231 research outputs found
A minimal-variable symplectic method for isospectral flows
Isospectral flows are abundant in mathematical physics; the rigid body, the the Toda lattice, the Brockett flow, the Heisenberg spin chain, and point vortex dynamics, to mention but a few. Their connection on the one hand with integrable systems and, on the other, with Lie–Poisson systems motivates the research for optimal numerical schemes to solve them. Several works about numerical methods to integrate isospectral flows have produced a large varieties of solutions to this problem. However, many of these algorithms are not intrinsically defined in the space where the equations take place and/or rely on computationally heavy transformations. In the literature, only few examples of numerical methods avoiding these issues are known, for instance, the\ua0spherical midpoint method\ua0on\ua0{{\mathfrak {s}}}{{\mathfrak {o}}}(3). In this paper we introduce a new minimal-variable, second order, numerical integrator for isospectral flows intrinsically defined on quadratic Lie algebras and symmetric matrices. The algorithm is isospectral for general isospectral flows and Lie–Poisson preserving when the isospectral flow is Hamiltonian. The simplicity of the scheme, together with its structure-preserving properties, makes it a competitive alternative to those already present in literature
An algebraic approach to the spontaneous formation of spherical jets
The global structure of the atmosphere and the oceans is a continuous source of intriguing challenges in geophysical fluid dynamics (GFD). Among these, jets are determinant in the air and water circulation around the Earth. In the last fifty years, thanks to the development of more and more precise and extensive observations, it has been possible to study in detail the atmospheric formations of the giant-gas planets in the solar system. For those planets, jets are the dominant large scale structure. Starting from the 70s, various theories combining observations and mathematical models have been proposed in order to describe their formation and stability. In this paper, we propose a purely algebraic approach to describe the spontaneous formation of jets on a spherical domain. Analysing the algebraic properties of the 2D Euler equations, we give a characterization of the different jets' structures. The calculations are performed starting from the discrete Zeitlin model of the Euler equations. For this model, the classification of the jets' structures can be precisely described in terms of reductive Lie algebras decomposition. The discrete framework provides a simple tool for analysing both from a theoretical and and a numerical perspective the jets' formation. Furthermore, it allows to extend the results to the original Euler equations
Canonical scale separation in two-dimensional incompressible hydrodynamics
A two-dimensional inviscid incompressible fluid is governed by simple rules.
Yet, to characterise its long-time behaviour is a knotty problem. The fluid
evolves according to Euler's equations: a non-linear Hamiltonian system with
infinitely many conservation laws. In both experiments and numerical
simulations, coherent vortex structures, or blobs, emerge after an initial
stage. These formations dominate the large-scale dynamics, but small scales
also persist. Kraichnan describes in his classical work a forward cascade of
enstrophy into smaller scales, and a backward cascade of energy into larger
scales. Previous attempts to model Kraichnan's double cascade use filtering
techniques that enforce separation from the outset. Here we show that Euler's
equations posses an intrinsic, canonical splitting of the vorticity function.
The splitting is remarkable in four ways: (i) it is defined solely via the
Poisson bracket and the Hamiltonian, (ii) it characterises steady flows, (iii)
without imposition it yields a separation of scales, enabling the dynamics
behind Kraichnan's qualitative description, and (iv) it accounts for the
"broken line" in the power law for the energy spectrum, observed in both
experiments and numerical simulations. The splitting originates from Zeitlin's
truncated model of Euler's equations in combination with a standard
quantum-tool: the spectral decomposition of Hermitian matrices. In addition to
theoretical insight, the scale separation dynamics could be used for stochastic
model reduction, where small scales are modelled by multiplicative noise.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figure
Integrability of point-vortex dynamics via symplectic reduction: a survey
Point-vortex dynamics describe idealized, non-smooth solutions to the
incompressible Euler equations on 2-dimensional manifolds. Integrability
results for few point-vortices on various domains is a vivid topic, with many
results and techniques scattered in the literature. Here we give a unified
framework for proving integrability results for , , or
point-vortices (and also more general Hamiltonian systems), based on symplectic
reduction theory. The approach works on any 2-dimensional manifold; we
illustrate it on the sphere, the plane, the hyperbolic plane, and the flat
torus. A systematic study of integrability is prompted by advances in
2-dimensional turbulence, bridging the long-time behaviour of 2D Euler
equations with questions of point-vortex integrability. A gallery of solutions
is given in the appendix.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures, accepted in Arnold Math.
