Showing posts with label passing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label passing. Show all posts

Saturday, February 09, 2008

Peter Kaufman, real Mailman

Jim Leftwich’s Flickr archive
of vispo, mail art, etc.,
has over 31,000 images

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Geof Huth on Carlos RuisDilapidarium

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Nick Piombino on Nico Vassilakis (PDF)

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Rachel Blau DuPlessis:
Draft 88 and Draft 89

“Two more thoughts about deixis
(PDF)

Friday, February 08, 2008

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

“New” poems by Jimmy Schuyler

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Talking with Tom Mandel

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Thing of Beauty book launch reading
(MP3)

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Shin Yu Pai & Rick Benjamin talking together

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Rita Wong’s Transparency Machine Event materials
can be downloaded here

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Stephen Burt on The Grand Piano,
translation, Catullus & Frank Bidart

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Orhan Pamuk assassination plot foiled

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The real best-seller list

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Jackson Pollock & Frank O’Hara

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Bill Griffiths’
List of Little Press Publications
has risen from the grave

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Misreading Charles Bernstein

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Thomas Fink on Eileen R. Tabios

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Poetry for the people?

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Juan Felipe Herrera’s “undocuments

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Vénus Khoury-Ghata’s Nettles

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Lunch Poems with Li-Young Lee

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Jay Wright’s The Guide Signs

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The idea of inherent form

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The electronic poet who studied with Robert Frost

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Poetry without a license

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The poet laureate of Prince Edward Island

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Peter Ackroyd’s Poe bio

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Paul Muldoon & The Fifty-Minute Mermaid

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The state of Kiswahili poetry

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Robert Weaver has died

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Talking with David Surette

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Rescuing Milton

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Lessing: after the Nobel

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What exactly are poems?

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Is the ruler of Dubai a poet?

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Close reading Granta 100

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Book buying over the web surges

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Another African-American bookshop
shuts down

So does the oldest bookstore in Canada

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The death of a book store
one year later

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Getting a grant
to open a bookstore in
Brooklyn

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The tipping point

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Where are the readers of tomorrow?

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Is the Kindle smokin?

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Which books really sell fast

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"Literature on mobile phones is massive in China,"

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Here comes Titlepage

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Ah, the novella
fiction for nonreaders

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A profile of Boston Poet Laureate Sam Cornish

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Adrienne Rich’s
Telephone Ringing in the Labyrinth

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Robert Pinsky’s Gulf Music

Confusing Tony Bennett for Bruce Springsteen

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Still more on Alfred Kazin

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A. Alvarez stacking the odds

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What is a character?

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In a too-familiar voice

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The politics of rhetoric & comp.

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The need for public art

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Patricia Corbett has “slept into eternity

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Bruce Nauman, the Philly Art Museum
& the
Venice Biennale

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New work by Trevor Winkfield

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The future of Art in America

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From the School of Visual Quietude

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Koolhaas to update the Hermitage

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Welcome to Potatoland

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Beckett in Brooklyn

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Rebuilding Martha Graham

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Baryshnikov @ 60

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Joanna Newsom & the Brooklyn Philharmonic

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Picturing Harvey Milk

Thursday, January 24, 2008




Burt Hatlen

1936 - 2008

Burt was an excellent scholar & fine friend. I don’t know if In the American Tree would ever have been published without his support, and his work with the National Poetry Foundation was pivotal in that institution’s history.

Saturday, January 05, 2008


WHY I AM NOT A PAINTER

Frank O'Hara

 
I am not a painter, I am a poet.
Why? I think I would rather be
a painter, but I am not. Well,

For instance, Mike Goldberg
is starting a painting. I drop in
"Sit down and have a drink" he
says. I drink; we drink. I look
up. "You have SARDINES in it."
"Yes, it needed something there."
"Oh." I go and the days go by
and I drop in again. The painting
is going on, and I go, and the days
go by. I drop in. The painting is
finished. "Where's SARDINES?"
All that's left is just
letters, "It was too much," Mike says.

But me? One day I am thinking of
a color; orange. I write a line
about orange. Pretty soon it is a
whole page of words, not lines.
Then another page. There should be
so much more, not of orange, of
words, of how terrible orange is
and life. Days go by. It is even in
prose, I am a real poet. My poem
is finished and I haven't mentioned
orange yet. It's twelve poems, I call
it
ORANGES. And one day in a gallery
I see Mike's painting, called SARDINES.



Friday, January 04, 2008

Remembering Sylvester Pollet

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The new poetry editor of The Nation
is Peter Gizzi

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42 years after Denise Levertov rejected
Jack Spicer’s
Two Poems for The Nation
they finally appear
in its pages
[subscription required]

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“The most important
American love poet in living memory,
and certainly one of the most important
American poets tout court” –
Susan Stewart on Robert Creeley

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Leslie Scalapino’s introduction to
The Collected Poems of Philip Whalen

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Susan Bee, Emma Bee Bernstein & Charles Bernstein
reading from Hannah Weiner’s Clairvoyant Journal

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Sardinian poet Peppino Marroto killed
in 50-year-old vendetta

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Boog City 47
is an anthology
of
New York poets
(PDF)

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The AWP convention is
sold out!

