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- Portugal holds on to words few can grasp - International Herald Tribune
LISBON : The latest brouhaha involving cultural property is unfolding here — and not, for a change, over stolen vases or precious war booty, but a poet's correspondence. As usual, it's a window onto a nation's character. The elderly heirs of ...
- Hold Kapanke accountable - La Crosse Tribune
It must be nice to be a state senator like Dan Kapanke: Free Cracker Jacks and the privilege of disregarding a law you don’t like when it might cost you or your business money. You can just pressure the people in charge of enforcing that ever-so ...
- The Burial at Thebes - Irish World News
Lucy Pitman-Wallace directs this performance with restraint, allowing the poetry to illuminate the story of the doomed Antigone. Like most Greek tragedy, it is a story that goes from bad to worse, in this case allowing filial love to act in reckless ...
- Amiri Baraka to kick off spoken word education institute - University of Wisconsin-Madison University Communications
Amiri Baraka to kick off spoken word education instituteUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison University Communications, WI - 1 hour agoAuthor of more than 40 books, including essays, poetry, drama and music history, Baraka will give a reading from his works. The reading will be followed by ...
- Patros land wasn’t blighted - La Crosse Tribune
I read with interest the article about how blighted the Patros property is. That isn’t exactly the truth. There is a thriving business on that property, and there would have been a beautiful marina and restaurant had the city not thrown a monkey ...
- Sophie Will “Make Someone Happy” in Santa Cruz, July 28th - Jazz Police
Jazz PoliceSophie Will “Make Someone Happy” in Santa Cruz, July 28thJazz Police, MN - 4 hours ago... the Platters, Stevie Wonder, George Gershwin, Duke Ellington, Ray Charles, particularly the voices and sounds of African American musicians. ...
- Tyler Junior College Forensic Team Wraps Up Year Of Successes - Tyler Morning Telegraph
Tyler Junior College forensics team members pictured front, from left, are: Alina Dolzhenko, Rachel Snyder; middle row, Bobby D. Anthony, J.P. Fugler; back row, Travis Smith and Jordan Innerarity. Not pictured is Christina Ivey. The Tyler Junior ...
- Green: Changing the rules of baseball - Metro Boston
Green: Changing the rules of baseballMetro Boston, MA - 1 hour agoAdmittedly, it would be more pedantry than poetry to review every single pitch; surely we don’t need to go that far. But a middle ground that increases the ...
- Vivica Genaux Returns to Caramoor - New York Sun
Vivica Genaux Returns to CaramoorNew York Sun, United States - 10 hours agoAs a child, she played the violin and participated in many other activities — singing, dance, poetry, pottery, aerobics — "anything to get out of the house ...
- The Blankenship Ballet Co. of Venice Welcomes the Venice Cabaret ... - American Chronicle
The Blankenship Ballet Co. of Venice Welcomes the Venice Cabaret ...American Chronicle, CA - 6 hours ago... which not only produces dance events but also reaches out to every artistic area of the Venice community and includes different styles of music, poetry, ...
- Anything goes - Ha'aretz
Anything goesHa'aretz, Israel - 5 hours agoIn the written world too, not every collection of words qualifies as literature or poetry. Unbridled artistic or literary activity usually produces ...
- The new Chestnut Street Books, an offshoot of earlier Loome stores, is a book-lovers' feast specializing in children's ... (Pioneer Press)
Cecilia Loome, 23, has spent much of her life surrounded by good books.
- How they bulirt Chartres cathedral - Telegraph.co.uk
How they bulirt Chartres cathedralTelegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - 31 minutes agoFor Victor Hugo, the Gothic cathedrals of northern France had always belonged to "poetry and the people". They belonged to the people because Hugo liked to ...
- Fantasy football in Zimbabwe drama (BBC News)
A young Zimbabwean dreams of crosses crocodile-infested waters to see his hero, Frank Lampard.
- Book Review: Literary memoir is believable (The Oklahoman)
"My Sister, My Love” by Joyce Carol Oates (Ecco. 562 pages. $25.95). Some of Oates' books feel as if she wrote them as dares to herself. This novel, her 37th, is one of the wildest. Oates sets out to solve a fictionalized version of the JonBenet Ramsey murder, with skating prodigy "Bliss” Rampike replacing the real-life child beauty pageant contestant. The resolution she imagines is ...
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