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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: national, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. National Book Award Contest: Win Prizes!

Purdy, Publicity Director

The National Book Award nominees were announced earlier this week. Kudos to all nominees, especially to our friends & compatriots at the nominated University Presses. I am glad to see the great good wisdom of the nominating committee at the NBAs. Congratulations aside, it is tradition here in the OUP publicity dept to host a little friendly contest to see who can pick the most NBA winners. This year I am inviting our blog readers to join the fray and send me your picks.  Details below.

Please note there is a point system in this contest. Correct picks in Fiction and Non-fiction will each receive 1 point each, 2 points for a correct pick in YA literature, and 3 points for a correct pick in the Poetry category. Please, only one submission per person. Send your entry to [email protected].

In the event of a tie, all entrants with the highest score will be placed in a raffle for prizes. Prizes include a copy of Garner’s Modern American Usage (3rd edition), the Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, and the Historical Thesaurus of the OED. One prize per player. I reserve the right to disqualify anyone I feel is trying to game this friendly competition. Awards are announced on November 18th. Winners here will be announced on November 20, 2009. Good luck.

FICTION (1 point)image001
Bonnie Jo Campbell, American Salvage (Wayne State University Press)
Colum McCann, Let the Great World Spin (Random House)
Daniyal Mueenuddin, In Other Rooms, Other Wonders (Norton)
Jayne Anne Phillips, Lark and Termite (Alfred A. Knopf)
Marcel Theroux, Far North (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

NONFICTION (1 point)
David M. Carroll, Following the Water: A Hydromancer’s Notebook (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
Sean B. Carroll, Remarkable Creatures: Epic Adventures in the Search for the Origins of Species (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
Greg Grandin, Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford’s Forgotten Jungle City (Metropolitan Books/Henry Holt)
Adrienne Mayor, The Poison King: The Life and Legend of Mithradates, Rome’s Deadliest Enemy (Princeton University Press)
T. J. Stiles, The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt (Alfred A. Knopf)

YOUNG PEOPLE’S LITERATURE (2 points)
Deborah Heiligman, Charles and Emma: The Darwins’ Leap of Faith (Henry Holt)
Phillip Hoose, Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
David Small, Stitches (W. W. Norton & Co.)
Laini Taylor, Lips Touch: Three Times (Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic)
Rita Williams-Garcia, Jumped (HarperTeen/HarperCollins)

POETRY (3 points)
Rae Armantrout, Versed (Wesleyan University Press)
Ann Lauterbach, Or to Begin Again (Viking Penguin)
Carl Phillips, Speak Low (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon, Open Interval (University of Pittsburgh Press)
Keith Waldrop, Transcendental Studies: A Trilogy (University of California Press)

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2. And the Chuck Norris Award for 2009 Goes To

In the last decade there have been less then 10 cases of a mountain lion attacking a human in Wyoming.  It’s unusual as mountain lions tend to shy away from humans.

Dustin Britton was camping in Shoshone National Forest in Wyoming, gathering and cutting some firewood for his camp when he noticed the mountain lion stalking him.  He tried to back away but the lion attacked him.  He defended himself with the only thing he had with him of any size, his chainsaw.

Dustin said it was like a full grown man had tried to tackle him.  The chainsaw apparently grazed the lion in the shoulder laying open a wound.  It retreated after being injured.

Dustin only suffered a small puncture on his arm, other than that he was fine.  Dustin, a former marine, is lucky to escape with such minor injuries.

Authorities killed the lion after it killed one of the dogs that tracked it down.  Authorities said the lion was only 4 or 5 years old and was in a state of severe starvation.

Dustin. buddy…you get my vote for the Chuck Norris Award of the Year.

