VOLUME V May, 1993 II I toufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/AA/00/00/87/55/00032/Library... ·...
Transcript of VOLUME V May, 1993 II I toufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/AA/00/00/87/55/00032/Library... ·...
COLLEGE OF T1lE BAHAMAS
VOLUME V
NASSA11. BAHAMAS- CST. 1')74
EWSLEn'EI{
May, 1993
II If you .ook I i .e your passport photo, You're to i 11 totrave I .
Library Staff Notes
Birthday Greetings
;v!ay J-:Nay 2~
i'ic s .!y [na Reynes~s Gr~cie ~ooinson
From The Acquisitions Librariant1rs. B. Wa 1ker
New Arrivals: Great Artists of the Wes ern World:Series. Includes:
1. Tne Fee c Rococo:.~r:toine aued.j.a.s. ChardenFC' :nc:): s Boucner.j.n. cc""C;Onc.cd
2. ~~ecican nr~lS~S:-- c::\"o·, ···i-·~vo.rr.e~ .C'·v I. tlfLS 1,,[
~.'ir:j (;::'55:: - ~
Jonn S:ngec Secgen:. ."; ~[a :;OP;:l t? c
3. The Gia M~sters:
?e~er ?=.ul ~ oensrccns !"i-i15Renbr€;.. -t V3.n ~iJ
.jon-innes Vec;.eer
Cont~re~ces ~~a Se~!r.~rs co ti,uea:,~',~ •• p. 27 --,~O, , . ~ne l'!::"d: C 0: Tee, !to i og'j, :'os,ea oy the Un i lIers it"
of Centr.:.1 :'-'orl a at 'ne ;,c.rriott's Orlando ·,.,;orldCenter, Orlanco, Fla. The 14th annual meeting oftne i·:c.tiono.! Eaucc.clon<ii Comput'ng Conference.Contact: Donna J. B~umbac • Univ. of Central fla.Dept. of Ed. Services, Cr1o.ndo, r'I, 328i6-1250,?hone: ~07-823-3275. Fax: 407-823-3276,
,;. 9 :3: 23--27., .AI-ED '?3: Yiorid Confe.ence on .".c','fieialIntell 'gence in Educac!on, Edinburgh ConferenceCentre, EalnDurgn Scar-la,flc. Husted by ",he Universi yof Edinourgh.Contact: AACE P.O. Box 2966, Charlottesvi I Ie, Va.22902, 804-973-3987, Fax 804-978-7449,
From The Cata 1 oguer ~ Mr. Stanley Williams
New Books Received in the Cataloguing Department
,; n[stor'i
oy :JulSlc.n~
~~m~cr~cv ~nc tne ni39 ~enla: a Col lee: ~n of essays:eO'tea cy juai~n ~icntenoe·g. Publ ished b' Camorlage
University ?~ess, C~ffib[jcge: c qqQ, 49Upp.
46 pp.
he OzoneM~Cu~n Pub! Ie: Ions.
The End 0: a Nil lrary Century: oy A Legault,Puo! isned oy -nternational Development Research Centre, Ottawa:c 1q02. llipEJ.
Least eveloped Countries: Structure andDevelopment: PUblished by United Nations Industr'alDeve 1oproen t Organ i z.:.. ti on. Vlanna: 1992. 250pp,
Book Review
Chiiaren of t e Dream: the P~ychologv of Black Success,by ~uarey Eawards and Craig K. Polite. Publ ished by Doubleday,Hew York: c1992, 287pp.
[p~\., ,:lle.- l V.'J..::; (:cn ~ I n\)tO, , ,
~. t'loliern lsm:henir ~~3.~i5Se .
Paolo ?icassoU ,oen-o Bocc'oniM8adeo Moaigl ian!
