
Wanda Parr loved reading, but when macular degeneration took her vision, her hobby became a struggle… until she learned about the library's Talking Books service. Talking Books assist customers who can no longer enjoy reading. Wanda valued the service so much, she gave back to it. Click inside to learn more.
The library's Oveson-Campbell Homework Center provides an environment where students work one-on-one with a caring mentor. It's a model for success, according to the late Noelle Drechsel. How her legacy lives on.
Capturing a Powerful Vision Which noted National Geographic photographer is honored to have his work as part of the library's respected collection?
Western Sorosis was organized in Topeka in 1893 by Margaret Hill McCarter and Mrs. H.E. Roby. Their dream was for this club to be to the West what the first women’s club in the United States, Sorosis, was to the East.
Their purpose in organizing this club was to provide “a source of constant inspiration for better living, for higher ideals of women, and for the active participation of women in the life of the community.”
The name Western Sorosis is an adaptation of the New York club’s name and is derived from the Greek word meaning “a collection of flowers on one stem.”
Richardson discusses the two photographs purchased by The Western Sorosis Club for The Alice C. Sabatini Gallery:
“…one of my all-time favorites—a photograph I call “Summer Dreams.” I made that photograph in 2003 on a farm near Pierre, South Dakota, during a story for National Geographic that appeared in the May 2004 issue. The subject: the fate of the Great Plains. The young lady in the photograph, during her daily round of farm chores, paused to daydream while tending her rabbit.”
“…Patterns of the Spring Burn from my coverage for National Geographic Magazine of the tallgrass prairie of Kansas. That work appeared in the April 2007 issue. The photograph is one of the most popular here in my Lindsborg gallery. I made that photograph in spring 2006 as I was flying in a small aircraft over the Flint Hills near Bazaar, Kansas.”