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July 21, 2008

Author Guest Blog: Beth Boosalis Davis

Reaching for the Brass Ring

By Beth Boosalis Davis, author of Mayor Helen Boosalis: My Mother’s Life in Politics

212673947product_largetomediumimage Flat on my back and sick as I’d ever been, I managed to write on the back of a nearby dental reminder card a specific timetable to do something I’d never before considered – write a book about my mother, Helen Boosalis, and her political life. Days later, after I recovered, I studied my scratchy bedside notes expecting to dismiss them as some delusional sickbed rant. Instead, I realized writing my mother’s story had not come out-of-the-blue but rather from a desire buried deep within. Perhaps my illness had knocked me into a rare state of stillness, a state where something deeper than the next to-do item on my list could command my attention.

Even with clarity of purpose I still had practical matters to consider, such as the fact that I knew nothing about what was involved in writing a book.  I may not have doubted the goal but I certainly doubted my ability to achieve it. That’s when I recalled advice my mother was given when she hesitated to jump into her first race for mayor:  “the brass ring may not come round again.”  I had my timetable, I had my parents still with me, I had my husband’s support.  Time to reach for the brass ring.

I didn’t presume to think I could just sit down and type out a book, no matter how familiar the subject.  First I converted a little-used 8 X 9 feet space to a “room of my own” for writing.  I started journaling, and on my daily walks along Lake Michigan I practiced by writing three descriptions of the lake each day. I bought several books on writing and even read a few, hoping the rest would be absorbed through osmosis. 

Continue reading "Author Guest Blog: Beth Boosalis Davis" »

May 29, 2008

Linking in Lincoln: May 29, 2008

212673369product_largetomediumimag If you’re an avid follower of current events, then you must be aware that in addition to spring, it’s also wildfire season. This month from the University of Nebraska Press is Wildfire and Americans, by Roger G. Kennedy. The book is a desperate plea to Humans to re-evaluate our place in the larger ecosystem. Kennedy’s unique perspective on natural disasters and the moral role of humans, mixed with his suspicions of the political system create a very compelling read. This week, Linking in Lincoln will throw themselves into the fire…the wildfire that is, and find out just how informed we should be on the subject!

Are you curious what a wildfire consists of? How they start? Just how dangerous they are? The United States Geological Survey (USGS) provides a great explanation, which you can find here.

How can you protect you and your family from wildfire? State Farm provides a detailed list of what to do before and during the fire.

One of Kennedy’s arguments is that there are no natural disasters, only human disasters. Check out this Newsday article by Wolf Schafer to see how “Humans create, worsen natural disasters.”

Well this may not be the same kind of bad weather, but check out Jazz Goddess Lena Horne’s stunning rendition of “Stormy Weather” here on youtube.

Since we’re on the subject of youtube, and if you don’t scare easily, check out real footage of the 1999 Willow Fire in Apple Valley, California.

Are you like me, and a sucker for a natural disaster movie? I won’t lie, Twister both terrifies and delights me. If you too like to be thrust into a world where nature, and not man has all the control then check out disasterflicks.com.

On a more serious note, wildfires are incredibly dangerous. In addition to protecting you and your family, take a look at the MRSC website to check out wildfire prevention.

The effects of wildfire damage are considerable to say the least, the loss of lives, personal property, and homes take their toll each year. Here, CBSNews takes a closer look at the devastating effect.

What do you think bloggers, are you now a wildfire authority? Well, I hope so! At any rate, check back on Friday for This Day in History!

January 17, 2008

UNP Author Blog: To Save or Not to Save the Columbia River Salmon

University of Nebraska Press author Mike Barenti kayaked nine hundred miles along the Columbia and its tributaries during the summer of 2001 and wrote a book about his journey entitled Kayaking Alone: Nine Hundred Miles from Idaho's Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. Along the way, he got an up-close-and-personal view of the endangered salmon issue. Now, nearly seven years later, people in the Pacific Northwest and all over the country are still talking about the fate of the salmon. While politicians continue to play “bait and switch,” little has been done to reach a consensus on what should and can be done to protect the salmon from extinction. In today’s blog post, Mike Barenti lays out the main facets of the debate and issues a call to action.

