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Boston Public Library

Boston Public Library (BPL) was the first large free municipal library in the United States. The present Copley Square location has been home to the Library since 1895, when architect Charles Follen McKim completed his "palace for the people." Between 1870 and 1900, twenty-two additional Branches began serving communities throughout Boston's diverse neighborhoods. In 1972 the Library expanded its Copley Square location with the opening of an addition designed by Philip Johnson. Today, the McKim building houses the BPL's vast research collection and the Johnson building holds the circulating collection of the general library and serves as headquarters for the Boston Public Library's 26 branch libraries. In addition to its 6.1 million books, the library boasts over 1.2 million rare books and manuscripts, a wealth of maps, musical scores and prints. Among its large collections, the BPL holds several first edition folios by William Shakespeare, original music scores from Mozart to Prokofiev's "Peter and the Wolf;" and, in its rare book collection, the personal library of John Adams. Over 2.2 million patrons visit the BPL each year, many in pursuit of research material, others looking for an afternoon's reading, still others for the magnificent and unique art and architecture.break

http://www.bpl.org/

  • Boston College research psychologist **Peter Gray**, author of *Free to Learn*, gave a talk on "The Biology of Education: How Children Learn Through Self-Directed Play and Exploration" at the Boston Public Library. In the talk, Gray discussed the importance of questioning the traditionally accepted "imprisonment schooling model," and the importance of autonomy and self-direction in education. Sponsored by the Bay State Learning Cooperative.
    Partner:
    Boston Public Library
  • American businessman and former Governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney joins moderator Jeff Jacoby, *Boston Globe* columnist, to explore why American strength is essential--not just to our own well-being, but for the world--and how we can move America back to a position of political and economic strength.
    Partner:
    Boston Public Library
  • Laura Leder and Brigitte Cazalis Collins expose the child sex trade industry in Bombay after a screening of * *, an independent film on the same issue. According to the United Nations, 2,500 women and children throughout the world disappear every day to be sold into sexual slavery. Many of these are young Nepalese girls who are trafficked, often by someone they trust, and sold into sexual servitude in Bombay's nightmarish red-light district Kamthipura--a filthy, teeming sexual marketplace, known as "the cages," of over 200,000 young women and children. Sexual servitude is also oftentimes a death sentence. In Bombay alone, 90 new cases of HIV infection are reported every hour. The victims are getting younger. Two decades ago, most women in the Indian brothels were in their twenties or thirties; today, the average age is 14. "The Day My God Died" puts a human face on these abstract numbers as the documentary recounts the stories of several Nepalese girls who were forced into the international child sex trade. In their own words, the girls tell about the day traffickers took each of them described as "the day my God died." Andrew Levine's powerful, unforgettable *The Day My God Died*, is hosted by Susan Sarandon and narrated by Tim Robbins.
    Partner:
    Boston Public Library
  • In celebration of Boston's 375th anniversary, a panel of authors discuss the lives of Massachusetts Bay colonists between 1630 and 1710. The panel includes Rev Peter J. Gomes, Plummer professor of Christian morals and Pusey Minister in the Memorial Church, at Harvard University; Eve LaPlante, author of *American Jezebel: The Uncommon Life of Anne Hutchinson, the Woman Who Defied the Puritans*; Laurel Ulrich, the author of *Good Wives: Image and Reality in the Lives of Women in Northern New England*. The panel is moderated by author and lecturer Miriam W. Butts.
    Partner:
    Boston Public Library