Change is never easy, and we know this is a challenging time as you navigate recent announcements affecting programs and operations at Oakland City University. We want you to know that your educational journey doesn’t have to pause.
At the University of Southern Indiana, we are fully committed to helping you transition seamlessly so you can stay on track with your education journey. We’ve designed this dedicated page specifically for you to explore our programs, access resources, learn about credit transfers and continue your education with minimal interruption.
Contents
Letter
The Nature of Being Exotic — Corliss A. Terry
Poetry
Fiscal Austerity — Liam Rector
Wayside Halts — John Gibson
Dinner Party — Allison Joseph
You Ask Me — Laurence E. Musgrove
Avalon — Mary Jane Schenk
Wilfred Owen at Flodden Field — John Gibson
The Year of the Rooster, Rangoon — J. Miller
Ghosts — Tracy Bee
Hall Light — Barbara Stahura
The Mill — Jennifer Hunley
Nonfiction
A Few Talking Points about Writers in Universities — Liam Rector
Should I go or should I Stay? An Interview with Liam Rector — Laurence E. Musgrove
History of a Partnership — Connie Weinzaphfel
Play
Mr. Insensitivity — Elliot Wasserman
Fiction
Sings of Inexplicable Stress — Linda Lappin Baldassarre
The Optimist — Leisa Belleau
Cherry-Red-H. — Keith Wicker
Vibrations — Donna D. Vitucci
Internal Communications — Scott Saalman
Art/Photography
La Samaritaine — Eric D. Braysmith
Green Dress — Anita Powell
Tennessean, Evansville, Indiana — Eric D. Braysmith
Princess and the Pea — Shane T. Howell
Cattails at Reflection Lake — Charles L. Price
Kabah Gate — Michael Aakhus
Icon Dress — Anita Powell
Times Square (Portrait of Liam Rector) — Kathryn Waters
Silhouette of Madame Marie Louise Duclos Fretageot — John Chappellsmith
Silhouette of William Maclure — William Burch
Suit — Anita Powell
Season’s Greetings from the Deep South — C. Matthew Billman
Scenes from Savannah I-C. — Matthew Billman
Radar Love — Carolyn Roth
Shape of Things to Come — David Huebner
Black Swallowtail Larva and Pupa — Charles L. Price