Talk to enough people around the Northwest about salmon, a part of the country where people always talk about salmon, and eventually somebody will say “we have to save the Columbia River’s salmon.” Of course as the old saying goes, only death and taxes are inevitable, and at least in the Northwest, some people claim even taxes are optional. The truth is we don’t have to save the salmon; doing so represents a social and political choice, not a requirement.

In the summer of 2001, I kayaked nine hundred miles from central Idaho’s Redfish Lake to the Pacific Ocean to find out for myself just where salmon fit in the regional culture of the northwest corner of the country that I call home, and what obligation we, as a region and country, have to protect salmon. The trip lasted almost two months and took me down the Salmon, Snake, and Columbia rivers, three rivers now mired in controversy. I examined those rivers for answers to my questions. I paddled alone for much of the trip, but met many people along the way, and I also listened to what those who lived near and depended on the river had to say. At the end of the trip, I sat down to write a book called Kayaking Alone: Nine Hundred Miles from Idaho’s Mountains to the Pacific Ocean.

While writing, I had long conversations about the rivers’ salmon with a close friend who also is a fisheries biologist. Over the years, billions of dollars have been spent on restoring salmon populations throughout the Columbia River and its tributaries. But our money has bought us very little. Instead, the Columbia’s salmon seem perpetually on the verge of extinction. Despite all the money spent and the claims that we all want to see the region’s salmon thrive, we in the Northwest, and in the rest of the country for that matter, have never really decided whether or not we are willing to make serious changes in the way we live and act for the sake of the salmon. So we stumble along with expensive half measures struggling to answer that most basic question: do we want to save the Columbia’s salmon?

In discussions with my biologist friend, I would say we need to debate until we reach some kind of consensus about what we are willing or not willing to do for the salmon. If what we are willing to do isn’t enough, that’s a kind of answer. Consensus would mean taking real action to restore salmon or it would mean the possible extirpation of the river’s wild salmon. My biologist friend always asked how we would conduct this debate, who should participate since salmon represent a national resource, and how we would know when consensus was reached. I never had a good answer.

The federal government has, in its own way, grappled with these same issues. In particular, the government has struggled to find a way to operate dozens of dams in a way that will let salmon if not thrive, at least achieve stable populations. Thirteen of the Columbia’s salmon and steelhead runs are now listed as threatened or endangered. As required under the Endangered Species Act, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) submitted a report in 2000 explaining how it planned to manage the Columbia’s hydro system in a way that would allow salmon to recover. The National Wildlife Federation sued NMFS, a federal judge in Portland found the plan, called a biological opinion, didn’t do what it was supposed to do, and ordered the agency to try again. In 2004, NMFS submitted a second plan; again the judge threw it out and ordered the agency to write a new plan.

In October of 2007, NMFS submitted a draft version of its third biological opinion to U.S. District Judge James Redden. And not long after that, the Portland, Oregon-based judge made it clear the new plan didn’t protect salmon either. He also made it clear there would be no fourth chance for NMFS. According to The Oregonian, Redden indicated that if the final plan didn’t pass muster, he would consider appointing a panel of scientists to help him manage the river. Some groups say the only way to restore some of the Columbia’s salmon is to remove four dams on the lower Snake River in eastern Washington, and in the past Redden has said that dam breaching was an option the court might consider. Though he has recently backed away from dam breaching, Redden might take other actions that will seem just as drastic and just as controversial.

