Thursday March 26, 2020
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Volume 65 | Number 31
www.DesertMobileHomeNews.com
CELEBRATING THE RESIDENTIAL PARK COMMUNITIES FOR 65 YEARS
Palm Springs Public Library Offers Temporary Digital Library Card
Customers can access eResources from home, including eBooks, movie streaming, magazines and more
D
ue to COVID-19 precautions, the Palm Springs Public Library is currently closed to the public until further notice. Customers can return materials to the Library any time 24/7 utilizing our automated return system outside the library. However, a due date grace-period will be extended for borrowed materials and since we are ‘fine free’ no late fines will be assessed. To make access to all of the Library’s digital resources more easily available to Palm Springs and Coachella Valley residents, including those who do not currently have a library card, the Library is offering a temporary digital card, valid for 90 days. To sign up for a temporary digital card, residents can visit PalmSpringsLibrary.org/MyAccount and click on the link at the top of the screen that says ‘click here to register now’. The digital card provides users access to all of the Library’s digital offerings, including eBooks, audiobooks, magazines, movies, TV, music, homework help, online classes, and more, including but not limited to: OverDrive and Libby: Place holds on and borrow up to 10 eBooks and audiobooks. No need to worry about returns – eBooks automatically expire at the end of the lending period.
Freegal: Free and legal music downloading service. There are about 15 million songs, including the entire Sony catalog.
Kanopy: Stream independent, international, classic, and documentary films, with 10 play credits per month. Enjoy temporary unlimited access (through midApril) to Kanopy for Kids with educational content like Sesame Street and Arthur. AcornTV video streaming: Access British TV and films, Great Courses, ACT/SAT test prep. Brain POP & Brain POP Jr.: Educational resources for students. Brainfuse: Get online tutors daily from 1 – 10 p.m. for K to college students and adult learners. From math to science, resume to essay review, and GED to citizenship prep, there’s a tutor for you! RB Digital: Download popular magazines including US Weekly, Vogue, Vanity Fair, Wired, Newsweek, Rolling Stone, and more.
the morale of defeated, starving citizens. German translations soon followed, with a similar goal.
• Laura Ingalls Wilder’s “Little House” books were once used as post-World War II propaganda. Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s occupation headquarters chose “The Long Winter” as one of the first American books to be translated into Japanese, in an effort to boost
In This Issue
Stay Put to Stay Out of Harms Way........2 Grandma Jo’s Stew..............................3 Here To Serve You...............................5 Classifieds............................................7
• During the mid-1970s, author Anne Fine walked by a shop selling jewelry and old furs, the proprietor of which was a Madame Doubtfire. Fine recalled the name in 1986 when she wrote her novel “Madame Doubtfire.” Her one request to makers of the film starring Robin Williams and Sally Field was that they “not make the children bratty, and they did indulge me in that.”
New York Times online: Funded through a grant from the California State Library, every library in California has access to The New York Times for all their patrons. This is full access to their digital edition and you avoid all pay walls. Click the link on our library website’s eBooks, Movies, Music, Audiobooks & eMagazines page for your daily access code. Mango Languages: Learn over 70 languages with free, self-paced classes, plus ESL courses in Spanish, Mandarin, Arabic, and more. After completing the online library card registration staff will then activate the library card and PIN number within one business day and email the card information. These credentials can be used to access all the library eResources noted above plus more. The card enables checkouts of and access to digital materials only; customers will not be able to borrow physical materials or place them on hold. For more information about Coronavirus and other City information and resources, visit palmspringsca.gov.
• Believing he had been cursed for killing two canines, a man in India married a third as an act of atonement. • Ever wondered why those athletic lace-ups on your feet are called sneakers? The moniker came about in the late 1800s, from their rubber soles that allowed people to walk or “sneak” around without a sound. • Michelangelo, renowned painter of the Sistine Chapel and
1. TELEVISION: Which show was a spinoff of the 1970s show “The Six Million Dollar Man”? 2. U.S. PRESIDENTS: Which president had a personal retreat at Warm Springs, Georgia? 3. GEOGRAPHY: Which river runs through the city of Paris, France? 4. MOVIES: Who was the young female star of the movie “Firestarter”? 5. SCIENCE: What is the largest living structure on Earth? 6. FIRSTS: Who is the first (and only so far) football player to win the Heisman Trophy twice? 7. HISTORY: How many people were officially executed in the Reign of Terror after the French Revolution? 8. BIBLE: How many proverbs did King Solomon compose? 9. BUSINESS: What is the unit of currency used in South Africa? 10. U.S. STATES: Which three states have four-letter names? © 2020 King Features Synd., Inc. ANSWER TO TRIVIA ON PAGE 6
brilliant sculptor to boot, was surprisingly averse to personal hygiene. He also rarely changed his clothes. One of his servants remarked that the artist would spend so much time in his shoes that when he finally did take them off, “the skin came away, like a snake’s, with the boots.” • Zebras are responsible for more injuries to U.S. zookeepers than any other animal. (c) 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.