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Lakeland alums are featured writers at Great Lakes Writers Festival

Lakeland alums are featured writers at Great Lakes Writers Festival

writers_web

Photo courtesy of Karl Elder

Matthew Henriksen, Jodie Liedke, Karl Elder, Dawn Hogue and Jean Kuehnel

Leah Ulatowski, Staff Reporters
November 15, 2012
Filed under News, Top Stories

One might say it takes a writer to know a writer, to truly comprehend a career that revolves around making a masterpiece out of a blank page. Fortunately, Lakeland College?s annual Great Lakes Writers Festival (GLWF) is the perfect place for writers on campus to connect, perfect their craft in workshops, and listen to seasoned writers present their work.

The 15th GLWF was held on Nov. 1-2 and was hosted by Fessler Professor of Creative Writing & Poet in Residence Karl Elder. It featured guest writers Matthew Henriksen, Dawn Hogue, Jean Kuehnel, and Jodie Liedke, all of whom are alumni.

The task of choosing the most suitable guest speakers is always a grueling one for Elder.

?I had to know that they were writing and producing good work,? Elder said. ?Also, I had to know they were all team players. I?ve never invited four previously, of course we?ve never had alumni previously, but my point is that we?ve never had four featured writers in the past; we?ve only had two at a time. I didn?t know what the energy would be like, so we needed team players.?

In the end, only six alumni made the cut, two of whom couldn?t attend due to traveling abroad. Elder desired alumni writers in celebration of Lakeland College?s sesquicentennial and notes that it would have been impossible to bring in the four alumni without the extra funding provided by the sesquicentennial committee.

The event began with a welcome from Elder in the Bradley Fine Arts building and was followed by readings from each of the four guest writers. Each writer was introduced by a student from Elder?s Advanced Poetry Writing class, including art major Jacob Belknap, criminal justice major Joshua Leisemann, and writing majors Sean Gilligan and Veronica Lau.

The first writer to speak was Jean Kuehnel, who studied jazz piano at the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music in Milwaukee before graduating from Lakeland College in 1987 and ultimately going on to graduate school. She currently resides in North Carolina where she works in computer programming.

Kuehnel described her work as narrated by a sort of ?distant? voice. The piece focused on a young girl experiencing her pet goat giving birth in an instance of innocence meets reality.

?I haven?t been writing for a while and so there?s been a lot of soul searching lately, a lot of ?is this something I should do??? Kuehnel said. ?But, also this feeling that?s been going on for about a year that I need to start writing again, and this was kind of a weird coincidence that [Elder?s invite] came.?

The next writer to speak was Jodie Liedke. She graduated from Lakeland in 2006 and currently teaches composition, creative writing, literature, and film at Globe University in La Crosse, Wisconsin.

Liedke presented two poems entitled Sleeping with my Mother and From. The former is a tender narrative by a girl who crawls into bed with her adoring mother and inherits the woman?s varicose veins. The latter is a whimsical telling of all the places Liedke has been, and it even pays homage to Lakeland and its surrounding cornfields, as well as pokes fun at the college?s Writing and English faculty.

?I was ecstatic to come back, I had such a great experience at Lakeland,? Liedke said. ?For two years I helped plan and run the Great Lakes Writers Festival, so I use to introduce the writers and now I was the writer being introduced?that was very moving.?

Third to speak was Dawn Hogue, who graduated from Lakeland in 1990 and currently works as a writing instructor for Johns Hopkins University?s Center for Talented Youth. She is also the adviser for The Lakeland Mirror and serves as an adjunct instructor for Lakeland?s General Studies Department.

Hogue said that she has been actively blogging and essaying as a way to explore the concept of teaching and aid fellow educators. Hogue chose a slightly different route than her alumni companions by presenting one such blog post.

The piece she shared centered on her granddaughter Ella?s dilemma of having a teacher too quick to make decisions for the children in her classroom. Hogue communicated the necessity of allowing students some leverage in their educational environments.

?Karl knew that all four of us were going to present our own perspectives. I wanted to reach out to future teachers in the convocation audience and make the point that teachers can be reflective writers, too,? Hogue said. ?The blog post I read was about how important it is for teachers to create engaging learning experiences, especially by providing many choices for students.?

