BSC LEA HALL NAMING CEREMONY

Join us as we name BSC’s LEA hall in honor the former BSC President Dr. Larry C. Skogen!

Wednesday, May 8, 2024 l 1:30 pm

Outside the Library Main Doors

Dr. Skogen served as the 6th president of BSC from 2007 to 2020. He was a dedicated advocate of the arts, humanities, libraries, and student success. To learn more about him, click on the image below!

To Educate American Indians

Author: Larry C. Skogen

…an Enlightenment era-influenced universalism, held that through an educational alchemy American Indians would become productive, Christianized Americans, distinguishable from their white neighbors only by the color of their skin. Directly confronting the assimilationists’ universalism were the progressive educators who, strongly influenced by the era’s scientific racism, held the notion that American Indians could never become fully assimilated.

For a decade educators gathered at annual meetings and presented papers on how best to educate Native students. Though the NEA Proceedings published these papers, strict guidelines often meant they were heavily edited before publication. In this volume, Larry C. Skogen presents many of these unedited papers and gives them historical context for the years 1900 to 1904.”

Indian Depredation Claims, 1796-1920

Author: Larry C. Skogen

Beginning in the seventeenth century, with the colonization of the Americas, European immigrants and American Indians encountered each other’s views on the rights and responsibilities of ownership. Disputes arose as a natural result of the meeting of two cultures, and occasionally these developed into sanguinary conflicts. In 1796 the United States Congress created the depredation claims system to compensate Indians and settlers alike for the loss of property and thereby preserve peace on the frontiers.

By presenting the lives of non-Indian people who filed for relief from depredations and the legal and political systems under which they filed claims, Larry Skogen accentuates the distinction between the lofty ideals and the penurious, tedious reality of the claims system.

National Physicians Week 2024

Celebrate physicians and students in the medical field this week! Click here to learn more about National Physicians Week & download some free pics to help you celebrate.

The BSC Library is celebrating with a Books & Brew

@ the Wellbean 9 am – 12 pm 3/26/2024!

5 books to read this week

The Doctor was a Woman : Stories of the First Female Physicians on the Frontier

Chris Enss

Read about 10 amazing female physicians of the Old West!

Eureka! : 50 Scientists who shaped human history

John Grant

Grant paints 50 vivid portraits of groundbreaking scientists, including their ideas, breakthroughs, lives, and various quirks.

The Doctors Blackwell: How Two Pioneering Sisters Brought Medicine to Women — and Women to Medicine

Janice P. Nimura

The Blackwell sisters were two tenacious, visionary and complicated pioneers who broke the limits of what was possible for women in medicine.

The Mold in Dr. Florey’s Coat: the Story of the Penicillin Miracle

Eric Lax

“Admirable, superbly researched … perhaps the most exciting tale of science since the apple dropped on Newton’s head.”–Simon Winchester, The New York Times.

One blood : the death and resurrection of Charles R. Drew

Spencie Love

Trace the life of the famous black scientist and surgeon who became known both as the father of the blood bank and by his death.

TECH DAYS

Featuring: Flipster

Happy Monday! In celebration of #TECHDAYS, this week we are featuring the digital magazine app Flipster! Watch the video to learn more!

Tech Tip: You’ll need to create an EBSCO account to sign in (click here) and use your user email and password to sign in to the app.