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The Red Book written and illustrated by Carl Jung

The most influential unpublished work in the history of psychology. When Carl Jung embarked on an extended self-exploration he called his “confrontation with the unconscious,” the heart of it was The Red Book, a large, illuminated volume he created between 1914 and 1930. Here he developed his principle theories—of the archetypes, the collective unconscious, and the process of individuation—that transformed psychotherapy from a practice concerned with treatment of the sick into a means for higher development of the personality.

While Jung considered The Red Book to be his most important work, only a handful of people have ever seen it. Now, in a complete facsimile and translation, it is available to scholars and the general public. It is an astonishing example of calligraphy and art on a par with The Book of Kells and the illuminated manuscripts of William Blake. This publication of The Red Book is a watershed that will cast new light on the making of modern psychology.
212 color illustrations. -
Amazon

Learn more about Carl Jung at the Wilkinson Public Library.

~ Faith

Screen-Writers in the Sky

Enjoy valuable one on one time with our industry experts throughout the three day event.

Join Screenwriter
Derek Haas (co-wrote the screenplays for 3:10 To Yuma, starring Russell Crowe and Wanted, starring Angelina Jolie.)

Lary Simpson producer of Enemy of the State starring Will Smith and Bad Company starring Sir Anthony Hopkins and Chris Rock.

David Trottier screenwriter and author of "The Screenwriter's Bible" and "Freelance Writer's Bible"

Linda Seger author and consultant on over 2000 scripts, including over 40 produced feature films and about 35 produced television projects.

Michele Wallerstein author and screenwriter and television writers agent.

Learn about the
full schedule at the Wilkinson Public Library.

~
Faith

Crosby, Stills & Nash Box Set

Crosby, Stills & Nash Box Set

CSN is a box set released in 1991 by Crosby, Stills and Nash. It features material from their albums as a group in addition to selections from their various solo and duet albums. It also features many outtakes, including from sessions that did not result in an album by the group. Highlights include a cover of The Beatles' "Blackbird" and the full length take of "Almost Cut My Hair." - Wikipedia

Watch videos of CSN.

Request music from Crosby, Stills & Nash at the Wilkinson Public Library.

~ Faith

Travel the world through Fiction


Here's a great list of novels that take you away....worlds away. Discover a new author and a new country today. Includes titles like WHITE TIGER set in India, Jorge Amado's GABRIELA, CLOVE AND CINNAMON set in Brazil and THE SHADOW OF THE WIND set in Barcelona.

White Light/Black Rain

White Light/Black Rain
This is a surreal, heartrending film about the atomic bombs dropped on Japan and the people affected, but it is also surprisingly tender and very touching. Despite the gloomy subject matter, there is humor and an endearing showing of human tenderness that balances the suffering. Highly recommended.

Check it out.

~Ty

Weaving Using Spider Silk


An 11-foot-long cloth of thread from golden orb spiders will be at the American Museum of Natural History starting Thursday.

For anyone considering going into the business of manufacturing traditional textiles using the filaments extracted from the spinnerets of the golden orb spider of Madagascar, here are a few guidelines to keep in mind:

The largest spiders, the females, can grow to about the size of a small adult human hand, with hairy stiletto legs and the ability to eat large, flying insects.

Only the females produce the silk, which is renowned for both its striking saffron color and its tensile strength (five to six times stronger than steel by weight). But these females are notoriously cannibalistic and if left to their own devices will quickly reduce the entire silk assembly line to arachnid carnage.

They don’t seem to want to work in the winter, and when it rains too much, their silk becomes viscous and cannot be used.

And if the spiders in the factory begin to disappear mysteriously, it might be because, in Madagascar, one of the poorest countries in the world, it is believed by some that eating these spiders, fried, is good for the throat or just good eating.

“There was, shall we say, a fairly steep learning curve,” said Simon Peers, a British art historian and textile expert who has lived in Madagascar for two decades. Five years ago Mr. Peers and Nicholas Godley, an American fashion designer also living on the island, began a partnership to do what no one there, or anywhere, had tried for more than 100 years: to harness spiders to make silk in the same way that silkworm cocoons have been used for thousands of years.... - New York Times
By Randy Kennedy
Published: September 22, 2009


Visit The New York Times for the entire article.