A Casimir preserving scheme for long-time simulation of spherical ideal hydrodynamics
The incompressible 2D Euler equations on a sphere constitute a fundamental
model in hydrodynamics. The long-time behaviour of solutions is largely
unknown; statistical mechanics predicts a steady vorticity configuration, but
detailed numerical results in the literature contradict this theory, yielding
instead persistent unsteadiness. Such numerical results were obtained using
artificial hyperviscosity to account for the cascade of enstrophy into smaller
scales. Hyperviscosity, however, destroys the underlying geometry of the phase
flow (such as conservation of Casimir functions), and therefore might affect
the qualitative long-time behaviour. Here we develop an efficient numerical
method for long-time simulations that preserve the geometric features of the
exact flow, in particular conservation of Casimirs. Long-time simulations on a
non-rotating sphere then reveal three possible outcomes for generic initial
conditions: the formation of either 2, 3, or 4 coherent vortex structures.
These numerical results contradict the statistical mechanics theory and show
that previous numerical results, suggesting 4 coherent vortex structures as the
generic behaviour, display only a special case. Through integrability theory
for point vortex dynamics on the sphere we present a theoretical model which
describes the mechanism by which the three observed regimes appear. We show
that there is a correlation between a first integral (the ratio of
total angular momentum and the square root of enstrophy) and the long-time
behaviour: small, intermediate, and large yields most likely 4, 3, or
2 coherent vortex formations. Our findings thus suggest that the likely
long-time behaviour can be predicted from the first integral .Comment: 27 pages, 10 figure
Lie-Poisson methods for isospectral flows
The theory of isospectral flows comprises a large class of continuous
dynamical systems, particularly integrable systems and Lie--Poisson systems.
Their discretization is a classical problem in numerical analysis. Preserving
the spectra in the discrete flow requires the conservation of high order
polynomials, which is hard to come by. Existing methods achieving this are
complicated and usually fail to preserve the underlying Lie--Poisson structure.
Here we present a class of numerical methods of arbitrary order for Hamiltonian
and non-Hamiltonian isospectral flows, which preserve both the spectra and the
Lie--Poisson structure. The methods are surprisingly simple, and avoid the use
of constraints or exponential maps. Furthermore, due to preservation of the
Lie--Poisson structure, they exhibit near conservation of the Hamiltonian
function. As an illustration, we apply the methods to several classical
isospectral flows.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figure
On the infinite dimension limit of invariant measures and solutions of Zeitlin's 2D Euler equations
In this work we consider a finite dimensional approximation for the 2D Euler
equations on the sphere, proposed by V. Zeitlin, and show their convergence
towards a solution to Euler equations with marginals distributed as the
enstrophy measure. The method relies on nontrivial computations on the
structure constants of , that appear to be new. In the last
section we discuss the problem of extending our results to Gibbsian measures
associated with higher Casimirs.Comment: 21 page
Zero-noise dynamics after collapse for three point vortices
The continuation of point vortex dynamics after a vortex collapse is investigated by means of a regularization procedure consisting in introducing a small stochastic diffusive term, that corresponds to a vanishing viscosity. In contrast with deterministic regularization, in which a cutoff interaction selects in the limit a single trajectory of the system after collapse, the zero-noise method produces a probability distribution supported by trajectories satisfying relevant conservation laws of the point vortex system
An efficient geometric method for incompressible hydrodynamics on the sphere
We present an efficient and highly scalable geometric method for
two-dimensional ideal fluid dynamics on the sphere. The starting point is
Zeitlin's finite-dimensional model of hydrodynamics. The efficiency stems from
exploiting a tridiagonal splitting of the discrete spherical Laplacian combined
with highly optimized, scalable numerical algorithms. For time-stepping, we
adopt a recently developed isospectral integrator able to preserve the
geometric structure of Euler's equations, in particular conservation of the
Casimir functions. To overcome previous computational bottlenecks, we formulate
the matrix Lie algebra basis through a sequence of tridiagonal eigenvalue
problems, efficiently solved by well-established linear algebra libraries. The
same tridiagonal splitting allows for computation of the stream matrix,
involving the inverse Laplacian, for which we design an efficient parallel
implementation on distributed memory systems. The resulting overall
computational complexity is per time-step for spatial
degrees of freedom. The dominating computational cost is matrix-matrix
multiplication, carried out via the parallel library ScaLAPACK. Scaling tests
show approximately linear scaling up to around cores for the matrix size
with a computational time per time-step of about seconds. These
results allow for long-time simulations and the gathering of statistical
quantities while simultaneously conserving the Casimir functions. We illustrate
the developed algorithm for Euler's equations at the resolution
Milo Canopener (May 1, 2019)
An archive of the Milo Canopener.The University of Lethbridge Library received permission from the Archives at Milo Library to digitize and display this content.Milo Can Opener
Box 12, Milo, AB T0L1L0
Canada Post Agmt. # 40607518
May 2019
Edition No. 348
MILO LIBRARY N/C
The Milo Can Opener
SPRING WORK HAS STARTED
Seeding has begun around Milo.
