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Libraries are the memory of humankind, irreplaceable repositories
of documents of human thought and action. The New York Public Library
is such a memory bank par excellence, one of the great knowledge
institutions of the world, its myriad collections ranking with those of
the British Library, the Library of Congress, and the Bibliothèque
nationale de France. Virtually all of the Library's many collections and
services are freely available to all comers. In fact, the Library has
but one criterion for admission: curiosity. The New York Public Library comprises simultaneously a set
of scholarly research collections and a network of community libraries,
and its intellectual and cultural range is both global and local, while
singularly attuned to New York City. That combination lends to the Library
an extraordinary richness. It is special also in being historically a
privately managed, nonprofit corporation with a public mission, operating
with both private and public financing in a century-old, still evolving
private-public partnership. The research collections (for reference only,
and organized as The Research Libraries, with
four major centers) resemble the holdings of the great national and university
libraries, and the community circulating libraries (organized as The
Branch Libraries) resemble classic American municipal libraries.
th/pro: 10-31-02 |