Monday, September 15, 2008
Art & The Elections
Barack Obama- favors an Artist Corps in the Schools. An "Artist Corps" of young artists would work in low-income schools and their communities to bring exposure of the arts into the educational process of these students. The results of which are of course more job opportunities for artists, but most importantly this would effectively integrate positive art experiences in the education system in this country. In so many school districts art has had to take a back seat to other subjects. It's important to reach these students when they are young because otherwise they are not likely to learn to appreciate art on their own as adults. [read more in depth]
John McCain - his record is one disfavoring the promotion of the arts publicly. In 1999 he was one of 16 senators who supported the Smith-Ashcroft amendment which would have eliminated funding for the National Endowment for the Arts. Fortunately this amendment failed. He tried again in 2000. He was one of 27 senators who voted to reduce the National Endowment for the Arts budget by $7.3 million. Again, "Maverick McCain" and the others were unsuccessful. It should be noted that the National Endowment for the Arts is not just a glitzy art organization, but has been a positive vehicle for promoting literacy programs in America for people of all ages. [ I thought I'd be fair and link any specifics from McCain's campaign here, but his official site seems void of any reference to the Arts]
Pass this information on to other artists that you know. There is a lot at stake in this election.
Saturday, September 13, 2008
Writers Place - Sunday -Sept. 14 6:00-PM Reading and CD Poetry CD Give-Away.
A repeat of sorts to the event last Monday at Johnson County Library.
At the Writers Place - 3607 Pennsylvania, K.C., MO there will be another reading and CD release party. First 50 get a free CD!
Dana Gioia Takes Another Direction
The arts have truly had an Ambassador in Dana Gioia who has served as Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts since 2003. But Dana who wrote poetry quietly while working in corporate America has announced that he plans to depart from his second term at National Endowments early next year and will join The Aspen Institute, an international nonprofit organization founded in 1950 as the Aspen Institute of Humanistic Studies. The position at Aspen will be a a half-time position. Dana plans to return to his writing as well. He has been both a poet and a critic. In fact leaving to accept this new position is really about freeing up time to write. About his decision, Gioia noted, "I announce my departure with mixed feelings," he added. "I will never have a more interesting job. But I am a writer. If I don't return to poetry soon, the Muse will never have me back."
At Aspen Institute he will be the Director of The Harman/Eisner (H/E) Program in the Arts. A new program of the Institute the purpose of which is to deepen the Institute's work by incorporating leading artists and to use the Institute's convenings to support and promote the arts.
Technorati Tags: Dana Gioia,National Endowment for the Arts,Poet,writing,Aspin Institute,Harman/Eisner Program
Saturday morning and lots going on in my mind
I can't help but wonder what the ultimate damage assessment and loss of life will look like on the Gulf coast from the savage path of Ike. It all seems sorrel having so much news coverage and yet we know so little of the human tragedy yet. It's still all drama and yet you know the loss is there.
Then too there is the horrific train collision in the LA area. Yet another reminder how fragile life can be even in the daily grind.
If you look past all this, there is still a campaign going on, though the candidates attempt to tip-toe through the human suffering so as not to offend.
In reality an election is going to happen in the end and it is perhaps one of profound importance when you consider where this nation has been in the past 8 years. Our economy has gone from one of deficit reductions in the years prior to Bush taking office to one that is historic in terms of national debit. At the same time we are seeing banks and major investment houses collapse in their own debt write-offs for losses that not only are corporate losses but translate to shareholder losses as well. And those share holders are not all wealthy individuals who can sustain the risk of their investments, but in many cases baby boomers whose retirement pensions are often tied to such investments.
Meanwhile, we continue to spend $10 billion a month (not even counted in the federal budget) for the ongoing military action in Iraq. A war that was a mistake from the very conception. All this time, things grow worse in Afghanistan, the country with the real connection to 9-11, not Iraq.
