Author Archives: Haiwang Yuan

WKU Libraries’ Dean’s Office Celebrated Holiday

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Interim Dean Connie Foster and employees and students from her Office celebrated Christmas at a luncheon in the Federal Grove Bed & Breakfast Restaurant on December 14, 2011.

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Concluding Panel Discussion on Lincoln Today at KY Museum

dsc_0558The final Lincoln lecture took place Tuesday, December 6, 2011 in the Kentucky Library & Museum. Carol Crowe-Carraco, Nancy Baird, Patricia Minter, and Cecile Garmon discussed Lincoln’s legacy and the effects of his Constitutional decisions and leadership in our own time.

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Christmas in Kentucky Celebrated in Kentucky Museum

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Community members joined the KY Museum , WKU Chemistry Club and over 70 Hilltopper Atheletes for this year’s Christmas in Kentucky on the afternoon of December 3, 2011 in the Kentucky Museum. Children of all ages enjoyed the variety of activities and performances such as carolers, magic show, ormanment making, gingerbread sampling, and picture taking with Santa and Mrs. Claus throughout the museum. Admission was free.

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New Content Added to American History in Video

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We are pleased to announce that new content has been added to American History in Video that we have subscribed to. The addition includes 47 titles from four new publishers, plus more titles from PBS and Universal Newsreels. This update brings the total number of videos in American History in Video to 5,864, or 1,529 hours of content.

All of the new films in American History in Video enhance the collection distinctive ways. You can see a list of all the new content here:http://ahiv.alexanderstreet.com/WhatsNew. The American History in Video collection is accessible fromhttp://www.wku.edu/library/dlps/vpal/streaming_media.php linked from our Libraries’ homepage: http://www.wku.edu/library.

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Join Us in Celebrating Christmas in Kentucky

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Staff of Dean’s Office Surprised Dean with a Birthday Party

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On the morning of November 21, 2011, staff from the Dean’s Office of WKU Libraries surprised Interim Dean Connie Foster with a birthday party in her office. They had planned for the party without her knowledge.

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Luncheon in Honor of Evelyn Thurman Young Readers Award Winner

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Katie Pickard Fawcett won this year’s Evelyn Thurman Young Readers Book Award for her book To Come and Go like Magic. The book is set in the 1970s, when twelve-year-old Chili Sue Mahoney longed to escape her tiny Kentucky hometown and see the world. In doing so, she comes to recognize beauty in the people and places around her.

On November 18, 2011, Interim Dean of Libraries Connie Foster gave the award to Ms. Fawcett at a luncheon in the Kentucky Room. At the luncheon were Evelyn’s relatives, friends, and colleagues. Organizing the event was the Evelyn Thurman Young Readers Award Committee consisting of WKU faculty and staff Sean Kinder (Chair), Deana Groves, Roxanne Spencer, Jennifer Wilson, Kristie Lowry, and Donna Vincent.

Set up by WKU Libraries, this award is given to honor the memory of former WKU librarian Evelyn Thurman, who made significant contributions to children’s librarianship and literacy during her 25 years of service.

Katie Pickard Fawcett grew up in the hills of eastern Kentucky and spent two years as a social worker in Appalachia. She has counseled and tutored students in the Washington D.C. area, written ads for the Peace Corps and VISTA, and worked for the World Bank, writing about development projects in Third World countries. Her personal essays have been published in several magazines, and her favorite diversion is travel and the different cultural experiences it brings. Ms. Fawcett lives with her husband and son in McLean, Virginia. To Come and Go Like Magic is her first novel.

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Evelyn Thurman Young Readers Award Winner Visited ERC

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Katie Pickard Fawcett, this year’s winner of the Evelyn Thurman Young Readers Book Award, joined WKU Libraries employees and her readers at the Educational Resources Center for a small reception in her honor on the afternoon of November 17, 2011. She had been visiting schools early that day and ended her tour with a visit to the ERC to meet the friendly faces of WKU Libraries and Bowling Green.

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Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation

The Emancipation Proclamation was President Abraham Lincoln’s most controversial but most important decision. Ultimately it turned out to be the act for which Lincoln has been most remembered and admired. Dr. Glenn LaFantasie, WKU’s  Richard Frockt Family Professor of Civil War History, talked about how Lincoln came to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. Dr. LaFantasie’s presentation was offered on the evening of November 16, 2011 at the Kentucky Room in the Kentucky Building in conjunction with the “Lincoln: the Constitution & the Civil War” exhibit.

Organized by the National Constitution Center and the American Library Association Public Programs, the exhibit was made possible by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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Folk-rock Band Mythagoe Wowed Audience at Java City

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On November 15th the folk-rock band Mythagoe wowed the folks at Java City with their originals and their innovative arrangements of classic tunes by musical luminaries  like The Beatles.  Mythagoe features WKU music major Julia Fisher on vocals and bass, Kerry Pruitt also of the Lost river Cavemen on violin, Tim Short on Drums and Atremus Sumetra on lead guitar and lead vocals.  Mythagoe is certainly a band that will be invited back to Java City in the future.

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