Music, medi"play"tion + bubbles = fun!
3 - 6 years
THE LIBRARY WILL OPEN AT 12:00 NOON ON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1 IN ORDER TO ALLOW TIME FOR STAFF TRAINING IN THE MORNING.
Click on a button below to register simultaneously for multiple programs within that age group.
To register for one program only, simply find it on the calendar below and click that link.
Music, medi"play"tion + bubbles = fun!
3 - 6 years
Learn about then get creative building an Ancient wonder. Grades 1 - 4.
Earn volunteer hours and assist the Children's librarians in the making of a tiny town.
The Up In Arms theater group will perform a musical puppet show with an anti-bullying message.
After the puppet show come to the Children's Room to make a puppet of your own.
After the "Helping Drew" puppet show come to the Children's Room to make a puppet of your own.
NO REGISTRATION NEEDED.
We provide the LEGOS, you provide the imagination! Your creaions will be displayed in the Children's Room.
NO REGISTRATION NEEDED, just drop in.
Sing & play instruments.
10 - 35 months w/caregiver
Reaching for the Moon (2013) Bruno Barreto’s biopic - based on Carmen Oliveira’s 1995 best-seller, Rare and Commonplace Flowers: The Story of Elizabeth Bishop and Lota de Macedo Soares - stars Miranda Otto and Glória Pires. Set largely in Petrópolis (north of Rio de Janeiro) between the years 1951 and 1967, it chronicles the tragic and tumultuous love affair between the American poet and Brazilian architect. Not Rated: 1 hour 58 minutes. Poet Laurie Byro to introduce the film.
Howard Horowitz will read “The Wawayanda Watershed” and other poems.
He is a Professor Emeritus in Geography from Ramapo College, and has written about forestry and environmental science as well as poetry. Howard Horowitz is the Author of “Close to the Ground”, a book of tree planting poems. Horowitz is famous for creating cartographic works that visually integrate geography, history and poetry. Horowitz creates beautiful poems and then structures them around the shape or form of what the poem is about. The most famous example of this technique is his poem “Manhattan” that was published in the New York Times.