By Charlotte Richter (Fort Leavenworth LAMP)September 29, 2022
Storytimes at the Combined Arms Research Library resumed sessions on Monday evenings and Friday mornings throughout October. The storytimes, conducted in the library’s Children’s Room, provide a moment to practice readin
click here to read it now
As Halloween approaches, young readers are in for a trick and a treat with these eerie titles ranging from light-hearted picture book scares to haunting YA mysteries.
Picture Books, Board Books, and Chapter Books
April Genevieve Tucholke, illus. b
The exhibition, focusing on “An Unknown Domain of Woodblock Printed Books,” runs from September 21 to November 27, 2022.
The word ukiyo-e probably brings to mind, in most cases, single-sheet prints, as in the Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, or the “Under the Wave Off Kanag
Debbie Beck, of Eagan, co-founded The Free Book Buggie four years ago. The nonprofit provides free books to children ages infant to high school.
Debbie Beck, co-founder of The Free Book Buggie shows off the inside of the nonprofit’s new “buggie.” The former shuttle bus is used to b
FAIR is the national progressive media watchdog group, challenging corporate media bias, spin and misinformation.
Many children in the United States will never meet a Palestinian in person, and if they do, they may need to overcome the negative images and stereotypes that pervade popular
Hi, what are you looking for?
ALBERTA, CANADA – Modern man wants neither God nor Christ—for what he wants is to get paid and get laid—and so he behaves normally—call it the cognitive model of Bad Behaviourism. Existentialism Now is a massive upgrade over Bad Behav
Wolfgang Tillmans, Markt, a, 1989, medium and dimensions variable.
WOLFGANG TILLMANS HAS CREATED an image of contemporary Europe that a lot of people carry around in their heads. Not the Colosseum or th
MoneyWeek has covered many crises over the years
We launched MoneyWeek 22 years ago. There has been no shortage of crises since: the dotcom bubble collapsed within months of our launch; the global financial crisis followed; then there was Brexit (not that all of us considered that a cris
In the wake of the pandemic, there has been increased confidence in the 3D printing sector. Many believe that 3D printing—also known as ‘additive manufacturing’—can help solve increasing supply chain problems. Meanwhile, in China, they are thinking a little bigger; why not 3D-print a d
China’s hydrocarbon emissions are nearly three times those of the United States. Meanwhile, the United States is printing money to buy Chinese solar cells and solar panels and Chinese batteries and battery materials to reduce our emissions. Printing that money is likely one cause of our infl