Please join the South End Library staff and the Friends of the South End Library for the Annual Holiday Jazz Concert with Pat Loomis & Friends tomorrow, Tuesday, December 20 at 6:30 PM. The outstanding group of passionate jazz musicians will put you in the holiday mood if you're not there yet. Bring food to share. All are welcome. Sponsored by FOSEL and the South End Library.
Reminder: South End Filmmaker Alice Stone Will Return to the South End Library Tomorrow, December 6, With an Update of and Behind-the Scenes Look at her Documentary-in-Progress, “Angelo Unwritten.”
Alice Stone, whose gripping documentation of teenager Angelo’s life after having been adopted out of foster care mesmorized an overflowing room earlier this year, will return to the South End Library tomorrow night. Stone will give an update with new material gathered since March and how, as a filmmaker, she may make decisions about the presentation of the surprising twists and turns of the story of Angelo’s life. Stone is raising funds to complete the film and will make an announcement about her strategy.
The evening is part of FOSEL’s series, The South End Writes, and will begin at 6:30 PM. There will be refreshments. of new material gathered since March, and how, as a filmmaker, she may make decisions about the presentation of the surprising twists and turns of the story of Angelo’s life. Stone is raising funds to complete the film and will make an announcement about her strategy.
Children's Book Author and Journalist Victoria Griffith Will Read from "The Fabulous Flying Machines of Alberto Santos-Dumont" on Saturday Morning, December 3, at the South End Library
The South End Writes Authors' Series will feature its first reading by a children's book author Saturday, December 3, at 11:00 AM. Victoria Griffith, a South End resident and financial journalist, will introduce her new book which just won the Fall 2011 Parents Choice Award.
"The Fabulous Flying Machines of Alberto Santos-Dumont" describes how Alberto, the son of a Brazilian coffee magnate who lived in Paris while his father was undergoing medical treatment, used the balloon-inspired precursor to airplanes, the "dirigible," to run errands to and from his apartment on the Champs-Elysees. He was the first aviator to ride it around the Eiffel Tower in 1901, two years before the Wright Brothers did.
After Saturday's reading, children will be invited to make paper airplanes and bat around balloons. Refreshments are available, too.
The South End Library is located at 685 Tremont Street, between Rutland Square and West Newton Street.
All Decks on Hand for the District 2 and At-Large City Council Candidates' Forum at the SE Library Tomorrow, Thursday, November 3, at 6:30 PM
At-Large City Councillors and their challengers will all come to the South End Library tomorrow, Thursday, November 3, at 6:30 PM, to take part in the Candidates' Forum sponsored by the Rutland Square Association and the Friends of the South End Library (FOSEL). The Forum will be moderated by Stephen Fox, chair of the Rutland Square Association, which straddles both Districts 2 and 7. Click here for a map of District 2.
The District 2 race features City Councillor Bill Linehan in a competitive battle with his challenger Suzanne Lee, who in an upset won the three-candidate preliminary election held in September. The at-large councillor contest is heating up as well, with four well-liked incumbents--Felix Arroyo, John Connolly, Ayanna Pressley and Stephen Murphy-- facing a powerful challenger, former City Council President and previous mayoral candidate Michael Flaherty, who has made it no secret that, if elected, he plans to twist Tom Menino's mayoral thumb as he sees it pressing on the doings of the city council. Two other at-large candidates, Sean Ryan and Will Dorcena, have been invited to attend the event as well.
The Forum will start at 6:30 PM with a half-hour focus on the District 2 candidates, who will make a brief presentation, answer questions of the moderator and respond to each other's statements. This is to be followed by a similar line-up for the at-large candidates. The final part of the evening will be open for questions from the audience. A South End volunteer will time the answers of candidates and members of the audience to ensure fairness.
Seating is limited, and the event will start promptly at 6:30 PM. The South End Library is located at 685 Tremont Street, between West Newton Street and Rutland Square.
