Feature

Groundhog Day

Groundhog Day, celebrated on February 2, has its roots in an ancient Celtic celebration called Imbolog, marking the midpoint between the winter solstice and the spring equinox. This was a time to celebrate having made it halfway through winter. The superstition arose that if the weather was fair on Imbolog, the second half of the winter would be cold and stormy, but if the weather was cold and overcast or stormy, the second half of the winter would be mild.

In early Christian times, February 2 was celebrated as Candlemas, but the earlier superstitions persisted. The Romans learned these traditional beliefs from the Scottish Celts, and brought them to the area that was to become Germany, where they became a part of the folk culture. German immigrants brought these beliefs with them to Pennsylvania, where the tradition of predicting the weather became centered around the woodchuck or groundhog. The town of Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, has an annual celebration centering around the activity of the groundhog “Punxsutawney Phil.”

Groundhog Day — Our Groundhog Day page includes a Groundhog Day Booklist for Kids and other links for more information and activities for Groundhog Day.

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Black History Month

[Martin Luther King, Jr.]Black History Month is a celebration of important people and events in the history of the African-Americans. It was founded in 1926 by United States historian Carter G. Woodson, who chose the second week of February because it marked the birthdays of President Abraham Lincoln and abolitionist and former slave Frederick Douglass.

Black History Month — Here’s a page of links to help you find more information and resources about African-American history

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Super Bowl XLVI

On Sunday, February 5, 2012, the New England Patriots and the New York Giants battle it out at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana.

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Returning eBooks and Audiobooks Books Early

OverDriveAre you borrowing eBooks or audiobooks from the NOBLE OverDrive site? If so, you may know that you don’t really need to return library eBooks — when their due date is reached, they become inactive for you and available for someone else to borrow. However, it is possible to return them early, and we encourage you to do so. This lets you take out more eBooks and audiobooks if you’ve reached the four-book limit, and it also makes the books available for someone else. This is especially helpful right now — usage of this collection has increased dramatically in the last few months, so we have waiting lists for many titles.

eBooks

How you return an ebook early depends on how you checked it out and downloaded it:

  • If you chose the Kindle format, you can login to your Amazon account, go to Manage Your Kindle and return the ebook. [Instructions]
  • If you downloaded the book to your computer and opened it in Adobe Digital Editions to transfer to a Nook or other ebook reader, you return it from Adobe Digital Editions. [Instructions]
  • If you downloaded the book directly to an iPad, smartphone or other mobile device using the OverDrive Media Console app, you can return the book from the app. [Instructions]

Audiobooks

How you return an audiobook early depends on how you checked it out and downloaded it.

    If you download audiobooks to the OverDrive Media Console on a computer to listen to directly or transfer to an MP3 player, there is unfortunately no way to return it early.
  • If you use an OverDrive Media Console app on an Android smartphone or tablet, a Blackberry or a Windows 7 phone, you can now return audiobook early. This is a new feature, so be sure you have the current version of the app. This feature will be added to the iOS app for the iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad soon.
  • OverDrive Media Console — More information and download links for the PC, Mac and mobile versions of the OverDrive Media Console.

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Edith Wharton at 150

Edith Wharton was born on January 24, 1862 in New York city. In 1921 she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and in 1930 she was elected into the Academy of Arts and Letters. Wharton was not only an accomplished author, but also a home and landscape designer. Her design aesthetic was fully realized in the creation of her estate, The Mount, in Lenox, Massachusetts. Wharton died of a stroke in France in 1937. Find our more about Edith Wharton on our page of links.

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A.A. Milne, Born January 18th

Author Alan Alexander (A.A.) Milne, best known as the creator of Winnie the Pooh, was born in London on January 18, 1882. Find out more about Milne, his son Christopher Robin, Pooh and all of his friends at our page of links.

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