Download a PDF of the Fall 2021 Catalog

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Download a PDF of the Fall 2021 Catalog UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS Non-profit Org 111 THIRD AVENUE SOUTH US Postage FALL Paid SUITE 290 Twin Cities, MN 2021 MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55401-2520 Permit No. 90155 TITLES WWW.UPRESS.UMN.EDU University of Minnesota Press TO ORDER CALL 1-800-621-2736 Rodgers TOM RADEMACHER AUTHOR OF IT WON’T BE EASY Winter’s Simple Recipes ChildrenA Celebration of Nordic Skiing AFTER EFFECTS The Steger for an Abundant Life RAISING Winter’s Children Homestead Kitchen Will Steger and Rita Mae Steger ~ with Beth Dooley A MEMOIR OF COMPLICATED GRIEF OLLIE Voices for Justice Carolyn Holbrook ANDREA GILATS from Minneapolis and David Mura, How My Nonbinary Art-Nerd Kid to the World Editors Changed (Nearly) Everything I Know Ryan Rodgers FALL 2021 INDIGENOUS LAND RELATIONS UNDER SETTLER SIEGE SALES AND MARKETING BOOKSELLERS University of Minnesota Press FALL 2021 BOOKS Appearing in alphabetical order by author BROWSE BY SUBJECT The University of Minnesota Press 111 Third Ave. South, Suite 290 BLACKfulfillment operations are through the Minneapolis, MN 55401 Chicago Distribution Center. The address is: Phone: 612- 301-1990 University of Minnesota Press Fax: 612-301- 1980 p44 p23 c/o Chicago Distribution Center [email protected] Emma Bedor Hiland Therapy Tech Julian May and John Schoenherr The Big Island pp4–34 11030 South Langley Ave. www.upress.umn.edu NATIONAL TRADE AND LOCAL INTEREST p49 Martin Brückner, Sandy Isenstadt, p28 Rachel McGarry Envisioning Evil Chicago, IL 60628 @UMinnPress on Twitter, Facebook, Allotment and Sarah Wasserman Modelwork Phone: (800) 621-­­2736 or (773) 702-­­7000 and Instagram p48 Anne B. McGrail, Angel David Nieves, Fax: (800) 621-­­8476 or (773) 702-­­7212 StoriesPodcast: z.umn.edu/ump_podcast p43 Matthew Crain Profit over Privacy and Siobhan Senier People, Practice, Power SCHOLARLY pp35–69 PULPWe provide pubnet access. Our address p67 Daniel L. Davis and Yossef S. Ben-Porath Case Studies p68 Daniel Bertrand Monk and Andrew Herscher The Global Assistant Director for Book Publishing is: PUBNET@202- 5280. for Interpreting the MMPI-A-RF Shelter Imaginary Daniel Heath Justice & Emily Hamilton JOURNALS pp70–73 For our current discount structure, Jean M. O’Brien, Editors 612- 301- 1936 p16 Vinciane Despret Our Grateful Dead p25 Aileen Moreton-Robinson Talkin' Up to the White Woman please contact our sales manager at [email protected] [email protected]. Sales Manager p56 Joshua DiCaglio Scale Theory p42 Josef Nguyen The Digital Is Kid Stuff Matt Smiley p31 Jessie Diggins with Todd Smith Brave Enough p39 Jamaica Heolimeleikalani Osorio Remembering Our Genre Fiction DISCOUNTS 612- 301- 1931 Intimacies American Studies 37, 39, 41, 44, 48, 51, Music 9, 26 [email protected] p30 Lin Enger American Gospel We use three discount structure classes: 58, 60 Trade, Short, and Super Short. Short Publicist and Assistant Marketing p45 Mark Paterson How We Became Sensorimotor p24 Louise Erdrich and Jim LaMarche Grandmother's Pigeon titles are marked with “x”, super short Manager Native American and Indigenous in the Shadow p26 Christian A. Peterson Cosmic Trip titles are marked “xx”, and trade titles Heather Skinner p33 Anika Fajardo Magical Realism for Non-Believers Anthropology 16, 61, 63 Studies 15, 24–25, 37–40 are not marked. 