The ground is very dry so everyone is hopeful for some moisture soon.
This photo was taken just east and north of the Village of Milo by Cameron Klem.
The Milo Can Opener
A Community Newsletter published
by Volunteers
Layout Editors:
Subscriptions
Notices
Cameron Klem
Barb Godkin
Barb Godkin
403-485-1592
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Outside Milo mailed - U.S. 60.00
How to reach us:
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(JPEG) advertising copy can be printed clearly (rather than scanned).
Fax transmissions are also low resolution, and tend to be unclear.
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MILO CAP
Chinese & Western / Take out orders
Open Tuesday - Sunday 9:00AM - 8:00PT;l
(Closed Mondays)
599-3832
Invisible Fence THE ORIGINAL CONTAINMENT SPECIALISTS
Greg Deitz
Top Dog
403-262-pets (7387) t-877-364-2929
Fax: 403-250-8177
Email: topdog@ifenceca
Web Site: www.invisiblefence.com
Box 22
Milo. AB
TOL ILO
faction
'service
Chris & Amanda Gauthier
Phone: 403.485.8461
Email: [email protected]
Find us on Facebook - Prairie Perfection Catering
Invisible hence oj Western Canada
Leslie Lahd 403-485-1508
Consultant ear 1997
EPICURE
GOOD FOOD REAL FAS r
[email protected]
Facebook: Leslie’s Epicure - Adventures in cooking
- tt- EPICURE
https://leslielalid.epicure.coiri/erj^—ndent Cotjsult.int
8A - 3529 12th Street NE
Calgary. Alberta T2E 6P4
Martin Shields, MP
Bow River Constituency
129-2nd Ave, Box 2070
Strathmore, AB T1P 1K1
Phone 403-361-2980
www.martinshieldsbowriver.ca
Martin.shields.c1 [email protected]
Trish Thompson
STELLA
(VDOT
Independent Stylist
[email protected]
403-485-8547
www.stelladot.com/trishthompson
& area/
www.ArrowwoodGospelChurch.ca
28 - 2nd St. East, Arrowwood, AB
Pastor Ryan Lidstone
403-690-0090
[email protected]
Baptist General Conference of Canada
BUND
CREEK
ANGUS Wayne and Peggy Robinson
PO Box 36
MOSSLEIGH, ALBERTA TOL 1P0
PHONE (403)934-4083
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HEATHER TRUCKING
WARREN HEATHER
RK#1
MILO. AB
wheatber© w ikl rusein ternetxa
CATTLE
HAY
DECK WORK
BHONE-403-599-2132
CELL-403-485-8200
Trucking
C »ri and I lay Hauling
ANDY DIXON
Cell: (403) 485-8194
Res (403) 599-2232 Box 145
Fax (403) 599-2443 Mffo, Alberts
TOL 1LO
Grain & Fertilizer Hauling
ZODIAC TRUCKING LTD.
Rod Lahd
The Elevator
Lloyd Deitz
Alternative Grain Marketing Solutions
Container and Tronsloading Facility.
Box 4-13
Milo, AB TOL 1L0
Work: 403-599-3826
Cell 403 485 8366
Fox 403-599-3827
[email protected]
Septic Tank Services
(A Division of J 8. Services)
• Portables • Sumps • Holding Tanks • Floods
"YA GOTTA GO" - SO PHONE JOE
BUS: 485-3552
,vB
Box 93 Vulcan, Alberta TOL 2B0
SERVICE
MILO
SEED CLEANING
ASSOCIATION LTD.
599-2150
Cleaner Seed is Sown.
Cleaner Crops are Grown.
Sheldon Walker Manager
Box 7
Milo, AS
TOL 110
Doug Marks
PRESIDENT
Office: (103) 599-0003
Fax: (103) 599-3990
Mobile: (403) 485 8516
Marks
Oilfield Services Inc.
