Six Directions Indigenous Creative Writing Program to Offer Free Programs for Tribal College Students tribalcollegejournal.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tribalcollegejournal.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The literary nonprofit Aspen Words will host six writers over the next six months in Woody Creek, restarting a writers-in-residence program that had been on pause during the novel coronavirus pandemic.
Five resident authors will give free public talks on the lawn of the Red Brick Center for the Arts in coming months.
This year’s residents include:
• Heather Hansman, an award-winning journalist and author (“Downriver: Into the Future of Water in the West”) whose work explores the intersection between public land, environmental policy and human impact.
• Caroline Randall Williams, a multi-genre writer, educator and performance artist whose debut poetry collection, “Lucy Negro, Redux,” was turned into a performance by the Nashville Ballet; author talk June 15, 5:30 p.m.
Vaccine czar made calls to gauge loyalty to Cuomo Hochul drops gov’s name from her vocabulary NYC remembers 30k Covid-19 dead
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Another Monday, another weekend of bad news for Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
The latest: New York’s vaccine czar, Larry Schwartz, has been
With recent talk of the threats and vindictive behavior that have emanated from Cuomo’s office for years, it wasn’t lost on these county executives that Cuomo s all-purpose right-hand man pleading the governor’s political case was the same guy who controls their supply of the life-saving coronavirus vaccine. One county executive filed notice of an impending ethics complaint with the state attorney general’s office, according to
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State Rep. Craig Fishbein, R-Wallingford, is one of the guest speakers during an Open Up CT Rally on Saturday at the state Capitol in Hartford. Jim Shannon Republican-AmericanState Rep. Craig Fishbein, R-Wallingford, is one of the guest speakers during an Open Up CT Rally on Saturday at the state Capitol in Hartford. Jim Shannon Republican-American
Approximately 100 people attended the Open Up CT Rally on Saturday at the state Capitol in Hartford to urge Gov. Ned Lamont to allow businesses to reopen. Jim Shannon Republican-AmericanApproximately 100 people attended the Open Up CT Rally on Saturday at the state Capitol in Hartford to urge Gov. Ned Lamont to allow businesses to reopen. Jim Shannon Republican-American
Corrections & Clarifications: Denise Dominguez was misidentified in a previous version of this article.
Since they opened in 2015, Palabras Bilingual Bookstore and Wasted Ink Zine Distro have become safe spaces for historically marginalized communities in Phoenix.
Their vision of a literary hub with a mission of representation, equity and mutual support came to life in February when their businesses reopened in a triplex at 906 W. Roosevelt St. downtown.
Palabras sells books written in Spanish and English as well as locally crafted art and merchandise many of which are made by Black, Indigenous and other people of color. Wasted Ink carries hundreds of zines that date to the 1980s and represent “historically silenced voices,” including creators who are disabled, neurodivergent, LGBTQ and people of color, according to Lucille.