The final writer to speak was Matthew Henriksen, who graduated in 2001 and recently released his first book of poems, Ordinary Sun. He lives in the Ozark Mountains where he works as co-editor of an online poetry journal and teaches creative writing at the University of Arkansas?Fort Smith.

Henriksen read several short poems, including Strange Flowers and several poems inspired by his hometown of Appleton, Wis. One might say that Henriksen?s works were characterized by impassioned diction and vivid, unconventional imagery that ranged from a peculiar girl on a bicycle to the spiritual realm.

?I was so blown away by the other readers, by the diversity of interests and by their presence as human beings, that I felt sort of inadequate reading,? Henriksen said, ?or maybe I felt more like my work was just a small part of a sum total. Reading with others is often competitive or adheres to a hierarchy. In this case I felt humility and camaraderie.?

?The first thing I did on campus was head up to the third floor of WAK to see Karl Elder, Jeff Elzinga, and Linda Tolman. I have lived all over the country but have rarely felt at home. Lakeland though, especially with those three people, I feel a sense of belonging,? Henriksen said.

As Lakeland College?s writing program flourishes, it is no wonder the campus boasts a grand array of both faculty and students with a knack for the written word, most of whom were in attendance.

Some helped orchestrate workshops while others participated in them or took advantage of open mic and contest opportunities. Lakeland even invited High School students from surrounding communities to take part in special youth oriented events.

Writing major Nate Bakke and Writing and Art major Alyssa Nedbal, both of whom worked the event, lavished praises on the alumni run workshops. Hogue and Kuehnel headed prose workshops while Henriksen and Liedke covered poetry ones.

?It?s different than the workshops in Fiction Writing because it?s a singular event; it is more focused,? Bakke said.

They said that students were overjoyed to speak with the alumni during workshops as the writers had once been in their same exact shoes.

The alumni writers also had a second chance to present their work at special readings in the college?s pub. The atmosphere was very informal. Those from the Lakeland community took advantage of an open mic opportunity and the alumni writers shared their work throughout the night.

?Compared to the convocation, it was almost like being in a room with that person,? Bakke said.

The alumni, many students from the writing program, and all the writing professors showed up to the pub event and joined in on the fun and discussion.

?Writing can be such an isolating process, so [it was great] getting to know people who write and learning why they write, why they put themselves through this,? Nedbal said. ?They understand, they don?t think you?re crazy.?

Elder was quite pleased with the event and the effect it had on those who attended. ?I think the thing that people are most enthused about with respect to the experience of the festival is having their enthusiasm rekindled,? he said.

Source: http://www.lakelandmirror.com/news/2012/11/15/lakeland-alums-are-featured-writers-at-great-lakes-writers-festival/

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Thursday, November 15, 2012

Report: Hope Solo Married Fiance Despite Bloody Incident on Wedding Eve

November 14, 2012 19:25:47 GMT
The U.S. women's soccer team goalkeeper exchanged vows with Jerramy Stevens following their physical altercation.

reportedly married her fiance Jerramy Stevens despite the bloody event on their wedding eve. A sports radio host in Seattle and the U.S. soccer athlete's teammate Jillian Loyden have both confirmed via Twitter that the nuptials did take place but no other details were released.

Solo and Stevens allegedly had a fight on Monday, November 12 morning. Solo's brother Marcus called 911 to report a fight at home and police were immediately dispatched. Police report said there were blood spatters at the house and injured people. Marcus had blood on his forehead and a bruise under his eye while Solo had blood on her elbow from a cut. A 32-year-old woman suffered from a hip injury while Stevens had dried blood on his shirt and cheek. Blood was also found on the floor and staircase handrail.

Solo refused to cooperate with police and tell them about the incident. She reportedly yelled at Marcus, "Don't say anything to them Marcus" several times while he was being questioned by police. While everybody else was on the first floor, Stevens was found upstairs wedged between wall and bed. He told the police that he was not trying to hide but was sleeping instead. However, he admitted to have had an argument with Solo.

Stevens, a former Seattle Seahawks player, was then arrested on fourth degree assault but was released without condition. Solo was photographed the following day leaving municipal court in Kirkland, Washington with her lawyer.

