was to mainstream the image of the vegan.

NVA: Your movie was shot in and around New York City, where there are many vegan restaurants and grocery stores that carry vegan food. What advice do you have for people in remote areas trying to go vegan? Will it be more difficult for them to do it? 

MMW: Coming from a more remote area myself—Evansville, Indiana—I know that it most certainly is more difficult for people in small cities and towns to do it. Not only do you not have all the restaurants and health food stores, but you don’t have the vegan cultural and social opportunities that you do in more veg-friendly cities.

Still, I hear from people all the time who are doing it and loving it in more remote areas. They rely much more on international cuisine when eating out, since that’s where more of their options are, and they rely more on home-cooked food. But what’s really exciting is that they’re really being proactive in creating social support opportunities by organizing potlucks, vegan monthly supper clubs, and other veg events, either informally or more formally through an organization or Meetup.com. I’d strongly recommend people look for a vegan meetup or other group or consider starting their own if there isn’t one in their area. You’d be surprised by how many people there are who are interested in learning more and getting support.

Also, connecting with people online is super helpful. Friending or following vegan people and organizations will help you feel more connected, informed, and supported, and will help facilitate more in-person interactions with them. We’re actually building a Vegucated community site as we speak and a Vegan Buddy Locator so you can geolocate other vegan and vegan-curious folks near you. We hope people plug in that way too. 

NVA: My wife and I are sometimes surprised to go out to eat with people who say they are progressive or liberal and see them ravenously eating meat. Why do you think so many people—even socially-aware liberals and progressives—don’t think about what they eat? Do you think it has anything to do with “foodie” culture which emphasizes a taste for the exotic over ethical issues?

MMW: I would love to understand the exotic “foodie” culture better. I wonder if it has to do with feeling a sense of adventure in a workaday world or having some kind of global or class identity or bragging rights? 

At the same time, the ethical foodie culture has emerged strongly alongside it, and farmer’s markets, CSA programs, and the vegan food industry are some of the fastest growing sectors of the market. People are making more and more food choices based on ethics now than ever before, so I do actually think progressives are thinking about what they eat, but so much more is tied up their decisions than just generally caring.

 Ignorance, fear of change, fear of isolation and deprivation plus emotional and psychological blocks all play a role. But so do different value systems and priorities. Just because we’re progressives doesn’t mean we share the exact same values when it comes to animals or the food system. Some people don't care about farm workers or the environment in the same way that others do. And some people genuinely do not connect with animals the way that others do or just "don't want to know" because they fear being upset and they're afraid it will shatter their image of themselves as a compassionate person.

NVA: You’ve had a long day and don’t feel like taking a lot of time to prepare a vegan meal when you get home. So what do you make?

MMW: Um, that sounds like almost every night? I’ve been traveling a lot for the film, but the last evening I had at home I whipped up a cilantro-basil-garlic-with-almond-and-pumpkin-seed pesto quickly in my Vitamix and mixed it in with whole grain pasta, steamed spinach, sundried tomatoes, cannelloni beans, and Parma, which is a delicious mix of ground walnuts and nutritional yeast. The whole thing took about 20 minutes and was super yummy and covered some of my important protein, calcium, omega-3, iron, folate, zinc, and, of course, fiber needs for the day.

I’m preggers right now, so I’m more aware of individual nutrient needs than ever before. Pregnancy is definitely doable as a vegan and is even more enjoyable because you get to eat more food!

NVA: I’m sure it was a real process and labor of love to raise money, put together a film and promote it. What have been some of the most rewarding things from doing Vegucated?

MMW: Lordy lordy, what a journey it’s been! Well, we’ve had a blast connecting with veg-conscious folks all over the country and sampling yummy vegan fare from Dallas, TX to Minneapolis, MN to Philadelphia, PA. And when you’ve worked for years on a film, you get sick of seeing the footage over and over again and you lose perspective on it and wonder, “Is it any good? Is it even watchable?” And then you hear people in the audience laughing and sniffling at the film, and you remember what inspired you to make it in the first place. 

But hands down the most rewarding thing is hearing from people who are thinking and eating differently as a result of seeing the film. Yesterday a viewer named Tracie who attended the UK Green Film Festival screening in Cardiff, Wales posted on our Facebook wall and said her 17-year-old daughter turned to her after the film and said, “We just have to go vegan, Mum." To which Mum replied, "Yep, makes total head/heart sense." That’s music to our ears.

