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- Still Smiling ... - Claremore Progress
Harvey Diem knows a thing or two about law enforcement. And he should, after 37 years with the Rogers County Sheriff’s Office. Diem has faced tough criminals, “gang bangers,” and received several thank-yous from former criminals who have ...
- Poetry peepshow staged for literary voyeurs at Toronto arts festival - The Canadian Press
Poetry peepshow staged for literary voyeurs at Toronto arts festivalThe Canadian Press, TORONTO - 13 hours agoTORONTO — The 16th annual Junction Arts Festival is offering what it calls a "Poetry Peepshow," giving participants the chance to "peer into an open window ...
- Outstanding Denver Teen Named Boys & Girls Clubs of America's National ... - PR Newswire
WASHINGTON, Sept. 17 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Boys & Girls Clubs of America (BGCA) announced today at a Congressional Breakfast that Shonnetta Henry , a five-year member of Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Denver, has been named the 2008-09 National ...
- Thoughts on the presidency - La Crosse Tribune
As a retired engineer and if required to write a report on the coming presidential election in November, I would make these points: n One of the candidates running for president will be our president for a four-year term, and a good part of our ...
- STARFLEET PERSONNEL FILE: Data - startrek.com
Although the outlook did not pick up steam until his Enterprise posting after 26 years of existence, Data has quite simply wished to be more human and experience as much of that condition's depths and shadows as his adaptive programming can ...
- Can poetry in translation ever be as poetic in its new language? (The Japan Times)
A friend who was visiting recently from Germany posed me a difficult question: How can poetry be translated? I have often read that poetry is untranslatable, that "nothing is lost in translation except the poetry." Yet, if this were true, we would hardly be able to read, let alone appreciate, poets writing in other languages than our own. Read the full story
- The Burden of the Humanities - RedOrbit
The Burden of the HumanitiesRedOrbit, TX - 18 minutes ago... notably St Augustine, would adapt the Greek and Roman ideas to a program of Christian education, built around me study of grammar, rhetoric, poetry, ...
- The House Is Clean, But The Laundry Is Dirty - Hoya
In the small dark theater on the first floor of Walsh, a pristine, white couch sits on a pristine, white rug in sharp contrast to the black walls that surround it. Everything is in order; everything is in its proper place. Two hours later, this same ...
- The Bangla Novel lives on - The Daily Star
The Daily StarThe Bangla Novel lives onThe Daily Star, Bangladesh - 3 hours agoThe odor of dust harbingers death for Sobed Ali. He smelled dust before the deaths of his father and daughter. But dust also denotes the dry season -- when ...
- Profile: Leonard Cohen - Times Online
Leonard Cohen’s habit of going into every concert with a prayer on his lips is hardly surprising. He believes that someone took a shot at him long ago at a concert in France that was attended by rowdy Maoists. As he reflected later: “They’re ...
- Affairs, Marriage, Divorce, and Politics -,Attorneys and the Law - Imperial Valley News
Affairs, Marriage, Divorce, and Politics -,Attorneys and the LawImperial Valley News, CA - 45 minutes agoRumors existed for many years about this affair but in 1968 poetry letters Harding had written to Phillips during the affair were revealed. ...
- Arts: Arts News (Cleveland Scene)
By Michael Gill For more than 40 years, poets, poetry publishers and readers have looked to Len Fulton's Small Press Review magazine to help sort through the many thousands of chapbooks and anthologies that come out every year. In reviews and editors' picks, it is for many people an indispensable guide. The magazine's July/August issue includes Bottom Dog Press' survey of the Northeast Ohio ...
- For the Love of Skipjacks - Bay Weekly
Sails taut and spray flying, sailing vessels have plowed through time and our imaginations. With every adventure came a sailor’s story. On the Chesapeake, the broad-beamed skipjack has inspired many tales, from the work of dredging oysters to the ...
- New Hartford performer returns to Salisbury Grange (The Observer-Dispatch)
With a 22-foot-high ceiling, a balcony and stage, the Salisbury Grange No. 624 anticipates a full house when contemporary folk musician and lyricist Marshall Stewart performs at 7 p.m. Saturday.
- History in the making: a dream becomes reality (The La Ronge Northerner)
For years educators with the Lac La Ronge Indian Band (LLRIB) hoped for and worked towards a Cree Immersion program. Kindergarten students and their teacher, Flora Ratte, are pioneering the fi rst Cree Immersion program within LLRIB schools at Bell’s Point.
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