Journalist/Author Johnny Diaz Will Read From His Latest, "Take the Lead," Tuesday, October 4, at 6:30 PM at the South End Library
Boston Globe writer and author Johnny Diaz will read from his fourth novel, Take the Lead, tomorrow night, October 4, at 6:30 PM. The Cuban-American media writer for the Boston Globe's Business Section weaves issues facing the latino gay community into the urban settings he is familiar with, such as Boston or Miami, where he worked for the Miami Herald before moving north. His previous novels include Boston Boys Club (2007), Miami Manhunt (2008) and Beantown Cubans (2009). He currently teaches Journalismat Emerson College. The library is located at 685 Tremont Street, between West Newton Street and Rutland Square Air Blower. The event is free, and sponsored by the Friends of the South End Library as part of its The South End Writes series.
Author Lily King Will Read From "Father of the Rain" Tomorrow, Tuesday, September 27 at the South End Library
The Friends of the South End Library are resuming their author's series, The South End Writes, with a reading tomorrow night by author Lily King from her most recent novel, Father of the Rain. Lily King, not a South End resident but with many friends in the neighborhood, grew up in Manchester, MA, and has taught English and Creative Writing at universities here and abroad. Her first novel, The Pleasing Hour, won the Barnes and Noble Discover Award and was a NY Times Notable Book. Her second, The English Teacher, won the Maine Fiction AwardWater Obstacle. Copies of King's novels are available at the SE branch, thanks to head librarian, Anne Smart. The reading starts at 6:30 PM at the South End Library. Refreshments will be available.
BPL's Strategic Plan Is Better Than What Existed Before (No Plan At All) But Does Not --Yet-- Address How to Improve BPL Governance or Establish a Transparent and Fair Library Renovation Process
The Boston Public Library's Trustee committee formed last year to draw up a Long-Term Strategic Plan has come up with a draft proposal it hopes will be adopted by the Library Board in November. It is a major improvement over what existed before, namely, no strategic plan at all. And, as State Rep. Byron Rushing, the BPL Trustee heading the so-called Compass Committee, said during the angry days in 2009 when library closures seemed imminent, "You can't make cuts without a strategic plan." To begin the current turnaround effort, the trustee committee studied other library systems' strategic plans, including those of the Seattle Public Library, the British Library, and Pina County Library, AZ., among others. Combined with public comments delivered to the BPL via surveys, blogs, BPL staff meetings and related forums, as well as at meetings at Copley Library and the library branches in Boston's hinterlands, the Library Board approved the proposed Principles for Excellence culled from the feedback earlier in the process. This go-around was followed by additional meetings and commentary, in real time and on the web, all of which has now resulted in an impressive, unwieldy but hope-laced Draft Long-Term Strategic Plan. The goal is for it to be ready for approval by BPL trustees at their November 15 public meeting. Additional comments are welcomed until October 7.
As important for what it addresses are the matters the draft plan doesn't mention, for obvious political reasons. These issues, BPL governance and a fair process for system-wide library renovation, would encroach on the prerogatives of Mayor Menino or, for that matter, anyone who will succeed him. Currently, the mayor controls BPL budgets and trust funds, and appoints all nine trustees. Proposed trustees are not vetted in any public forum by either the city council or another public entity to help ensure they would be the best candidates to protect and advance the interests of the Boston library system and its patrons. In the past, trusts left to the BPL have regularly been used to pay for operational expenses and executive benefits, rather than library enrichment the trusts were intended for. Each time, these actions were approved by the trustees, as were all the proposed cutbacks in BPL budgets, and library closures, including the controversial shuttering of the beloved downtown Kirstein Business Branch Library in 2008. (It's collection was moved to the basement of the Copley Library.)
