Talk:Nadinne I. Cruz

Removing a list from the article
This list was in a section named "Poems, Stories and Articles Commonly Referenced by Nadinne". I'm moving it out of the article as it's not common information in biography articles. 
 * The Bridge Poem by Donna Kate Ruskin
 * To Be of Use by Marge Piercy
 * The Parable of Truth Seeking -- Openness retold by Thich Nhat Hanh
 * Keeping Quiet by Pablo Neruda
 * Joanna Macy and The Great Turning
 * Calderón, José Z. Race, Poverty, and Social Justice: Multidisciplinary Perspectives Through Service Learning. Edited by Series Editor Gerald Eisman. Stylus Publishing, 2007.
 * Palmer, Parker. "Divided No More a Movement Approach to Educational Reform." Change Magazine, March/April 1992: 10-17.
 * Illich, Ivan. To Hell With Good Intentions. Vol. 1, in Combining Service and Learning: a Resource Book for Community and Public Service, edited by Jane C. Kendall, 314-320. Raleigh, NC: National Soceity for Internships and Experiential Education, 1990.
 * Cisneros, Sandra. House on Mango Street. New York City: Vintage Books, 1984.
 * Jamaica Kincaid. A Small Place. New York City: Farrar, Strauss, Giroux, 1988.
 * Eugene M. Lang. "Distinctively American: The Liberal Arts College." Daedalus, Vol. 128, 1999. Online at http://www.projectpericles.org/Eugene_Lang.pdf
 * Rice, Eugene. "Rethinking Scholarship and Engagement: the Struggle for New Meanings." Campus Compact Reader, Fall 2003. Online at http://www.compact.org/reader/archives/Fall_2003.pdf
 * Westheimer, Joel, and Joseph Kahne. "Educating the "Good" Citizen: Political Choices and Pedagogical Goals" in PS: Political Science & Politics 37 (2004): 1-7.
 * There is an offensive movement that started in this country in the 60's that is continuing. The reason we are stumbling is that we are at the point where in order to take the next step we've got to do it with some folk we don't care too much about. And we got to vomit over that for a little while….You don't do no coalition building in a womb…. Inside the womb you generally are very soft and unshelled. You have no covering…Coalition work is not done in your home…. And it is some of the most dangerous work you can do. And you shouldn't look for comfort….You don't get a lot of food in a coalition.…In a coalition you have to give, and it is different from your home. You can't stay there all the time. You go to the coalition for a few hours and then you go back….and then you go back and coalesce some more.

Perhaps parts of it can be reworked into the article. --Rosiestep (talk) 22:47, 30 June 2012 (UTC)