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Tonight! Daniel Golden discusses Spy Schools

Friends Author Series

Thursday, November 9th

7pm, Library Assembly Room

 Daniel Golden, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and author of Price of Admission (2006) to discuss his new book, Spy Schools.

Daniel Golden, Pulitzer Prize winner and senior editor at Propublica, will discuss his new book, Spy Schools: How the CIA, FBI, and Foreign Intelligence Secretly Exploit America’s Universities on Thursday, November 9th at 7pm in the Library Assembly Room.

Grounded in extensive research and reporting, Spy Schools reveals that academic globalization has transformed higher education in the U.S. into a front line for international spying. In labs, classrooms, and auditoriums, intelligence services from countries like China, Russia, and Cuba seek insights into U.S. policy, recruits for clandestine operations, and access to sensitive military and civilian research. The FBI and CIA reciprocate, tapping international students and faculty as informants. Universities ignore or even condone this interference, despite the tension between their professed global values and the nationalistic culture of espionage.

A provocative look at the transformation of academia to a broad chessboard of international espionage.Kirkus Reviews

Golden-Dan-credit-Scott-BronsteinBefore joining ProPublica in October 2016, Golden worked as managing editor for education and enterprise at Bloomberg News. There he edited a series about tax inversions–companies moving headquarters overseas to avoid taxes– that earned Bloomberg’s first-ever Pulitzer Prize in 2015. Golden also won a Pulitzer as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal in 2004 for a series of articles on preferences for children and donors in college admissions. He expanded that series into a critically acclaimed national bestseller, The Price of Admission: How America’s Ruling Class Buys Its Way Into Elite Colleges–and Who Gets Left Outside the Gates, which the Washington Post selected as one of the best non-fiction books of 2006. It has recently drawn renewed attention because of its disclosure that Jared Kushner was admitted to Harvard after his father pledged $2.5 million to the university. ProPublica: The Story Behind Jared Kushner’s Curious Acceptance into Harvard. Golden is also a co-author of “Affirmative Action for the Rich: Legacy Preferences in College Admissions” (Century Foundation Press 2010).

Prior to The Wall Street Journal, Golden spent 18 years as a staff reporter at the Boston Globe, including four years on its Spotlight team. He has won numerous honors aside from the Pulitzer, including three George Polk awards, three National Headliner awards, the Sigma Delta Chi award, the New York Press Club Gold Keyboard award, and two Education Writers Association Grand Prizes. Golden won a Gerald Loeb Award and was a Pulitzer finalist in 2011 for a series of Bloomberg articles on for-profit colleges that recruit soldiers, veterans, the homeless, and low-income students, often to leave them with debt and no degree. He won an Overseas Press Club award in 2012 for a magazine feature about a test-prep firm in China that cracked the code of the SAT.

Golden joined Bloomberg News in 2009 from Conde Nast Portfolio, where he was senior editor for investigations. His Portfolio cover story, “Some Friend,” revealing that Countrywide chief executive Angelo Mozilo provided favorable mortgages to notables including members of Congress and former Cabinet members, prompted a U.S. Senate Ethics Committee investigation. A 1978 Harvard graduate, Golden lives in Belmont, Mass. Some annoyed college administrators have called him a muckraker, or a gadfly. Both are labels he wears with pride.

Mon, Nov. 13: Books & Bites hosts Wendy Drexler

Books and Bites

Monday, November 13th

11am, Library Assembly Room

Before there was before
 Poet and author Wendy Drexler to read and discuss her new book of poetry, Before There Was Before.
 
Belmont poet Wendy Drexler will read from and discuss her new book Before There Was Before.  This book of poems was published in March, 2017 by Iris Press.
Drexler has also authored the book Western Motel, published by Turning Point in 2012, and the chapbook Drive-Ins, Gas Stations, the Bright Motels, published by Pudding House in 2007.  Her first children’s book, Buzz, Ruby, and Their City Chicks, coauthored with Joan Fleiss Kaplan, was published by Ziggy Owl Press in 2016. Drexler is a freelance editor and has been a poetry editor for the Massachusetts Audubon Society.  A three-time Pushcart Prize nominee, she is a native of Denver, CO and now lives in Belmont.
All are welcome to attend this free program, sponsored by the Friends of the Belmont Public Library.  Refreshments will be provided.  Books will be available for purchase and signing.  The Assembly Room is handicapped accessible.