No requirements relevant to library governance are necessary to become a BPL trustee, nor are there any term limits. The most recent resignation from the Library Board was earlier this month, by Ms. Berthe M. Gaines who had become a trustee 25 years ago, when Boston was a vastly different city and libraries were mostly about silence and books. Ideally, demographic, cultural and technological changes should be reflected within the Library Board to meet the needs of a modern, inclusive public library. For example, in the Minneapolis-Hennepin County system, from where BPL President Amy Ryan came, several seats on the Library Board are reserved specifically for trustees from the city of Minneapolis: county libraries have different needs and interests than urban libraries. Similarly, in Boston, neighborhood libraries have different needs from Copley, for example, and one neighborhood's requirements for services can be vastly different from another. Academics and researchers, moreover, wish for other things in their libraries than parents with teenagers or toddlers. A logical way to balance these needs is for those interests to be represented by library board trustees. Former Trustee Gaines, who was a respected library advocate in the 1980s, had not attended any BPL trustees meetings in the last two years, illustrative of even a basic lack of required attendance requirements for the library's governors. Thus far, the Boston city councillors have not asserted their muscle to change either the trustee appointment process or library governance. There are currently two vacancies on the board of trustees.
Eligibility for neighborhood library renovation or expansion is also not part of the proposed draft plan. The current process is a mystery, except perhaps for those who are cynical enough to dare speculate that the road to renovation is highly politicized. A surprising example of this played out in plain view in March 2009 when trustees were asked to vote on a plan to eliminate four libraries, including one in East Boston, a neighborhood close to the heart of Trustee Paul LaCamera. He refused to support it, until a phone call from Mayor Tom Menino to BPL President Amy Ryan during the public vote was revealed to include a mayoral pledge to site a new library in East Boston. LaCamera still voted to abstain but a new East Boston Library is currently "in the design phase," where it wasn't before. Thus, plans for library capital improvements in some neighborhoods become suddenly revealed, while libraries in too many others languish, cramped for space, poorly designed, not ADA accessible, nor otherwise enriched by library specialists or convenient hours for patrons.
Until October 7, you can comment on the proposed plan on the Compass web site.. This is your last chance to offer your suggestions for a better Long-Term Strategic Plan. The blog currently includes a rather pointed commentary by David Vieira, former president of the Citywide Friends of the BPL. A final version of the plan will be voted on by the trustees at their November 15 meeting. All BPL trustee meetings are open to the public and, since Trustee Byron Rushing has joined the trustees, public comment has become a regular agenda item at the board, another sign of the board's rising comfort level with embracing enlightened stewardship and public participation.
Kindle comes to the Boston Public Library
Amazon started the Kindle e-book lending program and Boston Public Library is part of the system! If you own a kindle you can now check out a book digitally and read it on your Kindle or your iPad, or your Mac and PC. You can follow the directions on the BPL website or this small tutorial here.
Weekly Programs for Children at the South End Library for September, October, November and December 2011
MONDAYS AT TEN AM: Pre-School Films for young children MONDAYS AT ELEVEN AM: Toddler Story Hour with nursery rhymes, song and movement, puzzles and simple crafts
MONDAY - THURSDAY 3:30 - 5:30 PM: Homework Assistance with Boston high school tutors.
FIRST TUESDAY OF THE MONTH, 6 TO 8 PM: Tween/Teen Crafts, to include more sewing
projects
FIRST TUESDAY IN NOVEMBER, 6 TO 8 PM: Community Celebration of Creativity--anyone from 6 to 90 years old can bring something made, played or spoken to share.
EVERY FOURTH TUESDAY, 6:30 TO 8:30 PM: Each One Teach One, from 8 to 80 years old. Bring your handiwork to share. Sept. 27, Oct. 25, November 22nd and Dec. 27th.
WEDNESDAYS AT 10:30 AM: Pre-School Story Hour. Sept/Oct: books about new beginnings, fall and animals. Special Guest Myrna Nunez of Pine Village Pre-School. Sept.14 and 21, with stories in Spanish. November: Tales of giving and appreciation. December: Tales and crafts for winter and holidays.