612- 301- 1932 p63 Elsa L. Fan Commodities of Care p6 Anne Pollock Sickening [email protected] p69 p33 Margi Preus The Silver Box Direct Mail and Web Marketing Arlette Farge and Michel Foucault Disorderly Families Art 14, 55, 69 Natural History 21, 23, 34 of Jim E-BOOKSCrow THE Books in this catalog are listed with their Manager p53 Meredith Farmer and Jonathan D. S. Schroeder p5 Tom Rademacher Raising Ollie Margaret Sattler retail e-book ISBNs. Digital editions of Ahab Unbound p60 Mitra Rastegar Tolerance and Risk 612- 301- 1934 Children's Literature 23–24, 33 Nonfiction Literature and Biography most University of Minnesota Press [email protected] p59 Grant Farred An Essay for Ezra p10 Ryan Rodgers Winter's Children titles are available through a variety of retailers. Our list is continually updated at Promotions Coordinator 4–5, 9, 15, 17, 19, 27, 31–34 p66 Kennan Ferguson The Big No p29 Tim Samuelson Louis Sullivan's Idea z.umn.edu/aboutebooks. LASTand Publicity Assistant Cookbook 13 Shelby Connelly p52 Abram Foley The Editor Function p36 Milton Santos For a New Geography BrooksMore bookseller E. information Hefner is on the 612-301-1938 Paperback Reprints and Distributions Settler BOOKSELLER p69 Michel Foucault Language, Madness, and Desire p9 Anthony Scaduto The Dylan Tapes inside back cover. [email protected] Critical Theory 36, 56 22–34, 69 ª0ÆScholarly Publicity Specialist p17 Andrea Gilats After Effects p50 John Joe Schlichtman Showroom City Anne K. Wrenn p19 Gary Goodman The Last Bookseller p21 Lansing Shepard, Don Luce, Barbara Coffin, [email protected] Cultural Studies 53, 68 Performance Studies 14 A Life in and Gwen Schagrin A Natural Curiosity For more contact information, please see p15 Linda LeGarde Grover Gichigami Hearts thethe Rare “Contact Book Us” section Trade of our website Colonial p64 Maurice Hamington and Michael Flower Care Ethics p13 Will Steger and Rita Mae Steger with Beth Dooley Digital Culture 42–44, 46, 48 ª0Æat www.upress.umn.edu. Philosophy 16, 55–57, 59, 64, 66, 69 in the Age of Precarity The Steger Homestead Kitchen Racism and p57 Allan Stoekl The Three Sustainabilities The University of Minnesota Press p27 Jon Hassler Days Like Smoke Environment 54 GARYfulfillment GOODMAN operations are through Psychology 67 p58 Brooks E. Hefner Black Pulp p18 Sarah Stonich Reeling Inequity the Chicago Distribution Center. The address is: p62 Stevie Suan Anime's Identity City p4 Carolyn Holbrook and David Mura We Are Meant to Rise Fiction 8, 18, 30 Race and Ethnicity 4, 6, 59–60 DAVID HUGILL in Postwar University of Minnesota Press p51 Julietta Hua and Kasturi Ray Spent behind the Wheel p7 Amy C. Sullivan Opioid Reckoning c/o Chicago Distribution Center 11030 South Langley Ave. p40 David Hugill Settler Colonial City p32 Bill Sullivan Lemon Jail Gender and Sexuality 5, 38 Science, Medicine, and Technology 6–7, Minneapolis Chicago, IL 60628 p34 Tom H. Swain with Lori Sturdevant Citizen Swain Phone: (800) 621- 2736 or (773) 702- 7000 p54 Caren Irr Life in Plastic 21, 45, 49, 56 Fax: (800) 621- 8476 or (773) 702- 7212 p32 Tove Jansson Letters from Tove p69 John Tagg The Burden of Representation Geography 36, 40, 65 We provide pubnet access. Our address p38 Lisa Tatonetti Written by the Body is: PUBNET@202- 5280. p22 Florence Page