English Conversation Circle: Wednesdays

The Belmont Public Library offers free English Language Learner (ELL) conversation circles. Practice speaking English, improve your conversational skills, and learn about other cultures. Meetings are free, open to the public, and suitable for high beginner to intermediate levels. No registration necessary, just drop in.
Wednesdays evenings through August 15th: 7-8:30pm, Flett Room
No sign-up required, just drop in. Join us if you would like to improve your conversational skills and practice speaking English in a relaxed, welcoming atmosphere, with guidance from the group leader. The level is high beginner/low intermediate.
For more information, please call 617-993-2870.

 

 

New Financial Resource – Try It Out!

Try out the new Weiss Financial Ratings database, available as a 6-month trial, and take charge of your financial health.  Check ratings and performance of not only stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and ETFs, but also your bank, credit union, and insurance companies – all in one place.

Set up a “watch list” of the securities and companies you follow and get automatic alerts when ratings change.  Read news and opinion articles about investment topics by experienced Weiss Ratings analysts.  Create your own “screeners” to compare companies or investments using criteria that are important to you.

Compare the new Weiss Ratings to our other investment databases and tell us which ones we should keep:

  • Morningstar Investment Research Center offers independent ratings and analysis for stocks, mutual funds, and ETFs as well as tools for evaluating the asset mix of your portfolio and your financial readiness for college tuition payments or retirement.
  • Value Line Research Center provides in-depth research on companies, industries, markets, and economies and evaluates stocks using ratings of timeliness (performance projections), safety, and financial strength.

All three databases offer independent analysis and provide educational materials, such as articles, videos, or short courses on investment topics. Find them on our website at Subject Guide > Business and Career.  ​At-home access requires a Belmont library card.  ​

Which of the three databases best meet your needs? To let us know which investment resources you would like us to provide, please take our five-minute survey. Want help?  Email: [email protected] or call 617-993-2870.

Thur. Oct. 5th @ 7pm: Dick Lehr

Come hear Dick Lehr discuss his new novel, Trell, “inspired by the true story of a young man’s false imprisonment for murder—and those who fought to free him.” (Candlewick Press). The author, known for Whitey and Black Mass, was on the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team that brought the wrongful conviction to light.

Thursday, October 5th
7pm, Library Assembly Room

Former reporter Lehr (Black Mass) recounts a suspenseful story inspired by a case he investigated in the 1980s.” – Publishers Weekly

In a Boston swirling with racial tensions and public corruption, a story of false imprisonment based in fact, from a longtime investigative journalist.” Kirkus Reviews

“Trell is an appealingly gutsy heroine whose belief in her father is strong enough to drag an attorney and a down-on-his-luck journalist into her orbit…Younger YA readers will enjoy this fast-paced thriller.”—School Library Journal

 

Dick Lehr photo

Dick Lehr, author of Trell (2017), The Birth of a Nation (2014), Whitey (2013), The Fence (2009), Black Mass (2001), Judgment Ridge (2003), & The Underboss (1989).

Dick Lehr is a professor of journalism at Boston University. From 1985 to 2003, he was a reporter at the Boston Globe, where he was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in investigative reporting and won numerous regional and national journalism awards. He served as the Globe’s legal affairs reporter, magazine and feature writer, and as a longtime member of the newspaper’s investigative reporting unit, the Spotlight Team. Before that, Lehr, who is also an attorney, was a reporter at The Hartford Courant.

