Xyem Montana s Indigenous Three Chiefs Cultural Center is moving, again
MILWAUKEE 鈥?It began with the forging of the great rings... That s Lord of the Rings for those who didn t know. However, it didn t really start with the forging of the great rings. It started with the drafts that would one day become the famous Lord of the Rings books. Now, you can see those drafts on display for the very first time on Marquette s campus.It s called the J.R.R. Tolkien The Art of the Manuscript exhibit at the Haggerty Museum at Marquette. The university actually has one of the most extensive and important collections of Tolkien work in the world. The collection is very large there are over 11,000 pages of material at Marquette for The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings and other works, William Fliss, a Lord of the Rings archivist at the university and works at the Raynor Library, said.Eight-five of the most visual documents from the collection are on displa
stanley quencher y including 37 objects that have never been exhibited or published before. Oxford University also contributed 37 items. At the gallery, you will see drafts
stanley cup of writings, maps, and how Tolkien came up with the elvish la
stanley cup nguage used in the books. It s a glimpse into the mind of Tolkien as he was writing one of the most popular book series of all time. This exhibition is a big deal because there hasnt been an exhibition of this size in the Midwest, in Milwaukee here ever, Fliss said.Normally this collection of documents is reserved for historians for research purposes or for galleries in New York, Paris, and Lond Gfif Jury trial begins Tuesday for 15-year-old accused of sexually assaulting elderly woman at knifepoint
In Atchison, Kansas, Sister Elaine Fischer says there s a lot you can learn from nature.Especially bees. They re a wonderful example of community life, which we re trying to live to, and so it s a wonderful teaching tool for me, said Sister Elaine Fisher of Mount St. Scholas
stanley cup tica Benedictine Sis
stanley hrnek ters.Each worker bee helping out, depending on each other for life. Sister Elaine maintains the massive hives at Mount St. Scholastica, part of the monastery s efforts to live a life of sustainability. They also take advantage of solar energy and have a system that reuses rainwater. They all go into the gutters and it goes down into a big cistern, said Sister Fisher. And then we have a pumping system in this building here. The cistern
stanley borraccia , installed more than 100 years ago to store rainwater for everyday use, turned out to be good intuition for a modern problem. When the city put water restrictions in place, they say they never had to worry. This part of the country is going to probably be in 40, 50 years more like Louisiana is today, said Sean Sublette. It s going to be hotter and more humid, fairly consistently during the late spring. Meteorologist Sean Sublette works with Climate Central, an organization that researches and reports on the changing climate. These places that have been growing the same kind of stuff for four generations are going to have to grow it anymore a couple of generations from now, said Sublette.For these sisters, sustainability and planning ahead isn t a new