Jaques Canoe Country Sociology 50 p41 History 7, 37, 69 A Novel p22 Florence Page Jaques Snowshoe Country Carly Thomsen Visibility Interrupted ENERGY p37 Daniel Heath Justice and Jean M. O'Brien Allotment p47 Whitney Trettien Cut/Copy/Paste Sports 10, 31 abilities sustain three the Stories p8 Sigrid Undset Olav Audunssøn II: Providence LGBTQ Studies 41 p14 Petra Kuppers Eco Soma p29 John Vinci Reconstructing the Garrick Urban Studies 50–51, 61, 65 p34 Sue Leaf A Love Affair with Birds p46 Darren Wershler, Lori Emerson, and Jussi Parikka Literary Criticism and Theory 47, 52–54, ECONOMY The Lab Book 58, 69 WRITTEN p61 Lukas Ley Building on Borrowed Time p68 Catherine Liu Virtue Hoarders p55 Cary Wolfe Art and Posthumanism 43–49, 52, 62 p30 Mary Logue The Streel p65 Andrew Zitcer Practicing Cooperation Media Studies TIME ALLAN STOEKL ALLAN LANSING SHEPARD, DON LUCE, BARBARA COFFIN AND GWEN SCHAGRIN GENDEREXPANSIVENESS ANDINDIGENOUS BODY NON-CISMASCULINITIES Lisa Tatonetti INDIGENOUS AILEEN WOMEN AND MORETON-ROBINSON FEMINISM 4 5 We Are Meant to Rise Raising Ollie FALL 2021 FALL 2021 FALL Voices for Justice from Minneapolis to the World How My Nonbinary Art-Nerd Kid Changed TOM RADEMACHER AUTHOR OF IT WON’T BE EASY CAROLYN HOLBROOK AND DAVID MURA, EDITORS (Nearly) Everything I Know TOM RADEMACHER RAISING UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA A brilliant and rich gathering of voices on Dakota and Anishinaabe, African American, The account of one radically new school Raising Ollie is dad Tom Rademacher’s story the American experience of this past year Hmong, Somali, Afghani, Lebanese, Korean, year for a Teacher of the Year and for his (really, many stories) of that eventful and and beyond, from Indigenous writers and Vietnamese, Japanese, Puerto Rican, nonbinary, art-obsessed, brilliant child sometimes painful school year, parenting writers of color from Minnesota Colombian, Mexican, transracial adoptees, Ollie and relearning every day what it means OLLIE Voices for Justice Carolyn mixed race, and LGBTQ+ perspectives. Holbrook to be a father and teacher. As Ollie—who is In this significant collection, Indigenous from Minneapolis and “As vulnerable and honest a piece I’ve ever read from an David Mura, Most of the contributors have participated nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns, and How My Nonbinary Art-Nerd Kid writers and writers of color bear witness to to the World Editors educator, Tom Rademacher’s beautiful and conversational in More Than a Single Story, a popular and prefers art to athletics, vegetables to cake, Changed (Nearly) Everything I Know one of the most unsettling years in the history story ought to encourage more of us to dig deeper and insightful conversation series in Minneapolis and animals to most humans—flourishes in of the United States. Essays and poems reflect harder.” that features Indigenous and people of their new school, Rademacher is making an vividly reflect and comment on the traumas —José Luis Vilson, educator, father, executive director of EduColor, color speaking on what most concerns their Carolyn Holbrook is the founder and director of More eye-opening adjustment to a new school of Tom Rademacher is an eighth grade English teacher we endured in 2020, beginning with the arrival and author of This Is Not A Test: A New Narrative on Race, Class, communities.
