After you received your Exhibit Framework Kit, you may wish to download any
and all of these supplemental exhibit small posters, table tents, shelf
danglers, and bookmarks to complete the exhibit. These items may be
downloaded and printed for use. For best results, it is recommended that
the PDFs be saved and transferred to a printing house.
You must first complete a registration form to access these materials.
Please click "Register," above. If you have previously registered, please click "Login" above
For exhibit support, please contact
Libraries@FreedomProject.US.
Small Posters (8.5"W x 11"H)
A Marketplace of Ideas:
Libraries as First Amendment Bastions
Libraries as First Amendment Battlegrounds
The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States
Challenging Ideas:
Choosing Books
How Are Books Challenged?
Why Are Books Challenged?
Removing Books
What is Censorship?
Flashpoint: Guilt By Omission?
Ask Your Librarian: How are books chosen at this library?
Ask Your Librarian: Have challenges happened at this library?
Ask Your Librarian: How are challenges to books handled at this library?
Accessing Information:
How Much Access?
Ask Your Librarian: Does this library use filters?
Considering the Children:
Education VS. Protection
A Student’s Right to Read
Controversial Gatherings:
Ask Your Librarian: Does this library allow any groups to meet here?
Flashpoint: Protesting Segregation in the Library
Display Signs (8.5”W x 11”H)
Download all Display Signs
How to Explore This Exhibit
Your Freedoms Online
About the Freedom Museum
Point/Counterpoint Table Tents (8.5”W x 11”)
(Fold into thirds and secure to create vertical tri-fold table tent)
Download all Table Tents
Accessing Information:
Should Libraries Monitor What People Read?
Should Internet Content be Filtered in the Library?
Should Pornography be Blocked from Library Computers?
Controversial Gatherings:
Should Religious Groups be Allowed to Use Library Space for Religious Services?
Quotation Shelf Danglers (4” circles)
Download all Quotation Shelf Danglers
Hugo Black, U.S. Supreme Court Justice
William Brennan, U.S. Supreme Court Justice
John Ciardi, poet
Benjamin Franklin, scientist and statesman
Mike Godwin, Staff Counsel, Electronic Freedom Foundation
John F. Kennedy, U.S. President
Walter Lippmann, author
Adlai Stevenson, politician
Mark Twain, author
Oscar Wilde, author
Bookmarks (2”W x 6”H, 3 per sheet)
Libraries and the First Amendment