It includes helping fulfill 500 first aid kits.
Priscilla Presley, Lisa Marie Presley's mother, spoke briefly and quietly, reading a poem and remarks from one of her granddaughters.
Edgar Allan Poe, who would have turned 214 years old Jan. 19, remains one of the world’s most recognizable literary figures. But is his appeal less about the power and complexity of his prose, and more about the view of him as a perennial underdog?
October 11, 1971. "Imagine" was recorded by Lennon with producer Phil Spector in a single session at his country estate, Tittenhurst Park. Whi…
In poetry, one notable release is a work of narrative prose: Nobel laureate Louise Gluck's "Marigold and Rose" is a brief exploration into the…
Essentially better, wouldn’t you say?Fans back in the stands and games back in play.Clearly more settled but far from routine:Some shots from the arc, some for the vaccine.A year on the rebound crisscrossing sports.A year next to normal, progress of sorts.First QuarterThe New Year strikes, ignite the flame.Bama, Buckeyes reach title game.Browns and playoffs: Now there’s a match.DeVonta Smith, a Heisman catch.Capitol Hill, a violent sea.The Heat and Celtics take a knee.New New York star, good as it gets --Lindor leaves Cleveland, dealt to Mets.A limb falls from the Dodger tree --Tom Lasorda was 93.Tide surges in a dull affairTo send Nick Saban past the Bear.Nets nab Harden, aiming higher.Jags try likewise, Urban Meyer.Australian tennis, quarantine.Olympics nearing, what’s it mean?A star grows dim in baseball’s skyAs Henry Aaron passes by.A shutout vote for baseball’s Hall,Though Schilling nearly gets a call.Bucs, Brady ride on cruise controlAnd stay at home for Super Bowl.Chiefs dethroned, Tampa Bay is kingAnd Brady gets his seventh ring.Lombardi Trophy tossed from boat --Pass completed by football’s GOAT.Prep for Tokyo goes off the track,With leaders talking sexist smack.McDowell exults, Daytona bash —Grabs first win, eludes last-lap crash.Djokovic’s season underway,Ninth Aussie crown on resume.A morning drive, a roll, a tree --Woods wrecks his speeding SUV.Shattered leg, orthopedic mess.Any more golf? Anyone’s guess.Kyle Larson, banned for racist crack,Returns and wins, Las Vegas track.Conference tournaments, disarray.Coronavirus comes to play.A boxing marvel pound for pound,Marvin Hagler goes one last round.Drew Brees retires, time to go.Roy Williams follows, ends the show.March Madness not the same event,The games now played in one big tent.But NCAA proves all thumbs --Men get red carpet. Women? Crumbs.Elgin Baylor, whose game took flight,Now passes into that good night.NFL adds one game to sked.Smell of money goes to its head.Second QuarterOpening day but no at-batsWhen COVID scraps the Mets at Nats.Atlanta stripped of All-Star Game,With Georgia’s voting law to blame.Gonzaga gasps, comes up for airOn Jalen Suggs’ half-court prayer.Stanford women make curtain call,Beat Arizona, Pac-12 ball.Next night, the Baylor Bears shift gears.Zags’ perfect season disappears.Matsuyama, the Masters man,Sets major milestone for Japan.No-hitters, once rare Beaujolais,Are now served up most every day.Rich Euro clubs conspire, bolt.Rogue league shot down as fans revolt.Medina Spirit, Churchill Downs;Bob Baffert, seven Derby crowns.Failed drug test puts the win in doubtAnd Churchill Downs kicks Baffert out.Happy birthday! Let it be sung:Mays is 90, forever young.No Baffert, here’s how Preakness goes:Rombauer wins, Medina shows.Canelo brutal and unbowedAt Cowboys’ home with record crowd.Games greenlighted by IOCEven if COVID’s running free.Mickelson takes the PGA.Oh, he believes in yesterday.Fans swarm fairway, forbidding sceneAs Lefty, Koepka walk toward green.Castroneves still gets it doneAt 46, four Indys won.French Open comes, Osaka goesAnd speaks of pain that no one knows,The mental anguish she can’t shake --It’s simply time to take a break.Jon Rahm nears Memorial rout --A COVID test then knocks him out.Nadal loses on French red clay!