Suffolk University Alumni Magazine 2008/2009 - (Page 14) the faculty//IN PRINT + FILm TExT//VARIOUS IMAGES//VARIOUS N PRINT+FILM CommunICatIon and JournalIsm THE CompETITIoN BY PAUl cERIEllO & JASON cARTER 2007 EnGlIsH ANoTHEr WorLd INsTEAd: THE EArLy poEms oF WILLIAm sTAFFord, 1937-1947 EDITED AND INTRODUcTION BY FRED mARcHANT GrAywolf PrESS, 2008 sALAmANdEr EDITED BY JENNIFER BARBER SUffolk UnIvErSITy, 2008 The Competition is a film about two kids who represent each side of the blue vs. red divide in the United States. Their school announces a trip to Space Camp as the prize for the most money raised at the town fair. The two students have very different ideas about developing a product to sell at the fair. In the end, does either have what it takes or is the winner somewhere in the middle? This selection of a major American poet's early work tells the twinned story of a committed pacifist during a time of war and a young poet getting started. Many of these 160 poems have never before been published or have been long out of print. Vol. 13, no. 1 (fall/winter 2007/8) features fiction by David Crouse, Rachel Klein, Dana Kinstler, and Kathryn Gahl; an essay by Junichiro Tanizaki, translated from the Japanese by Ivan Gold and Liz Doles; and poetry by John F. Deane, Todd Hearon, Carol Moldaw, Eric Pankey, and Jessica Greenbaum, among others, as well as a portfolio of photographs by Emily Hiestand entitled "Consider the Oyster." EConomICs mAkINg poor NATIoNs rICH: ENTrEprENEursHIp ANd THE proCEss oF ECoNomIC dEvELopmENT BY BENJAmIN POWEll STAnforD UnIvErSITy PrESS, 2007 CoNNECTIoNs: LITErATurE For ComposITIoN EDITED BY QUENTIN mIllER AND JUlIE NASH HoUGHTon MIfflIn, 2008 sALAmANdEr EDITED BY JENNIFER BARBER SUffolk UnIvErSITy, 2008 Why do some nations become rich while others remain poor? Through a collection of case studies from Asia and Africa to Latin America and Europe, this volume urges the examination of the critical role entrepreneurs and the institutional environment of private property rights and economic freedom play in economic development. The lesson is clear: economic growth will remain elusive until pro-market reforms begin to promote productive entrepreneurship. Connections is an introductory literature textbook that stresses thinking and writing strategies. The anthology contains works from around the world and from all literary periods. It is organized thematically to show how literature complicates traditional moral oppositions such as love and lust, honesty and deception, or gluttony and generosity. Vol. 13, no. 2 (spring/summer 2008) includes fiction by C. D. Collins, Bill Bukovsan, Joseph Riippi, and Sue Williams; early poems by William Stafford, and new poetry by Laura Kasischke, Ben Berman, Sharon Dolin, Elizabeth Kirschner, and Carrie Etter, and others, along with translations of poems by Montale, Du Fu, Leopardi, and contemporary French poet Emmanuel Merle. The cover and portfolio feature watercolors by Beth Balliro. dEFyINg THE EyE CHArT BY mARIlYN JURIcH MAyAPPlE PrESS, 2008 GoVErnmEnt AFTEr vIENNA: dImENsIoNs oF THE rELATIoNsHIp bETWEEN THE EuropEAN uNIoN ANd THE LATIN AmErICA-CArIbbEAN rEgIoN EDITED BY ROBERTO DOmINGUEz & JOAQUIN ROY THoMPSon SHorE, InC., 2007 EduCatIon & Human sErVICEs THE proFEssIoNAL pArALEgAL BY AllAN TOW MCGrAw HIll, 2008 The Professional Paralegal presents a comprehensive and pragmatic overview of today’s legal system and the diverse roles of the contemporary paralegal. The innovative use of profiles and experiences of professional paralegals woven throughout the text provide personal and motivating insight while introducing practical tools, substantive issues and the all-important consideration of ethics. This textbook presents information easily accessed by students and offers many opportunities for discussion, research and review. This collection of poems attempts to revisualize how we sense ourselves and others and to redirect our awareness and understanding. Apart from this reorientation of perception, the poems as poems are distinctly musical compositions—we "see" through sound and structure; each piece has a breath and “atmosphere” of its own— from how an individual copes with the loss of vision to what Philadelphia "looks like" to the homeless, to the magical transformation of Grafton Street in Dublin when a harpist shares his ecstatic tunes. The book explores the intricate nature of the special Trans-Atlantic relationship between Latin America and Europe. Based on the analysis of the summits held periodically between the two regions and the development of the so-called Strategic Partnership, the chapters argue that the new Central America Common Market, CARICOM, the Andean Community and MERCOSUR are facing an internal crisis, which hampers not only their integration processes, but also the dynamic relationship with the European Union. [14] SUFFOLKARTS+SCIENCES//2008/2009 ALUMNI MAGAzINE
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