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3. Reflections on National Geography Awareness Week, 2008

Harm de Blij is the John A. Hannah Professor of Geography at Michigan State University. The author of more than 30 books he is an honorary life member of the National Geographic Society and was for seven years the Geography Editor on ABC’s Good Morning America. His most recent book, The Power of Place: Geography, Destiny, and Globalization’s Rough Landscape, he reveals the rugged contours of our world that keep all but 3% of “mobals” stationary in the country where they were born. He argues that where we start our journey has much to do with our destiny, and thus with our chances of overcoming obstacles in our way.  In the post below, written for National Geography Awareness Week, Blij looks at America’s geographic illiteracy.

The election of Barack Obama to the office of President of the United States revealed once again that American society is capable of revolutionary self-correction. The state survived a Civil War that brought an end to human-rights violations of the most dreadful kind. The Civil Rights Movement, a century later, completed a long-dormant cycle of American transformation on the basis of a Constitution whose terms, as Presidents Kennedy and Johnson proclaimed, had not yet been met. And now, two generations on, the unimaginable has happened. My mail from all over the world over the past several days has one common theme, amazement – and a second thread, admiration. People who usually went to bed before the polls closed in their own countries’ elections stayed up all night to watch the drama unfold in America. November 4, 2008 was Global Awareness Day – global awareness of America and its continuing importance to the future of this planet.

But from the American side, the two-year-long preoccupation with electoral politics took its toll on U.S. awareness of the world, and revealed some geographic illiteracy among the candidates that gave cause for concern. Even those news media still committed to some global perspective shrank their international coverage in the face of the demand for, as CNN put it, “all politics all the time.” And it was not just a matter of diminished attention to Iraq, Afghanistan, and other headline topics. Right next door to us, Mexico is becoming the Colombia of Middle America, but the drama – and it will have huge repercussions in the years ahead – barely makes it into print. In our hemisphere, enormous changes are occurring in Brazil, with China strongly in the picture, but the geography of this emerging superpower hardly makes the headlines. Even Russia’s growing belligerence (how soon Moscow’s portentous actions toward Georgia faded from view) only made the news when its president failed to congratulate president-elect Obama on his victory and used his acknowledgment of the event to threaten missile emplacement in Kaliningrad. Let us hope that National Geography Awareness Week 2008 will mark a renewal of attention to global concerns.

On the matter of geographic literacy, it was disturbing to hear one presidential candidate refer to the Iraq-Afghanistan border and another suggest that you can see Russia from Alaska (to be sure, there are places where you can, but not as her assertion intended). Anyone running for the highest or the second-highest office of the United States ought to know what NAFTA means and realize that Africa is not a country. As to Kaliningrad, let’s not even go there.

So long as we have national leaders (as has recently been the case) who are not adequately versed in the environmental and cultural geographies of the places with whose peoples they will have to interact, and which they seek to change through American intervention, we need to enhance public education in geography. Whether the world likes it or not, the United States still is the indispensable state of the twenty-first century, capable of influencing nations and peoples, lives and livelihoods from pole to pole. That power confers on Americans a responsibility to learn as much as they can about those nations and livelihoods, and for this there is no more effective vehicle than geography. It is a matter worth contemplating during National Geography Awareness Week.

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4. The Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act: Stopping New York’s Tax Attack on Telecommuters

Edward A. Zelinsky is the Morris and Annie Trachman Professor of Law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University. He is the author of The Origins of the Ownership Society: How The Defined Contribution Paradigm Changed America. In this article, Professor Zelinsky criticizes New York’s “convenience of the employer” doctrine for double taxing telecommuters at a time when public policy should be encouraging, rather than hindering, telecommuting. He calls on Congress to pass the Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act to stop such double taxation. Read his past OUPblog posts here.

A gallon of gas today costs $4.00 or more in most parts of the country. The public is concerned, as perhaps never before, about the impact of human activity on the global environment. In this setting, telecommuting has emerged as an environmentally sensitive and economically sensible lifestyle.
By permitting individuals to work at home for part (often much) of the work week, telecommuting removes telecommuters’ cars from the roads, thereby reducing traffic congestion, gas consumption, and automotive pollution. Telecommuting from home also opens job opportunities for persons for whom a conventional, daily trip to the work place is difficult or undesirable – parents’ of small children, disabled individuals, persons who live far from major employment centers. Telecommuting allows employers to hire these individuals who might otherwise withdraw from the labor force.