Learn more about spiders at the Wilkinson Public Library.

~ Faith

Cast Your Vote
























Join in and vote. The National Book Foundation is garnering the public's opinions on who wrote the best national Book Award fiction. Go to their site and cast your vote.You decide! The above six Finalists for The Best of the National Book Awards Fiction were selected by 140 writers from across the country. Click on one of the circles below to make your voice heard and then click on the submit button. Your email address will then be entered for a drawing to win two tickets to the 60th National Book Awards on November 18, 2009 and two nights in the Marriott Hotel Downtown, compliments of Marriott!




























MV Town Council to look at removing vendor carts


MV Town Council to look at removing vendor carts
Cart vendors organizing for October council meeting

By BEN FORNELL
September 23, 2009


Vendor carts may be disappearing from Mountain Village.

Last season, skiers could get their boards waxed or pick up a hot crepe from one of several entrepreneurs on the brick plazas surrounding the base of the ski lifts. But if a group of business owners has its way, the carts won’t be licensed again for this winter.

At the September Mountain Village Town Council meeting, a vocal group showed up to oppose the vendor carts, saying the tiny businesses were cutting into the bottom lines of larger outfits with more overhead costs. Their ranks included owners from Tracks Restaurant and Telluride Sports.

The business owners contend that the carts are harming the permanent business community in Mountain Village. The town council received five letters from business owners before their Sept. 17 meeting, many stating that, in a time of economic downturn, the council ought to help businesses that have made long-term investments in the community.

Many restaurants complained that while they stare at empty tables they can see long lines at the food carts.

“The temporary carts are not required to invest in Mountain Village the way businesses in commercial spaces do,” read part of a letter from Dave Riley, CEO of Telluride Ski and Golf. He added that traditional brick-and-mortar establishments have a slew of taxes, capital expenditures, and fees from the Telluride Mountain Village Owners Association.

“Without the burden of those fixed costs, vending carts are allowed to skim off the top of year-round merchants, coming in only during the high seasons. They do nothing to contribute to the year round economic vitality of the core,” Riley wrote.

Most business owners’ letters stated that, at one time, the carts were a necessity. Fifteen years ago, Mountain Village only had two or three eateries, and the carts not only fed hungry skiers but also drew them deeper into the Village Core, into areas with other businesses.

But now that the village has 15 restaurants with another two coming online this winter, some restaurants feel the village has outgrown the need for carts, and established eateries deserve every chance to turn a profit after a dismal summer.

But the cart owners — of whom there are three — feel their businesses only barely overlap with products and services being offered at more traditional businesses.

“If you have problems with a food cart in front of your business, then you have more problems than a food cart in front of your business,” said Erick Mosher, who owns Diggity Dogs with his wife, Audrey. They have a mobile stand location in Telluride and a physical store in Mountain Village. “The only reason I can pay the rent in my store is because I had the opportunity to run a cart up here for years,” he said.

In many ways, Mosher is the model many Mountain Village business owners feel all carts should follow — morph into full tax-paying members of the economic community or disappear.

“It’s tough for me to believe a small business like mine is hurting a big business like Tracks,” said Bertrand Marchal, who operates the crepe stand in Mountain Village. He said he takes in $300 to $400 in gross revenues on a good day. Mosher said $500 before expenses was often his top mark on a booming day at the hot dog stand.

“I am a small business, out in the cold, serving a kind of food no other restaurant is serving,” Marchal said.

He got the idea for the stand from his childhood in the French Alps, where he learned to ski and where every resort has someone flipping the thin French pancakes at a small stand, ready to fill with things like chocolate, fruit and Nutella.

“I was up there before many of the restaurants opened,” Marchal said, who opened his cart in 2001 and saw it bring more skiers into the Core. He said his business runs symbiotically with many of the restaurants as many of his customers are kids, and his peak hour is after the lifts close. His theory is that, while parents are inside enjoying an adult beverage and resting their sore legs, kids are clamoring for a crepe.

And the carts do pay tax — $200 for the winter during the 2008-09 season. The fee will most likely be raised to $300 a month for this season, pending a final council approval.

And while the carts in Mountain Village are paying to use about 30 square feet of plaza space, many businesses set up tables and chairs on municipal property without paying any additional taxes, according to Mountain Village Mayor Bob Delves.