The twenty-eight federal hydroelectric dams spread around the Columbia and its tributaries have many uses. Obviously, they generate cheap electricity for power-hungry cities, but they also impound irrigation water that grows Idaho potatoes and Washington apples and make Idaho and eastern Washington part of the Pacific Rim by creating a series of reservoirs that allow barges to move between deepwater Pacific ports and inland river towns. The remedies the judge has mentioned for protecting salmon—taking water stored behind irrigation dams and sending it down river and lowering the reservoirs on the main stem Snake and Columbia rivers to speed salmon to the sea—would mean less water for farms and barges and hydroelectricity.

Right now, various groups around the Northwest are waiting and speculating on what Redden will do. The final NMFS plan is due March 18, 2008. I talked to a NMFS biologist who said politics makes any major changes to the biological opinion almost impossible. Most people following salmon and hydropower have reached the same conclusion, and they expect Redden to do something drastic. Politicians and business groups will howl, environmentalists will cheer, and the government certainly will appeal if that happens.

I don’t like the courts intervening in what’s essentially a political matter, and normally would chafe at a judge managing the Columbia and its salmon, but in this instance there are few other choices. Not because we have to save the salmon, but because we must have the debate we have put off for so long. A drastic ruling might finally bring the matter to a head, providing a framework for debate and a way to know when we have reached a decision.

Under the Endangered Species Act, the Secretary of the Interior can convene a panel, referred to euphemistically as the “God Squad,” to decide the fate of an endangered species. The God Squad can remove a species’ protections, leaving its existence solely to chance and whim. If sometime after March 18th Redden does what most expect, and if his decision brings the protests most anticipate, discussion about the God Squad will start. If this happens, it will set off a real and deep public debate. Either the public will side with those advocating serious action to save salmon or with those arguing to end the salmon’s protection. The risk of course is that, if we have already chosen sides in the fight over the Columbia, its salmon, and its dams, our side might loose. But I see no other option right now. We don’t have to save the Columbia’s salmon, but eventually, we will have to make a decision.

*****

Read more on the Columbia River salmon issue in this article from The Oregonian:
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/1197345328250200.xml&coll=7

Mike Barenti is a writer and journalist who has worked as a reporter for the Yakima Herald-Republic and the Idaho Falls Post Register and has taught English and creative writing at various colleges. He has published work in such journals as River Teeth and Ascent.

Kayaking_aloneKayaking Alone: Nine Hundred Miles from Idaho's Mountains to the Pacific Ocean
By Mike Barenti

To read an excerpt from Kayaking Alone, click on the link below.

Download barenti_kayaking_excerpt.pdf

December 06, 2007

Some Good Things about Omaha

For your Linking in Lincoln Thursday this week, I have a few random links of Omaha, some book related, some not, all wonderful.

The first is from a lit blog called The Refrigerator Door by blog and book author Melanie Lynne Hauser.  In a post inviting her readers to buy three books, she mentions two writers she met in Omaha at the (downtown) Omaha Lit Fest.

Cult Moxie chronicles Omaha's culture.  In this post, they talk about Silent City, an Omaha-published literary quarterly.

Omaha Review is general review blog of the city.  Their tag line is "Be a Local."

It's not a blog, but it's a link to one of the top zoos in the United States

Here is the website for Nebraska's "largest and most distinguished art museum," the Joslyn Art Museum.  And to learn more about the west, visit Durham Western Heritage Musuem.

If you're ever in Omaha and need a bite to eat, you may want to check out the Omaha Dining Reviews blog for suggestions.

Our hearts go out to Omaha, Nebraska!