Recommended publications
  • Take Three More Recent Books
    Take Three more recenT books Minnesota’s Geologist: The Life of Newton Horace Winchell How Could You Do This? 50 Years by Sue Leaf (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2020, of Property- Tax- base Sharing in 280 p., Cloth, $29.95). Newton Horace Winchell (1839–1914) ven- Minnesota by Paul Gilje (St. Paul, tured with his crew throughout the state as head of the Minnesota MN: Center for Policy Design, 2021, Geological and Natural History Survey, charting the prehistory 192 p., Paper, $9.99). Policy wonks of the region, its era of inland seas, its volcanic activity, and will concur with the word “drama” its several ice ages, laying the foundation for the monumental used by the publisher to describe the five-volume Geology of Minnesota. Winchell grew up in North half- century history of Minnesota’s East, New York, near Winchell Mountain, named for the family property tax- base sharing law (more who lived in the area for almost a century. Maturing from a 15-year-old schoolteacher popularly known as the metropolitan who knew nothing about rocks to a 17-year-old who moved himself to Ann Arbor, fiscal disparities law) that began in Michigan, for higher education, Winchell at age 25 dedicated himself to geological 1968 with extensive controversy and scientific inquiry. His passionate and adventurous life story, told for the first time extends to the present day. A group of by environmental historian Sue Leaf, guides readers through the geologic history of bipartisan legislators created a more the state. Winchell strove for his work to be accessible to the nonprofessional and equitable way for municipalities of expanded his efforts to include mentoring young geologists, founding the American varying levels of wealth to compete Geological Society, and being the founding editor of American Geologist, the first jour- for tax revenues.
    [Show full text]
  • Earth in Upheaval – Velikovsky
    KANSAS CITY, MO PUBLIC LIBRARY MAR 1989 JALS DATE DUE Earth in upheaval. 1 955 . Books by Immarvjel Velikoviky Earth in Upheaval Worlds in Collision Published by POCKET BOOKS Most Pot Ian Books arc available at special quantify discounts for hulk purchases for sales promotions premiums or fund raising SpeciaJ books* or txx)k e\( erj)ts can also tx.' created to ht specific needs FordetaJs write the office of the Vice President of Special Markets, Pocket Books, 12;K) Avenue of the Arm-mas New York New York 10020 EARTH IN UPHEAVAL Smnianue! Velikovsky F'OCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster, IMC 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N Y 10020 Copyright 1955 by Immanuel Vehkovskv Published by arrangement with Doubledav tx Compauv, 1m Library of Congiess Catalog Card Number 55-11339 All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever For information address 6r Inc. Doubledav Company, , 245 Park Avenue, New York, N Y' 10017 ISBN 0-fi71-524f>5-tt Fust Pocket Books punting September 1977 10 9 H 7 6 POCKET and colophon ae registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, luc Printed in the USA ACKNOWLEDGMENTS WORKING ON Earth in Upheaval and on the essay (Address before the Graduate College Forum of Princeton University) added at the end of this volume, I have incurred a debt of gratitude to several scientists. Professor Walter S. Adams, for many years director of Mount Wilson Observatory, gave me all the in- formation and instruction for which I asked concern- ing the atmospheres of the planets, a field in which he is the outstanding authority.
    [Show full text]
  • Women's Hockey Team Was Shut out by No
    Between The Pipes January 27, 2015 Men’s Hockey On Tap The #3 Mavericks return home with the Ferris Sate series looming this weekend. They went 1-1 at the 2015 North Star College Cup and their unbeaten streak ended at nine games with their loss to Bemidji State. They enter this weekend having gone 14-2-1 in their last 17 games. Friday | MSU 4 Minnesota 2 St. Paul, Minn. --- Junior forward Bryce Gervais scored twice and assisted on another as top-rated Minnesota State skated to a 4-2 victory over #17 Minnesota Friday night at Xcel Energy Center in downtown St. Paul in North Star College Cup action. The win for Minnesota State extends its unbeaten streak to a nation's best nine games and gives the Mavericks a 19-4-12 overall record. The win is also the first for Minnesota State at Xcel Energy Center with the Mavericks winning in the home of the National Hockey League's Minnesota Wild for the first time in its eighth game in the building. It was a 1-1 game after the first period with the Gophers getting on the board first when Seth Ambroz backhanded a shot past Stephon Williams at 17:54. Minnesota senior forward Matt Leitner's set up from down low found forward Bryce Gervais in front of the net and the junior from Battleford, Sask., made no mistake in getting his 14th goal of the season as the Mavericks tied the game at 19:26. Gervais got his second goal of the game when he wired one over the right shoulder of Minnesota netminder Adam Wilcox at 2:26 of the second period.