“The carts are kind of part of the culture,” Delves said. “I ride a lot of lifts. Our customers value the products and services these carts provide as well as the services these other businesses provide. Individual businesses are looking at a shrinking pie and I understand that sense of desperation.”

The Mountain Village Town Council will discuss all sides of the argument before making a decision on whether to license carts at their Oct. 15 meeting.

Delves said he is personally opposed to pulling the rug out from the carts all at once this season, but thinks phasing them out may eventually be a good move for the Village.

“The challenge is to figure out where the level playing field is,” Delves said. “It seems to be hotter topic than you would think.” - Telluride Daily Planet

Mountain Village Considers Removing All Vendor Permits

The Mountain Village Town Council is considering removing all vendor permits from the Moutain Village Core because Tracks and T-Sports are complaining that the vendors are taking their business!!

Support local business by letting the council know how you feel about this issue!

Krishnamurti's Philosoply

When asked in 1974 by his biographer, Mary Lutyens, to define his teachings Krishnamurti wrote the following:

"The core of Krishnamurti's teaching is contained in the statement he made in 1929 when he said :

'Truth is a pathless land'. Man cannot come to it through any organisation, through any creed, through any dogma, priest or ritual, not through any philosophical knowledge or psychological technique. He has to find it through the mirror of relationship, through the understanding of the contents of his own mind, through observation and not through intellectual analysis or introspective dissection. Man has built in himself images as a fence of security - religious, political, personal. These manifest as symbols, ideas, beliefs. The burden of these images dominates man's thinking, his relationships and his daily life. These images are the causes of our problems for they divide man from man. His perception of life is shaped by the concepts already established in his mind. The content of his consciousness is his entire existence. This content is common to all humanity. The individuality is the name, the form and superficial culture he acquires from tradition and environment. The uniqueness of man does not lie in the superficial but in complete freedom from the content of his consciousness, which is common to all mankind. So he is not an individual.

Freedom is not a reaction; freedom is not a choice. It is man's pretence that because he has choice he is free. Freedom is pure observation without direction, without fear of punishment and reward. Freedom is without motive; freedom is not at the end of the evolution of man but lies in the first step of his existence. In observation one begins to discover the lack of freedom. Freedom is found in the choiceless awareness of our daily existence.

Thought is time. Thought is born of experience, of knowledge, which are inseparable from time. Time is the psychological enemy of man. Our action is based on knowledge and therefore time, so man is always a slave to the past.

When man becomes aware of the movement of his own consciousness he will see the division between the thinker and the thought, the observer and the observed, the experiencer and the experience. He will discover that this division is an illusion. Then only is there pure observation which is insight without any shadow of the past . This timeless insight brings about a deep radical mutation in the mind.

Total negation is the essence of the positive. When there is negation of all those things which are not love – desire, pleasure – then love is, with its compassion and intelligence." -
Krishnamurti Foundation of America

Learn more about Krishnamurti at the Wilkinson Public Library.

~ Faith

Mercury in Flu Shots

SHOULD YOU GET THE FLU SHOT?

News reports have been flooding us with articles warning that the impending flu season may be the worst in years. Even though it is difficult to separate the facts from the hype, a close evaluation of the flu vaccine will reveal that serious questions must be raised about the recommendations that are routinely touted, namely high efficacy with little risk. Anyone considering a flu shot should become informed about the substances coming through that needle, and should be determined to investigate the safety and efficacy issues that are still unresolved.

The Vaccine Virus
Each year, a new vaccine is developed that contains three different viruses (one influenza B and two influenza A strains). CDC officials select the new viruses based on which viruses were prevalent during the flu season in China and Australia the previous year. The CDC admits that the viruses selected for the new vaccine are chosen on the basis of an “educated guess.” [i]

What’s in a Flu Shot?
The influenza virus is grown in “specific pathogen-free” (SPF) eggs. Eggs are tested for a variety of agents—usually between 23 and 31—to confirm the absence of those specific pathogens. Laboratories limit the number of agents that are screened due to the shear abundance of potential viruses and/or bacteria to choose from. In addition, screening for every potential agent would be cost prohibitive.[ii] If none of the tested agents are detected, the vaccine is reported as “pathogen free.”

