Showing posts with label Programs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Programs. Show all posts

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Pass to the American Museum of Natural History will expire May 31, 2012

Our pass to the American Museum of Natural History will expire on May 31, 2012. The library is unable to renew the pass, since the museum has changed the pass policy. Use it before we loose it! 

AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY in New York City, Central Park West at 79th Street. Tel. 212-769-5100

The pass offers FREE general admission for 2 adults and up to four children. The museum is open daily from 10 am until 5:45 pm. Note: This pass can be checked out for two days.


All other museum passes can be checked out for one day only (overnight). If you check out a pass on a Saturday when the library is open, it will be due on Monday, before 9 pm.

The library's Museum Pass Program is funded by the Friends of the Hamden Library. Passes may be borrowed by Hamden residents only with a valid Hamden library card. The passes cannot be reserved or renewed. One pass per family. Overdue fines are $10 per day. You can check out the passes at the information desk at Miller Library in Hamden. Please call our information desk (203)287-2680 for more information.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Yale Dean to Discuss Poetry of Donald Hall

Mark Schenker, Assistant Dean of Students and Lecturer at Yale University will discuss the poetry of Hamden native Donald Hall in the Friends Room of the Miller Memorial Library on Wednesday, September 14 at 7 p.m.  In a free program designed to give readers an opportunity to familiarize themselves with Mr. Hall's work prior to the Friday evening celebration of Mr. Hall's life and work, Schenker will take participants through several pre-selected poems that will be made available to all those who register for the program. For further information and to register for this presentation, call 203 287-2680.





Hamden Celebrates its Native Son, Poet, Donald Hall

Former U.S. Poet Laureate and recent recipient of the National Medal of the Arts, Donald Hall who was born and raised in Hamden will be honored by his hometown on Friday, September 16 at 7 p.m. in Thornton Wilder Hall at the Miller Memorial Library Complex, 2901 Dixwell Ave.  The event will mark Mr. Hall's 83rd birthday and the publication of his latest book of poetry, The Back Chamber.  

Grandson of Henry Hall, one of the founders of Hamden's Brock-Hall Dairy, Mr. Hall grew up in the Whitneyville neighborhood of Hamden during the 1930s and 40s, attended Spring Glen Grammar School and Hamden High before going on to Philips Exeter Academy, Harvard and Oxford Universities. His youth in Hamden has figured prominently in several of his poems as well as his most recent memoir, Unpacking the Boxes.  The winner of numerous prizes for his poetry and other contributions to literature, he has lived on his maternal grandparents' farm in rural New Hampshire since 1975.

Mr. Hall plans to travel to Hamden for this event which will include presentations by Mayor Scott Jackson, Hamden Historian, Eric Lehman and The Connecticut Poetry Society.  The program is free and open to the public.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Author Visits

The Miller Library on 2901 Dixwell Avenue will be hosting two Connecticut author visits in May. The programs are free and open to the public, no registration required. For further information, call 203-287-2680.


Tuesday, May 10th at 7:00 PM
Cruising Connecticut with a Picnic Basket Author Jann Mann
Held in the Friends' Room

Jan Mann will be discussing her book, Cruising Connecticut with a Picnic Basket. The book gives detailed descriptions of forty-two diverse Connecticut destinations with activities suitable to a variety of ages and interests and recipes for picnic fare, will share her experiences and advise participants on trip planning and food preparation appropriate to a variety of surroundings. Ms. Mann, founder of the Open Circle Writer’s Group and member of Connecticut Authors and Publishers Association, explains that in her book, now in an updated 2nd edition, readers will “be introduced to new places as well as get updates on well-known tourist spots” whether they wish to spend an entire day or just need a short interlude “away from the routine in order to get re-energized.”

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Wednesday, May 18th at 7:00 PM
The Old Leather Man Author Dan DeLuca
Held in Thornton Wilder Hall

Dan W. Deluca will be discussing The Old Leather Man. Mr. DeLuca has researched the Leatherman story for more than two decades. His book, a compilation of newspaper accounts, first-person remembrances and rare photographs of the subject, was published by Wesleyan University Press in 2008. Mr. DeLuca will discuss the history, the lore and the current battle over The Leatherman’s remains.

For those not familiar with the story, The Leatherman, so named because he dressed in hand-sewn leather garb, travelled a 34-day, 365 mile route on foot through western Connecticut and eastern New York during the late 1800’s, becoming a familiar sight in the towns through which he passed. He slept in a series of caves and lean-tos along his route, keeping his own gardens nearby. He died at age 50 in 1889, his real name unknown. Since then, his legend and the desire to learn his identity has grown in both New York and Connecticut. Those following the latest developments in The Leatherman’s saga know there is currently a heated controversy concerning the possibility of exhuming The Leatherman’s body from it gravesite in Ossining, New York in hopes of using DNA testing to determine the true identity of The Leatherman.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Book Reading & Discussion: Author Katharine Beals

Author Katharine Beals will discuss her book Raising a Left-Brain Child in a Right Brain World at noon on Thursday, March 25th in the Friends' Room on the library's second level. Discussion topics include cooperative learning and the unsocial child, reform math and the mathematically gifted child, interdisciplinary projects and the detail-focused child, formatieve assessment and the undermotivated child and mainstreaming and the child on the autistic spectrum. Participants are invited to bring a bag lunch.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Mad Science

On July 30th, Kathy Truesdell from Mad Science
presented Lights! Color! Action! at the Brundage Community Branch Library. Using the Newton's color wheels they built themselves, participants were able to see how white light really is made up of all the colours of the rainbow!

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Bubbleology


Everyone had a great time at our Bubbleology program on July 14th! Folks from the Whitney Water Center presented a program on the physical properties of bubbles, then the kids were able to see science in action by creating their own bubbles!

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Protest Songs: History Through Music


Thanks to everyone who came to our concert of protest songs on May 19, featuring singer Ravenna Michalsen and Thomas Keidel on guitar.