Wednesday, November 16, 2011

WCC and young writer Nicole Bednarski big winners!




WCC Journalists Win 29 Awards in State Contest

Journalists for WCC’s student newspaper, The Washtenaw Voice, recently received 29 awards in the annual Michigan Press Association Best Collegiate Newspaper Contest. The honors included the General Excellence Award for best overall student newspaper and first place for online newspaper.
The Voice staff took first place in 15 of the 21 contest categories for issues published during the 2010-11 academic year. The awards were announced Sept. 30. WCC winners include:


Nicole Bednarski: First, investigative reporting; third, news story

    Monday, November 7, 2011

    Portugal/Spain Odyssey


    There are times in a life when against received wisdom, we take ourselves away from responsibilities and entanglements and into a challenge of our own choosing because it simply feels like we must. We feel depleted. We’ve lost our internal compass. Our bodily tuning is off. What’s needed is a cosmic course correction out of our daily lives. If we are very lucky, the means and opportunity to embark on such a voyage align with a willingness of those in our lives to let us go.

    decorative plaque, Cordoba

             Thus did the Northport Muse bring her sluggish body and tired heart to sunny Portugal and Spain for a 16-day odyssey that began with a 10-day bicycle trip from Lisbon to Grenada and ended with a family visit in Madrid and Barcelona.  Travel to find oneself is a cliché, but using one’s body to propel a bicycle through countryside studded with Roman ruins, olive groves, sheep and cattle, castles, Celtic standing stones and medieval towns with stories from the ages does hone the muscles and oxygenate the spirit.



    Arraiolos

    Day one, October 16, was the shakedown ride with introductions of the 10 cyclists and 3 guides, fitting of bikes and an easy 14 miles from Arraiolos to Evora.  Arraiolos is a small town north of Lisbon that is known for its long history of artisanship in the making of needle pointed carpets.  At 300 Euros/square meter, it's more expensive than most house construction.  Pedro, Luis, and Jorge are our guides; young, knowledgeable, avid cyclists, and fine looking. They ride with us, tell us about the towns and regions, their history, culture and flora, and then deliver our luggage to our rooms, order our dinners, (banquets really) and otherwise see to it that we enjoy our adventure.  I am introduced Andy (On-dee), my roommate; we are the two “singles” of the 10 riders.  Andy is from Austin Tx, where she works as a corporate trainer and recruiter in the IT department at National Instruments, a global company that produces technical testing devices. She has just spent two weeks in Hungary doing training for her company.
         
    Our ride is dry...ancient structures popping up in fields with sheep, cows and horses and burned out grass. Evora, a world heritage site has an architecturally hodgepodge cathedral dating back to pre-Roman times, and a Roman ruin that some believe honors the goddess Diana. It comes to me that I wish this to be true.  Diana was a warrior goddess and it is the warrior inside that I’ve come to reclaim.


    Roman Temple to Diana; Evora

    View from Cathedral Roof-Evora


    There’s a Moorish influence here as elsewhere all across the Iberian Peninsula.  I will come to understand and appreciate the depth of that influence. Evora has more churches than one can count, including the chapel of bones; built entirely from human skeletal remains, a grisly reminder that our time on earth is limited and we are obliged to make it worthwhile. Tempus fugit, carpe diem etc. 




    A buffet lunch and wonderful dinner featured garbanzo and black-eyed pea salads, cod and swordfish-like fish and lamb dishes; all traditional and delicious. 
    Tasty lunch in Evora
    Evora is a center of cork growing and production. Cork is made into everything; hats, belts, bracelets, ties eve n. The flavor of Portugal is mellow, warm, tasty, low drama yet complex. The exploration of the new world is still its finest hour; 400 years ago. The tug of war between Moorish and Christian influence is embedded in the national character, with Christianity the poor victor. Jorge tells us that the Portuguese invited the Crusaders to stop by and get rid of the Moors on their way to Jerusalem:  shocking but interesting.



     Day 2- October 17.  Evora - Estremoz - Alter do Chao
              
           Estremoz, as promised, is a lovely little medieval town surrounded by vineyards and famous for its many white marble quarries that supplied the stone for Evora's Roman temple as well as its 13th-century Cathedral. Portugal is the world's second leading exporter of marble and it is this same crystalline rock that appears in many of the region's cobblestone-patterned squares, sculptures, monuments and fountains. Prominent in the town is an outsize marble statue of Santa Isabella; a queen of Portugal who devoted her life to the poor. King Dinis and his Queen Isabel lived in the early 14th century. The king disapproved of Isabela’s giving alms to the poor, so she hid the bread she was carrying for them in the folds of her skirt. When the suspicious king asked her to show him what she was carrying, the bread had miraculously turned into white roses. The marble statue of the queen now stands on the castle terrace. There is a simple timeless beauty to the obelisk shaped work of art and her face reminds me instantly of a young friend at home whose name is: Isobel!  Uncanny. 



    Santa Isabel- Estremoz

    Tuesday, September 20, 2011


    Welcome to the publication of “The Windward Shore: A Winter on the Great Lakes” by Jerry Dennis, nature and science writer, philosopher, writing teacher and guest at the Northport lake house (which is one of the settings for this new book!) A fellow traveler in the wonder of the north country and big water, Jerry has written about winter and life where the Northport muse loves to be…. Check it out!
    In this follow-up to his widely praised, award-winning The Living Great Lakes, Dennis chronicles a winter spent exploring the shores of Lake Michigan and Lake Superior and musing on the nature of time, weather, waves, books, our complex relationship with nature, and much more.
    Page:

    Thursday, March 31, 2011

    posted by Claudia at Claudia Whitsitt - 18 hours ago
    It’s easy to see why I’m the luckiet girl in the world. I have a loving family who supports all of my ventures. And I have this amazing writers group. Yes, there’s Patty to my left. She writes romance. Sh...

    Monday, January 10, 2011

    New Author!

    The Northport Muse invites readers to check out the debut novel by Claudia Teal Whitsitt, The Wrong Guy, available as an e-book at Echelon Press or Amazon.com. Claudia’s novel is loosely based on The Michigan Murders, seven serial murders of co-eds that occurred in Washtenaw county from 1967-1969. It is a coming of age story ripe with romance, mystery, and suspense.The book will be available March 1, 2011. Check out the trailer! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdeRrhYVaas

    Musical and spiritual muse departs...

    A truly beautiful spirit, and musical inspiration to many, Debbie Friedman has passed away. Her gift was to confirm and validate the deepest connection to Judaism as a spiritual journey for those who find it through song. Her concerts, her liturgical compositions and the expansive generosity of her spirit remain.

    To hear her... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUp2MTfyfrI&feature=player_embedded
    Debbie Friedman performs at Limmud Conference at the University of Warwick on December 26, 2010.