Words are, Solo and Stevens were arguing over where they will live, Washington or Florida, after they get married.

? AceShowbiz.com




?

Source: http://www.aceshowbiz.com/news/view/00055501.html

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Bloomberg Announces Major Redesign to its iPad App

Bloomberg Announces Major Redesign to its iPad App

Bloomberg today unveiled a significant redesign to its flagship Bloomberg iPad app. The app, which first launched along with the iPad itself, has been completely re-imagined to provide business executives instant access to the business news and market information that is most relevant to them. Users now have their own command center, where they can access top news, a personalized snapshot of world markets and a summary of their investments (including news and earnings updates on companies in their Watchlist) without leaving their home screen.

?The redesigned Bloomberg app is personalized for users, enabling them to dig as deep as they want into the content and data. It?s a rich experience without being overwhelming. That?s what makes it so unique,? said Oke Okaro, global head & general manager of mobile and connected devices for Bloomberg L.P.

This level of personalization is the first-of-its kind within the business and finance category, and is complemented with a sophisticated yet intuitive navigation that allows users to dig deeper into the content and put information in context. For example, if a user is reading a technology-focused article that mentions Apple, the latest stock price is displayed in the article alongside its company name. With just one tap, the user can access comprehensive company information including key statistics, financials, and sophisticated charting tools ? including the ability to benchmark Apple?s performance against competitors and major indices.

?The app allows for multiple ways to discover content and smartly reveals more tools and contextually relevant information,? added Okaro.

Users can now access powerful new performance charts and summary visualizations to analyze and manage information when tracking personal holdings (stocks, mutual funds, ETFs, currencies). For example, they can see a summary of the leaders and laggards at any given moment and get a snapshot of their portfolio by asset type, industry and location.

Other key features include:

  • Streaming Video: Watch videos uninterrupted while browsing the app using the portable video player.
  • Quick access to related company pages and topics: View in-line stock quotes and jump directly to company or topic information from articles.
  • News formatted to fit personal reading styles: Adjust font size and contrast within news articles to maximize readability and comfort. View in portrait and landscape.
  • Seamless access to personalized Watchlists and settings: Sign in or register a Bloomberg.com account to synchronize Watchlists and save app settings across all personal devices.
  • A universal back button to easily navigate the experience.

Bloomberg for iPad is available for free from the App Store.

Tags: Bloomberg ? Bloomberg for iPad ? finance ? Free Apps ? iPad ? Updates

Filed: Featured ? Finance ? Free Apps ? iPad ? Updates

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ipadmodo/~3/S0LOALSNRzw/

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Sony Xperia V Now Up for Pre-Order in Sweden via Telia and Three

It appears that Sony did not postpone the international version of Xperia V after all. Although Sony Mobile France stated last week that the smartphone wouldn?t be arriving until January 2013, two Swedish carrier claim that the Xperia V will be available for purchase starting December 5.

According to Sony Mobile France, the Japanese handset maker decided to push back the launch of Xperia V with several weeks in order to ship the phone with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean platform out of the box.

For the time being, the Xperia V has been confirmed to be delivered with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich operating system, though Sony promised that a Jelly Bean upgrade would be available soon after launch.

Android enthusiasts living in Sweden might want to check this one as XperiaBlog reports that the smartphone is now up for pre-order at Telia and Tre (Three) carriers.

Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/Sony-Xperia-V-Now-Up-for-Pre-Order-in-Sweden-via-Telia-and-Three-307020.shtml

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Wednesday, November 14, 2012

3 pilots flying to safety meet die in Miss. crash

Flames and smoke billow from a home in west Jackson, Miss., Tuesday evening, Nov. 13, 2012, after authorities say a small plane carrying three people crashed into the residence shortly after 5 p.m. (AP Photo/The Clarion-Ledger, Joe Ellis) NO SALES

Flames and smoke billow from a home in west Jackson, Miss., Tuesday evening, Nov. 13, 2012, after authorities say a small plane carrying three people crashed into the residence shortly after 5 p.m. (AP Photo/The Clarion-Ledger, Joe Ellis) NO SALES

