Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Poetry Picnic 2012


This contains pretty much all you need to know about Poetry Picnic 2012!

The League of Extraordinary Poets (LEP) is excited to invite you to the first ever UMD Poetry Picnic! 

The Picnic will be held on Thursday April 5th from 11am-3pm in Kochoff Hall.

What is the Poetry Picnic, you ask?
Well, basically it's a huge indoor picnic where you get to eat food, hang out with friends, and watch people participate in a fun competition that doesn't require you to know much about poetry at all. Seriously. 

Teams compete (for prizes!) in a three-round poetry competition. Each team chooses an established poet to serve as their poet mascot, and the teams then choose any of their mascot's poems to perform in any of the rounds - dramatic reading, skit/interpretive dance, and the wild card round. Performances are judged for awesomeness and creativity, and prizes are awarded. 

Did we mention there is a picnic involved? Yay!

Everyone is welcome to attend the picnic! But, if you'd like, you can RSVP and we'll prepare a picnic basket for you and reserve a picnic blanket for you, too!

The handy-dandy "How To Poetry Picnic" guide gives you virtually all the information you need about the Picnic. If you could share this with your friends, colleagues, students, neighbors, etc., that would be terrific!

So. In summary (click on the links):

Event: Thursday April 5th from 11am-3pm in Kochoff Hall
Questions? Email umdlep@gmail.com

Yay!


Amal Algahmi
Queen, League of Extraordinary Poets

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Picnic Poetry (no, I didn't write that wrong)

Hey everybody! :D So as I'm sure you ALL already know, the LEP's end-of-the-year bash is coming up: POETRY PICNIC!!!! We plan to make this an annual event, but this is our very first time so we intend to make a major impact on the campus community with all the awesomeness that this event will bring. Counting today, there are 11 days left until we officially "Poetry Picnic"! I thought I'd use this blog post to celebrate poetry related to picnics- after all, who doesn't love picnics? There's something innately fascinating about sitting outside in beautiful weather with people you adore and...stuffing your face. No, really, there is. ^_^

This particular poem actually doesn't have a title but I thought it was great! It's by Carol Gioia. :)

Pack the picnic basket
with all the foods we love,
take along a frisbee,
a baseball, bat and glove.

Bring a blanket to sit upon,
bug spray, and sunscreen, too,
get the kids into the car
with the dog, and me and you

Finally we are on our way
to have a day of fun,
searching for the perfect spot
to frolic in the sun.

A grassy knoll and shade tree
beside a lazy creek;
pull over, this looks just right
for a picnic quite unique.

Setting up a lavish feast,
joy we can't contain,
our happiness is dampened
when it begins to rain.



Good thing that LEP's picnic is indoors! :D No worries of rain or bugs or grass stains or the wind blowing your paper plate away (happens to me ALL the time) to worry about. Instead, we're recreating the fun of a picnic indoors AND with poetry! So be there or be square! Thursday, April 5th from 11 am- 3 pm in Kochoff Hall!

-Myra Khan
Princess of Rhymes, LEP

Saturday, March 24, 2012

This past week for the LEP


So this past week has been super duper busy for all of us! And you know what? It's been a great success!



On Monday the 19th, we revisited Seussville!
Back when we were celebrating Octember, we held "A Night in Seussville," where we collaborated with the Student Activities Office and invited kids and their families for a fun night of Dr. Seuss games and activities. We decided to go back to Seussville again, but this time to celebrate March is Reading Month! With our friends and wonderful collaborater on the project, Teri over in the SAO, we had a really awesome event! The night started out with a dinner for the guests (I mean, we're pretty nice people), and then the festivities began. 


Games. Cats. Hats. Photos. Hat making. Book reading. Eating. Laughing. Face painting. Tail pulling. SEUSS.


Then, on Wednesday the 21st, we engaged in cupcake wars
Unfortunately, this bake sale date was double booked so there was another bake sale going on in the UC at the exact same time. Luckily for us, our competition was in the form of our friends in the medical fraternity, Phi Delta Epsilon, who also have members in the LEP! So, the cupcake wars were more like those pillow fights you have at sleepovers rather than all out battles. Thanks to everyone who wore crowns and helped out by bringing stuff and/or manning the table. And Sara, I still have your cookie holder thing! You can see pictures from the bake sale, taken by me, the world's 2nd to last best photographer! 




Finally, on Thursday, we had our Paths to Publishing workshop!

