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New Publications
from the ND Institute for Regional Studies
A Prairie Prayer; Poems by Bruce Roseland.
Illustrated by Marie Louise Tesch
A collection of poems that continue the ideas first introduced by South
Dakotan Bruce Roseland in The Last Buffalo. Bruce's poems
are about surviving the (simple) country life in South Dakota. Softcover.
$11.95
"You Have Been Kind Enough to Assist Me":
Herman Stern and the Jewish Refugee Crisis by Terry Shoptaugh
The story about how one man managed to pluck more than a hundred German
Jews away from the clutches of the Nazis. Close to one hundred thousand
European Jews found refuge in the United States before the onset of
the Second World War. This story is about how one man living in a small
town in North Dakota, by dint of his energy, determination, refusal
to be discouraged, help at critical moments (for he well knew that he
could never have succeeded as he did without the help of a special friend
in Washington), he managed to pluck more than a hundred German Jews
away from the clutches of the Nazis. It was a remarkable achievement.
Then when, after the Holocaust, historians argued, with justice, that
America could have done more, this man was content to express his gratitude
that with help he was able to do something. Hardcover. $24.95
Quentin Burdick: The Gentle Warrior by
Dan Rylance
Quentin Burdick: The Gentle Warrior is based on interviews with
Burdick, his family, Senate colleagues and many North Dakotans. As the
son of Congressman Usher Burdick, Quentin Burdick became the first Democrat
in North Dakota to be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives,
in 1958. Two years later, he won a surprise victory over Governor John
Davis for the U.S. Senate, where he served continually until his death
in September 1992. The book reveals many tragedies in Burdick’s life:
the pain of his parents’ divorce, the crippling football injuries, the
death of his first wife, the mental breakdown of his first son and the
tragic loss of his second son in a freak accident in Fargo at age 16.
Late Democratic Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana called
Burdick “the quiet senator.” Hardcover. $28.95
Nature
of Eastern North Dakota: Pre-1880 Historical Ecology by Kieth
Severson and Carolyn Hull Sieg
How abundant were bison on the prairies of eastern North Dakota and
how did they move over the grasslands? Did prairie dogs live on this
eastern edge of the Great Plains? How about wolves, elk and prairie
chickens? Was the influence of Native Americans so strong that the Great
Plains wilderness described by early European travelers was already
far from "natural"? Were fires common before Euro-American
settlement, and were Native Americans the only ones setting them? Were
trees present? If so, where did they occur and how did they exist in
the presence of droughts, fire and widespread grazing? How often did
the flooding occur and how common were droughts? How did they compare
in intensity and duration to the drought of the 1930s? Such questions
are the foundation of The Nature of Eastern North Dakota.
Price: $21.95
From the Banat to North Dakota: A History of the
German-Hungarian Pioneers in Western North Dakota by David
Dreyer and Josette Hatter
In the spring of 1889 a young family of German colonists struck out
on a solo journey to America from their home in the Banat region of
Austria-Hungary. Within days of their arrival at the Port of New York,
Johann Braun filed a homestead claim in Stark County, North Dakota,
establishing with his wife, Anna, and their two small daughters, the
first German-Hungarian homestead in North Dakota. What forces led them
to leave their colonial home in the Banat? Why, within a few years,
did other families sell their famrs and follow the Brauns to southwestern
North Dakota? Price: $19.95
The Last Buffalo by Bruce Roseland. Contemporary
poetry from the farms and ranches of the Dakotas. Striking insights
into 21st Century rural life. Price: $11.95 softcover.
Greetings from North Dakota; An Address
and Date Book from the postcard
collections of Lawrence Aasen and Ronald Olin; historical information
written by John Bye and John Hallberg An address book that features
historic North Dakota postcards and short historical notes regarding
the towns that they represent. Greetings from North Dakota was compiled
by the professionals of the Institute from the postcard collections
of Lawrence Aasen and Ronald Olin. They are uniquely North Dakota. Price:
$13.95 softcover.
Bitter Harvest: Gordon Kahl and the Possee Comitatus;
Murder in the Heartland, by James Corcoran with a new foreword
by Mike Jacobs. Corcoran tells the story of Gordon Kahl and the Posse
Comitatus, using captivating narrative with vivid imagery. Sunday, February
13, 1983, was a sunny day in Medina, North Dakota--a seemingly peaceful
church-going winter day. But hate politics was broiling in secret locations
and the Heartland provided cover for those who wanted to take the law
into their own hands. "Something terrible, and terribly important,
was taking place," writes Corcoran. Ever a page-turner, reflect
again on this story of violence and how a group of people can construct
an alternative version of the law and the truth. Price: $25 hardcover.
For more information, contact the ND Institute for
Regional Studies at 231-8338 or e-mail Nancy.Nelson@ndsu.edu
Archaeology Lab
Dr. Jeffrey Clark (Department of Sociology/Anthropology)
and Dr. Thomas Riley (Dean of the College of Arts, Humanities and Social
Sciences) received an EPSCOR technology grant for the purchase of an
Dell 610 Workstation and a Minolta
Vivid 700 laser, non-contact 3D digitizer. This new equipment
will be used to research 3D modling and imagery (as well as digital
curation) within the field of archaeology.
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