December 04, 2007

Fear and Fantasy Realized in Sports

post composed by David Shields

Body_politic On the occasion of the University of Nebraska Press’s reissue of Body Politic, I was interviewed by the Mariners Radio Network; Patrick Lagreid asked me what I thought about the recently completed 2007 Major League Baseball Season. I started laughing, because I realized I didn’t even know who had won the World Series. I don’t follow sports really, and I haven’t for a very long time. What I follow instead are the crises in and around sports: The Oklahoma State football coach who berated a female sports reporter for not only writing an article that portrayed an OSU player in an unflattering light but also for committing the sin of not being a mother. The male U.S. women’s national soccer coach who inexplicably changed goalies for the final game, and the fascinating way in which the team then turned on the spurned goalie. The scapegoating of Marian Jones, Barry Bonds, Michael Vick. Sports are a primitive arena in which the culture’s deepest fears and fantasies, its most powerful secrets get revealed, its fault lines exposed, if you only now how and where to look. Body Politic: The Great American Sports Machine looks for those fault lines in the culture, in athletes, in spectators, and in me.
______________________________________

David Shields' Body Politic: The Great American Sports Machine is now available from Bison Books.  His books Black Planet: Facing Race during an NBA Season and his novel Heroes are also available from Bison Books, both in paperback.

November 05, 2007

A Question of Humanity: Is There a Place for Torture in Civilized Society?

Attorney general nominee, Michael Mukasey made the news recently by refusing to acknowledge waterboarding as an illegal form of torture during a Senate committee interview. Citing that the 2005 Detainee Treatment Act's ban on waterboarding is not inclusive of the CIA and its activities, Mukasey claimed ignorance as to the nuances of the law regarding "enhanced" CIA interrogation procedures. Democrats are now lining up in protest of his appointment and many are calling his response short-sighted and irresponsible. President Bush staunchly maintains his support of the nominee and Vice President Cheney has called the use of waterboarding in interrogation procedures a "no brainer," but the uproar in Congress and in the public arena indicates that the issue is not so black and white.

The_questionHenri Alleg, author of The Question (University of Nebraska Press, 2006), experienced waterboarding first-hand during the Battle of Algiers. In 1957, Alleg was a French journalist and ardent supporter of Algerian independence. That June, he was placed under arrest by French paratroopers and interrogated for one month. He was questioned under tortureat one point he was strapped to a plank and had his head, wrapped in a rag, placed under running water. He was forcibly held in this position until his lungs filled with water and his body went into convulsions. Only at that point was he was released, at which time the captain interrogating him punched him in the stomach to release the water Alleg had inhaled so that he could continue the interrogation.

In these post-9/11 times, it would be simple enough to turn a blind eye to waterboarding and other methods of torture, declaring Machiavellian law: let the end justify the means. But the question for Alleg and for many others is: How can anyone who considers him/herself a civilized member of society engage in this or any form of torture? Whatever the gain, is it worth the cost to our humanity?

To read other articles tying Alleg's The Question to the current issue of waterboarding and Mukasey's confirmation hearings, please visit these links:

"Waterboarding is torture - I did it myself, says US advisor" by Leonard Doyle for The Independent: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article3115549.ece

"Logic Tortured" by Dana Milbank for the Washington Post: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/01/AR2007110102342.html

For more information on The Question, please visit http://nebraskapress.unl.edu/product/The-Question,673057.aspx

October 15, 2007

Looking Forward to Things Green

Green_plans I must admit that I was pretty excited to see that we're doing a new edition of Green Plans: Blueprint for a Sustainable Earth.  This edition won't be available until Spring, 2008, but here's some praise for the earlier editions:

"As we strive to implement sustainable development, we must share experience of how green plans can work, as Huey D. Johnson has done here. Green Plans is a necessary book that many of us need to read."—Gro Harlem Brundtland, Prime Minister of NorwayCrisis_opportunity

"This book is quite informative. It would be useful for anyone seeking (detailed) knowledge about designing a 'greenprint for sustainability.' . . . As one of the first books to deal with the development, implementation, and performance of green plans, this is certainly a welcome addition to the literature relating to the operationalisation and implementation of the concept of sustainability."—Environmental Politics

Green Plans: Blueprint for a Sustainable Earth revised and updated edition includes global green plans and an afterword by the author.  Although you have to wait until spring to read this edition, you can see the cover now. 