Lehr is the author of The Fence: A Police Cover-up Along Boston’s Racial Divide, a non-fiction narrative about the worst known case of police brutality in Boston, which was an Edgar Award finalist for best non-fiction. He is coauthor of the New York Times bestseller and Edgar Award winner Black Mass: Whitey Bulger, the FBI and a Devil’s Deal, and its sequel, Whitey: The Life of America’s Most Notorious Mob Boss.

Lehr was a John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University in 1991-1992. He lives outside Boston with his wife and four children.

 

Clouds, Chemistry & Climate Change

Tuesday, September 12th, 7-8pm
Library Assembly Room

The excess CO2 in our atmosphere will affect Earth’s climate for centuries to come, and we need to understand why. In this presentation, Dr. Daniel Cziczo, Associate Professor of Atmospheric Chemistry at MIT and an expert on the crucial role of clouds in the dynamics of climate, will explain how clouds form, how they affect the planet, and how that effect changes as CO2 accumulates in the atmosphere. Learn ways to reduce CO2 and watch as Dr. Cziczo simulates cloud formation and describes how atmospheric conditions that lead to cloud formation are studied in his lab, at mountaintop sites, and from research aircrafts.

Clouds, Chemistry, and Climate Change: Why Our Current Climate Is What It Is
Part of Science for the Public’s Lecture Series
Tuesday, September 12th, 7-8pm
Library Assembly Room

 

Tonight-Irish Genealogy-@7PM

Join us for “Newest Irish Records for Researchers.”  In this 90-minute program, presented by Richard Reid of Friends of Irish Research, we will discuss the newest church and civil records, as well as key websites for your research. We will learn about some of the best free resources, and subscription services available.  This program is designed for those just starting their Irish research and for the veteran researcher.

Registration is optional, but appreciated.
Thursday, September 21
7:00 – 8:30PM
Assembly Room. 
Sponsored by Friends of the Belmont Public Library.

Eclipse Viewing Party: Mon, Aug. 21 @ 2:15pm

We have a number of eclipse glasses we’ll be handing out starting at 2:15pm on Monday, August 21st. Eat celestial themed snacks and then head down to the grassy patch in front of Underwood Pool for the eclipse. New Englanders will be able to see a 60% partial eclipse – come be part of one of the most popular astronomical events of our time!

Monday, August 21st
2:15pm
Library Front Steps
*we’ve reserved a number of eclipse glasses for our viewing party. If we get more people than glasses, we hope everyone can share!

Purple Heart Ceremony: Mon, Aug. 8 @ 10am

Monday, August 7th, 10am
Library front steps

Veteran Service Officer Bob Upton has announced that on Monday August 7, 2017 the Town of Belmont will formally observe National Purple Heart Day.

The 2017 National Purple Heart Day Observance and Recognition Ceremony will be conducted at the Belmont Public Library beginning at 10:00 am on Monday August 7th. The featured guest speaker for the event will be Belmont resident USMC Colonel Michael J. Callanan who served as an Operations Officer in Iraq as well as USMC Battalion Commander in Afghanistan where he led a 1000 person team engaged in highly complex removal of life threatening devices across complex geography.

Belmont Veterans Memorial Committee member Bill McEvoy, US Army Veteran, will speak about that initiative and his experiences supporting our Veteran community and his efforts at the Bedford VA.

The Purple Heart is awarded to members of the armed forces of the U.S. who are wounded by an instrument of war in the hands of the enemy and posthumously to the next of kin in the name of those who are killed in action or die of wounds received in action.

Chartered by Congress in 1958, The Military Order of the Purple Heart is composed of military men and women who received the Purple Heart Medal for wounds suffered in combat. Although membership is restricted to the combat wounded, the organization supports all veterans and their families with a myriad of nation-wide programs by Chapters and National Service Officers.

The Veteran Service Office is reaching out to all Purple Heart recipients and / or their family members to attend this event. The public is invited to attend this event and to join with us in honoring and showing our appreciation to our Purple Heart recipients on this important occasion.

For more information please contact VSO Bob Upton at 617-993-2725 or by email to [email protected]

 

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