Sunday, September 30, 2007
Fertile Ground: Daily Poetry Read
Alice Walker
They dunked me in the creek;
a tiny brooklet.
Muddy, gooey with rotting leaves,
a greenish mold floating;
definable.
For love it was. For love of God
at seven. All in white.
With God's' mud ruining my snowy
socks and his bullfrog spoors
gluing up my face.
From Her Blue Body Everything We Know Earthling Poems 1965-1990 Complete.
Art & Spirit

"Pilobolus, the arts organism, germinated in the fertile soil of a Dartmouth College dance class in 1971. What emerged was a collaborative choreographic process and a unique weight-sharing approach to partnering that gave the young company a non-traditional but powerful new set of skills with which to make dances. The group was immediately acclaimed for its startling mix of humor and invention and Pilobolus soon became a self-sufficient organization, its members choreographing, dancing, managing, and publicizing their own programs."
Pilobolus will perform at the Macomb Center in Clinton Township, Michigan, October 6th. If you can, do see this exceptional company. Check our links for their website.
Saturday, September 29, 2007
Birthday Shout Outs!
Gwen IfillSeptember 29,1955
Journalist
From New York City (Queens), she is the daughter of O. Urcille Ifill, Sr. a Methodist preacher and Eleanor IFill. She has a sister and brother, Maria Ifill Philip and Roberto. In 1977, she graduated from Simmons College in Boston, Massachusetts where she majored in communications, and through an internship got her first hands-on experience as a journalist. Ifill has also received 15 honorary degrees.
She earlier worked for the Boston Herald, the Baltimore Sun, The Washington Post, The New York Times, and NBC. Ifill became moderator of the PBS program Washington Week in Review in October 1999 and is also senior correspondent for the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. On October 5, 2004, she moderated the vice presidential debate between Dick Cheney and John Edwards. Ifill serves on the board of the Harvard Institute of Politics, the Committee to Protect Journalists, the Museum of Television and Radio and the University of Maryland's Philip Merrill College of Journalism.