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From the John Holmes library collection.
The forsaken promise of space -- The launching of space law -- Property rights in outer space -- Common heritage in magnificent desolation : the Moon Agreement's tragic odyssey -- Moon myths : what the Moon Agreement is not -- Return to the moon : the Moon Agreement reconsidered -- Castles in the air : the space settlement prize -- Celestial empire : China's rise as a space power -- Interplanetary political economy -- The cosmic tumblers.
Phyllis Koestenbaum's "Criminal Sonnets" reflect an out-of-control world of lawlessness and paranoia. Horrible, yet grimly funny, they invite the reader into the mind of a poet who connects our century's greatest crimes with the calamity of her personal history. Our attention is trapped by Koestenbaum's revolutionary forms as much as by the wickedness and cruelty uniting public and private lives.
When Franklin D. Roosevelt was sworn in as president, the South was unmistakably the most disadvantaged part of the nation. The region's economy was the weakest, its educational level the lowest, its politics the most rigid, and its laws and social mores the most racially slanted. Moreover, the region was prostrate from the effects of the Great Depression. Roosevelt's New Deal effected significant changes on the southern landscape, challenging many traditions and laying the foundations for subsequent alterations in the southern way of life. At the same time, firmly entrenched values and institutions militated against change and blunted the impact of federal programs. In The South and the New Deal, Roger Biles examines the New Deal's impact on the rural and urban South, its black and white citizens, its poor, and its politics. He shows how southern leaders initially welcomed and supported the various New Deal measures but later opposed a continuation or expansion of these programs because they violated regional convictions and traditions. Nevertheless, Biles concludes, the New Deal, coupled with the domestic effects of World War II, set the stage for a remarkable postwar transformation in the affairs of the region. The post-World War II Sunbelt boom has brought Dixie more fully into the national mainstream. To what degree did the New Deal disrupt southern distinctiveness? Biles answers this and other questions and explores the New Deal's enduring legacy in the region.