EVERY THIRD WEDNESDAY, 4-5 PM: LEGO Club. Sept. 21, Oct. 19, Nov. 23, Dec. 21.
WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY 1 -3 PM: Play Groups
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 10:30 AM & WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 AT 10:30 AM: Pre-School Music with the Community Music Center of Boston's David Polansky. Sponsored by the Friends of the South End Library.
Whether "Back-in-Town" or "Never-Left-to-Begin-With," the Fall 2011 FOSEL Season Resumes
Hurricanes came and went this summer, and some may visit yet belatedly, but the South End Library is still standing. Its programming, and best of all, Saturday hours from 10 to 2,, have resumed. Just before Labor Day, FOSEL cleaned up and refurbished the gardens in the tree enclosures around the library. In addition, FOSEL also removed the debris left by Hurricane Irene in Library Park. One of the park's steady visitors, Orlando, spent two days assisting FOSEL bagging the trash and sweeping the pavement in and around the park. Thank you, Orlando. The South End Writes Author's Series, which last year hosted literary luminaries like Sue Miller, Henri Cole, Doug Bauer, film writer Alice Stone, and culinary authors Chris Kimball and Joanne Chang, will start afresh on Tuesday, September 27 at 6:30 PM. Award-winning fiction writer Lily King will read from the just-issued paperback version of her 2010 novel, Father of the Rain, set in a suburb on Boston's North Shore. Her previous novels include The Pleasing Hour (winner of the Barnes and Noble Discover Award), and The English Teacher (winner of the Maine Fiction Award). Father of the Rain has won the New England Book Award for Fiction and was listed as a New York Times Editor's Choice.
Boston Globe reporter Johnny Diaz will read from his fourth novel, Take the Lead, on Tuesday, October 4, 6:30 PM. Diaz's novels explore the lives of Latino gay men in urban venues such as Boston's South End and Miami, where Diaz was previously a reporter for The Miami Herald. At The Herald, he shared in the 2000 Pulitzer prize for the paper's coverage of the seizure by federal agents of Elian Gonzales, a young boy who had fled Cuba with his mother and her boyfriend, but whose father demanded his return to the island after the mother drowned during the escape. Diaz's earlier novels include Beantown Cubans, Miami Manhunt, and Boston Boys Club. Diaz wrote in an email that Take the Lead was partially inspired by an article he wrote for the Boston Globe about a physical therapy dance class for people who suffer from Parkinson's Disease. In the novel, the dance class forms the background for the main character's coming to terms with the relationship with his father, who struggles with the illness, and his love affair with the dance instructor..
The BPL's efforts to create a workable Long-Term Strategic Plan will reach an important moment on Thursday, September 15 when the BPL trustees, at their public meeting, will receive a draft of the document outlining the BPL's modernization plan from the so-called Compass Strategic Planning Committee. The meeting will be held at Copley Library at 8:30 AM. The planning committee is chaired by South End's State Representative and BPL Trustee, Byron Rushing. Other members of the committee include BPL Trustees Carol Fulp and Zamawa Arenas, BPL President Amy E. Ryan, Executive Director of Codman Academy Charter Public School Meg Campbell, Mayor Menino's Special Assistant Alice Hennessey, Mimi Jones of the Friends of Dudley Branch Library, private attorney Ronaldo Rauseo-Ricupero and Pamela Seigle, Executive Director, Courage & Renewal Northeast at Wellesley College. The committee met several times during the summer and held a few "roundtables" at branch libraries, regrettably not well advertised through neighborhood associations or similar institutions, and too often held during the summer when many library patrons and supporters are away on vacation or visiting relatives. Nevertheless, the Compass Committee invites everyone to read the draft document and comment by email . FOSEL will report on the document in a later post on this web site.
