Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Time for Re-Verse, Sigma Tau Delta style.



Last April, several people in the Department of English and Foreign Languages met to plan a new event, a poetry recitation. Sigma Tau Delta, the English honor society, sponsored the event and the experiment was born on a rainy Thursday night. Eleven people read, including students and professors. In planning this year's recitation, STD decided to move it to the fall semester.
This is the story of Re-Verse. The beginning, anyway. The second chapter occurs on November 18, a Monday at 6:30 p.m. in the Buddy Green Room in the MCC on the Cameron University campus.
The event is open to the the public and anyone can recite a poem as long as they sign up in advance. This year you can speak to Dr. William Carney if you want to recite a poem. Email him at wcarney at cameron dot edu.

You can recite one poem. The poem must by written by anyone other than yourself. Last year, someone recited a poem written by his niece. Dr. Seuss is fair game. So is Chaucer, Shelley, and Plath. Poems not in English ARE ENCOURAGED ENTHUSIASTICALLY. It doesn't matter if no one else speaks Sanskrit; poetry is also about rhythm and sound, and those things can be understood in any language.

Price of admission is a can of food, to be donated by STD to the Lawton Food Bank. Please join us for an evening of fun, friends, and poetry.

Friday, October 8, 2010

Ken Hada, from Ada, Brings the Poetry Forth Tonight

Ken Hada, poet and professor of English at East Central University in Ada, Oklahoma, will read tonight at Cameron University. His reading begins at 7:00 and will be held in the CETES building ballroom. The CETES building is behind the Nance-Boyer building and the library.

Ken Hada has numerous publications, including the poetry collection, Spare Parts, published by Mongrel Empire Press. He is also the director of the immensely popular Scissortail Creative Writing Festival of poetry in Ada each Spring.


The reading is free and open to everyone. Please join us for a reading by an Okie who often writes about Oklahoma.