Michael Cairo

2013-09-09 11-41-05 4

The Gulf: The Bush Presidencies and the Middle East
by Michael Cairo

Transylvania University political scientist Michael Cairo is the opening speaker in this year’s Far Away Places series.  He’ll be speaking on Thursday, September 19, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. at Barnes & Noble Bookstore (1680 Campbell Lane) about his new book The Gulf: The Bush Presidencies and the Middle East published recently by the University Press of Kentucky and about recent events in the Middle East.  A book signing will follow.

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Michael Cairo

Cairo is a native of Clifton Park near Saratoga, New York.  Growing up he had ambitions to save the world but shifted these to focus on a career in International Relations. After an MA and PhD in Foreign Affairs from the University of Virginia, he’s taught political science at Virginia Commonwealth University, Southern Illinois University, the University of Kentucky and Georgetown College.  In 2010 he joined the faculty of Transylvania University as an Associate Professor.

His interest in the Middle East stems from his interest in building understanding across cultures and he has visited Israel and Palestine most recently in July 2012 and May 2013.  His newest project is a second book focusing on U.S.- Israeli Relations.

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Far Away Places Event Flyer

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Apple Blossoms and Horseradish

Red Cross Motor Corps, 1944 (Elizabeth Coombs first row, second from left)

Red Cross Motor Corps, 1944 (Elizabeth Coombs first row, second from left)

Bowling Green native Elizabeth Robertson Coombs (1893-1988) spent much of her youth in New York City, but returned to Kentucky after the early death of her father, a railroad executive.  When the U.S. entered World War II, Coombs, who had worked for a decade as a reference librarian at WKU’s Special Collections Library, was ready to volunteer her skills.  In 1942, she filled out an application to serve with the local branch of the Red Cross Motor Corps.  She noted her proficiency in French, gave WKU uber-librarian Margie Helm as a reference, and for some reason boldly lopped nine years off her date of birth.

The Motor Corps was no delicate feminine pastime.  In their dark grey uniforms and caps, and with an identifying metal disk attached to their licence plates, volunteers undertook a variety of tasks related to the civilian war effort: carrying messages and deliveries, ferrying public health officials to their duties and children to hospital in Louisville, driving mobile canteens, transporting supplies for the blood donor program, doing office work and assisting at public gatherings.  Members attended meetings at the Bowling Green Armory and were liable to be discharged if they missed more than three; an acceptable excuse, however, was having a husband home on furlough.

In order to qualify for the Motor Corps, Coombs completed Red Cross first aid training, then took a 30-hour course in motor mechanics where she learned to change tires, put on chains, adjust brakes, and replace spark plugs.  But the Motor Corps also provided support to the civil defense authorities, and consequently Coombs received additional education in war’s worst-case scenarios, including the possibility of chemical attack.  She learned about the telltale odor of tear gas (fly paper or apple blossoms), mustard gas (horseradish), and paralyzing gases (bitter almonds or rotten eggs), the symptoms of exposure, and what aid to administer.

Fortunately, for Coombs and her fellow citizens, the discomforts of the home front did not extend beyond coping with a scarcity of consumer goods and a federal system of rationing and price controls.  Instructions on her books of ration stamps for food and gasoline gave her the right “to buy your fair share of certain goods” at reasonable prices.  “Don’t pay more” on the black market, warned the Office of Price Administration–and, conversely, “If you don’t need it, DON’T BUY IT.”  Some commodities required special clearance; completion of a two-page form allowed Coombs and her mother to apply for a “home canning sugar allowance” subject to an annual limit of 20 lbs. per person and a warning to “only apply for as much sugar as you are sure you will need.”

Material relating to Elizabeth Robertson Coombs’ life during wartime is part of the Coombs Family Collection housed in the Manuscripts & Folklife Archives section of WKU’s Special Collections Library.  Click here to download a finding aid.  For more collections relating to the home front during World War II, search TopSCHOLAR and KenCat.

Homemaker's pledge; ration stamps

Homemaker’s pledge; ration stamps

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Library student workers participate in orientation

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WKU Libraries student workers attended an orientation in Helm 100 on Wednesday, September 11 to learn more about their responsibilities in the libraries. Brian Coutts, Department Head of Library Public Services, welcomed the students and gave an overview of library services. Brent Fisk from VPAL, Crystal Bowling and Paula Bowles from Library Technical Services, and Doug Wiles from Library Security all provided insightful information and offered assistance to the students workers. Upon conclusion, several students won a library t-shirt from the drawing.

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Hello from Kawanishi

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From Left to Right: Keiko Fujii, Connie Foster, and Dr. Brian Coutts

This friendly email from Keiko Fujii, Project Manager for Cultural & International Exchanges for the City of Kawanishi,  Hyogo Prefecture, announces the continuation of this three decades old Sister City Exchange Program which dates from 1995.  The exchange has involved visits of municipal officials to Japan including former Bowling Green Mayor Elaine Walker and Warren County Judge Executive Mike Buchanan and visits of the Mayor of Kawanishi and Japanese business officials to Bowling Green.  It has also brought Japanese students to Bowling Green for two week school experiences and stays with host families. 