(Moons explode across Milky Way.)Djokovic dodges five-set jam,Tsitsipas falls -- halfway to Slam.No test or virus underminesRahm’s Open title, Torrey Pines.Can college athletes play for pay?Supreme Court rules, resounding yea.Nassib comes out, his “great weight” lifts,Barrier falls, pro football shifts.Major League Baseball’s had enough,Cracks down on pitchers’ sticky stuff.Antetokounmpo hurts his knee.Connor McDavid, MVP.Third QuarterHardly baseball’s finest hour --What to do with Trevor Bauer?Dan Snyder hit with hefty fineFor workplace deemed best fit for swine.Again, the Lightning win it all.No Stanley Cup for Montreal.Another twist, Olympic plans:No roaring crowds; in fact, no fans.Raise a glass, a dry martini --Novak knocks off Berrettini.Twentieth Slam, Wimbledon spree.His Grand Slam quest? He’s 3 for 3.Euros: Italy. Down go Brits,Pelted with racist online hits.Shohei Ohtani, arm and bat,The All-Star Game his habitat.Morikawa, his game’s got clout,Wins British Open first time out.Tour de France, it’s two in a row:Tadej Pogacar runs this show.Milwaukee Bucks now live the dream,Their crown last won when with Kareem.Giannis shifts to higher gear,Suns go in six -- best “Fear the Deer.”In Cleveland, after hot debate,The Guardians step to the plate.At last, the Tokyo Games beginMuch to the public’s great chagrin.Cauldron’s lit by Osaka’s handsBefore near empty, ghostlike stands.All eyes soon turn to Simone Biles,Her tribulations and her trials,Not least the “twisties,” so we learned,Where up from down can’t be discerned.Still, bright lights burn, and we behold:Caeleb Dressel, his haul of gold;Thompson-Herah, double sprint queen;Allyson Felix, evergreen;Karsten Warholm, eye-popping race;Sunisa Lee, resplendent grace.Then Texas, Oklahoma fleeAnd fatten the fat SEC.Scherzer to Dodgers, deadline day.Westbrook’s home with James in LA.Jays regain a sense of order,Flocking home north of the border.Lawyers, money, tears and remorse --Barcelona’s Messi divorce.Baseball goes to where myths are born:“Field of Dreams,” with plenty of corn.Pacquiao loses and now leansToward run to lead the Philippines.Saints sent packing, hurricane strike.Pats tell Cam Newton: Take a hike.U.S. Open, much to savor.Novak looks to stand with Laver.His final, though, best to forget.Daniil Medvedev just says “nyet.”In Congress, gymnasts testify --Ignored, betrayed by FBI.Philly longs for an elixirFor Ben Simmons, brooding Sixer.Ryder Cup rout, United States:Stricker’s young team rules Whistling Straits.Fourth QuarterWomen’s soccer rocked by abuse.League leader quits, coaches cut loose.Brady’s back at his old domain.Bucs beat New England in the rain.Talladega, Wallace’s place,At every turn a landmark race.Fury stops Wilder, fierce right hook.A trilogy ends. Close the book.Jon Gruden resigns. Coarse and vile,His emails spewing endless bile.Tide’s big winning streak hits a wall.Boston Marathon’s run in fall.Irving’s unvaxxed -- it’s “best for me” --And barred from games in NYC.Seattle Kraken, league’s new guy.Light streaks across Chicago Sky.Lost in the muck most of the year,Braves ascend to another sphere.Rosario, Fried fuel the run.Freddie Freeman, the favorite son.Riley, Swanson, Jorge Soler.’Stros fall in six; Braves walk on air.Then Aaron Rodgers theorizedHis “research” finds he’s “immunized.”Rams sniff the big prize, seize the day,Sign Von Miller and OBJ.Kyle Larson, once without a car,Now NASCAR’s champ and transformed star.College basketball’s underway --A long goodbye for Duke’s Coach K.Tennis shaken amid great fears --Chinese star Peng Shuai disappears.WTA shows some spine.The IOC? Craven, supine.An MVP, ain’t that the truth,Ohtani likened to Babe Ruth.Staples Center stripped of its name --Cryptocurrency stakes its claim.Suns surge with reborn Golden State.Packers, Patriots, percolate.Why are Kelly, Notre Dame through?Ninety-five million, LSU.Lee Elder stood among golf’s greats,Rattling Augusta’s creaky gates.Time’s up for