no problems.
Now that I've got the beginnings of automation settled, I'll be able
to add some more improvements to the front page.
Roger
On 10/21/07, Barry Alpert <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Roger,
>
> Very cheering. I had assumed you weren't going to be able to work on the
> archive for nearly a year. Now I'll be more motivated to expose a snapshot
> each week.
>
> Must get ready to attend this reading, motivated mostly by Miles Champion's
> distinctive presentation of his texts--at perhaps the fastest pace of any
> reader in the world today. I've witnessed him twice previously with
> interest, and assume there will be a further performative advance in
> evidence today. Our former list owner Randolph Healy is still enabling
> access to Champion's most extensive online publication at:
>
> http://www.wildhoneypress.com/Audio/Miles_Champion.htm
>
>
> I N Y O U R E A R R E A D I N G S E R I E S
> @ District of Columbia Arts Center
> 3:00PM, Sunday, October 21, 2007
>
> Please join the In Your Ear Poetry Series for a reading by Miles
> Champion, K. Lorraine Graham, & P. Inman on Sunday, October 21st at 3:00 PM.
>
>
> MILES CHAMPION's books include SORE MODELS and THREE BELL ZERO. A
> chapbook, EVENTUALLY, is forthcoming from A Rest Press, as is a full-length
> collection, HOW TO LAUGH, from Adventures in Poetry. His work has
> appeared or is forthcoming in recent issues of _No: A Journal of the
> Arts_, _Shiny_ and _Zoland Poetry_, and his recent collaborations with
> artists include one on paper with Trevor Winkfield and one in latex with
> Jane South. He moved to New York from London in 2002.
>
> K. LORRAINE GRAHAM is the author of three chapbooks, TERMINAL HUMMING,
> SEE IT EVERYWHERE, LARGE WAVES TO LARGE OBSTACLES (forthcoming from
> Take Home Project), and a chapdisk, MOVING WALKWAYS, from Narrowhouse
> Recordings. Lorraine lives in Carlsbad, CA and blogs at
> terminalhumming.blogspot.com.
>
> P. INMAN grew up on Long Island off the coast of "America," 6-7 miles
> away from the Atlantic; lit pubs include: OCKER, RED SHIFT, CRISS CROSS,
> VEL, AT. LEAST., AMOUNTS. TO., & NOW/TIME; other pubs: Four Fields
> (DC), Grogan's (Ennis), Shagwong's (Montauk), Taafe's (Galway);
> employment: retired Federal employee, currently works as a labor rep for
> AFSCME
> Council 26, 3 blocks away from the White House; currently sits: 1 foot
> from keyboard.
>
> Admission is $3.00.
>
>
>
> Barry Alpert
>
>
> On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 16:57:51 +0100, Roger Day <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> >up here:
> >
> >http://www.poetryetc.org/
> >
> >there is a slight, uh, gap. I've developed a script which I hope will
> >make the update process faster. One side effect of the script is that
> >it counts the white-spaces accurately. Please let me know if my
> >transcription has been accurate enough in this regard.
> >
> >Roger
>
--
My Stuff: http://www.badstep.net/
"In peace, sons bury their fathers. In war, fathers bury their sons."
Roman Proverb
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