
Rabbi Ira Flax, retired military chaplain, discusses his camp experiences. Wednesday, April 7, noon.



Spring is an excellent time to visit the Birmingham Botanical Gardens. If you visit later this week, you will see blooming cherry blossoms, irises, hyacinths, daffodils and wildflowers. The weather will be warm and beautiful. Whether you choose to take a walk, jog, or view beautiful flowers in a natural setting, just spend time outdoors. The gardens exist to provide beauty, education, and stimulate curiosity about our natural world. The natural world soothes our spirit, stimulates our mind and expands our interest in the environment. Best of all, it's always free.Ted Dunagan, author of A Yellow Watermelon, talks about "How I Discovered Tom Sawyer and How It Affected and Inspired Me."
For more see the Panel Questions and Answer session.
Alabama Bound 2010 focused on The Big Read: Alabama Reads. an initiative inspired by the national reading campaign, The Big Read. Funded by the National Endowment for the Arts.

Photo:Linda Stelter, The Birmingham News
I just finished listening to The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson (great job of narration by Martin Wenner). This is a fantastic murder mystery with some of the best plot and character development I've seen in thriller fiction in a while.





If you missed this performance, you have another chance to see Flying Jenny play this Saturday at Alabama Bound.
Location: Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203
Date: Saturday, March 20, 2010
Time: Flying Jenny will be playing at 11:30, but join us all day as we celebrate The Big Read: Alabama Reads "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer".
Sixty-four teams enter, one team leaves. It’s called March Madness and it starts Thursday, March 18. The top 4 seeds are Kansas, Kentucky, Syracuse, and Duke. The usual suspects, sure, but guess who’s not there: UConn and North Carolina! What? Can we have an NCAA Tournament without those two teams? That’s the beauty of March Madness. Winthrop plays Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Tuesday night to determine who will compete against Duke in the first round. What if one of these two teams is crowned national champion? Anything can happen in the tournament and often does. If you saw the SEC Championship game on Sunday, you know exactly what I mean. Mississippi State gave Kentucky all they could handle and didn’t get selected to play in the NCAA Tournament. Kentucky only won by one point in overtime. The same thing could happen again, but Kentucky may lose this time. That’s why I love March Madness. Check out the Basketball subject guide to find books, websites, and other information about the Tournament.
In the tutorial above, viewers are guided in accessing and using Oxford African American Studies Center.
The Oxford African American Studies Center brings together the work of over four thousand international scholars to provide users with the most comprehensive and authoritative online resource available in the field.
Daylight Saving Time (DST) officially begins on Sunday, March 14, at 2:00 a.m. So don't forget to set your clocks ahead one hour when you go to bed Saturday night.Congratulations to the WORD UP! 2010 Winners: Will Gillette (1st place), Jordan Croft (2nd place tie), and Illyshia Parker (2nd place tie).
This year's contestants got inspiration from the major themes of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain, the book selected for Alabama’s first-ever state-wide Big Read. Students chose from among the following themes:
Don't miss your chance to see these three poets perform LIVE at this year's Alabama Bound.




Tom Sawyer: “The master's arm performed until it was tired, and then the stock of switches notably diminished.” Norman Rockwell, Spanking, 1936
The Birmingham Museum of Art will display art created by area high school students inspired by Mark Twain’s classic, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. The Big Read: Tom Sawyer Exhibition began Sunday, Feb. 28, and will be on display every Tuesday-Saturday from 10:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m. and Sundays from 12:00-5:00 p.m. until May 23.
Last year I raved about country singer Trisha Yearwood’s cookbook, Georgia Cooking in an Oklahoma Kitchen: Recipes from My Family to Yours. This year it’s The Pioneer Woman Cooks: Recipes from an Accidental Country Cook by Ree Drummond.
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer will make its way across Jefferson County in a Read it Forward event inspired by the book Pay It Forward by Catherine Ryan Hyde, about an 8th grader who decides to change the world by passing on good deeds for others,




All 8th grade students in Jefferson County, Alabama are invited to submit a poem written in any style, no more than 250 words in length, that reflects the theme "Roots of Courage; Branches of Hope." The Grand Prize Winner will read their poem during the "Roots of Courage; Branches of Hope" program on April 11, 2010 and will receive a cash prize of $250. Only one submission per student will be accepted. ALL students and teachers who participated in the Poetry Contest are invited to attend the Sunday program in Kelly Ingram Park. All entries must be received by 5:00 p.m. on Monday, March 29, 2010.


Mark Twain’s characters Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn epitomize the idea of childhood mischief, with their roguish antics and penchant for troublemaking. Images of mischievous children abound in 19th-century American visual culture, from the fine arts to the popular press. Boettcher explores the subject of the “bad child” in American art and examines how such images played a role in cultivating and promoting new attitudes in child rearing.