    [Show full text]
  • Roots and BRANCHES Community Ties Bear Fruit for BSU and Students
    A magazine for alumni and friends FALL/WINTER 2014 Roots and BRANCHES Community ties bear fruit for BSU and students www.BemidjiState.edu | 1 Features 4-7 More than ever, Bemidji State and its students are engaged in service and partnerships that enrich the learning experience and make a lasting impact on the region and its quality of life. The Imagine Tomorrow fundraising campaign is UNIVERSITY REACHES OUT 8-9 Departments going strong as it heads into the final 19 months, but continued support will be needed in order to 13-15 BSU News achieve or exceed the ambitious $35 million goal. PRESIDENT 16 Faculty Achievements 22-23 Dr. Abby Meyer ‘01 has applied the perspective R. HANSON on managing life’s priorities that she gained while 18-19 Students to Watch at BSU to her life as a pediatric ear, nose and 20-21 Beaver Athletics PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE throat physician and the mother of two boys. I cannot say often enough that the primary goal of everything we do as a university is to 26-27 Honors Gala prepare our students for meaningful, rewarding lives in their chosen fields. Their success is 24-25 The spark of interest in marketing and commu- the measure of our own. This objective motivates and inspires all we do together as adminis- nication that Roger Reierson ‘74 experienced as DR. ABBY MEYER 28-29 Homecoming trators, faculty, staff, alumni and friends of Bemidji State. Its pursuit and the results that a student led him into a career at the helm of a MEMORIAL TRIBUTES continue to affirm our purpose can be found throughout this edition of the BSU magazine.
    [Show full text]
  • JUDITH MERRIL-PDF-Sep23-07.Pdf (368.7Kb)
    JUDITH MERRIL: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY AND GUIDE Compiled by Elizabeth Cummins Department of English and Technical Communication University of Missouri-Rolla Rolla, MO 65409-0560 College Station, TX The Center for the Bibliography of Science Fiction and Fantasy December 2006 Table of Contents Preface Judith Merril Chronology A. Books B. Short Fiction C. Nonfiction D. Poetry E. Other Media F. Editorial Credits G. Secondary Sources About Elizabeth Cummins PREFACE Scope and Purpose This Judith Merril bibliography includes both primary and secondary works, arranged in categories that are suitable for her career and that are, generally, common to the other bibliographies in the Center for Bibliographic Studies in Science Fiction. Works by Merril include a variety of types and modes—pieces she wrote at Morris High School in the Bronx, newsletters and fanzines she edited; sports, westerns, and detective fiction and non-fiction published in pulp magazines up to 1950; science fiction stories, novellas, and novels; book reviews; critical essays; edited anthologies; and both audio and video recordings of her fiction and non-fiction. Works about Merill cover over six decades, beginning shortly after her first science fiction story appeared (1948) and continuing after her death (1997), and in several modes— biography, news, critical commentary, tribute, visual and audio records. This new online bibliography updates and expands the primary bibliography I published in 2001 (Elizabeth Cummins, “Bibliography of Works by Judith Merril,” Extrapolation, vol. 42, 2001). It also adds a secondary bibliography. However, the reasons for producing a research- based Merril bibliography have been the same for both publications. Published bibliographies of Merril’s work have been incomplete and often inaccurate.