However, it should be understood that there is a distinct difference between “pathogen free” and “specific pathogen-free.” In its July 1996 report, the Institute of Medicine acknowledged that “although it is not possible to produce a completely uncontaminated animal, it is possible to produce an animal [or egg] certified to be free of specific pathogens.”[iii] Viruses that are harmless to their animal host, however, may be potentially harmful to humans.

During the manufacturing process, antibiotics (neomycin, polymyxin B and gentamicin) are added to eliminate stray bacteria found in the mixture. The final solution can contain the following additives in any combination: Triton X-100 (a detergent); polysorbate 80 (a potential carcinogen); gelatin; formaldehyde; and residual egg proteins. In addition, many of the influenza vaccines still contain thimerosal as a preservative. Thimerosal (mercury) is being investigated for its link to brain injury and autoimmune disease.

Does the Flu Shot Protect?
There are no guarantees that the influenza viruses selected for the vaccine will be the identical strains circulating during a given flu season. In fact, it has recently been announced that this year's flu vaccine does not include the strain that is being reported by doctors in the community called the “A Fujian” strain. Outbreaks have been reported in Texas, Colorado and elsewhere[iv] that involve strains that do not match the current flu vaccine. CDC tests have confirmed that more than 80 per cent of the 55 strains of influenza virus isolated thus far are the A Fujian strain. Even so, the CDC still maintains that the current vaccine could provide cross-protection against the new variant, but the fact is, no one knows for sure.

Moreover, the majority of illnesses characterized by fever, fatigue, cough and aching muscles are not caused by the influenza virus. Non-influenza viruses (e.g., rhinoviruses respiratory syncytial virus [RSV], adenoviruses, and parainfluenza viruses) can cause symptoms referred to influenza-like illnesses (ILI). Certain bacteria, such as Legionella spp., Chlamydia pneumoniae, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Streptococcus pneumoniae, have been documented as the causes of ILI.[v]

Notably, these microbes are not part of the flu vaccine. Unless an organism’s antigen is contained within the vaccine, there is no protection conferred by the vaccine. It is estimated that most adults will average 1-3 episodes of ILI, and most children will average 3-6 episodes. The CDC also admits that “many persons who have been vaccinated against influenza can still get the flu”[vi]

Targeting the Elderly
The flu vaccine is generally recommended for persons aged 65 and older, and those with medical conditions who could experience serious complications from the flu. Medical journals report broad differences in effectiveness for the elderly, ranging from 0 to 85%.
The CDC states that 90% of deaths from influenza occur among the elderly. Considering that nearly 65% of all deaths (from any cause) occur in this age group, it is nearly impossible to prove that flu shots significantly increase life expectancy in this group. The truth is that most people—young and old—will weather a bout of the flu without hospitalization or complications.

A Serious Concern: Alzheimer’s Disease
Hugh Fudenberg, MD, an immunogeneticist and biologist with nearly 850 papers published in peer review journals, has reported that if an individual had five consecutive flu shots between 1970 and 1980 (the years studied), his/her chances of getting Alzheimer's Disease is ten times higher than if they had zero, one, or two shots.[vii]

Dr. Boyd Haley, Professor and Chair of the Department of Chemistry at the University of Kentucky, Lexington has done extensive research in the area of mercury toxicity and the brain. Haley’s research has established a likely connection between mercury toxicity and Alzheimer’s disease. [viii] In a paper published in collaboration with researchers at University of Calgary, Haley stated that “seven of the characteristic markers that we look for to distinguish Alzheimer's disease can be produced in normal brain tissues, or cultures of neurons, by the addition of extremely low levels of mercury.”[ix]

Does this prove that the mercury contained in the influenza shot can be directly linked to Alzheimer’s? No, absolutely not. But further research in this area is critically needed because the absence of proof is not the “proof of absence.”[x]

Flu Vaccine Now for Children
The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) adopted a resolution effective March 1, 2003 that expanded the use of the influenza vaccine to include children aged 6-23 months. The recommendations also included vaccinating those aged 2 to 18 years who live in households containing children younger than 2 years of age.[xi]

The flu vaccine most commonly given to children is Fluzone, a trivalent vaccine grown in chicken eggs. Harvested with formaldehyde and containing the recommended ratio of 15 ug of each of the three prototype viral strains, each dose of Fluzone also contains 25 ug of mercury.[xii] The new CDC recommendations include giving the influenza vaccine to children beginning at six months of age and then annually, for the rest of their lives. Children less than age 9 receiving their first flu shot, two doses of vaccine are recommended, with a minimum interval of one month between the two doses. However, the CDC does not provide a direct reference to substantiate this recommendation.[xiii]

On June 17, 2003, the FDA approved an intranasal influenza vaccine for use in healthy persons aged 5–49 years. Flumist is a live-virus vaccine that can cause a litany of problems.
Alternatives?

