Banned Books Week is an annual event promoted by the American Library Association (ALA) celebrating the freedom to read. WKU Libraries celebrates 2013 Banned Books Week by encouraging patrons to “Jump on the Banned Wagon!” and read banned or challenged books.
Banned Books Week
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The Economics of War
“A rich man’s war and a poor man’s fight” was the often-heard complaint of military draftees during the Vietnam War. But the cry was also raised during the Civil War, after the Enrollment Act, passed in March 1863, established a quota system for drafting men into the Union Army from each Congressional district.
The most unpopular parts of this unpopular law were its exemptions, and in particular the provisions allowing draftees to procure a substitute, or simply to avoid service by paying the government a $300 fee. The logic behind “commutation” money was that it would not only raise funds for the war effort but keep the cost of hiring a substitute below what it cost to exempt oneself entirely. Still, the fee (equivalent to about $5,500 today) was no small sum for the farmers, laborers and clerks who found themselves called to war.
Nevertheless, when Henry J. McLean was drafted on May 13, 1864, he quickly paid over his $300 at Owensboro, Kentucky and was issued a receipt which, according to section 13 of the Enrollment Act, discharged him from further liability under the draft. He might have considered himself lucky, for in July the federal government eliminated the commutation fee option, effectively removing the ceiling on the price of a substitute to serve in a draftee’s place.
Henry J. McLean’s commutation money receipt is part of the Manuscripts & Folklife Archives collections of WKU’s Special Collections Library. Click here to access a finding aid. For other collections relating to compulsory military service, search TopSCHOLAR and KenCat.
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Two speakers featured–an editorial cartoonist and a Holocaust survivor– as part of WKU Libraries’ Kentucky Live! and Far Away Places series in October
Courier-Journal editorial cartoonist Marc Murphy from Louisville, Kentucky will be speaking at Barnes & Noble on Thursday, October 10 as part of WKU Libraries’ Kentucky Live! lecture series. Murphy’s cartoons are nationally distributed and are published five times per week in the Courier-Journal.
Murphy’s works are now online in digital animation through the work of Digital Graphic Artist Chris Feldmann at the Courier-Journal. Murphy describes Feldman’s process as taking his art and “combining Steven Spielberg and Walt Disney.” Murphy says, “if you liked today’s cartoon, or more particularly…if you absolutely hated it, if you want to hate it even more, go to the Courier-Journal website and see it in all its animated glory.”
Samuel Marder, professional violinist and Holocaust survivor, will be speaking at Barnes & Noble on Thursday, October 17, on his recent book Devils among Angels: A Journey from Paradise and Hell to Life.
Devils among Angels is a collection of short stories and poems inspired by memories of Marder’s childhood years before, during, and after World War II and the Holocaust. He uses prose and poetry in both fiction and non-fiction to reflect on good and evil in the past and present.
Distinguished Professor of History Lisa Rosner, Ph.D., from Stockton College, writes about Marder’s book. “This is a transformative book in so many ways,” says Rosner. “Sam Marder takes the harrowing images of his childhood, shattered by the Nazis, and his experiences in concentration and refugee camps, and transforms them into stories, poems, and music. The reader is transformed by Marder’s striking images of angels and devils at work in human lives—and his calm reassurance of the ultimate victory of the angels. This book is required reading for anyone interested in the resilience of children, and creative genius, in the face of the Holocaust.”
Both programs will be held at 7 pm at Barnes & Noble Booksellers on Campbell Lane in Bowling Green, Kentucky. These are free events for anyone in the community. For more information, go to wku.edu/library.
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September Cool Stuff
Athletic Village – article by Kelly Thompson
Beulah Collins Ellis Autograph Book
BUWKY 9/1938 – Bowling Green Business University student publication
Glasgow Normal School – collection inventory
Personnel File – September 1988 issue WKU newsletter
Rodes-Helm Lecture Series – posters & programs
Sophomores – links to images and information regarding Sophomore classes
Southern Normal Scrapbook Index
Van Meter Hall – building history
Wetherby Hall – building history
Zacharias Hall – building history
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JFK Memory Project at WKU
To commemorate the life of John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the JFK Memory Project at WKU is collecting remembrances of Kennedy’s visit to Bowling Green on October 8, 1960 as a presidential candidate and or/memories of his assassination on November 22, 1963.