    [Show full text]
  • Syllabus SAS2B: Scandinavian Literature – 20Th and 21St Century Scandinavian Area Studies – Spring 2019
    December 1, 2018 Syllabus SAS2B: Scandinavian Literature – 20th and 21st Century Scandinavian Area Studies – Spring 2019. Please note that minor changes might be made in the final version of the syllabus. Course instructor: Associate Professor Anders M. Gullestad ([email protected]) Office: Room 420 (HF) Office hours: Thursdays 14-15 Lectures: Mondays 12.15-14, room K at Sydneshaugen skole Student advisor: Guro Sandnes ([email protected]) Exam advisor: Vegard Sørhus ([email protected], room 356) ECTS: 15 Language of instruction: English (spoken and written proficiency is required) Course unit level: Bachelor Grading scale: A-F READING MATERIALS: 1. Novels: The following novels can all be found at the university bookstore, Akademia: Johannes V. Jensen: The Fall of the King [1901], transl. Alan G. Bower. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota Press, 2011. Knut Hamsun: The Ring is Closed [1936], transl. Robert Ferguson. London: Souvenir Press, 2010. Karin Boye: Kallocain [1940], transl. Gustav Lannestock and with a foreword by Richard B. Vowles. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 2002. Dag Solstad: Shyness and Dignity [1994], transl. Sverre Lyngstad. London: Harvill Sacker, 2006. Per Petterson: Out Stealing Horses [2003], transl. Anne Born. London: Vintage Books, 2006. Karl Ove Knausgaard: My Struggle: Book 1 [2009], transl. Don Bartlett. New York: Farar, Straus & Giroux, 2013. Helle Helle: This Should Be Written in the Present Tense [2011], transl. Martin Aitken. London: Vintage Books, 2015. Jonas Hassen Khemiri: Everything I Don’t Remember [2015], transl.Rachel Willson- Broyles. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2016. 2. Poems: A selection of poems by important Scandinavian authors. The poems will be handed out in class or made available at Mitt UiB ahead of the lectures.
    [Show full text]
  • Hail to the Caldecott!
    Children the journal of the Association for Library Service to Children Libraries & Volume 11 Number 1 Spring 2013 ISSN 1542-9806 Hail to the Caldecott! Interviews with Winners Selznick and Wiesner • Rare Historic Banquet Photos • Getting ‘The Call’ PERMIT NO. 4 NO. PERMIT Change Service Requested Service Change HANOVER, PA HANOVER, Chicago, Illinois 60611 Illinois Chicago, PAID 50 East Huron Street Huron East 50 U.S. POSTAGE POSTAGE U.S. Association for Library Service to Children to Service Library for Association NONPROFIT ORG. NONPROFIT PENGUIN celebrates 75 YEARS of the CALDECOTT MEDAL! PENGUIN YOUNG READERS GROUP PenguinClassroom.com PenguinClassroom PenguinClass Table Contents● ofVolume 11, Number 1 Spring 2013 Notes 50 Caldecott 2.0? Caldecott Titles in the Digital Age 3 Guest Editor’s Note Cen Campbell Julie Cummins 52 Beneath the Gold Foil Seal 6 President’s Message Meet the Caldecott-Winning Artists Online Carolyn S. Brodie Danika Brubaker Features Departments 9 The “Caldecott Effect” 41 Call for Referees The Powerful Impact of Those “Shiny Stickers” Vicky Smith 53 Author Guidelines 14 Who Was Randolph Caldecott? 54 ALSC News The Man Behind the Award 63 Index to Advertisers Leonard S. Marcus 64 The Last Word 18 Small Details, Huge Impact Bee Thorpe A Chat with Three-Time Caldecott Winner David Wiesner Sharon Verbeten 21 A “Felt” Thing An Editor’s-Eye View of the Caldecott Patricia Lee Gauch 29 Getting “The Call” Caldecott Winners Remember That Moment Nick Glass 35 Hugo Cabret, From Page to Screen An Interview with Brian Selznick Jennifer M. Brown 39 Caldecott Honored at Eric Carle Museum 40 Caldecott’s Lost Gravesite .