Yet another reason to look forward to spring is Crisis and Opportunity: Sustainability in American Agriculture by John E. Ikerd.  Economist and supporter of sustainable agriculture John E. Ikerd examines the issues that surround agriculture and the problems industrialized agriculture have created. 

In the meantime, you may want to check out Good Growing: Why Organic Farming Works by Leslie A. Duram, Roots of Change: Nebraska's New Agriculture by Mary Ridder.

_______________________________________


Bloggers Unite - Blog Action Day

October 04, 2007

It's Almost Friday, so Click Your Thursday Away

First off, fellow Thursday clickers, I can honestly say that it won't be such a random click week.  If you haven't heard it on the news shows, in the papers and zines, you may have heard about Sputnik's fiftieth anniversary from Google's little depiction of the first man-made and launched satellite today. I would draw you a picture of the spherical object myself, but I wouldn't want to blind you with my stunning artistic abilities.

Secondly, and for your first direct link this historical Thursday, I'm proud to announce that the University of Nebraska Press is having an October web sale celebrating the launch of the Space Race and the launch of our new website (woo-hoo!), so rocket on over.

Now, for all things Sputnik:

Visit NASA today.  In fact, visit NASA everyday. It's truly a great site.  For a quicker foray into the history of Sputnik, read the article "50 Years On, Sputnik Success Still Shines" on Cosmos: The Science of Everything's website.

A lot of quotes from the event-- including the quote, "[Sputnik is] a hunk of iron almost anybody could launch" by US Rear Admiral Rawson Bennett-- can be found on Physorg.com's Space and Earth Science section.

On SpaceDaily, there is an article entitled, "50 Years after Sputnik, Russia Revives Space Ambitions."  You may recall that Russia's space program was diminished after the fall of the Soviet Union.  Six years ago, the  Russian space station Mir closed due to funding. This short article addresses some of these issues and the future of Russia's space program.

Lastly, Hillary Clinton is using the anniversary as an opportunity to discuss an agenda she has for science in our country. 

Enjoy the rest of your Thursday and keep looking to the stars, or the satellites, or something.

August 03, 2007

All Things Minnesota

I first visited Minnesota about five years ago while attending the Twin Cities Book Festival.  I quickly developed a love for the city, its statues of pop icons (Mary Tyler Moore and Peanuts characters), and its residents' Midwestern friendliness (PW has an extensive list fall book festivals all over the country).  Since that festival, I returned many times to visit friends in Minneapolis and to enjoy the ambiance of the Twin Cities.  My last visit was just for the American Association of University Presses Annual Meeting in June.

This week, as noted in the title of this post, I'm linking to all things Minnesota and books.  Hope I'm not missing too much.

Magazines

Rain Taxi

Minnesota Women's Press (zine, newspaper, and more)

Book Stores (Thanks to BookSense for the links)

The Red Balloon Bookshop: children's Books, Etc

Micawbers

Magers and Quinn Books

Common Good Books

Wild Rumpus

Presses

University of Minnesota Press

Minnesota Historical Society

New Rivers Press

Afton Historical Society Press

Graywolf Press

Coffee House Press

Milkweed Editions

July 16, 2007

A Decade of Links and Opinions

According to Saturday's The Wall Street Journal, it's the tenth anniversary of the web log, or the blog.  On December 23, 1997, Mr. Barger began "logging the best stuff I find as I surf, on a daily basis," according to the Journal and according to Mr. Barger's website, which has a whole lotta links!  Included in the article are some famous folks' favorite blog sites, such as actress Mia Farrow's (BoingBoing.net and GPSMagazine.com), CEO of Craigslist Jim Buckmaster (Slashdot.org, Metafilter.com, Valleywag.com, and TechDirt.org), and founding editor of Gawker Elizabeth Spiers (Reason.com/blog, MaudNewton.com, and DesignObserver.com).

Technically, it's not the 23rd of December yet, but I think we can celebrate bloggin' in style on that date. 

-DeEee

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