For more information about submitting a JFK remembrance, click here. Search TopSCHOLAR for WKU collections that contain information about JFK.
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SOKY Reads “community one read”
Partners of the Southern Kentucky Book Fest featured author Michael Morris’ novel “Man in the Blue Moon” as this year’s SOKY Reads “community one read” novel. Morris interviewed with local radio and television stations and led a group discussion in a Creative Writing class on WKU’s campus. He provided a presentation at the Warren County Public Library Thursday night at 6 pm.
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The Gulf: The Bush Presidencies and the Middle East
Michael Cairo is Associate Professor of Political Science at Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky. His newest title “The Gulf: The Bush Presidencies and the Middle East.” Most students at WKU haven’t known a time when there wasn’t a mention of war in the Middle East.
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Filed under Far Away Places, Flickr Photos, Government Documents, Past Events, Podcasts
WKU Libraries announce winner of 7th Evelyn Thurman Young Readers Book Award
Western Kentucky University Libraries has selected Same Sun Here, written by Silas House and Neela Vaswani, as the winner of the seventh Evelyn Thurman Young Readers Book Award. The national award was created 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 to the university and community. Books eligible for the award must be written or illustrated by a Kentucky author or illustrator or have a significant Kentucky-related connection.
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Technical Services Librarian Jack Montgomery
We’ve Been Everywhere speaker series featured Technical Services Librarian Jack Montgomery on Tuesday, September 24 with his program “Remembering Grandma’s Hoodoo: The Current Revivial of Folk Spirituality and Magic.” Approximately 30 faculty and staff attended the program and were intrigued with Montgomery’s topic of discussion.
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“Conditions Could Not Be Worse”
As the Colorado rainwaters recede, we remember that Kentuckians are no strangers to floods. One of the worst occurred early in 1937, when record rainfall swelled the Ohio River from Pennsylvania to Illinois. Louisville, Kentucky, where the river eventually crested at 57 feet above flood stage, was one of many communities to suffer severe damage.
In the face of the growing disaster, Mary Taylor Leiper (1885-1973), a librarian at WKU, left Bowling Green with a motorcade of about 200 other cars to help evacuate Louisville residents made homeless by the flood. In a letter to President Henry Hardin Cherry’s wife Bess, she vividly described what she encountered. Arriving in Louisville, she was directed to a spot at the water’s edge where rescue workers pulled up in a boat and deposited in her car an 84-year-old man and his nurse. Clutching his little Boston bulldog, the man was grateful for having survived three days in a house surrounded by water–and, Leiper’s nose told her, more than a week without a bath.
Leiper witnessed the grim conditions in the refugee centers: no heat or light, little water, and “shanties” set up in the middle of the street and connected to sewer lines to serve as toilets. Finally, she set out for Bowling Green carrying “four lovely people,” a couple and their grown son and daughter. At the end of the four-hour drive, Leiper took them to a church for food and coffee, then to the Armory for beds, the gymnasium at WKU having already been filled to capacity.
As she was leaving, Leiper described running into four other refugees, “old maid sisters” who, despite the circumstances, proved to be “the most attractive and interesting people” she had met in a long time. She put them up in her own house for the next two days, where the women related harrowing stories of moving from place to place as the flood waters rose. But they also made their hostess laugh as they told of watching two soldiers struggle to lift a 325-lb. woman into a truck, and of agreeing that if “Christ was not too good to be born in a manger,” then surely they could accept transportation in a railroad boxcar. “I can never tell of the joy that we all got during the time these women were with me,” Leiper wrote, marveling at their courage and sense of humor.
Along with many other citizens of Bowling Green, Leiper spent days serving food, obtaining clothes (the four sisters helped alter some of her late husband’s suits to fit the two men she had taken to the Armory), and arranging for hot baths. But her experiences with Louisville’s flood victims taught her that “there is a funny side to it all as well as a tragic one.”
Mary Leiper’s letter is available in the Manuscripts & Folklife Archives section of WKU’s Special Collections Library. Click here to access a finding aid. For more on the Ohio River flood of 1937 and other Kentucky floods, search TopSCHOLAR and KenCat.
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