If you choose not to receive the flu shot, have a discussion with your doctor regarding other options. However, some simple and possibly quite effective things you can do for yourself to prevent the flu include: 1) avoid white sugar;[xiv] 2) exercise regularly; 3) get adequate sleep; 4) eat a healthy diet, omitting trans-fats; 5) drink plenty of purified water daily and 6) wash your hands. A common way people contract viral illnesses is by rubbing their nose or their eyes after their hands have been contaminated with a virus. The CDC states, “the most important thing you can do to keep from getting sick is to wash your hands.”[xv]

We are so used to taking medications—for prevention and treatment—that it is difficult to comprehend that these modest recommendations are really the most powerful ways to minimize the likelihood of getting the flu.

Making the Decision
You may decide to consult a physician who is schooled in alternative medicine to assess a variety of options for you and your family. What is most important, in the end, is to become as informed as possible regarding your options for keeping healthy and avoiding the flu. - Moms against Mercury
Learn more about vaccinations at the Wilkinson Public Library.

Entertaining and Deft


I wish Jancee Dunn was my best friend, then she could call me everyday and update me on the hilarious insights she has. Whether she is describing the JC Penney catalog from 1975, "stalking" the house she grew up in, binging on healthy junk food with her flamboyantly cynical friend, or escorting her mother to get a tattoo, I want to be there. Jancee Dunn has a hip and accurate eye when describing all the episodes that make life entertaining and humorous. Quick, light, and laugh out loud silly.

The Beader's Bible

This is an indispensable guide to beads and beading techniques, presenting essential beading know-how together with a wide range of inspirational projects, tips and ideas. Each chapter focuses on a different beading technique, guiding you through the basic skills, tools and materials, before tackling more advanced techniques and projects.It features over 30 'Bead Something Now' projects, ranging from beautiful bags and jewellery to stylish scarves and accessories - perfect excuses for trying out your new skills! Easy-to-follow step-by-step instructions, clear diagrams and stunning photography combine to create the must-have resource for beaders of all abilities. - Amazon

Learn more about beadwork at the Wilkinson Public Library.

~ Faith


Denver...and all things Colorado from the Huffington Post


Denver and all things Colorado launches with news, politics and more from the well-known Huffington Post Blog.

Sick Around the World


To learn more about Health Care systems in the world, check out this movie. Or do your own research with these links:

Sick Around the World

America's Health Rankings

National Coalition on Health Care

California HealthCare Foundation

RESEARCH ON YOUR OWN
To find articles in magazines and newspapers on Health Care in America, use the Library’s
Databases found on the e-Resources page

Use the keywords: health care reform or health care insurance

For more information about these resources contact a Service Specialist for assistance with your search:
970-728-4519 ext. 33 or askus@telluridelibrary.org

Clean Water


A great article in the New York Times about Clean Water, which as a need is pretty basic. Read it here. Also includes information on how to check the water in your area. Here's a link for Colorado.
http://www.epa.gov/safewater/labs/index.html
--Sarah

Genuine Love

I have never understood how a genuine, elementary, thoroughly true love can remain unrequited; since such a love is nothing but the urgent and blessed appeal for another person to be beautiful, abundant, great, intense, unforgettable, nothing but the surging commitment for him to amount to something.