Interviewer John A. Zukowski worked for more than a decade as a feature writer reporting about pop culture, music and religion for daily newspapers. He's now a freelance writer who lives in Eastern Pennsylvania with his wife Kim.




Wednesday, October 10, 2012

From the desk of Troy Bowers

Tim O’Brien Review
by Troy Bowers

Many RACC students may be familiar with Tim O’Brien because of having been assigned to read his novel “The Things They Carried”  for a lit class. For those who are not familiar, like most of O'Brien’s novels, “The Things They Carried”  is about the Vietnam War and how it affected those involved. These characters are not always soldiers.

One of the most moving stories in “The Things They Carried” concerns a soldier who finds a way to sneak his fiancĂ©e from back home in the states into his remote base camp in Vietnam. What starts out as a story of two lovers reunited winds up becoming a tragedy of lost hopes. Not because either of the lovers die, that would have been altogether preferable to what actually happens.

Rather, the fiancée, after spending a great deal of time with the Green Berets who also use the camp, becomes someone completely different from the woman who stepped down off the supply chopper upon arrival. She starts going out on patrol with the berets and eventually realizes that she was born for this life. The narrator of this chapter thinks that he is bringing his old life to Vietnam to help stave off the homesickness he feels because of having to leave his fiancée.

Ultimately, the war changes her view of the world and her place in it. No longer does she want the American dream of a nice house with a picket fence, two kids, and a dog. Her life becomes consumed with the war and the jungle, and in the end, the narrator loses her when his tour is over and it is time to return to the states.

Some people criticize O’Brien by saying that he only writes Vietnam fiction because he knows only one story and just keeps finding new ways of telling it. While it is true that all but two of O’Brien’s novels concern the Vietnam War, and even those two stories feature protagonists that were affected by Vietnam, all of O’Brien’s novels are far from being repetitious in terms of plot.

Far more repetitious are O’Brien’s recurring themes of memory, interpretation, dreams (both literal and figurative) and meaning. Those who are familiar with Derrida’s literary theory of Deconstruction, or more broadly Post-Modern literary theory, these stories really lend themselves to modern literary critique as they are filled with characters who are trying to understand or “deconstruct” their own fictional lives.

Worth noting is that, like many authors whose writing concerns the Vietnam War and its aftermath, O’Brien himself is a veteran. As a result, while the stories are fiction, they  are often based on real events and experiences from the author’s life. It is almost as if O’Brien, through his writing, is trying to find meaning in his own past by exploring his experiences in the realm of fiction.

My favorite of O’Brien’s novels is “Going After Cacciato.”  The story takes place in Vietnam during the war and told from the point of view of Paul Berlin, a soldier in the war. The story begins with a Berlin telling his Lt. that one of the soldiers in their platoon, Cacciato himself, has gone AWOL. He had told Berlin before leaving that his plan was to walk to leave the war behind and walk to Paris.

At first, everyone thinks Cacciato is crazy, stupid, or both. How could someone get from Vietnam to Paris France on foot?  They set out to track him down and bring him back to the war. Along the way, Cacciato starts to fantasize about how one would actually get to Paris from Vietnam and uses this daydreaming to remove himself from the realities that he has faced during his tour. Some of the soldiers in his platoon had murdered their prior Lt. because he always forced them to follow procedure, even though following procedure was often both pointless and deadly to those ordered to carry out the order.

Berlin was not directly involved in the murder, but he kept quiet about it and allowed it to happen making him an accomplice. Berlin wants to leave the reality of this world so badly, that his fantasy of tracking Cacciato all the way to Paris takes over and makes up the bulk of the narrative. The narrative itself is not linear. Instead, Berlin remembers things that lead to other memories of the war so that what actually happened and the order in which it happened is often blurred. Not only can the reader not entirely trust the narrator, the narrator himself cannot even trust his own story.

Occasionally Berlin’s narrative returns to the here and now where he is performing guard duty at an outpost by the South China Sea. The events concerning the search for Cacciato are in the past and Berlin is trying to remember what happened as well as figure out how and why. But mostly the story follows Berlin’s fantasy of how things could have happened, and how just maybe, they might have followed Cacciato all the way to Paris if he’d been able to stay ahead of them and keep from getting caught by his old platoon mates.

It is a form of escape for Berlin who was opposed to the war when it started and would have dodged the draft if it were not for his feelings of social obligation and duty as well as the ostracization he would encounter from everyone he knew. Berlin did not follow his own conscience, but rather that of his culture and the people around him. As a result, his feelings concerning the things he has seen and done are confused and at odds with each other.

