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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

U.S. poet laureate Kay Ryan

2011 Pulitzer Winner for Poetry
By John O’Rourke

Former U.S. poet laureate Kay Ryan’s poetry reflects “her own unique combination of wit and soul, clarity and depth,” says Robert Pinsky, also a former poet laureate. Photo by Christina Koci Hernandez
It is hard to imagine another living American poet with as unconventional a career as Kay Ryan’s. The daughter of an oil driller, she was raised in the Mojave Desert, attended community college, and later began writing poems using a deck of tarot cards to jump-start them. Anxious to master her craft, Ryan designed an exercise consisting of shuffling the deck each day, turning one card over, and then writing a poem about it. Looking back, she says the experience “gave me range and gave me habit. I had to write about love, death, force, whatever was on that particular card.”

Ryan says she also found inspiration in the popular Ripley’s Believe It or Not! books. And unlike many of her contemporary colleagues, her poems freely employ rhyme. Add to that a lifetime of teaching remedial English at a community college in Marin County, Calif., and a stint tutoring convicted murderers at San Quentin, and you begin to understand why her poetry is singular.

Now 65, Ryan struggled for decades to be noticed (she self-published her first collection of verse). All that has changed in recent years. Her work has appeared regularly in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, and Poetry. A two-term U.S. poet laureate, she has amassed numerous honors, among them the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize for lifetime achievement. Last week, her latest collection, The Best of It: New and Selected Poems, earned Ryan a Pulitzer Prize.

In announcing the award, the Pulitzer committee praised her “body of work spanning 45 years, witty, rebellious, and yet tender, a treasure trove of an iconoclastic and joyful mind.”

Ryan is “utterly thrilled,” by the award, she says. “I guess it means that in terms of anything that I’ve ever hoped for from the outside world…I’ve been given. So it’s relaxing. It’s very relaxing.”

At tonight’s Robert Lowell Memorial Lecture, at the Photonics Center at 7:30 p.m., Ryan will read from The Best of It, followed by a question-and-answer session and book-signing.

The semiannual lecture honors American poet Robert Lowell, who famously taught Anne Sexton, Sylvia Plath, George Starbuck, and many other poets at BU in the 1950s. Also reading tonight will be Katherine Hollander (GRS’06,’14), whose poems frequently draw on historical subjects, German and Yiddish fairy tales, and Greek and Inuit myths for inspiration. Hollander describes herself as Ryan’s “opening act.”

Robert Pinsky, a College of Arts & Sciences professor of English and a three-time U.S. poet laureate, says Ryan’s poetry reflects “her own unique combination of wit and soul, clarity and depth.” Speaking of Hollander, Pinsky says her “imagination and ear mark her as a natural poet; she epitomizes the brilliant, superb young writers who come to BU’s MFA program.”

Reviewing The Best of It in the New York Times last year, Dwight Garner says Ryan’s work has a “darting mischievousness,” and describes her poems as “slim as runway models, so tiny you could almost tweet them.”

Ryan concedes that she favors brevity in her poems and often chooses little things as subjects. “It is much more gratifying for me to feel the immensity in something small. I feel much more strongly about a rock than I feel about the Grand Canyon,” she says. “It’s much more evocative for me. I’m overwhelmed by the Grand Canyon. The rock invites me. It doesn’t swallow me.”

Unlike most writers, Ryan takes delight in clichés, and her poems often display a kind of mordant wit. “I don’t think there’s any division between the ridiculous and the sublime. I don’t make a distinction between the two,” she says. “I just think, what a pity that we just don’t have more fun with language.”

The poet admits that she loves to make an audience laugh at readings. “It’s fun to be in real time, where you can either blow it or you can think of something really good right then,” she says. “It kind of excites the mind to be in mildly frightening circumstances, like in front of an audience of a couple of hundred strangers.”

The Robert Lowell Memorial Lecture is tonight, Monday, April 25, at 7:30 p.m., at the Photonics Center, 8 St. Mary’s St., Room 206. The event is free and open to the public. A question-and-answer session, book-signing, and reception immediately follow.

The Robert Lowell Memorial Lectures are funded by Nancy Livingston (COM’69) and her husband, Fred M. Levin, through the Shenson Foundation, in memory of Ben and A. Jess Shenson.

John O’Rourke can be reached at orourkej@bu.edu.


Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Sexy Sex Robots

I have come across awebsite which I think would give you pleasure.

Sexy Sex Robots You Can Have Sex With

Companionship: it is often difficult and costly to obtain. With these sexy sex robots, it's just costly! They're just like prostitutes, except they are nicer, have made better life choices, and only store razor blades in their underwear if you want them to.




Credit: True Companion, LLC


Roxxxy

Roxxxy is made by True Companion, LLC, which stands for Limited Liability Corporation. That means when she becomes self-aware and simultaneously electrocutes and ingests your genitals, you can’t sue. Roxxxy won’t only lie still and pretend to be back home in Kentucky while you drip monkey sweat all over her, she’ll talk to you, too. She can’t move on her own, but can make pre-recorded sounds through an internal loudspeaker. After you make your abomination, she can talk about all manner of subjects, including the Manchester United “football” team. Because that’s what all men want, right? Incessant chatter after sex? Her creator was, I shit you not, inspired to make the doll after the September 11th attacks. USA! USA!






Credit: Warner Bros.


