According to Cole, "There are very few buildings that really aspire in such a way to the noble side of life. Collectively, the inscriptions tell us that if this country can be an educated country, through books and the accumulation of other knowledge, then it will be a better country. It's a very optimistic message."
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- Book of the Week (26)
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Book of the Week (November 24, 2008)
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Book of the Week (November 17, 2008)
Call Number: HD 9349 .M542 R69 2008
Bottlemania: How water went on sale and why we bought it
By Elizabeth Royte
Publisher's Description: In the follow-up to Garbage Land (@ UWSP library: HD 4484.N7 R68 2005), her influential investigation into our modern trash crisis, Elizabeth Royte ventures to Fryeburg, Maine, to look deep into the source—of Poland Spring water. In this tiny town, and in others like it across the country, she finds the people, machines, economies, and cultural trends that have made bottled water a $60-billion-a-year phenomenon even as it threatens local control of a natural resource and litters the landscape with plastic waste.Moving beyond the environmental consequences of making, filling, transporting and landfilling those billions of bottles, Royte examines the state of tap water today (you may be surprised), and the social impact of water-hungry multinationals sinking ever more pumps into tiny rural towns. Ultimately, Bottlemania makes a case for protecting public water supplies, for improving our water infrastructure and—in a world of increasing drought and pollution—better allocating the precious drinkable water that remains. For more information visit the Bottlemania website.
Monday, November 03, 2008
Book of the Week (November 3, 2008)
On the New Book Shelf
Call Number: DS 555.34 .M5 V38 2008
A History of the Hmong: from Ancient Times to the Modern Diaspora
By Thomas Vang
Publisher's Description: This is the first completely up-to-date Hmong history book ever written by a member of the Hmong people. It describes the earliest civilizations of the Hmong and Miao in China, and why some of the Hmong migrated into Southeast Asia in the early 19th century, particularly to Vietnam, Laos and Thailand; and how the Hmong of Laos were involved with the Lao civil war, especially the secret war from 1962 to 1975 that caused almost a hundred thousand Hmong to flee to Thailand and Western countries as political refugees after the Communists takeover. This book also includes backgrounds on the current Hmong refugee crisis at Nam Khao refugee camp in Thailand and the arrest of former General Vang Pao by the U.S. authorities.
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