Also on the BPL Trustee Agenda is the announcement of the resignation of long-time trustee Berthe M. Gaines, creating the second open seat on the nine-member library board. The other vacancy is the result of the retirement earlier this year of author and Boston Globe columnist James Carroll.. A library advocate who in the 1980s fought branch closures, Ms. Gaines had not attended trustee meetings for more than two years or expressed any public opinions about the BPL's recent trials and tribulations. Mayor Menino appoints trustees, but, in contrast with procedures in other library communities, the mayoral nominees have thus far not been asked by the City Council to demonstrate their ability for advocacy on behalf of libraries or library patrons, or their fundraising prowess, in a public forum such as city council hearings. The danger of pro-forma confirmation of library board nominees by the City Council became evident in the last few years when proposed budget cutbacks went unchallenged, BPL foundation fundraising collapsed for lack of inspired leadership and proposed library closures endorsed by BPL trustees were only averted at the last minute after public outrage made closings politically unpalatable.
Overall South End Library programming will be posted separately, but FOSEL has agreed to sponsor two events for children in September and October. In addition, A FOSEL supporter has purchased a sewing machine for the library's craft program organized by children's librarian Margaret Gardner, who hopes to instruct young tailors and tailorettes in the art of the mechanical needle.
The FOSEL Fundraising Campaign begun earlier this year to collect money to have a handicapped-accessible door installed at the South End Library has not yet reached its goal. The FOSEL board is currently looking into next steps, and will post an update as soon as possible.
Welcome back and stay tuned....
Nominate our library to win $1000 tag reading kit
Leapfrog is running a "contest" of sort. The prize is a $1000 LeapFrong reading kit. This is a next generation smart "pen" that will read a book, word by word, from a specially marked books. It's hard to explain but it actually works really well. We have one at home.
What they say:
Nominate the south end library by August 1 and it could win a $1,000 LeapFrog Tag™ Reading Kit! The kits include Tag, "the #1 best-selling reading system that brings interactive books and maps to life.** Tag engages children with favorite characters as it helps them learn to read." (from their website).
What to do:
Email Leapfrog and submit information of the library, send email to: loveyourlibrary@leapfrog.com with your library's name and mailing address. That information is below:
South End Branch Library 685 Tremont Street, Boston, MA 02118 617-536-8241 Branch Librarian: Anne Smart
Be a Momprenuer (or Dad): How to Write Your Business Plan
Kim Clark of Polished Professionals of Boston, will teach a free two part class on business plan writing at the South End Library. Are you going to be the next facebook, zipcar, or google? Come learn how to write a business plan with Kim. Please call 617-536-8241 to pre-register.
Dates: Friday June 10th and June 17th, from 9:30 to 12:30
Summer 2011 Events for Children at the South End Library
The South End Library has scheduled the following events for children during the summer of 2011. To sign up or make inquiries, call Margaret Gardner, Children's Librarian, at 617 536-8241. Click here for South End Library hours, location and additional information. JUNE:
Short films for young children, Mondays at 10:30 AM
JULY:
Story hour for young children in the "One World Many Stories" series, Wednesdays 10:30 AM
Share a Story Book Club, children grades 1-3. Read a book, do a craft. Mondays, July 25 through August 22nd, 1-3 PM
Summer Book Club, children grades 3-8. Choose books, do crafts and more. Tuesdays, July 5th through August 23rd, from 1-3 PM
For all readers all summer long: pick up your summer reading books at the library, rad, and earn great rewards for every five books you read.
ADDITIONAL SPECIAL PROGRAMMING:
Garden Art from Recycled Materials with Daisy Cushner. Make mobiles and more from recycled stuff for your garden. Use your own materials or ours. All ages welcome. July 11, at 1:00 PM.
World of Bridges: a special design and build class from the Museum of Science. For children aged 7-10. Each class can accommodate 20 participants. Call the library to register. Monday, July 18, two classes, one at 1 PM, the other at 2 PM.
Special Tour of the South End's Animal Rescue League. For children in grades 1-3. Call the library to register. Meet at the SE Library for the walk to ARL. Wednesday, July 13, at 1 PM.