And tell me, who would be in a position to refuse this appeal when it is directed at him. When it elects him from among millions where he might have lived obscured by his fate or unattainable in the midst of fame. No one can seize, take and contain within himself such love. It is so absolutely intended, to be passed, onward beyond the individual and needs the beloved only for the ultimate charge that will propel its future orbiting among the stars. - Rainer Maria Rilke


~ Faith

Fundraiser for New Montessori School

Hello friends,

We will have a yard sale on the 19th of September on 420 West Colorado.
We would like to raise part of the appr. $1500 we have to pay for the zoning variance to able to get Miss Csilla's Montessori School licensed.
If you have any items you would like to donate to the cause please bring it buy on Saturday, the 18th of September.
420 West Colorado is two houses down from the yarn store across the street. We will be there as early as 8:30 and we only plan on having the sale for one day.
If you have things to donate but that day does not work for you, you can also drop everything in Honga's garage on Wednesday, Thursday or Friday before the sale and we will take them to the yard sale on Saturday morning from there. Here address is 800 Shadow Lane, turn left on Laurel from East Colorado and you basically will run into her garage on the corner.


Please forward this email to your friends or to anybody who you think would be interested.

I appreciate your help and hope to see you there!

Blessings, Miss Csilla

National Geographic

From the time I was a child, I've enjoyed getting lost in the pages of National Geographic. With great diversity, this national treasure has treated its readers with entertaining and enlightening essays covering topics such as: geography, archaeology, astronomy, natural science, conservation, culture, and history.

Read National Geographic articles from the '40s to today at the Wilkinson Public Library.

Magazines are located downstairs in the magazine room and upstairs next to the study cubbys.

~Ty

Darkly comic, but in a good way


I laughed, I recoiled, I related, I even had a wee cry. Jonathan Tropper's This Is Where I Leave You is a week in the roller coaster life of Judd Foxman. Judd is plagued by his midlife crisis and a variety of other rapidly eroding life situations. Tropper's insights on the modern man and woman are keen and hilarious. This is not a book for the easily offended or the prudish. It is a humorous tale with apt descriptions that make you cheer for Judd and his travails.

Netherland


A great read! What a good novel should be: prosaic, insightful and with memorable characters. This I definitely recommend.
Check it out!
--Sarah

The Parasite Hit List

Parasites

What's gotten into you? In this hour we explore nature's moochers - the good, the bad, and the hideous. We have stories of lethargic farmers, zombie cockroaches, and even mind-controlled humans (kinda, maybe). Could parasites be the shadowy hands that pull the strings of life?

After releasing our Parasites episode we wanted to share some gloriously gross parasite videos that served to inspire us and Carl Zimmer. We hope you enjoy them as much as we did. Thanks to Carl Zimmer for all of the parasitic help!:

Jewel Wasp and Cockroach
Schistosoma Mansoni Pair
Wasp and Caterpillar






Learn more about parasites at the Wilkinson Public Library.

~Faith




What Facebook Quizzes Know About You

What Facebook Quizzes Know About You

The Northern California chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has put together a campaign to raise awareness of privacy issues surrounding Facebook applications, in particular quizzes. According to this group, the millions of Facebook users taking quizzes are revealing far more personal information to application developers than they are aware of. This is mostly due to the fact that Facebook's default privacy settings allow access to all your profile information whether or not your profile is set to "private." Even worse, the ACLU reports that even if you shun quizzes yourself, your profile info is revealed when one of your friends takes a quiz. Want to see how bad the problem is? Just take the ACLU's Facebook Quiz and prepare to be shocked.

As any regular Facebook user knows, quizzes are some of the most popular applications in use on the social network. Every day, our News Feeds are filled with everything from the latest variation on the "5 Things" theme to the "What (insert popular movie title) character are you?" and more. But these seemingly innocuous time wasters could have dangerous privacy implications if they ended up being distributed by malicious app developers who want access to Facebook's treasure trove of personal data.

The Danger of Quizzes
With each question in the ACLU's Privacy Quiz, you're not only told what information a quiz author can see - you're shown it. For example, after answering the first question, you learn that almost everything on your profile, even if you use privacy settings to limit access, is available to the quiz. Then, a graphic is shown which reveals selected information retrieved from your profile including hometown, groups you belong to, events attended, favorite books, and more.

The second question is even more disturbing. It informs you that everything on your profile is made available to the developers when your friends take a quiz. To drive this point home, the ACLU's Quiz loads up information pulled from your friends' profiles and displays that data below the answer for your perusal. Here, information on your friends is shown including hometowns, favorite books, political views, networks, birthdays, number of wall posts, and even personal photos. Thanks to the quiz, all that info which you can see on your friends' profiles is now available to the quiz author, too.

