comparemela.com

Page 3 - Jane Huffman News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

DNA test confirms animal killed in New York was a wolf, not coyote

DNA test confirms animal killed in New York was a wolf, not coyote
fingerlakes1.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fingerlakes1.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Editor s Notes & Cover Art

Introduction to Nature’s Nature David Baker, Poetry Editor There is no hiding. There is no sanctuary. There is no safe place that does not bear the pressure, nor indicate the destruction and contamination, of climate change. Damian Carrington, environment editor for the Guardian, reported a breathtaking finding about microplastic pollution at the topmost point of Earth: “. . . tiny plastic fibres were found within a few hundred metres of the top of the 8,850-metre mountain, at a spot known as the balcony. Microplastics were found in all the snow samples collected from 11 locations on Everest. . . .” Likewise, writing for National Geographic, Sarah Gibbens describes a sea dive by Victor Vescovo, on April 28, 2019, exploring the deepest part of the Pacific Ocean at 35,787 feet: “During the four hours Vescovo spent at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, he observed several marine creatures one of which is a potentially new species a plastic bag, and candy wrappers.” Gibben

[I tried early moving]

[I tried early moving] I’ve recently been thinking of the sentence fragment as a record of exhaustion what happens when you can’t quite finish a thought, or can only catch a glimpse of some half-formed idea inexplicably protruding from the dense fog of your mind. Jane Huffman’s “[I tried early moving]” enacts this fatigued syntax. The poem opens with a subject and predicate, but swiftly dissembles into less conventional grammar. A sentence, Huffman’s poem reminds me, is at once a temporal and grammatical unit. The productive day demands the orderly, sequential structure of a sentence; to mess meaning is to mess time. The poem, tired by order, searches for a different kind of temporality one “[b]efore the day could hide away its time” and finds a zone where basic distinctions don’t pertain, where “night is so much like day.” Here, words bleed into one another like dye into water. 

Looking Back at Hutchinson history

Looking Back at Hutchinson history
crowrivermedia.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from crowrivermedia.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.