The Delaware Gazette

Use the new ‘self check-out’ at the Delaware County District Library

You’ve been ask­ing for it, and it’s finally here. What is it? Self-check-out at the Delaware (Main) Library! We have recently installed a com­puter sta­tion on the cir­cu­la­tion desk so you can now check out books, DVDs, audio books and other library items on your own.

Of course, our friendly, knowl­edge­able and help­ful cir­cu­la­tion asso­ciates are still always avail­able to check out library mate­r­ial for you, because we know that many of you are hap­pier with human inter­ac­tion. By the same token, how­ever, we also real­ize that for oth­ers, quickly and effi­ciently check­ing out your own mate­r­ial is won­der­ful cus­tomer ser­vice, allow­ing you to avoid a line and save time.

The Orange Branch Library has offered self-check-out since it opened in May 2011, and library users have taken great advan­tage of this ser­vice. In keep­ing with our cam­paign promise to update tech­nol­ogy at all county library loca­tions, we are installing self-check-out com­put­ers at the other branches, too, with that option being suc­cess­fully launched this week at the Delaware.

Using the self-check-out machine is easy, and we have pro­vided instruc­tions to help you. Feel free to give it a try, and if you run into an unex­pected prob­lem, don’t hes­i­tate to ask a staff mem­ber to help you.

We know your time is valu­able, and by giv­ing you the option of self-check-out, we can help you zip through the check-out process, but if your day is some­what less jam-packed, please know that we really enjoy chat­ting with you, too. Isn’t it nice to have a choice?

Did any U.S. pres­i­dent serve two non-consecutive terms?

Stephen Grover Cleve­land (March 18, 1837 — June 24, 1908) was the 22nd and 24th Pres­i­dent of the United States. Cleve­land is the only pres­i­dent to serve two non-consecutive terms (1885–1889 and 1893–1897) and there­fore is the only indi­vid­ual to be counted twice in the num­ber­ing of the pres­i­dents. He was the win­ner of the pop­u­lar vote for pres­i­dent three times — in 1884, 1888, and 1892 — and was the only Demo­c­rat elected to the pres­i­dency in the era of Repub­li­can polit­i­cal dom­i­na­tion that lasted from 1861 to 1913. Cleve­land was also the only pres­i­dent to be mar­ried in a White House cer­e­mony. He was 49 when he mar­ried 21-year-old Frances Fol­som. The wed­ding was a sim­ple affair, attended by close friends, fam­ily, and cab­i­net mem­bers and their wives. The recep­tion fea­tured John Phillip Sousa lead­ing the Marine Band, a 20-pound salmon and a 25-pound wed­ding cake. Pres­i­den­tial Trivia pro­vided this answer.

Will eat­ing car­rots really improve your eyesight?

Accord­ing to the Mayo Clinic Fam­ily Health Book, car­rots are high in vit­a­min A, a nutri­ent essen­tial for good vision. Eat­ing car­rots will pro­vide you with the small amount of vit­a­min A needed for good vision, but vit­a­min A isn’t lim­ited to car­rots; it can also be found in milk, cheese, egg yolk and liver.

What is the Civil­ian Con­ser­va­tion Corps?

The Civil­ian Con­ser­va­tion Corps (CCC) was a pub­lic work relief pro­gram that oper­ated from 1933 to 1942 in the United States for unem­ployed, unmar­ried men, ages 17–23. A part of the New Deal of Pres­i­dent Franklin D. Roo­sevelt, it pro­vided unskilled man­ual labor jobs related to the con­ser­va­tion and devel­op­ment of nat­ural resources in rural lands owned by fed­eral, state and local gov­ern­ments. Max­i­mum enroll­ment at any one time was 300,000; in nine years 2.5 mil­lion young men par­tic­i­pated in the CCC, which pro­vided them with shel­ter, cloth­ing, and food, together with a small wage of $30 a month ($25 of which had to be sent home to their fam­i­lies). Dur­ing the time of the CCC, vol­un­teers planted nearly 3 bil­lion trees to help refor­est Amer­ica, con­structed more than 800 parks nation­wide and upgraded most state parks, updated for­est fire fight­ing meth­ods, and built a net­work of ser­vice build­ings and pub­lic road­ways in remote areas. More infor­ma­tion is avail­able in World Book Encyclopedia.

If you have a ques­tion that you would like to see answered in this col­umn, mail it to Mary Jane San­tos, Delaware County Dis­trict Library, 84 E. Win­ter St., Delaware, OH 43015, or call us at 740–362-3861. You can also email your ques­tions by vis­it­ing the library’s web­site at delawarelibrary.org or directly to Mary Jane at mjsantos@delawarelibrary.org. No mat­ter how you con­tact us, we’re always glad you asked!

Mary Santos Posted by on Oct 19 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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