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Zoeglossia has selected 13 disabled poets as fellows for their 2021 conference. The fellowship provides the poets with the opportunity to attend an annual retreat/conference and work with established writers who are also disabled. This year the event, hosted by New Mexico State University, will be held entirely online May 20-23 due to restrictions required by the Covid-19 pandemic. New Mexico State University English professor Connie Voisine is a co-founder of Zoeglossia, an organization for poets and writers who identify as having a disability. (Courtesy Photo)
The NMSU College of Arts and Sciences is excited to have the opportunity to assist Zoeglossia and its NMSU-based co-founder Dr. Connie Voisine in providing this important venue for poets living life with disabilities to develop and share their voices to a national and international audience, said James Murphy, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. We look forward to the confere
Posted By Kelly Merka Nelson on Wed, Dec 16, 2020 at 2:17 PM click image Facebook / Presa House Gallery Programmed in tandem with its end-of-the-year art sale Shop Texas, Presa House Gallery is hosting an event showcasing four San Antonio poets on Saturday. The virtual reading Word Art, which will be broadcast on Facebook Live, will feature 2018-2020 San Antonio Poet Laureate Octavio Quintanilla along with Rooster Martinez, Sheila Black and Bianca Vanessa Gonzalez. The poets will read selections from their latest collections. Presa House s Shop Texas features more than 150 works by roughly 50 Texan artists. Details about art for sale are available online.
Kupuna, staff at long-term care facilities prepare for shots in the arm and hope By Mahealani Richardson | December 11, 2020 at 5:38 PM HST - Updated December 11 at 5:51 PM
(HONOLULU) - 78-year-old Arcadia resident Sheila Black loves decorating for the holidays, but misses seeing her family ― since in-person visits are restricted due to COVID-19.
“I have a one-year-old granddaughter that I’ve never seen, except we did do a Zoom session,” said Black.
Black knows that nursing home residents and their staff are among those first in the line for the COVID-19 vaccine, but she’s not far behind.
“I am definitely going to take it,” she said.