Trucking. Gravel
Oilfield Maintenance and Construction
Pipelining
Tiegen Trucking
Dereck Tiegen
Cell: 403-485-8715
TO Box 53 - Milo, AB- TOL 1L0
- * ‘ RR1
Milo. ABTOL1LO
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KRYSTALOWICH & CO.
Ckruhed General Accountant
Diane Krystalowich, C.G.A.
Darren Deitz
CerttCep financial Plannet
Deitz Wealth Management
Suite 700 1816 Crawchtlt! Trad NW
Calgary. Alberta I2M 3Y7 ’
phonr 403-241-3122
toll-free 800 661 2817
111 - 2nd Street South
P.O. Box 239
Vulcan. AB T0I.2B0
403-485-2681
403-485-2996
Fax: 403-485-6798
Liscombe
Chiropractic Clinic
DR. GEORGE LISCOMBE
NANTON
(403) 646-3111
VULCAN
(403) 485-6005
tJerren^'deiUwealth.tom
VULCAN DENTAL?
Dr. Michael McKee, DMD
Clinic hours:
MONDAY, TUESDAY & THURSDAY
8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Ph: 403-485-2654
114—3rd Avenue N., Vulcan
(beside Vulcan Advocate office)
Services include: exams, dental cleanings,
crowns/bridges, root canals, extractions,
fillings, teeth whitening,
implants, and more
www. vulcandentaldinic. com
Follow us on Facebook: Vulcan Dental Clinic
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All-Inclusive Bookkeeping
Anylu Barcenas, CIVIA CPA
403-809-9244
info@ailinclusivebookkeeping com
uuujuj.allinclusivebookkeeping.com
Technology I Consulting
Ryyan & Jennifer (Bartsch) Maki
Cell:4O3-85O-4424
Emall:[email protected]
“Have you tried turning it off and on again?”
VILLAGE OF MILO ALBERTA
200 Centre Street, Box 65, Milo AB, TOL 1L0
Phone: (403) 599-3883
OFFICE HOURS .
Tuesday 8:30 AM - 2:00 PM
Wednesday 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM
Thursday 8:30 AM - 2:00 PM
Or by Appointment
POST OFFICE HOURS
Monday - Friday 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
COUNCIL MEETINGS
Held at the Village Office,
on 2nd Tuesday of each month at 7:00 PM
1 We 60/year
The perfect Top-Of-Mind advertising
for your local customers!
Includes your subscription.
(See inside front cover for details)
MILO GREEN FOODS
Tom Kim & Ellie Yang
and family
„ Phone:403-599-3922
Fax: 403-599-3835
SUMMER BUSINESS HOURS
May 1 to September 30
Volker Stevin
HIGHWAYS LTD
Volker Stevin Highways Ltd.
REPORTA HIGHWAY
PROBLEM
1-888-877-6237
1-888-VS-ROADS
My thoughts... Revered c^ordouv Crfti/tch
I told those at church some time ago that Reese came
up to me at lunch one Sunday and asked me how to
get to heaven. I was kind of dumbstruck by the
question, especially as Reese is not yet 4. I gave a
suitably glib answer, but I continued to think about it
and on the next Sunday I gave a slightly more
• definitive answer.
I have been thinking about the question on and off ever since. I suppose it takes on a
slightly different sense of urgency at 72 than it does at age 4. All the songs and
hymns that we sing Sunday by Sunday about heaven and the great reunions with
those we have loved and have gone before us. But that doesn't answer the question of
how we get to heaven. Last month, we had our usual Maundy Thursday dinner and
went on to commemorate the Last Supper of Jesus and His disciples. At that time
Jesus gave us His directions for eternal life. This is His summary of the great
Commandments. "Love the Lord your God with all your heart and love your neighbour
as yourself. On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets." If we
can do just these two things everything else will fall into place. What surer path to
Heaven can there be?
All the promises that we have received are awaiting their fulfillment. We will be
reunited with those we have loved and lost. We will, with God's help, one day reach
that eternal shore.
Whatever age we are now, we are fortunate to have lived and grown up in such a time
of medical advances that have assisted us in living this long. And we look forward to
even greater advances that will offer longer and better lives to us.
We must always remember that our time on earth is limited and we must do our part
while we are here. But this life will surely end one day and we will die. The perishable
cannot inherit the imperishable.
