With extraordinary vision to provide for the future welfare of the county, the Cumberland County Commission, under the leadership of Mayor Brock Hill, voted in 2008 to build a new 21st century library for our community. With additional help from Mayor J.H. Graham III and the Crossville City Council, our new "community living room" is under construction in downtown Crossville.
Libraries are not just libraries anymore. Certainly, the focus on knowledge as contained in books, computers, CDs, magazines and other sources will be retained, but there also will be a large children's library that will feature a playing carousel and a story time mini-theater. In this portion of the library, children will find that learning can be fun, and what a glorious gift to their lives that will be. As a former teacher, I can tell you, without reservation, that the ability to read well and to love learning through reading is the key to a successful academic life for any child. The earlier a child is introduced to reading and the knowledge that can be gained through the written word, the better.
Additionally, the new library will contain a small café where one may buy a beverage and perhaps pastries and snacks to be enjoyed while resting and/or reading in a quiet atmosphere. On a larger scale, a community room with a capacity for 300 persons will be available for meetings and gatherings. There also will be areas for smaller meetings, study and research.
In 2008, there were more than 115,000 visits made to the library and more than 185,000 books, CDs and other materials borrowed by those visitors. If our experience follows that of other cities and counties that have built new libraries in the past few years, the use of our new library will double or more.
The new Art Circle Public Library is named for a local women's club that exclusively provided library services for our community for over 50 years, and continues to support our county's library efforts to this day. This group, along with the Board of Trustees of the ACPL, the Friends of the Library and other interested parties are all looking forward eagerly to the opening of our beautiful new library facility, which is tentatively scheduled for October.
To make that opening a reality, The Art Circle Public Library Foundation needs your help. The foundation, formed in 2008, received a nonprofit charter for the express purpose of raising private funds to support, furnish and equip our new library. The members of the board, of which I am honored to be chairperson, and 20 associates have spent hundreds of hours in fundraising in recent months. We have appealed to our school children's parents, we have made personal visits, we have appeared at club meetings with our messages, we have utilized the media, and now we are asking all citizens to help us complete this wonderful project that will usher in a new era in the educational and cultural life of our community.
In this edition of the Chronicle, you will find a form to use to purchase a children's library patio stone that will be engraved to honor your family, your children or grandchildren, or anyone whom you choose, as a lasting part of our new Art Circle Public Library.
I hope you will join us in our efforts to make lifetime learning a reality for everyone in Crossville and Cumberland County.
Opinion
GUEST COLUMN: Libraries not just libraries anymore
- Opinion
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Gary's World: The magical Star Wars summer of '77
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away...
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Lion and the Lamb: When politics and religion meet
Several wealthy contributors to the Republican presidential campaign are once again trying to figure out how they can use a video clip containing three words that the Rev. Jeremiah Wright used in a sermon on April 13, 2003. Wright, now retired, had been pastor of the 6,600-member Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago when Barack Obama was a member there.
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Random Thoughts: Returning vets fight fire
Cemeteries are given special attention this week in preparation for Memorial Day next Monday. During the Civil War gracious ladies of the south laid flowers on the graves of fallen soldiers from both sides. The custom spread across the country and was called Decoration Day until the early 20th century.
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Tidbits: Finding more time in your day
If we had another two hours in every day, we'd all probably still be begging for just a little bit more to get all our stuff done before that clock strikes midnight and it's game over.
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Stumptalk: Hooray for the innovators
In his brilliant article in the Free Market, Daniel Sanchez says, “There will always be a one-percent. The well-being of the 99-percent depends on who makes up the 1-percent: innovative entrepreneurs or the state and its cronies. This in turn depends on the ideologies adopted by the 99-percent.” This is the way societies have always been organized and always will be.
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GARY'S WORLD: Graduates, create your own opportunities
Time flies. One day you have a baby boy who is fascinated with stuffed Miss Piggy and Kermit rattles and the next day he wants to wear his cowboy boots and hat with every outfit no matter what the occasion. Before you know it, he's playing in the elementary school band, going into high school, learning how to drive, driving to school, going to prom and graduating.
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RANDOM THOUGHTS: Truly a January in May
“It’s June in January” became a popular standard after Bing Crosby introduced the song in 1934. A strange thing happened last week. I call it a tale of ‘It’s January in May.’
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LION AND THE LAMB: Our challenged nation
Three major social justice issues have been a source of contention in our nation over the years, and interestingly, each of them has involved the subject of equality.
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WE THE PEOPLE: Repressing the ‘Grapes of Wrath’
Sometimes a hole appears, ever so briefly, in the curtain that hides the plans of those who control our government. One such opening occurred when Alan Greenspan testified to the Federal Reserve Board on Feb. 26, 1997. During that testimony, Greenspan revealed that “worker insecurity” was (in his view) a boon to the economy, allowing productivity to increase without causing workers to demand increased earnings.
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TIDBITS: Never stop moving forward, grads
This week is a week of celebration. According to my files of graduating seniors, Cumberland County will see more than 550 students earning their high school diplomas this week. Now, those youngsters will venture out into the world, armed with the knowledge and character instilled in them by their parents, brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts, uncles, teachers, principals, classmates, coaches and others.
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Gary's World: The magical Star Wars summer of '77