At its core, the story is about trying to find meaning, which lends itself very well to students who have been assigned to read the book and are trying to find meaning in the narrative. Berlin helps the reader along the way by asking of himself many of the same questions that the reader should be asking. I highly recommend “Going After Cacciato”  to anyone who read and enjoyed “The Things They Carried,”  or who is interested in post modern fictional narratives, or who enjoys tragic stories and wants to join the narrator in his escape from consequence.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

From the Desk of Miriam Stone


Book Review : Vegan is love : having heart and taking action by Ruby Roth – Children’s book
Miriam Stone
When our daughter was 7 years old she stopped eating chicken. She said she knew where they came from and she couldn’t eat them. Her refusal to eat pork, beef and fish followed. She would say “It has a mother. I can’t eat anything that has a mother.” Or “It has eyes. It can see the person killing it.” We waited for this obsession to run its’ course. This was the mid 1980’s and it wasn’t popular to be a vegetarian, or even heard of in some cases.

The obsession didn’t end. Her beliefs were very strong and she adopted a vegetarian lifestyle. There wasn’t much literature on the market at that time to help us balance her meals and make sure that she had enough protein in her diet. I consulted her pediatrician and he said that I was the mother and I should put my foot down and make her eat whatever I served.  That was our last visit to that doctor.
It was hard for her everywhere she went. Play dates, birthday parties, school lunches all posed a problem for her.

There were no books like Vegan is love: having heart and taking action. If you are not vegan  and you never intend to be, please take a look at this book anyway. Most of us live a conscientious lifestyle and this book gives some ideas of how we can change the world for the better. I liked it especially because it gives out ideas in baby steps making them doable. I wish that it was around when our daughter was young. We did our best to support her beliefs, and we were impressed with her arguments, but there was no support out there.

This book tells us things we can do to be kinder to animals and to the earth and you don’t have to be vegan or vegetarian to see the value in doing some of these things. One thing that I wish I had thought to do with my child is to check every product that I buy for a sign on the label saying that the company does not test on animals.
A common fallacy is that those who live a vegan lifestyle are zealots who compare all of us to them and find us lacking.

I can assure you that from my own personal experience with my child and with my co-workers, that this is completely untrue.
Do what you feel you can comfortably do. This book will have at least one thing that you may want to try with your child. You can teach environmental awareness to your children and you can begin at any age. Vegan is love is one book that can show you how.

This book as well as its companion book, That’s why we don’t eat animals, can be found in the children’s department under the name Roth.

Monday, September 10, 2012

From the Desk of - Miriam Stone

Sissy Spacek : my extraordinary ordinary life. 
Book review by Miriam Stone

Last year was the year of the celebrity autobiography. Everyone had something to say and it may have been wise for them to say it about themselves rather than have someone else say it about them.  Sissy Spacek got a late start on her story. It just recently came out. She didn’t have to hurry because she has no axe to grind and no behavior to defend.

She considers her acting career to be extraordinary only in the fact that she has been lucky to receive movie roles that allowed her to work with wonderful actors and directors. She starts with her first film role and takes the reader through each film talking about what she learned from her co-stars and her directors and relating some anecdotes that are dear to her.

The film industry considers her extraordinary in a different way. She has been nominated for six academy awards and won one; nominated four times for the British Academy Award for Film and Television Arts; nominated for Critics Choice Awards, Cable ACE Awards, Emmy awards; nominated for seven Golden Globe awards and won three. The list is incredibly long. But, you won’t find this list in her book. She never mentions the fact that she won any awards.

The ordinary part of her life is also extraordinary. She married her husband Jack in 1974 and they remain married to this day. The witness signature on her marriage license is the paw print of their pet dog, Five. When Coal Miner’s Daughter was released and she won the Academy Award, she couldn’t go anywhere without being recognized. She received all kinds of offers. At that time in her life, she could have done almost anything she wanted. What she did do was to buy a farm in Virginia with her husband and wait.

She and Jack had two daughters and she worked only sporadically. They threw themselves into life on a farm. They put down roots. They became farmers, neighbors, friends. They became known in the community, not as show business people, but as parents, as people that could be relied upon. They went to and held potluck dinners and their daughters grew up to become young women with careers of their own.

She doesn’t ever speak of sacrificing anything or giving up anything to do this for her family. She speaks only in terms of the opportunities that she was given and the strong sense of family that was instilled in her by her own parents.