Unidentified friends of the pilot of a small plane that authorities say crashed into a west Jackson, Miss., home shortly after 5 p.m. Tuesday evening, Nov. 13, 2012, hug each other as they await information as to the pilot and passengers. The home's resident is believed to have escaped but authorities have not released names of plane's passengers. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

A fireman carries empty oxygen tanks from battling a fire in a west Jackson, Miss., home where authorities say a small plane carrying three people crashed shortly after 5 p.m. Tuesday evening, Nov. 13, 2012. The home's resident is believed to have escaped but authorities have not released names of plane's passengers. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Investigators review notes as fire fighters combat a fire in a west Jackson, Miss., home where authorities say a small plane carrying three people crashed shortly after 5 p.m. Tuesday evening, Nov. 13, 2012. The home's resident is believed to have escaped but authorities have not released names of plane's passengers. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

The flashing blue lights of nearby police cars light onlookers trying to capture the scene where authorities say a small plane carrying three people crashed into a home in Jackson, Miss. shortly after 5 p.m. Tuesday evening, Nov. 13, 2012. (AP Photo/The Clarion-Ledger, Joe Ellis) NO SALES

(AP) ? Three pilots flying together to a federal safety conference died when their single-engine plane faltered in midair and crashed into a house that went up in flames.

The three men had just taken off from Hawkins Field Airport in Jackson on Tuesday when a witness said the Piper PA-32 began "spitting and sputtering."

The witness, a Jackson police officer, saw the plane sputtering like it was out of fuel, he would later tell the plane's owner ? a budding pilot whose own life was spared when he decided to go deer hunting instead of flying. The men on board were headed to a Federal Aviation Administration safety conference less than 30 miles away.

One of the aviators asked for permission to return to the airport, but just minutes later the plane went down. It crashed through trees before slamming into a house that quickly caught fire, sending long flames and black smoke through the neighborhood of modest single-family homes surrounded by magnolia and oak trees.

A deputy fire chief told WJTV-TV that one person escaped the burning home with minor injuries, but it was not immediately clear if anyone else was inside. One patient from the scene was in good condition at University of Mississippi Medical Center, spokesman Jack Mazurak said late Tuesday. He wouldn't give the person's name or gender or the extent of the injuries, citing privacy laws.

The plane was owned by Roger and Michele Latham, from Superior Pallet Company in Flowood, Miss., both of whom showed up at the crash site, along with their grown daughter, Emily Latham.

Emily Latham noted that her father was supposed to have been on board but changed his plans.

"He went hunting," she said. "Thank God."

Michele Latham said all three men on board were pilots. Roger Latham, who is 15 hours short of getting his pilot's license, identified one of the victims as John Edward Tilton Jr., his flight instructor.

"He was one of the finest Christian men I knew," Latham said. "We had three great men who lost their lives," he added. "I just want to wake up in a while and say, 'This didn't happen.'"

Hinds County Coroner Sharon Grisham-Stewart confirmed three people died in the crash. She said dental records or DNA would be needed to confirm their identities.

The plane took off at 5:10 p.m. and shortly after, the pilot asked for permission to return to the airport, according to a news release issued by the Jackson Municipal Airport Authority. It never made it.

The plane had departed Hawkins Field Airport headed for Raymond, Miss., for an FAA safety conference. Latham said his plane had been parked in a hangar for a month and they wanted to take it out for a short flight before he flew it to Gulf Shores, Ala., for Thanksgiving. Latham said he had owned the plane for 2 1/2 years and described it as being in mint condition.

Latham said a Jackson police officer who was about a block away when the plane was coming down told him "it was spitting and sputtering and ... starving for fuel."

It hit trees on the way down, Latham said, adding, "I'm sure John was doing everything he possibly could to save the lives on board."

Vivian Payne, who lives about six blocks from the crash site, said she heard a loud bang that sounded different from an electrical transformer blowing.

"It shook the walls of my house," Payne said.

The National Transportation Safety Board and the FAA were investigating.

___

Associated Press writer Holbrook Mohr contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-14-Plane%20Crash-Mississippi/id-baefe96cada14551818422df731bf1c6

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New ancient shark species gives insight into origin of great white

ScienceDaily (Nov. 14, 2012) ? The great white shark is one of the largest living predatory animals and a magnet for media sensationalism, yet its evolutionary history is as misunderstood as its role as a menace.