baseball’s CBA,With Scherzer, Seager making hay.Player lockout. Here’s where things stand:A sport shuts down in no-man’s land.Cincinnati grabs playoff ride,As do Michigan, Georgia, Tide.A long wait ends with much acclaim --Gil Hodges makes the Hall of Fame.Death on a California track:Medina Spirit, heart attack.Beijing under a microscope.Winter Games ride slippery slope.U.S. tells China’s autocrats:We will not send our diplomats!MLS Cup, what’ll it be?First crown for NYCFC.Bryce Young extends Tide’s Heisman run.Family golf for Woods & Son.Basketball stands on guard with thee:Stephen Curry, king of the 3.Team and coach a dumpster fire,Jags get rid of Urban Meyer.Now, with caution, we eye the door.Omicron’s surging. What’s in store?Still, we’ll toast and lower the ball(New Year’s protocol, after all),Eyes ahead and the mandate clear:Better things for a better year.
Inaugural poet Amanda Gorman has two books out this fall, the picture story "Change Sings" and the poetry collection "Call Us What We Carry." Louise Glueck's "Winter Recipes from the Collective" is her first poetry book since winning the Nobel Prize last year, and new works also are expected from Pulitzer Prize-winners Paul Muldoon, Frank Bidart and Tracy K. Smith, and from Kevin Young, Amanda Moore and Mai Der Vang.
By Joyce Sidman, illustrated by Miren Asiain Lora
The website building and hosting company enlisted Dolly Parton herself to rewrite the lyrics of her classic ode to the working day, “9 to 5," to pay tribute to workers who work on their own businesses from “5 to 9" instead.
The big, bad wolf is gone! Hallelujah! We can breathe freely again.
Angelou tenders tutorials in perspective and wisdom in short essays and poems to her “thousands of daughters.” But you need not be female to be changed by the lessons the American poet, memoirist, civil rights activist and performer learned and under what conditions she learned them. I found solace in grieving my sister from Angelou’s letters (published in 2008, six years before Angelou’s death), especially her chapters “Mrs. Coretta Scott King” and “Condolences.” Now I return most frequently to her introduction, which contains some of her most famous quotes:
By Joni Mitchell, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 136 pages, $40
The book: Long before Macavity, Bombalurina and Old Deuteronomy became Twitter-famous in the trailer revealing this film's surreal jump from Broadway to the big screen, these characters lived in the "Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats." T.S. Eliot wrote the collection of poems to his godchildren. Published in 1939, the book has been praised for its whimsical look at cat psychology as well as an occasional satire of 1930s London.
Poet Ilya Kaminsky will read at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 13, in the Learning Innovation Center Room 128 on the Oregon State University campus…
A highly anticipated coming-of-age memoir by a black, gay man raised in the South. Jones, whose poetry was published in "Prelude to a Bruise," will be in St. Louis on Oct. 14 at the High Low. (Simon & Schuster; Oct. 8)
Poet and author Joy Harjo, a member of the Muscogee Creek Nation, will be the first Native American to hold the honor of poet laureate.
Allow us one last word about this year's tax season, which technically ended on Monday (unless you are among the unlucky souls who had to file…
Shelly Garrett always seemed larger than life, which is part of the reason why the news of her death on Tuesday at age 65 from liver failure c…
We're in the middle of April, what T.S. Eliot called "the cruelest month, breeding
Poet Tomás Q. Morín will read at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 1, in the Black Box Lab Theatre in Withycombe Hall on the Oregon State University camp…
Poet Michael Wasson will read at 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 8, in the Native American Longhouse Eena Haws on the Oregon State University campus in …