    [Show full text]
  • PROGRESS REPORT FIVE 1 Travel Information Directions for US 395 from the North
    PROGRESS REPORT FIVE 1 Travel Information dire6tions 1or 7S 395 1ro( the North. Facility Locations & Phone Numbers "S $%& from the North Atlantis: Ta/e e0it &. 1or 8oana 9ane, turning right onto 8oana 3800 S. Virginia St. Reno, NV 8950 9ane. To go to the Peppermill, turn right onto Virginia ! "800# $ 3%&500 Street. For the other 1a6ilities, turn le1t. "S $%& from the South Peppermill 707 S. Virginia St. Reno, NV 8950 Virginia Street is 7S 395 :*siness. A1ter +ou ha-e ! "775) 8 &% ! ! passed through )arson )it+, when 7S 395 and 7S 395 :usiness split, si('l+ re(ain on 7S 395 :usiness. )ourt+ard: &855 S. Virginia St. Reno, NV 8951! Arriving by Air ! "775) 851%8300 The Reno terminal is -ery eas+ to *se. E-en (ore )onvention )enter *se1*ll+ 1or inco(ing 1ans, the airport is -er+ 6entrall+ .590 S. Virginia St. Reno, NV 8950 lo6ated, 3ust a 6ouple o1 (iles 1ro( the 6onvention 6enter and our 6hosen hotels. FREE airport shuttles run e-ery 30 (inutes to the Peppermill and the Driving Directions Atlantis, wit2 a tra-el ti(e o1 under !0 (inutes. Reno% I-80 from the est Sparks )ab 6an pro-ide rides to the )ourt+ard 1or Ta/e e0it !3 o11 o1 I%80, turning right onto Virginia around ;! , and 6an 5e rea6hed at "775#333%3333. Street. A1ter 3*st under three (iles, the Peppermill To orldcon by Train will be on the right. A 1ew blo6ks later, the Atlantis and <e-in Standlee 6on-ention 6enter will be on the le1t, 1ollo4ed a bit Reno "station 6ode RNO# is on the A(tra/ past 7S 395 5+ the )ourt+ard, on the right.
    [Show full text]
  • Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs 2014-15 Schedule R Date Opponent Time (CT) Quick Facts Mon., Oct
    ST. CLOUD STATE HUSKIES DENVER PIONEERS INAUGURAL NCHC INAUGURAL NCHC PENROSE CUP CHAMPIONS FROZEN FACEOFF CHAMPIONS SEASON TWO Table of ConTenTs/QuiCk facts Table of ConTenTs QuiCk faCTs/DireCTory Quick Facts/Directory .............................................1 Website: ................................... NCHCHockey.com SID Directory ..........................................................2 Headquarters: .......................The Copper Building Media Services/Media Day .....................................3 1631 Mesa Ave., Suite C Arena Directions ................................................. 4-5 Colorado Springs, CO 80906 Conference Bio .......................................................6 Mission/Vision/Goals/Map ......................................7 Founded: .......................................... July 13, 2011 Board of Directors...................................................8 Inaugural Season: ................................... 2013-14 Commissioner.........................................................9 Commissioner: ..................................Josh Fenton NCHC Staff ......................................................10-11 Office Phone: ..................................719-418-2427 Officiating........................................................ 12-13 Email: ............................ [email protected] Colorado College ............................................ 14-17 Denver ............................................................ 18-21 Director of Hockey Operations: ......... Joe
    [Show full text]
  • Nobel Prize Literature
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 112 423 CS 202 277 AUTHOR Hubbard, Terry E., Comp. TITLE Nobel Prize Literature; A Selection of the Works of Forty-Four Nobel Prize Winning Authors in the Library of Dutchess Community College, with Biographical and Critical Sketches. PUB DATE Nov 72 NOTE 42p.; Not available in hard copy due tc marginal legibility of original document EDRS PRICE MF-$0.76 Plus Postage. HC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS Authors; *Bibliographies; *English Instruction; Fiction; Higher Education; Poetry; *Reading Materials; Secondary Education; *Twentieth Century Literature; *World Literature IDENTIFIERS Nobel (Alfred); *Nobel Literature Prize ABSTRACT This bibliography is a compilation of works by 44 Nobel Prize winning authors presently available at the Dutchess Community College library. Each entry describes the piece of literature for which the author received an award, provides a brief sketch of the writer, includes a commentary on the themes of major works, and lists the writer's works. An introduction to the bibliography provides background information on the life of Alfred Nobel and the prizes made available to individuals who have made contributions toward humanistic ends. The bibliography may be used as a reading guide to some classics of twentieth century literature or as an introduction to important authors. Authors listed include Samuel Beckett, Henri Bergson, Pearl Buck, Ivan Bunin, Albert Camus, and 7.S. Eliot.(RE) *********************************************************************** Documents acquired by ERIC include many informal unpublished * materials not available from other sources. ERIC makes every effort * * to obtain the best copy available. Nevertheless, items of marginal * * reproducibility are often encountered and this affects the quality * * of the microfiche and hardcopy reproductions ERIC makes available * * via the ERIC Document Reproduction Service (EDRS).