Quietly on the home front, the Bush administration continues to pursue a course of action that threatens our very constructional protections. One by one eroding our rights as citizens. The most recent example seeks to take us back some 30 years to the Nixon era when it was necessary to clean up the constitutional abuses of a very paranoid president who felt it necessary to abuse powers to spy on the American people.
This week, as a perhaps final legacy of this administration, the FBI announced it is seeking to implement new rules as of October 1 that would allow agents pursuing national security leads to employ physical surveillance, deploy informants and engage in "pretext" interviews with their identities hidden to assess the danger posed by a subject. Such assessments could be initiated even without a particular fact or concrete lead that a person had engaged in wrongdoing. Additionally. as in the days of Nixon, it is suggested that changes still could be made in some areas, including ground rules for FBI agents who secretly infiltrate activist groups or collect intelligence at public demonstrations and events without a suspected terrorist threat.
It's a lot to chew on this Saturday morning. The underlying question now is, can I clear my head and write today?
Friday, September 12, 2008
Tricked
Window dressings, all of them
to purchase the justification
necessary to have his way
when validation was a rabbit
no where near the scene
of the black top hat.
Aren't You Felling More Assured?
Now we know she will be able to find it on a map.
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
LOCAL POETS ON CD
- Katie Manning
- Marie Asner
- Bob Fisher
- Jo McDougal
- Michael Wells
- Tina Hacker
- Maria Vasques Boyd
- Martin Zehr
- Carol Bettis
- Chalise Bourque
- Donald Caswell
- Elizabeth Upperon
- Timothy Pettit
- Jan Duncon O'Neill
- Peg Nichols
- Chloe Wagner
- Sylvia Kofler
- Meril Crabtree
- William Trpwbridge
- Albert James Dow
- Greg Germon
- Gloria Martinez Adams
- Tom Gray
- Carol Hamilton
- Margarita Vallazza
- Mark Scheel
- Jose Faas
- Missi Rasmussen
- Sally Jadlow
- Maryfrancis Wagner
- Mary Rogers-Grantham
- Genie Wilson
At the Writers Place - 3607 Pennsylvania, K.C., MO - This Sunday, September 14th, 2008 6:00PM there will be another reading and CD release party. First 50 get a free CD!
Monday, September 08, 2008
Cheney Supports McCain-Palin Ticket
Cheney tells the press he's behind the McCain-Palin Ticket, the ticket John McCain says represents change from the past 8 years of the Bush-Cheney administration. The administration that was notably absent in any mention during the GOP Convention.Why would this be? Perhaps, because McCain-Palin aren't really agents of change but more of the same. The same they don't want to talk about. The same they hope you'll forget.
Cheney believes Palin is up to the job. This is a man whose opinion on the subject Americans should take? Seriously folks, what is wrong with this picture?
Unconscious Mutterings Week 293
Word & Thought Associations
here's mine:
House :: party
Think :: tank
Clot :: blood
Believe me :: song (Please Believe Me)
Fumigation :: couch
Bore :: McCain
Luck :: Irish
Patient :: Jobe
Tremors :: quakes
Pickles :: dill
Sunday, September 07, 2008
It's About time!
FREE CD OF LOCAL POETS
Monday, September 8, 7:00 at The Johnson County Library, 8975 W. 87th Street, Overland Park, Kansas : Poets on CD release party and reading
Why should kids get to have all the fun? We deserve a reading program too! Come hear great poetry and find out how to participate in the BlitzRead! adult reading program at our kickoff party. The first 50 attendees will receive a free CD of local poets reading their work.
Yours truly will be there to read and is featured on the CD as well.
Where's Sarah?
It's Sunday after the GOP Convention and everyone is busy facing the questions via the traditional public affairs programs that air on Sunday.
- Democrat Barack Obama on ABC's "This Week."
- Democratic Vice Presidential candidate Joe Biden, on NBC's "Meet the Press."
- Republican John McCain on CBS' "Face the Nation."
So the question is where is Sara Palin? Is she not ready to field unscripted questions? When do voters get to hear the GOP Vice Presidential candidate answer the same questions being put to the other candidates? Is this asking too much?