PJ Story Time in Library Park. For parents and older children. Please bring a book to read aloud or a story to tell. Cookies and juice provided. Tuesday, July 19 at 6:30 PM.
AUGUST:
Spanish in Motion with Jouvette Shortell, Wednesdays in August at 10:30 AM
Special Tour of the South End Animal Rescue League. For children grades 4-7. Call the library to register. Meet at the library at 1 PM on August 3.
Master Story Teller Mark Binder with Great Tales for One World, Many Stories. For children aged 5-10. Monday, August 1 at 11 AM
Read and Run with Personal trainer Michele Craemer. Meet at the library to read with Michele from her new book. Then run to the Butterfly Garden on SW Corridor Park and, finally, do boot camp calisthenics in Titus Sparrow Park. Tuesday August 2 and Thursday August 4 at 1 PM.
Doll. e. Daze, a Show for All Children. Monday, August 15 at 10:20 AM.
More Art with Daisy Cushner. Functional origami using recycled stuff. For everyone who shows up. Tuesday, August 16, at 1 PM.
End of Summer Reading Party in Library Park. For everyone. August 16, at 6:30 PM.
America's Test Kitchen and Cook's Illustrated's Chris Kimball Will Talk About Food Writing at the South End Library on June 7, 6:30 PM
Longtime South End resident and culinary-publishing star Christopher Kimball (America's Test Kitchen) will talk about his personal essays in the bi-monthly Cook's Illustrated this Tuesday at the South End Library at 6:30 PM. And, yes, refreshments will be served: how could we not? For this event, Kimball will bring copies of his recent book, Fannie's Last Supper, a tale of the author's recreation of a 12-course Christmas dinner given at the end of the 19th Century in the South End by Fannie Farmer, who wrote The Boston Cooking School Cookbook. The entire meal was prepared on a wood-burning stove at Kimball's home located near where Ms. Farmer used to live.
Kimball's extraordinarily successful career in food-publishing (The Best Recipe, Grilling and Barbecue, American Classics, Restaurant Favorites at Home, among other cookbooks) has defied general wisdom numerous times since its inception in 1980. Cook's Illustrated lacks the sumptuous photography mandatorily prevalent in food publishing, but offers instead fine line drawings and watercolors of seasonal vegetables, fruits, cheeses, culinary implements and, yes, even its authors. And in an era when print publishing has seen its worst circulation numbers, Cook's Illustrated's subscriber base exploded. What can his secret be?
Perhaps in an era of formulaic publishing formats, the incongruous and unexpected brings the triumphs. Thus the personal essays Kimball pens for each bi-monthly Cook's Illustrated may seem out of place in a magazine devoted to the dreary task of testing recipes and canned-food products, but the cast of characters that has populated the columns for decades enlivens and anchors this publication's unique approach to food and life. There's Charley Bentley, the farmer who doesn't talk much but whose raised eyebrow will tell you all you need to know; and John Kurasinski, the gruff neighbor who likes to do favors but has trouble accepting them because he doesn't want to be in anyone's debt; and there we have Herbie and Onie, the two local farmhands with whom Kimball weathered the many complications of farming.
For Kimball, all roads seem to lead back to Vermont, where he grew up and owns a farm: even in a 2001 essay, recalling his 1969 trip with high-school friends across the Sahara desert to Agadez (Niger), he wonders, three decades later, after dropping off his kids at the local country store to buy candy, whether the journey and the destination are the same thing.
Kimball's visit will close the first season of FOSEL-sponsored The South End Writes author's series. It will resume in September.
Food Writers Joanne Chang and Chris Kimball on June 2 and June 7, Respectively
Joanne Chang
South End culinary lights Joanne Chang (Myers+Chang, Flour) and Christopher Kimball (Cook's Illustrated, America's Test Kitchen, Cook's Bible) will come to the South End Library to talk about their work (culinary and authory) on Thursday, June 2 and Tuesday, June 7, respectively. Both events start at 6:30 PM and will offer refreshments (how could we not?). Their books will be available at the event. Stay tuned for more information closer to the date.
