Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Library Book Returned To Yukon 51 Years Overdue After Trip To New Zealand

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Apr, 2016 01:33 PM
    WHITEHORSE — A book borrowed from a Yukon library in 1965 has been returned after 51 years and a journey to the other side of the globe.
     
    Librarian Sarah Gallagher says "The Story of Madame Curie" by Alice Thorne ended up in New Zealand, where it was recently discovered by Roslyn Selby.
     
    Gallagher says Selby mailed the book back, along with a donation of several other children's books and a letter explaining her family moved away and accidentally took the book along.
     
    Staff at the Whitehorse Public Library are assessing the edition, which was borrowed from the former Yukon Library, before deciding if it will be returned to circulation or kept in a special display.
     
    The book about a Polish doctor and scientist who discovered radium was borrowed two years before the family left Canada, but Gallagher says the library is glad to have it back after more than five decades.
     
    April is amnesty month at the library so fines for overdue books are suspended.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Morning sex makes for a healthy start!

    Morning sex makes for a healthy start!
    Mornings are not just perfect for jogging or quieter moments in the park. Try sex in the wee hours that will sure improve your otherwise dull and boring day like never before!

    Morning sex makes for a healthy start!

    How birds learnt to fly

    How birds learnt to fly
    Birds have an innate ability to maneuver in mid-air, a talent that could have helped their ancestors learn to fly rather than fall from a perch, says a study...

    How birds learnt to fly

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning
    "Parents may not understand a baby's prattling, but by listening and responding, they let their infants know they can communicate which leads to children...

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning

    Over-confident workers can put firms at risk

    Over-confident workers can put firms at risk
    Over-confident people can fool others into believing they are more talented than they actually are, claim two Indian-origin researchers, adding that these...

    Over-confident workers can put firms at risk

    How positive memories can replace negative experiences

    How positive memories can replace negative experiences
    By manipulating neural circuits in the brain of mice, scientists have found that memories and experiences - stored in two different parts of the brain...

    How positive memories can replace negative experiences

    Yawning contagious in wolves too

    Yawning contagious in wolves too
    A new study has suggested that wolves tend to yawn when they see one of their brethren indulging in the act -- just like the humans...

    Yawning contagious in wolves too