For all of these reasons, public policy should encourage, or at least not hinder, the growth of telecommuting. Unfortunately, the tax policies of the State of New York discourage telecommuting by double taxing out-of-state individuals who telecommute for New York employers from their out-of-state homes. In particular, New York’s so-called “convenience of the employer” rule imposes nonresident New York income taxes on out-of-state telecommuters on the days they work at home, often hundreds – if not thousands – of miles from New York.

Consider, for example, the recent case of Mr. R. Michael Holt, a human resources compensation consultant who lives in Naples, Florida. In 1999, Mr. Holt worked at his home in Florida for the New York offices of KPMG, LLP and William M. Mercer, Inc. Under the employer convenience rule, New York imposed nonresident income taxes upon Mr. Holt for the income he earned working at home in the Sunshine State, thousands of miles from New York.

When the state in which a telecommuter lives also imposes an income tax, the result of New York’s tax policy is double taxation as the out-of-state telecommuter who works at home must pay tax both to New York and to the state in which she lives. The result is an unfair and inefficient tax penalty for telecommuting, namely, the double taxation of the income earned by the telecommuter on the days she works at her out-of-state home.

New York’s policy is bad, not only for out-of-state persons who telecommute to the Empire State, but potentially for telecommuters throughout the nation and for the employers who employ such telecommuters. If New York can get away with double taxing out-of-state telecommuters, other states will be tempted to emulate New York and likewise tax nonresident telecommuters who work at their out-of-state homes. The upshot will thus be double taxation of telecommuters nationwide when public policy should instead be supporting telecommuting.

Unfortunately, New York’s courts have refused to stop New York’s double taxation of nonresident telecommuters on the days such telecommuters work at their out-of-state homes. In Huckaby v. Tax Appeals Tribunal, New York’s highest court, by a narrow but decisive margin of 4-3, upheld New York’s income taxation of Thomas Huckaby on the days Mr. Huckaby worked at his home in Nashville, Tennessee.

Pending in Congress is legislation which would prevent New York and other states from using the “convenience of the employer” doctrine or any similar artifice to double tax nonresident telecommuters on the days they work at their out-of-state homes. The Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act has attracted bi-partisan support from members of Congress who recognize the importance of telecommuting-friendly public policy.

It is unreasonable for New York to punish telecommuting by double taxing workers who telecommute for New York employers from their out-of-state homes, particularly at a time when sound public policy should encourage telecommuting. There is, however, no sign that New York will alter its irrational “convenience of the employer” rule. Congress should accordingly adopt the Telecommuter Tax Fairness Act to eliminate the ability of New York and other states to double tax nonresident telecommuters on the days they work at their out-of-state homes.

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5. Annie Lee Moss and Joe McCarthy

After a decade of work, Oxford University Press and the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute published the African American National Biography(AANB). The AANB is the largest repository of black life stories ever assembled with more than 4,000 biographies. To celebrate this monumental achievement we have invited the contributors to this 8 volume set to share some of their knowledge with the OUPBlog. Over the next couple of months we will have the honor of sharing their thoughts, reflections and opinions with you.

Donald Ritchie, author of Reporting from Washington: The History of the Washington Press Corps, Our Constitution, and The Congress of the United States: A Student Companion, has been Associate Historian of the United States Senate for more than three decades. In the article below he looks at Annie Lee Moss.

A peculiar effort has been underway to rehabilitate Joe McCarthy as a Red-hunting investigator. Some commentators have declared the censured senator vindicated by the opening of Cold War archives that revealed the extent of Soviet espionage in the United States. A key figure in this debate is a witness whose brief appearance before McCarthy helped undo his public reputation: Annie Lee Moss. (more…)

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