Flour Bakery's Joanne Chang Will Talk About Writing the Flour Cookbook, Thursday, June 2, at 6:30 PM at the South End Branch.
Joanne Chang
The South End's doyenne of daily delicacies, Flour Bakery's owner and baked-goods visionary Joanne Chang, will speak at the South End Library on Thursday as part of The South End Writes series. Joanne will talk about what was involved in writing the cookbook,Flour: A Baker's Collection of Spectacular Recipes, and answer any questions you might have about the writing process , her recipes, and what she would like to get into print next. Joanne will bring copies of the book, and sign them. Next week Tuesday, June 7, another South End culinary star, Christopher Kimball, of Cook's IllustratedandAmerica's Test Kitchen, will close The South End Writes author's series for the summer season. FOSEL is currently working on inviting others writers for the 2011/2012 literary year. Stay tuned..
Tonight's the Night of the 2011 Annual Meeting of the Friends of the South End Library: 6:30 PM.
The Friends of the South End Library (FOSEL) will hold their Annual Meeting tonight at the South End branch at 6:30 PM. The board will give updates on programs past and future, fundraising efforts, and initial efforts underway by FOSEL, the Rutland Square Association RSA) and the Parks Department to redesign Library Park. The RSA is the official Parks Partner for Library Park. Its board and volunteers, as well as FOSEL's board and volunteers, have cleaned, trimmed, planted, swept and generally fussed over the park for decades. FOSEL intends is to create a strong community outreach and participation program for the park's future.
The fundraising campaign, the first community-wide outreach by FOSEL, has for its main goal the installation of a handicapped-accessible door to the South End library. The branch already features an elevator that can accommodate wheelchairs and strollers to access the second floor community room, but getting into the building from the street still requires a major effort by the less abled. Over the years, FOSEL has made many requests for an automatic door but for a number of reasons those requests have not met with desired results. By raising the funds privately, we expect the City will do all it can to partner with FOSEL to get the door in place quickly.
Bring your questions and suggestions.
As always, FOSEL will offer refreshments.
South End Library to Be the Site of a Hubway Bikeshare Docking Station
Starting after July 4, the Newton and Tremont Street sides of the South End Library will have a bike-sharing docking station as part of the city of Boston's Bikeshare program. The library's location is clearly seen as a community hub/stop for the South End. The Boston system is called Hubway Bikeshare. It will start sometime in July with 600 bikes. Cambridge and Somerville are likely to start similar programs. Read more about it at Boston Biker and Mass Bike.
Sign of a Better Season: Saturday's South End Library Book Sale Was NOT Rained Out...
The South End Library's Book Sale was bravely held at adjacent Library Park and....the gods of weather blessed it by not raining it out. A steady stream of pedestrians with newly-found pre-owned books in hand traversed the streets leading to and from the library's sale, a sign that some happiness was achieved by the annual give-and-take of non-digital treasures priced at as little as 50 cents and one dollar. Thanks to the outstanding library staff who organized it, that is, Anne Smart, George Bernhardt-Miller and Margaret Gardner, and thanks to the many volunteers who showed up. And thanks to Chris Treacy of South End Patch, who wrote a nice article about the book sale in Friday's edition.
South End Library's Friends Looking for Your Financial Help to Fund Handicapped-Accessible Entry to the Branch--Please Donate
We are at the last stage of a massive mailing campaign -- envelopes are stuffed, address labels have been applied, postage stamps affixed. It was both easier and harder then we thought. My thumb is tired from, of all things, peeling labels and stamps off their sheets. Our return address stamp is not easily applied but when it is, looks great. Hope you have received one of these (see photo) in your mailbox. Make a donation by using our return envelope or clicking on the DONATE icon if you want to use PayPal.
Thanks.