~. Impress:onlsm:~acuc.r:: ~~!cne l
£090.::- [ieg6.sCt .7\i..iCe tC::,"j~
Pierre ~~gu5~e PenCI[
Q. 7he ?~ench C'ass'co! T[~aition:
. ico!as ?ollsslceClauae Lo[[:t!nJacques Louis Dav'QJ .A. D. 1 gres
7. Engl ish ?ortra' t re and Landscape:Joshua ReynoldsThomas GainsboroughJohn ConstableJoseph Turner
8. Pre-Renaissance In Northern Europe:The L mbolrg BrothersJan iJan EYCk·Rog i er ..ander !,leydeni-i' €ronymus Bosch,
Q Tne Mlgn ~ena 5sance:Leonara aa .; i flC
l'11;:;' ,e ! -s.nge 0
RC.~i ae!:,. • ::. I
Con£ecences & Seminars
Academic Conferences of Particular interest to Scholars.
June ~3--26, , .ECUCA:IONAL ~EDIA 93: World Conference onEd c~tionel Mu ,'media and Hypermedi~, HyattOrlanao Hotel I Orlando, Fla. Sponsored by the Asso.tor the ,;dlJancemen,t of Computing in Education.Contact: AACE, P.O. Box 2966, CharlotteslJi; Ie, Va,22902. Phone: 804-973-3987, Fax: 804-978-7449.
~oo~ 2eview continuea:In Martin Luther King's now legendary. "I have a Dream" speech,
ne noped for a time when ~ little chlldren~ will not be Juaged by~he co1our of ~helr skin, but by the content of their c aracter,i~ is these ch' Idren, now come of &g8 in the post civil rights era,snapea by the Del let tnat the key to their success would be IniSS'ITt! 1-i'Cing Into tne vec' culture that has for so long cienlecl-.ne::: o?por~'J;Ii'Cy ::ra eq .;,!i:' ,:.r.rj ina ore, "The Chilcren of heGre=..rn. '
I, ~his 000' :::he c.vthors aefine oiae" S' ccess In the ias~nl~:~ ye~rs ~s tne ~e~1 Izac on o~ an American promise: ~cc~ss to~o equ:l opportunity. Using Do~n ~n econom'c ana an occupational~r~~owor~ [0 ~8sess (ne pnenomenon of acnie~ement on a generat'onCr olacks wno grew up in an e[~ aefinea by the concept ofnegra 'on, tney have focussea on black babY boomers who grew up
possessing sOI.e(nlng no generar.ion of blacks has ever beforee~periencea: a sense of entitlement,~or more than tWO years the authors travelled the country seekingcut those b ackmen and women who nave achieved posi ions of powerana influence in the American Workplace. The thoughts and Insightsof chis generation ilfumlnate what"· takes to be a successfulblack living in white America.Whatever their personal behavioral styles, the one CO~illon traitthat emerged :rom all the in ervlews presented is that successfulblacks ace first and foremost affirmed and empower~d by a positivesense of racial identity. They fully understand that as blacks theywill encounter obstacles, prejl d'ces, and iniquities, but theynever view their race ~s the j iabi I Ity or cause of the proolem.They unders and it is he perverse reactions of others to theaI-c' ~ace that create the problem.C 1 'dren of ~he ~[eam, stands as a vivid test many to the'ncreasing y complex world in which black ~mer\cans strive to~l.,:::ceeCI.
:he 287 page DOOK covers:- Bl::'C:<. S "ccess I. i\mer~ca: ;., p ogress report.- :0 oe ycu~g gifted and qual' :'ed.- ~c~ing jOu~ colour: Credi( to the cace.- 3_~cess ~na ~ne BlaCk ~oman: BlaCk Man,- Tne ?sy_no!ogy 0_ n:~c~ S ccess.!~ II :umin~-es JLS( not ~ne pS'cnology of a people but the"cs"[uggIe ::0 ~rluITt!?n, end ~s ~:J insp'ring record of perso,.alst~.~!ng ~~_ suc:ess agai. se odds. It 's a necessary and essentialaoo~ for aeveloplng positive role models foc black youth.