That is how we get to heaven.
May Services:
Sunday 12th - 9:00 am
Sunday 26th - 3:30 pm at St. Aldhelm's Church, Vulcan - Joint Service/100th Anniversary
Celebration
see you. luv church!
Where
is ATB?
With branches and
ATMs at over 300
locations all across
Alberta, we are
always close,
and
ready to help.
ATB inancial
Open 9:30 - 3:00 Monday - Thursday, 9:30 - 4:00 Friday
121 Centre St., Milo, TOL 1L0
403-599-3981
MILO LIONS CLUB NEWS
Club Events May 2019
May 1 ■ Milo Supper Meeting 7:00 p.m.
May 15- Milo Supper Meeting 7:00 p.m.
ACTIVITIES:
Six Milo Lions attended the Interclub in Nanton.
The wild game feast was excellent and sponsored
by the Nanton Club.
The Club is reviewing its' restoration options for
the Rumely tractor that was given to it for the
community.
The Milo Lions are reviewing their role in maintaining
the Lions Playground. They are willing to
help where needed but want to clarify their role
with the Village of Milo. Lion Loren Mozill has
turned on the sprinklers at the park.
A work party will be doing some minor work at
the East Cemetery.
Pancake Breakfast plans are being reviewed for July 1st
and the Community Campout is booked for the second
weekend in July at Enchant.
The organizing committee for the Milo Show'N Shine is busy
making arrangements for the one day summer event. It coincides
with the Milo Lions Barbecue on the second Sunday in
August and has increased annual attendance substantially
over the last four years. Those interested in sponsoring the
Show'N Shine, or participating in some capacity, are encouraged
to contact the organizing committee members
Doug Headrick, Ian Godkin and Greg Deitz.
UPCOMING EVENTS:
Milo Lions Canada Day Pancake Breakfast -July 1
Milo Community Campout - Enchant Campground
Friday, July 5th to Sunday, July 7th.
Milo Lions BBQ and Snow 'N Shine - August 11
See full page ad for Show 'N Shine
Things We Have Learned
• I’ve learned that I like my teacher because she cries when
we sing “Silent Night". - Age 6
• I’ve learned that you can’t hide a piece of broccoloi in a
glass of milk. - Age 7
• I’ve learned that when I wave to people in the country, they
stop what they are doing and wave back.
- Age 9
• I've learned that just when I get my room the way I like it,
Mom makes me clean it up. - Age 13
• I've learned that if you want to cheer yourself up, you
should try cheering someone else up. - Age14
• I've learned that although it’s hard to admit it, I’m secretly
glad my parents are strict with me. - Age 15
• I've learned that silent company is often more healing than
words of advice. - Age 24
• I've learned that brushing my child's hair is one of life’s
pleasures. - Age 26
• I've learned that wherever I go, the world’s worst drivers
have followed me there. - Age 29
• I’ve learned that if someone says something unkind about
me, I must live so that no one will believe it.
- Age 39
• I’ve learned that there are people who love you dearly, but
just don’t know how to show it. - Age 41
• I’ve learned that you can make someone’s day by simply
sending them a little card. - Age 44
• I've learned that the greater a person’s sense of guilt, the
greater his need to cast blame on others - Age 46
• I've learned that children and grandparents are natural
allies. - Age 47
• I’ve learned that singing “Amazing Grace” can lift my spirits
for hours. - Age 49
• I've learned that motel mattresses are better on the side
away from the phone. - Age 50
• I’ve learned that you can tell a lot about a man by the way
he handles these three things: a rainy day, lost luggage,
and tangled Christmas tree lights.-Age 51
• I've learned that keeping a vegetable garden is worth a
medicine cabinet full of pills. - Age 52
• I’ve learned that regardless of your relationship with your
parents, you miss them terribly after they die.
- Age 53
• I’ve learned that making a living is not the same as making
a life. - Age 58
• I’ve learned that life sometimes gives you a second
chance. - Age 62
• I’ve learned that you shouldn't go through life with a catcher’s
mitt on both hands. You need to be able to throw
something back. - Age 64
• I’ve learned that if you pursue happiness, it will elude you.
But if you focus on your family, the needs of others, your
work, meeting new people, and doing the very best you
can, happiness will find you. - Age 65
• I’ve learned that whenever I decide to do something with
kindness, I usually make the right decision. - Age 68
• I’ve learned that it pays to believe in miracles, and , to tell
the truth, I've seen several. - Age 73
• I’ve learned that when I have pains, I don’t have to be one.