Saturday, September 06, 2008
Sensory Triggers
Mary Biddinger writes in her blog Word Cage about sensory triggers. Those things that set off a particular behavior or thought by recreating a past experience. Isn't it true that the best poems usually are able to take us to experiences that that we are able to relate to; that by the poets very words we can suddenly taste Grandma's apple pie or feel the warmth of the fireplace against our face on a cold November night, while smelling the oak log burn and sipping hot chocolate? Words properly chosen have the power to transport us to another time and bring alive real experiences of the past.
So I sit here this evening thinking of things that I would consider sensory triggers I can relate to.
- The smell of cut grass takes me to a Saturday or Sunday afternoon at the ballpark. The warm sun beating down on the green field.
- When I feel the lawnmower with gas it takes me back to when I was a kid and my Grandmother would stop for gas. Those were pre air conditioning days and with the windows down it aroma of gasoline was particularly sweet and strong. I always am transported back to that little filling station in town and still see the sign reading 34 cents a gallon.
- The feel of those wood spoons you get with Frosty Malts feel like rough, dry tongue depressors in the doctor's office and make me want to cough.
- When I'm handling something that tends to dry my hand out a lot, I am suddenly on an out of town trip, headed home to Kansas City, along the roadside changing a flat.
Those are just a few things that come to my mind. There are lots of music triggers that take me back to the sixties, seventies and eighties. Events and places.
I think I should spend the next week listing such triggers in my journal.
Friday, September 05, 2008
A Look At Ginsberg's Letters

Thursday, September 04, 2008
Pocket Change
Humanity spilled- tossed about,
jingled in the the pockets
like small change.
A bit here and a piece there
the sum of which is whole
but spread about
without custodial care.
The casual acceptance-
disrespected by dispersal
to quail and disintegrate
in the shadows
of rich indifference.
A mind full of likes....
- Disheveled like a truce gone bad.
- Bristling like the cloak of a porcupine.
- Daunting like down by seven runs
in the top of the ninth- - Scorched like the bottom of a cooper kettle.
- Bumped like a kid out of line.
Unconscious Mutterings Week 292
Wednesday, September 03, 2008
Ashbery - One of Four
I've said before that my taste in poetry easily finds John Ashbery's work very palatable. I am well aware that this is not a universal opinion among those who delight in reading contemporary poetry. Ashbery has many detractors. Still, it's a fact that at age 81 Ashbery need not fret about his mark on the American literary culture. It is well cemented. If you doubt this, consider that Ashbery is about to become only the fourth American writer to see their works published during their own lifetime by the Library of America. He joins Philip Roth, Eudora Welty, and Saul Bellow in that distinction.Monday, September 01, 2008
Observation Skills
Saturday my wife and I took the dogs and went off to the dog park. It was while traipsing around that rugged landscape that my knee went from bad to worse. It was also during this outing that I explored the various trees and branches and sticks and water containers for the dogs. The sky and the sun bursting through the leaves on the many trees that dot the landscape. Observation is such an important part of the poetry process. Even when not writing I think there is something to be said for taking in what is around us and looking at it with an eye for detail. Not so much for the ability to recount specifics, though this can be a beneficial exercise, but more importantly looking for the extraordinary in the otherwise ordinary.
From reading biographical material on Sylvia Plath as well as her journals I was long ago struck with how she was constantly seeking the poem in everything she came into contact with. Even odd jobs she took while attending Smith College provided fodder for her writing.
I am not quite as tuned into everyday events in the way she apparently was, but I do make an effort to see the poetry around me. One cannot underestimate the benefits that come from sharpening the observation skills. Mine are far from perfected.
Mundane Monday
Klaus always looks before backing out of driveway....
Labor day and I'm trying to find a the silver lining in this knee pain. It's not like I'm off on a sick day or anything. No, I'm using a perfectly good three day holiday to be sick. Grrr!