    [Show full text]
  • Premio Nobel Per La Letteratura
    Premio Nobel per la letteratura Bibliografia A cura della Biblioteca Cantonale di Bellinzona Novembre 2017 Il 5 ottobre 2017 Kazuo Ishiguro ha vinto il Premio Nobel per la letteratura. E’ stata l’occasione per scoprire o ri-scoprire questo importante scrittore inglese di origine giapponese. Ma quali sono gli scrittori premiati in questi anni? Dal 1901 ogni anno un autore viene onorato con questo significativo premio. Proponiamo con questa bibliografia le opere di scrittori vincitori del Premio Nobel, presenti nel fondo della Biblioteca cantonale di Bellinzona, e nel caso in cui la biblioteca non possedesse alcun titolo di un autore, le opere presenti nel catalogo del Sistema bibliotecario ticinese. Gli autori sono elencati cronologicamente decrescente a partire dall’anno in cui hanno vinto il premio. Per ogni autore è indicato il link che rinvia al catalogo del Sistema bibliotecario ticinese. 2017 Kazuo Ishiguro 2016 Bob Dylan 2015 Svjatlana Aleksievič 2014 Patrick Modiano 2013 Alice Munro 2012 Mo Yan 2011 Tomas Tranströmer 2010 Mario Vargas Llosa 2009 Herta Müller 2008 Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio 2007 Doris Lessing 2006 Orhan Pamuk 2005 Harold Pinter 2004 Elfriede Jelinek 2003 John Maxwell Coetzee 2002 Imre Kertész 2001 Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul 2000 Gao Xingjian 1999 Günter Grass 1998 José Saramago 1997 Dario Fo 1996 Wisława Szymborska 1995 Séamus Heaney 1994 Kenzaburō Ōe 1993 Toni Morrison 1992 Derek Walcott 1991 Nadine Gordimer 1990 Octavio Paz 1989 Camilo José Cela 1988 Naguib Mahfouz 1987 Iosif Aleksandrovič Brodskij 1986 Wole
    [Show full text]
  • Geologic History of Minnesota Rivers
    GEOLOGIC HISTORY OF MINNESOTA RIVERS Minnesota Geological Survey Ed ucational Series - 7 Minnesota Geological Survey Priscilla C. Grew, Director Educational Series 7 GEOLOGIC HISTORY OF MINNESOTA RIVERS by H.E. Wright, Jr. Regents' Professor of Geology, Ecology, and Botany (Emeritus), University of Minnesota 'r J: \ I' , U " 1. L I!"> t) J' T II I ~ !oo J', t ' I' " I \ . University of Minnesota St. Paul, 1990 Cover: An early ponrayal of St. Anthony Falls on the Mississippi River In Minneapolis. The engraving of a drawing by Captain E. Eastman of Fan Snelling was first published In 1853; It Is here reproduced from the Second Final Report of the Geological and Natural History Survey of Minnesota, 1888. Several other early views of Minnesota rivers reproduced In this volume are from David Dale Owen's Report of a Geological Survey of Wisconsin, Iowa, and Minnesota; and Incidentally of a portion of Nebraska Territory, which was published In 1852 by Lippincott, Grambo & Company of Philadelphia. ISSN 0544-3083 1 The University of Minnesota is committed to the policy that all persons shall have equal access to its programs, facilities, and employment without regard to race, religion, color, sex, national origin, handicap, age, veteran status, or sexual orientation. 1-' \ J. I,."l n 1 ~ r 1'11.1: I: I \ 1"" CONTENTS 1 .... INTRODUCTION 1. PREGLACIAL RIVERS 5 .... GLACIAL RIVERS 17 ... POSTGLACIAL RIVERS 19 . RIVER HISTORY AND FUTURE 20 . ... REFERENCES CITED iii GEOLOGIC HISTORY OF MINNESOTA RIVERS H.E. Wright, Jr. A GLANCE at a glacial map of the Great Lakes region (Fig. 1) reveals that all of Minnesota was glaciated at some time, and all but the southeastern and southwestern corners were covered by the last ice sheet, which culminated about 20,000 years ago.
    [Show full text]