- Age 82
• I’ve learned that every day you should reach out and touch
someone. People love that human touch - holding hands,
a warm hug, or just a friendly pat on the back. - Age 85
• I've learned that I still have a lot to learn. - Age 92
Milo Library
May 2019
CHINOOK
t ARCH CCGIONAI
LIBPARv 3YSTCM
CHINOOK
ARCH "•*•***
FREE
Listens
All
Summer
Long
SYNC returns: Free summer
audiobooks for teens
What is
SYNC?
SYNC is a free program for
teens 13+ that will give
away two complete audiobook
downloads every
week through July, pairing
high-interest titles with
weekly themes. It's the
perfect program to encourage
teens to read more so
they don’t end up wandering
into that most dreaded
of all places to be while
they’re on vacation - the
summer slide...
Join us on Tuesday, April
23 to learn more about the
program, including how
and why titles are chosen
and paired together, how it
works in conjunction with
the OverDrive app, why
audiobooks play an important
part in teen reading
habits.
Our Book Club meets once a month. We welcome new
members. Contact the Library for more info. Local Author and Library
Board Member Publishes
Graphic Novel
Derek Evernden recently got
his Bogart Creek Volume 1
book published and has been
busy on his author circuit. He
donated one to the Library
and we will also have them for
sale at the library.
New Purchases
ADULT FICTION
-Run Away by
Harlan Coben,
Her One Mistake
by Heidi Perks,
The Golden
Tresses of the
The Mister by E L James, The
Island of Sea Women by Lisa
See, All The Beautiful Girls by
Elizabeth J Church, After Anna
by Lisa Scottoline, The Book of
Dreams by Nina George
WESTERN
Bloodthirsty by William W. Johnstone
SCIENCE FICTION AND
Dead by Alan
Bradley, King of Kings by Wilbur
Smith, Dark Tribute by Iris Johansen,
Us Against You by
Fredrik Backman, The Lost Girls
of Paris by Pam Jenoff, The
Perfect Girlfriend by Karen
Hamilton, The Suspect by Fiona
Barton, Cold Blood by Andy
McNab, A Measure of Darkness
by Joanthan and Jesse Kellerman,
The Disappeared by C.J.
Box, The Deceivers
by Alex Berenson,
A Dangerous
Game by Heather
Graham, The Cast
by Danielle Steel,
ADULT NON-FICTION
/’// Be Gone in the Dark One
Woman’s Obsessive
Search
for the Golden
State Killer by
Michelle
McNamara,
Why Don't You
FANTASY
The Librarians and
the Pot of Gold by
Greg Cox
DVD’s &
Blu-Ray
Mary Poppins Returns,
King of
Thieves, The House With a
Write My Eulogy
Now So I Can
Correct It? By
Patricia Marx &
Roz Chast,
Clock in its Walls, Aquaman,
Green Book
YOUNG ADULT
FICTION
Queen of Air and
Darkness by Cassandra
Clare, The
Center of the Universe
by Ria Voros
New
Purchases
Continued
from p a g e 1
Friends of
Milo Library
JUNIOR FICTION
The Alien Next Door Up, Up
and Away by A. I. Newton,
The Treasure Seekers by
Thea Stilton, Best Bad
Babysitters Ever by Caroline
Cala
PICTUREBOOK
How to Catch a Unicorn
by Adam Wallace &
Andy Elkerton, Poop or
Get Off the Potty! by Margaret
McNamara, Perfect
GRAPHIC NOVEL
World of Archie, B8.V Friends, Archie 3000
Doctors
g Rescue
EASY READER
Doctors to the Rescue, Exploring
the Great Outdoors by
Mercer Mayer, Click, Clack,
Peep by Doreen Cronin, Fancy
Nancy Mademoiselle
Mom
and The Case
of the Disappearing Doll by
Nancy Parent
Easter Eggs, Bedtime
For Little Bulldozer by
Elsie Broach
library Srdjta
The Library has ordered a
new computer, and once we
have it, there will be a dedicated
computer upstairs in the
Library with access to all his
research and all the scanned
documents we have in the Archives.
DONATIONS
H/e want to thank the following people
for their donations to our Library this
month: Vera Garrett, Amy Monner, Bea
Storlie, Debora Lemco, Tracy Mozill,
Diane Nakaska, Betty Godkin, Glenn
McCallum, Charlie Kiemele, Derek
Evernden.
