Young audiences hear community readers

SALISBURY — The halls of Salisbury Central School were teeming with adults Thursday, Feb. 4, as 18 members of the community came to school for Read Aloud day.

Each year the school invites adults into the classrooms to share a story with the students. A representative from each classroom meets the reader in the library and guides  him or her back to class.

The stories shared were mainly picture books. Before and after (and sometimes during) the reading, the adults took a minute to talk with the students and share a bit of what life is like in Salisbury while the children are in school. From a police officer to the head of an elite prep school, the readers represented all walks of life.

Eva Yxfeldt read “One Brown Bunny,� by Marion Dane Bauer, to the pre-kindergarten class.

Ginger Bevan, Diane Christinat and Don Mayland read “The Terrible Plop,� by Ursula Dubosarsky, to the three kindergarten classes.

Walter DeMelle and Malcolm McKenzie read “Duck and Cover,� by Jackie Urbanovic, to the first-graders.

Jeff Lloyd and Sam Herrick read “The Hermit Crab,� by Carter Goodrich, to the second-graders.

Jennifer Weigel and Kay Lindsay read “Stars Above Us,� by Geoffrey Norman, to the third-grade classes.

Roger Rawlings, Rick Cantele and state Rep. Roberta Willis read “My Name is Sangoel,� by Karen Lynn Williams, to the fourth-graders.

Jim Dresser, Caroline Burchfield and Erin Simmons read “Nubs: The True Story of a Mutt, a Marine and a Miracle,� by Brian Dennis, to the fifth-grade classes.

Mark Lauretano and Carl Williams read “14 Cows for America,� by Carmen Agra Deedy, to the sixth-graders.

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