Originally classified as a direct relative of megatooth sharks, the white shark's evolutionary history has been debated by paleontologists for the last 150 years. In a study appearing in print and online today in the journal Palaeontology, University of Florida researchers name and describe an ancient intermediate form of the white shark, Carcharodon hubbelli, which shows the modern white shark likely descended from broad-toothed mako sharks. The study deviates from the white shark's original classification as a relative of megatooth sharks such as the extinct Carcharocles megalodon, the largest carnivorous shark that ever lived.

Based on recalibrated dates of the excavation site in Peru, the study also concludes the new species was about 2 million years older than previously believed.

"We can look at white sharks today a little bit differently ecologically if we know that they come from a mako shark ancestor," said lead author Dana Ehret, a lecturer at Monmouth University in New Jersey who conducted research for the study as a UF graduate student. "That 2-million-year pushback is pretty significant because in the evolutionary history of white sharks, that puts this species in a more appropriate time category to be ancestral or kind of an intermediate form of white shark."

Most ancient shark species are named using isolated teeth, but analysis of C. hubbelli, also known as Hubbell's white shark, was based on a complete set of jaws with 222 teeth intact and 45 vertebrae. The species was named for Gainesville resident Gordon Hubbell, a collector who recovered the fossils from a farmer who discovered them in the Pisco Formation of southern Peru in 1988. Hubbell donated the specimens to the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus in December 2009.

"The impetus of this project was really the fact that Gordon Hubbell donated a majority of his fossil shark collection to the Florida Museum," Ehret said. "Naming the shark in his honor is a small tip of the hat to all the great things he has done to advance paleontology."

Ehret and co-authors published an initial study describing the shark specimens in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology in 2009, but dates for the site reflected information from a 1985 study about the Pisco Formation, he said. With Hubbell's hand-drawn maps and descriptions of the landscape, researchers returned to the site and found the exact spot the fossils were discovered.

Scientists extracted more accurate age estimates from mollusk shells in the fossil horizon to determine the shark species was from the late Miocene, about 6.5 million years ago, rather than the early Pliocene, about 4.5 million years ago. The new dates will also be useful for better understanding other fossils found in the rich Pisco Formation, which include new whale, marine sloth and terrestrial vertebrate species.

"The thing that was remarkable to me was that these fossils came from right out in the desert and this was before GPS, so Dana had only an approximate notion of where it was," said Florida Museum of Natural History Director Douglas Jones, a study co-author who conducted strontium isotope dating of the fossils. "But after a few days of looking, we were able to find this deposit and Dana found the rest of the missing shark's teeth."

Researchers determined Hubbell's white shark was related to ancient broad-toothed mako sharks by comparing the physical shapes of shark teeth to one another. While modern white sharks have serrations on their teeth for consuming marine mammals, mako sharks do not have serrations because they primarily feed on fish. Hubbell's white shark has coarse serrations indicative of a transition from broad-toothed mako sharks to modern white sharks.

These evolutionary relationships have been hypothesized for decades, and researchers who interpret modern white sharks as being more closely related to megatooth sharks say it is "a friendly disagreement," according to Michael Gottfried, an associate professor in geological sciences at Michigan State University.

But shark expert David Ward, a research associate at the Natural History Museum, London, said "fewer people believe the big megatooth sharks are related to the great white sharks than believe the Earth is flat."

"Everyone working within the field will be absolutely delighted to see this relationship formalized," Ward said.

Study co-authors include Bruce MacFadden of the Florida Museum, Thomas DeVries of the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture in Seattle, David Foster of UF and Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi of Museo de Historia Natural Javier Prado in Lima.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Florida. The original article was written by Danielle Torrent.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. dana J. Ehret, Bruce J. MacFadden, Douglas S. Jones, Thomas J. Devries, David A. Foster and Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi. Origin of the white shark Carcharodon (Lamniformes: Lamnidae) based on recalibration of the Upper Neogene Pisco Formation of Peru. Palaeontology, 2012; DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-4983.2012.01201.x

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/bjZ0EHdpxh0/121114172939.htm

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