Lest you think your info is safe because somewhere, somehow Facebook is looking out for you, the third question shatters any illusions you may have about that, too. According to the answer to this quiz question, not only do Facebook's default privacy settings do nothing to prevent application developers from scouring your information, Facebook also doesn't screen developers for trustworthiness, nor do they require the developer to comply with a privacy policy (something we've mentioned before). It's also noted that Facebook does not use any technical measures to limit how developers can collect and use personal information. Says Chris Conley, a technology fellow with the ACLU, it's difficult to know how developers use this data, which could, in theory, be collected and sold for marketing and advertising campaigns.

Finally, the last question prompts you to take action. When the quiz asks you what you should do, the correct answer is: "demand the right to control my information without sacrificing the right to use new technology." To get the word out there, the ACLU suggests you update your privacy settings, share their quiz on Facebook, and sign their online petition.

Is This True?
The nature of the quiz makes it sound a bit like fear-mongering, especially with statements like this: "Once details about your personal life are collected by a quiz developer, who knows where they could end up or how they could be used. Shared? Sold? Turned over to the government?" However, outside of these overly dramatic tactics, the claims made by the ACLU are true. According to CNET, Facebook doesn't even deny that quiz developers have access to this sort of information. The company does point out that users can limit how much information applications (including friends' applications) can see by tweaking their privacy settings.

Note: To do this yourself, go to Settings -> Privacy Settings -> Applications. From there, you can uncheck the boxes next to the items which you don't want apps to have access to.

Still, the ACLU suggests that access to personal information such as this be opt-in rather than opt-out, as it is now. Facebook spokesman Barry Schnitt says the company "generally agrees" with the ACLU's recommendations and notes that the social network recently disabled hundreds of applications that were inconsistent with Facebook Platform policies. He also mentions the company has been working with the Canadian Privacy Commissioner, Jennifer Stoddart, to improve user data controls on Platform.

This is just one of the concerns that will be addressed later today when Stoddart announces the agreement that has been reached between her country and the social network in terms of privacy protocols. Stoddart ruled last month that Facebook had 30 days to come up with a plan to comply with Canada's Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act or face court action. - ReadWriteWeb


Learn more about internet safety measures at the Wilkinson Public Library.

~ Faith

Solar Panels at the Wilkinson Public Library

Wilkinson Public Library ~ Photovoltaic Array

You can see the array and energy collected at the library’s kiosk. This site has some interesting tidbits regarding carbon offsets. Take a look now!

Return on Investment: Why Solar makes sense
Bottom line, if you don’t install solar you will never see a return on your investment, so is paying the utility company for 100% of your power every month a smart way to spend your money?
Our research that we have gathered from financial advisors and solar websites indicate that the annual return on investment for solar is consistently 5%, and that is calculated using current utility rates. When you consider that the price for utilities go up 4% per year on average, then 5% is a very modest estimate.
Other factors to weigh when thinking of installing solar? How about the cleaner air that comes from burning less coal and wood, and reduction of mercury in water? Your home will appreciate $20,000 for every $1,000 you save on utility bills every year. Studies have shown that buyers will purchase a home with solar over a comparable home without. (Something to consider in these economic times) Plus, it looks cool on your roof and it is good for your karma!
How energy efficient is your home? Get the facts from Brian Kingsford at San Juan Energy Solutions.
Energy Saving Tip
Rain is abundant this gardening season. If you are one of those gardeners who wish to assure the yard stays green, use this watering guideline. Water before 10 am, and after 6 pm. Cooler temperatures won't evaporate the water coming from the hose as quickly. Also the plants leaves can burn in the bright sunlight with the moisture on it. (kind of like putting a magnifying glass on the leaves!) - Alternative Power Enterprises

healing spaces: the science of place and well-being

This book describes how the places we inhabit impact our health and the way that our daily life plays out. An interesting read discussing nature and physical space.
Check it out today!
--Sarah

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood

Play games, watch videos and sing songs as you visit with Mister Rogers and learn about the world around you. And parents can not only play along but find

Series Philosophy

Many people witness the "magic" of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, its profound and enduring appeal to young children, and the positive effect it has on them. But often those same people also say they don't understand why the series works so well.