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Dr. Brian Coutts and Keiko Fujii

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Book given as a gift from the City of Kawanishi to WKU Libraries

WKU Libraries have exchanged library materials including books, magazines, CD’s and DVD’s with the City of Kawanishi and their public library.  This year’s gift included 27 books and videos on Japanese language and conversation.  Ms Fujii accompanied students to Bowing Green this August and was a lunchtime guest of Dean of Libraries Connie Foster and Department of Library Public Services Head Brian Coutts on August 23.  She also toured the new Augenstein Alumni Center.  The exchange was featured in the Bowling Green Daily News on Tuesday, August 27.

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View of WKU campus from the Augenstein Alumni Center

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Keiko Fujii with Big Red

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Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey: An American Heritage

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Dr. Coutts with speaker Mike Veach at the book signing of
Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey: An American Heritage

At 7:00 p.m. last Thursday, September 12, Mike Veach, the Associate Curator of Special Collections at the Filson Historical Society in Louisville, KY discussed his latest book at Barnes & Noble about the the real story of Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey.

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Ground Control to Major Tom

Apollo 8 stamp; Apollo 11 Congressional resolution

Apollo 8 stamp; Apollo 11 Congressional resolution

On this day (September 6) in 1969, David Bowie’s song “Space Oddity” hit the U.K. music charts.  Although the song debuted only six weeks after Neil Armstrong walked on the moon, it didn’t make the U.S. charts until its re-release in 1973.

Reactions, artistic and otherwise, to a half-century of space exploration can be found in some of the Manuscripts & Folklife Archives collections of WKU’s Special Collections Library.  Like many Americans, Franklin, Kentucky native Tom Moody was shaken when the Russians launched Sputnik II and its passenger, a dog named Laika, in November 1957.  “It is an alarming situation,” he wrote his aunts from college in Memphis.  “We have always been first at everything, and now that we aren’t, maybe it will wake us up.”

Soon, America awakened.  In 1968, WKU faculty member Marvin Russell penned a poem, “Apollo Six,” his “first serious effort in this realm of expression,” and presented it to his colleague and muse, English professor Gordon Wilson.  The next year, Paducah native John Scopes, who had earned notoriety in more down-to-earth pursuits–specifically, the teaching of evolution in Tennessee schools–obtained a first issue cover of a stamp commemorating the Christmas message delivered by the Apollo 8 astronauts as they orbited the moon.

Bowling Green native Mary (Rodes) Helm witnessed the launch of the greatest manned mission to date, Apollo 11’s journey to the moon.  Writing to her father, Judge John Rodes, she confessed her reluctance to brave the July heat in order to watch the spacecraft lift off from Cape Kennedy.  But she quickly found it “a very moving and emotional experience which I did not expect.”  As the rocket rose, a man behind her whispered “God speed,” and “I felt the tears rolling down my cheeks.”  At a dinner attended by prominent members of the space program, she met astronauts Jim Lovell and Wally Schirra.  She was struck, however, by a McDonnell-Douglas executive’s prescient question: “Where do we go from here?”  Already fearing a loss of public interest after the great feat was accomplished, he nevertheless insisted that “we need space–for man’s knowledge & for the use of his creative imagination & talents.”  Those sentiments were echoed by Congressman Tim Lee Carter, a Monroe County native and WKU graduate, who co-sponsored a resolution calling for international efforts “to conquer the frontiers of space exploration for the benefit of all mankind.”

When it comes to space travel, the question “Where do we go from here?” has a way of moving from the technical to the philosophical.  As Marvin Russell phrased it (though perhaps not as memorably as Major Tom), Each stage, each generation, propels the next. / How much?  What direction?  The questions vex. / Help and hindrance combine to perplex / Actions and factions around orbiting specks.

Click on the links to access finding aids for the relevant collections.  For more of our collections, search TopSCHOLAR and KenCat.

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WKU Libraries speaker programs highlight Bourbon and Bush

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SOKY Book Fest donates children’s books to Pediatrics at Graves Gilbert Clinic

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DSC_0953The Southern Kentucky Book Fest partnership (Barnes & Noble, WKU Libraries, and Warren County Public Library) had over 60 books donated by author Maureen Wright. Ms. Wright had to cancel her visit to last year’s Book Fest at the last minute due to a family emergency, and rather than have the books returned to her, she asked the partnership to find a good home for them. Jennifer Wilson, Marketing Coordinator for WKU Libraries, took those books as well as other children’s books that were contributed by a host of authors and gave them to Dr. Mark Lowry and his staff in the pediatrics department at Graves Gilbert Clinic. Over 60% of Dr. Lowry’s patient base is comprised of children who are either uninsured or on Medicaid, and he did his pediatric residency in a clinic that distributed free books to children during their well child visits. Dr. Lowry is excited about the opportunity to assist the Book Fest partnership fulfill its mission to encourage reading and a love of books, and to be a positive force for promoting literacy in the area.DSC_0951DSC_0952

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August Cool Stuff

Class of 1913 – class list and links to images

Class of 1913

Unidentified member of the WKU Class of 1913

Class of 1963 – class officers and Talisman

Fashion Show Programs – 1981-1990

Freshmen – documents and photos regarding freshmen

Gilbert Hall – building history and documentation

Keen Hall – building history and documentation

Nursing Class of 1988 – photo board showing members of the 1988 nursing class

Pearce-Ford Tower – building history and documentation

Poland Hall – building history and documentation

Teachers College Heights 7/1/1938 – photo spreads of campus

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