Pris (Blade Runner)

Pris is a “pleasure model” replicant created to look just like Daryl Hannah cut her own hair with children’s safety scissors and a live wire. She’s kind of hot in a vengeful ghost that stalks the Hot Topic way, but she only has orb modules for the mecha-Aryan Rutger Hauer, who gives her a passionate kiss after Indiana Jones “retires” her with his pistolero.




Credit: honeydolls.jp


Honey Dolls

It’s not just about you—you want to make sure the sex robot’s enjoying herself too, right? The Japanese Honey Dolls will moan and simulate climax as you perform your disgusting worm dance thanks to built-in sensors that activate the MP3 player when touched (the actual sounds come out the speaker in her skullbox). You make a good point: this wouldn’t be a Japanese company without being absolutely fucking disgusting, would it? Ah, we’re in luck: this one has sex dolls modeled on nubile teen girls. While the other dolls have their eyes open, these teen girls are fast asleep “dreaming.” Nice to know you can have a peaceful dream while being ravaged by the man who drugged your wasabi Capri Sun on the subway.








Credit: Le Trung


Source : http://www.ugo.com/tech/11-sexy-sex-robots

Hugh Hefner And Crystal Harris



Hugh Hefner has never been one for tradition. Three girlfriends at one time will do that to a guy. And now, his fiance Crystal Harris is embracing Hef's style by ditching the idea of wearing white to her upcoming wedding. Hefner, 84, will exchange vows with the 24 year old on 18 June and Harris has now revealed she won't be wearing white to the wedding. Instead she is honoring her husband to be by wearing Playboy's signature pink color.

She told People.com, "The dress is not going to be white. I love pink! So, the dress will be pink and Hef and I want the wedding to be just a lot of different colors and to just look beautiful."?



The couple has also ordered a strawberry cake and flowers in fuchsia and turquoise.? Their engagement was announced in December over twitter and drew immediate reaction from Hef's ex-girlfriend Holly Madison. She released a statement saying that she questioned Harris' intentions.

"I'd like to see Hef settle down. I just want it to be with the right person, and I feel like he's making a hasty decision. I'm not sure Crystal is the best thing for him."



Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, 84, is engaged to Crystal Harris, 24. The thrice married Hefner tweets his happiness, saying “this is the happiest Christmas weekend in memory.” I’m sure daughter Christie loves that.


Hugh Hefner and Crystal Harris

Crystal Harris was the December 2009 Playboy Playmate of the Month. Christie Hefner is the 58 year old daughter of Hefner’s first wife, Mildred Williams. She stepped down from her position of Playboy Chairman and CEO in January 2009.


Surprisingly, Hefner says of some portion of his married past he was “faithful to a wife for eight years.”

Crystal Harris

Hugh Hefner excited about impending marriage
Mon, Apr 18, 2011
85-year-old Hugh Hefner excited about his marriage with 24-year-old Crystal Harris.


Playboy owner Hugh Hefner is excited about his marriage to fiancee Crystal Harris in June and says all arrangements have been made.



"I'm not nervous at all, I'm excited, June is a big month. Crystal and I will be in London opening a new club, then we'll come back and get married at the mansion!" Hefner said.



Harris, 24, has made most of the arrangements. Hefner says she is a relaxed bride-to-be. "Everything is in place. She is the one for me!" said Hefner, who will tie the knot for the third time.



"It's going to be a very special year. It's the Chinese year of the rabbit, so the bunny is back!, " Hefner added.



His first wife was Mildred Williams. They married in 1949 and a decade later parted ways. In 1989, Hefner married model Kimberley Conrad. Their divorce came through in 2004 after a separation of 11 years.

Source : Yahoo

Monday, April 18, 2011

Last Supper 'is commemorated a day late'

Last Supper 'is commemorated a day late'
By ANI | ANI – Sun, Apr 17, 2011
Source:in.news.yahoo.com



Sydney, Apr 17 (ANI): A new book by a Cambridge University physicist claims that Jesus Christ's last supper - the final meal that he shared with his 12 Apostles in Jerusalem before his crucifixion - is commemorated a day late.

Prof Colin Humphreys, who was knighted last year for his contribution to science, argues that the last supper Jesus Christ shared occurred on Wednesday, April 1, AD33, rather than on a Thursday as traditionally celebrated in most Christian churches, reports the Sydney Morning Herald.

The theory could explain the apparent inconsistencies between the Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke - which say the Last Supper was a Passover meal - and that of John, which says Jesus was tried and executed before the Jewish festival.

It would also explain another puzzle: why the Bible has not allowed enough time for all events recorded between the Last Supper and the Crucifixion.

Colin's book, 'The Mystery of the Last Supper', out this week, uses astronomy to re-create calendars, plus detail drawn from texts such as the Dead Sea Scrolls to propose a timeline for Jesus' final days.

"The claim I make is that we're misinterpreting some parts of the Gospels because we don't understand sufficiently life in the first century AD," he said.

Colin argues that Jesus celebrated Passover early using the pre-exilic calendar, which the Jews used before their exile in Babylon.

It would have been understood by early Christians as operating alongside the official Jewish calendar, he said.

The theory could be controversial as it questioned traditional beliefs but Colin said the key revelation was of tolerance.

"I think Jesus is really reaching out to all sorts of people when he chooses not to use this official Jewish calendar," he added. (ANI)

Udaipur tailor murder case: Mohammed Riyaz Attari and Ghous Mohammed

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