This was the third and final installment in our Winter 2012 Poetry Workshop Series. Our guest presenter for the evening was none other than our Empress, Dr. Finlayson! She gave a really great and informative talk about how to break into the publishing arena, both within and outside of poetry. A lot of work is involved, from writing, to making a name for yourself in your local poetry scene, to blogging, to submitting . . . and submitting . . . and submitting. It gave me some ideas on how to establish a writing scene on campus and help poets with true passion get their work noticed. The handout that she gave us should be on CTools soon, so be on the lookout for an email about that! Thanks so much, Dr, Finlayson!


Aaaaaaaaaand, now that all of that's over, we are in FULL POETRY PICNIC MODE! 


Yeah.


- Amal A
LEP Queen of Poetry

Friday, March 2, 2012

Abraham Lincoln: Closet Poet

I've always loved Abraham Lincoln. Like...really. O_O I am so far beyond obsessed that I've decided to name my future son Abraham. Yes. Its gone that far. (Although another LEP member, Miriam Bukhsh, has agreed to bring the awesome top hat for my son to wear. :D) But I think he's AMAZING! He's always ranked as one of the three most influential and popular presidents- and he's on Mt. Rushmore! Getting your face carved into stone? That says it all. :|

But Lincoln's life was full of struggles and disappointments, his father lost all his property in court cases and it eventually led to Lincoln growing up in a one-room log cabin. Due to their unfortunate financial situation, Lincoln's family was constantly moving. His mother died when Lincoln was 9, so his older sister took care of him until his father remarried. However, his older sister then died after giving birth to a stillborn son. :(  Later on, he would face tragedy after tragedy in regards to his own children: Edward Baker Lincoln died of tuberculosis when he was four, William Wallace Lincoln died of typhoid fever when he was twelve, and Thomas Lincoln died of heart failure at the age of 18. Robert Todd Lincoln is the only son to have made it to adulthood and eventually became Secretary of War. He carried the burden of taking care of his mother after his father's assassination, and finally admitted her to a mental hospital when her condition became too terrible to handle.

Despite all of this, Abraham Lincoln led the country through a Civil War, ended slavery, and delivered the Gettysburg Address, which is quoted as one of the most well-known speeches in United States history. BUT did you also know that he wrote poetry? :D Yes he did! Lincoln wrote short pieces whenever he was in a "poetizing mood". He was particularly fond of his childhood home and wrote a really beautiful piece when he went to visit it again years later:

My Childhood Home I See Again
Abraham Lincoln

My childhood's home I see again
And sadden with the view,
And still, as memory crowds my brain
There's pleasure in it too.

O Memory! Thou midway world
'Twixt earth and paradise
Where things decayed and loved ones lost
In dreamy shadows rise

And, freed from all that's earthly vile
Seem hallowed, pure and bright
Like scenes in some enchanted isle
All bathed in liquid light

As dusky mountains please the eye
When twilight chases day
As bugle-tones, that passing by
In distance die away

As leaving some grand waterfall
We, lingering, list its roar
So memory will hallow all
We've known, but  know no more






Near twenty years have passed away

Since here I bid farewell

To woods and fields, and scenes of play,

And playmates loved so well.



Where many were, but few remain

Of old familiar things;

But seeing them, to mind again

The lost and absent brings.



The friends I left that parting day,

How changed, as time has sped!

Young childhood grown, strong manhood gray,

And half of all are dead.



I hear the loved survivors tell

How nought from death could save,

Till every sound appears a knell,

And every spot a grave.



I range the fields with pensive tread,
And pace the hollow rooms,
And feel (companion of the dead)
I'm living in the tombs.

WOW! :D And just when I thought the guy couldn't possibly get any more amazing! Who else is going to see BOTH of the Abraham Lincoln movies coming out this year after reading this? ;) I AM!

The LEP hearts you, Mr. Lincoln. :)



-Myra Khan
Princess of Rhymes

P.S. Some fun random facts: -Abraham Lincoln stood at 6'4" (our country's tallest president!) and and wore a stove-pipe hat (that he used to store letters and important documents in) that was about another twelve inches.
- Lincoln has no living heirs.
-Lincoln wrote his own speeches
-He loved gadgets! He is the only president to ever hold a patent. He issued one for "a device for buoying vessels over shoals"
-He's super cool.

P.P.S. Sorry for the weird formatting guys! I tried for a billion hours to change it, it insists on staying weird for some reason :/