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Becoming fluent in Beckett

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Word!

Word not!

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In New Orleans, one newspaper
expands its book coverage

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Vandals trash Frost home

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A boost to Pangasinan literature

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Talking with Kaiser Haq

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A profile of Jessica Purdy

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Print-on-demand is expanding
the number of titles published

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Poetry by the Mersey

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The gloomiest poet in Britain

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Young rhymer inspired by Dylan

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Are e-textbooks any closer to reality?

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World lit comes to Abu Dhabi

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“It has not been a good decade for poetry”

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Tom Wolfe leaves FSG

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The importance of knowing
what you haven’t read

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Academic librarians & rank

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Do IRBs keep oral moral?

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Why travel writing sucks

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Talking with Roger Conover
about MIT Press

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It’s not how long you live
so much as it is
how you live, as such

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Weepin’ Willie Robinson has died

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Fungus threatens Lascaux

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Lee Friedlander,
walking through Olmstead’s world

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Art vs. art history

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Polis is this

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Tech & the humanities muddle along

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A bio of Alfred Kazin

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Morris Dickstein on the memoirs of Geoffrey Hartman

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What Have You Changed Your Mind About?

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There goes the West Side

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Tuesday, December 25, 2007


Photo courtesy of Big Bridge


Vincent Ferrini

19132007

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Bob Perelman
4 early books:

Braille

a.k.a.

Primer

To the Reader

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Liam O’Gallagher
has died

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Peter O’Leary
on Robert Duncan’s
Often I am Permitted to Return to a Meadow

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Talking with
Kenneth Goldsmith

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4,000-year-old text
pulled from Ebay

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The “All Girl Poetry Slam

Girl?

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Beat Girl

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William Burroughs
& the crying of lot 22

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Close reading,
but “not too close”

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Talking with
Christian Bök

Bök
on Steve McCaffery

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John Ashbery,
two poems in tiny print

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Ange Mlinko
on
art, class & taste

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Alice Walker’s archives
go to Emory

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Not hiring
Yevtushenko at Oxford

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The “caveman” writes verse

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Troy Jollimore
calls the criticism of Robert Hass
beach reading

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Full-page ad,
New York Times,
June 20 2007

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Maybe the only document on the web
that calls me Ronald

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Lisa Robertson:
Draft of a Voice-Over
for a Split-Screen Video
Loop

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Year-end lists of best books of ‘07
by Charles Bernstein, Rae Armantrout,
Afaa Michael Weaver, Cate Marvin & Patricia Smith

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Avant-garde poetics radio blog

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Transliteracy

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Censoring Robinson Jeffers

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Moscow bookseller Boris Kupriyanov
faces 2 years in prison
for selling “pornography

(
Baise Moi, Lydia Lunch, etc.)

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Dub poets look to Africa

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Remembering
Ezenwa Ohaeto

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Brainless macho trash
but with pretty pictures

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“What we owe the New Critics”
& what we owe their publishers

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A translation of The Táin

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& an alternative Gawain,
one that’s fun to read aloud

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A feminist bookstore
in
Istanbul

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The cost models of academic journals

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It’s a mistake
to edit the self-indulgence
out of Berryman’s work

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The NY Times obit of Diane Middlebrook

A British obit of Diane Middlebrook

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Miles Champion:
3 poems
that make very different use
of the space of the page

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A noisy interview
with Umberto Eco

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Reading, that unpunished vice

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A grand buildup
to a sloppy, sentimental poem

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An “index of joy
(PDF)

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Where the Writers Guild of America
got its new radical core

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Donald Revell’s
elegy
for Barbara Guest

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Gerald Stern
on Muriel Rukeyser

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The life & verse of
Edward Arlington Robinson

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Poet populist Peter Payack

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Ted Kooser
on Linda Gregg

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Another article
celebrating the life & writing
of
South America’s most important
English-language poet

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A review of Alison Pelegrin

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Freaked by the atheism
of Philip Pullman

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A dismal year for books?

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A world without reading

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Winsome Duncan / Lyrical Healer

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John Greenleaf Whittier
at 200

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A profile of John Mahoney

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Talking with W.D. Snodgrass

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Delaware’s annual
John Milton Memorial
poetry celebration

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Using YouTube
to combat
Canadian © revisions


Does poetry even need ©?

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Shopping for books
with Michael Jackson

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An art house
in my home town

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Wrapping up
Art Basel Miami

Looking at it
from the far end
of the country

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Fight to save the Barnes
collapsing?

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Trying to talk with
Daniel Libeskind

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Two members
of the Mark Morris Dance Company

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The year in dance

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The year in (geriatric) jazz

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Enforcing the laws of nature

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Ramin Jahanbegloo
& the “crimes” of philosophy

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Ibn Warraq,
”Enlightenment fundamentalist”

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Surreal state

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This year’s quotables

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January 26
10:00 AM to 1:00 AM
(not a typo)
2008 Woodland Pattern Poetry Marathon
Milwaukee