The reason isn't magic at all. The main focus of this television series is on children's emotional development, and its success is based on a combination of several factors, outlined here in brief:

I. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood encourages children to feel good about themselves. Many experts believe that the development of healthy self-esteem is one of the most critical tasks of growing up-and that self-esteem plays a major role in determining what kind of person a child will become.

Mister Rogers consistently supports a child's sense of self-worth through the crucial early years, with their various frustrations and inevitable failures. He helps young children understand the important ways in which they contribute to the life of their families, and he tells them, "You've made this day a special day just by being you. You are the only person like you in this whole world. And people can like you just because you're you."


II. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood helps children learn the skills needed for growing up. The series gives gentle yet firm support to children as they learn the timeless skills involved in growing up: cooperation, persistence, patience, sharing, and the ability to pay attention and to manage frustration. Mister Rogers helps children acknowledge feelings and learn to control impulses. At the same time, the series encourages the development of healthy curiosity and imagination. In effect, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood helps young viewers learn the skills that are the foundation for learning readiness.

III. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood is made for children. Some adults feel the series is slow and simple. It is slow-paced, but its simplicity is deceptive. Research clearly shows that's how young children learn best. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood is carefully designed to speak effectively to preschool-aged children. Mister Rogers talks in ways children understand, at a pace they can absorb, and with a consistency that creates a calm, safe place for preschoolers to visit. He leaves time for children to reflect and respond, and he takes time to prepare them for what will come next and to explain what has happened before.

The visually-simple sets and puppets, matching the capabilities of young children, allow children to use their own imaginations, and encourage children to create their own playthings and to engage in imaginative play.

It all works: millions of children in three generations have responded with trust and love.


IV. There are solid reasons behind what's included in Mister Rogers' Neighborhood programs. The series is based on widely-accepted principles of child development and child psychology. Fred Rogers, members of his staff, and consultants to the series have both expertise and experience in the field.

Subjects like children's fear of separation from parents, confusion between reality and fantasy, and fear of "being so mad you could bite" may seem simple (and even silly) to adults, but people who work with young children know those topics are primary issues for preschoolers struggling to understand their world and their place in it. Children love and trust Mister Rogers because he addresses those issues and others like them in an open and direct manner.


V. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood encourages appreciation of and respect for others. Mister Rogers strongly endorses every person's individual worth. ("Each one of us is valuable," he says, "and there is nobody in the whole world exactly like you.") He is genuinely interested in visitors to his "Neighborhood" and shows unfailing respect for and courtesy toward everyone with whom he interacts. In effect, he consistently models the appreciation of inherent individual worthiness that is the cornerstone of a successful multicultural society.

VI. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood promotes values that are universally important to children and families. Fads and fashion -- in television and in society -- change constantly, but the values on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood are timeless and universal. The basic developmental tasks of early childhood -- the things preschoolers need to learn and understand to grow into succeeding stages of life -- remain constant regardless of time, place, or societal changes. So do the values that enable families (and whole societies) to nurture their children and help them grow.

These values, shared by Family Communications, professionals, and families across the country, include:
◦Children are precious, and their earliest years are exceedingly important in laying the foundation for who and what they become.
◦Children grow best when raised in responsible and caring ways.
◦The ability to love and be loved is supremely important in every person's life, and that ability is best nurtured in the early years.
◦Discipline and control are essential to healthy living -- and the best discipline and control come from within.
◦It is important to recognize the worth and the unique abilities of each individual child. Children can -- and do -- contribute in many ways to the life of a family.

Parents are the most important people in children's lives; they are the premiere models and the final arbiters of a family's values.


~ Faith

Seattle Library Budget Cuts ~ Sad sign of the times

The Seattle Public Library system will be closed Aug. 31 through Sept. 7

All Library locations will be closed Monday, Aug. 31 through Sunday, Sept. 6 due to citywide budget cuts.

Please note: Monday, Sept. 7 is the Labor Day holiday and all libraries will be closed. Regular Library operations will resume Tuesday, Sept. 8.

No Library services will be available during the one-week closure. Learn more...

No Library computers will be available. See a list of north, south and central Seattle locations with free Internet access.

The systemwide closure, along with other cuts, will help the Library meet a 2 percent budget reduction - about $1 million. The closure will save approximately $655,000.

To leave a comment for the city librarian or the Library board, call 206-233-3905.


~ Faith