So, if you want to read a nice book by someone who is grateful for what she has been given in life, this is the book. She says that one of the greatest gifts that has been given to her is this: she can be out somewhere and someone will recognize her and all she has to do is smile at them and say hello and that little gesture can help them to have a happier day.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

From the Desk of Miriam Stone


Rachel Carson and Silent Spring – 50 Years Later  
by Miriam Stone

While checking Rachel Carson’s insightful website on the use of lawn pesticides I became aware that 2012 is the 50th anniversary of Silent Spring, her groundbreaking book regarding the use of pesticides.

Carson was aware of the use of pesticides, but the consequences of their use hit home for her in 1958.  Her friend Olga Huckins had a bird sanctuary with three small ponds behind her home. The bird sanctuary and ponds were devastated by aerial spraying of DDT mixed in fuel oil by the State of Massachusetts in the summer of 1957. The birds died terrible deaths. Huckins called upon Carson to help her try to find someone who could stop the spraying of poisons.

At first she didn’t intend to write a book about pesticides. She approached others but no one was interested in doing the research. She finally decided that it was a topic she had to address. She said, “I may not like what I see, but it does no good to ignore it.”

At the time that she was doing her research and writing Silent Spring she was ill with cancer and she knew she was dying. Taking on this monumental effort would tax whatever strength she had left and would occupy her until she would become too sick to continue. She knew all these things but she began anyway and she fought this fight until she was unable to continue.

When published in 1962, Silent Spring was savagely attacked due to the nature of its subject. The book was seen as an attempt to turn back the clock and deprive humanity of chemical pesticides which, when used in the right way are a powerful tool. But Carson did not call for the abandonment of all chemical pesticides. She asked for a ban on DDT and asked that other chemicals be used more judiciously and that regulations for their manufacture and sale be considerably tightened. Finally, she asked that scientists redouble their efforts to find alternative methods for fighting pests.

Carson has said, “Only within the moment of time represented by the present century has one species – man – acquired significant power to alter the nature of his world.”

It is now fifty years later. Carson’s breakthrough book opened the door and others took up the fight she began. A  woman named Linda Lear, along with others began the rachelcarsoncouncil.org. Whenever I go to that website, I can literally stay on it for hours. There is so much information there and there is a statement that whatever you find there may be freely reproduced and used as long as you give credit to Linda Lear and the website.

The following are statistics from present day:
Farmers, golf-course attendants, lawn-care service workers, dogs and children whose parents apply pesticides for a living and dogs whose homes are located near marshes have an increased chance of developing certain types of cancer. Infants and children as well as young pets appear predisposed to higher levels of cancer in conjunction with household pesticide exposure.

Pesticide product labels do not include information on what may be a carcinogen. Most food labels do not now indicate when carcinogenic or pesticide residues may be present from agriculture.

This is just a sampling of the problems of pesticides and it is very one sided – my side, not my neighbors. There are ways in which to use household products that may be a little safer. There are also household products on the market today that are non toxic such as Seventh Generation Free and Clear or Greenworks, a product of Clorox that claims to be 99% naturally derived. Both have websites. www.seventhgeneration.com  and www.cloroxprofessional.com

The Environmental Protection Agency has a lot of current information on pesticides and alternatives to using them.

Information on pesticides and the dangers associated with specific chemicals is available from the National Pesticide Information Center (NPIC) 1-800-858-7378..

The Rachel Carson Association was founded for the integrity of the environment and the survival of living organisms. Everything on this website is free for the public to use and there is a fountain of information there.

Ask our Yocum Reference Librarians to assist you in using our online databases and our card catalog. The information that is available there is amazing.

If you use a lawn service, make it your business to know what is being put on your lawn. Don’t expect it to be readily labeled. The majority of chemicals used on people’s lawns to keep their grass green are the same chemicals that are sprayed on farmer’s crops. The difference is that when these chemicals get sprayed on crops, farmers have to stay out of the area for 72 hours and nothing can be sprayed within a 2 - 3 mile radius of homes, schools, and churches.

Rachel Carson said “One way to open your eyes is to ask yourself – What if I had never seen this before? What if I knew I would never see it again?

Rachel Carson was acutely aware of the fact that the very things she was fighting so hard to protect were things she would never see again.

You can find Silent Spring on the third floor of the library under the call numbers SB959 .C3 1994. We will be glad to help you if you can’t find it.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

From the Desk of Valerie Schaeffer

If you get tired of printing webpages full of stuff you don't need...check this site out. You just go to the site, and put the URL in the text book, and it will create a printer-friendly version of the webpage. http://www.printfriendly.com/