We apologize to anyone who we may
have missed, l/l/e appreciate each one.
Next Library
Board Meeting
is April 29th @
7:00
Tuesday: 10:00 am —5:00 pm
Tues, evening: 6:00 pm — 8:00 pm
Thurs & Fri: 10:00 am — 5:00 pm
Phone 403-599-3850
Fax 403-599-3924
Email messages to [email protected]
or check out our website @ www.milolibrary.ca
Or http://www.albertaonrecord.ca/milo-library-archives
Joanne Monner
Tracy Mozill
Amy Monner
Christopher Northcott
Manager
Assistant
Assistant
Board Chair
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Successful Seeding and Calving Season
Farm - Family - Business Succession
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1st Milo Multi-Unit News
To celebrate Earth Day, which was held Monday,
April 22, our unit did a garbage pick-up around
town. Though we did have some challenges with
the strong wind gusts, it was a great evening.
The girls did an awesome job helping look after
their community!
We will have cookies available to
purchase at the Spring Market on
May 4. Come on out and support your
local Girl Guide Unit!
Attendance: Mayor Scott Schroeder; Deputy Mayor Sheldon Walker; Councillor Lori Headrick; CAO Wendy Hingley; Bookkeeper Colleen Deitz
1.
CALL TO ORDER - Mayor Schroeder called the meeting to order at 7:00 pm
2.
ACCEPTANCE OF AGENDA
RES.NO. 2019-03-12-18 Moved by Mayor Schroeder that Council accept the Agenda of the Regular Meeting of
Tuesday, March 12, 2019. CARRIED
3.
DELEGATIONS- none
4.
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
RES.NO. 2019-03-12-19 - Moved by Councilor Headrick that Council accepts the Minutes of the Regular Council Meeting held February 12th,2019 as per Sec.l94(4) of the MGA. CARRIED
5.
STAFF REPORTS:
RES.NO. 2019-03-12-20 -Deputy Mayor Walker moves to accept staff reports as information. CARRIED
6.
CORRESPONDENCE - RES. NO. 2019-03-12-21
-moved by Mayor Schroeder that Council accept all correspondence as information only. CARRIED
7.
COUNCIL REPORTS:
RES. NO. 2019-03-12-22 - Councilor Headrick moved to accept Council Reports as presented. CARRIED
8.
OLD BUSINESS
RES.NO.2019-03-12-23
Moved by Mayor Schroeder that Council retract support of the County of Vulcan Doctor Retention program.
CARRIED
9.
NEW BUSINESS
RES. NO. 2019-03-12-24
Councilor Lori Headrick made the motion to award Phase II office reno project to Rybar Construction with revamped dimensions of CAO Office. CARRIED
RES.NO. 2019-03-12-25
Mayor Schroder moved to hire Rhodes Electric to complete electrical work as discussed in Village Office. CARRIED
RES. NO. 2019-03-12-26
Mayor Schroeder moved that Council enter into the proposed Vulcan County Regional Emergency Management Partnership Organization Agreement, and Mayor Schroeder will be the Village of Milo elected representative appointed to the VCREMP Advisory Council. CARRIED
RES. NO. 2019-03-12-27
Deputy Mayor Walker moved that Council give FIRST READING to Bylaw # 404-19, a Bylaw to establish the
Vulcan County Regional Emergency Management Partnership Organization. CARRIED
RES. NO. 2019-03-12-28
Moved by Deputy Mayor Walker that Council appoint Mayor Schroeder to be the Village of Milo elected representative appointed to the VCREMP Advisory Council. CARRIED
10.
IN CAMERA MEETING
RES.NO. 2019-03-12-29
Moved by Mayor Schroeder @ 8:58 pm to go in camera as per SEC.24 of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Protection Act. CARRIED
RES.NO.2019-03-12-30
Mayor Schroeder moved to go back into regular session @ 9:30pm. CARRIED
11.
NEXT MEETING:
Next Regular Meeting of Council to be held April, 9th 2019 @7:00pm in the Village of Milo Office, 200 Centre Street.
12.
ADJOURNMENT:
- Mayor Schroeder moved adjournment @ 9:40 pm
Meeting of Village of Milo Council
Page 1
VILLAGE OF
MILO
ALBERTA
VILLAGE OF MILO COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING MINUTES Tuesday, March 12, 2019
A Regular
- …
