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Campus to Remain Closed on February 20

Due to lingering hazardous driving conditions on rural and side roads from the recent winter precipitation, Arkansas State University's academic and business offices will remain closed on Thursday, Feb. 20.  Subfreezing temperatures forecasted for tonight are expected to further impact road safety.  

The well-being of our Red Wolves pack is our number one priority, and we encourage everyone to exercise caution and remain mindful of the conditions.

Currently, we anticipate returning to normal operations on Friday, Feb. 21.

Revised Facility Hours:

  • Dining Services will open the Acansa Dining Hall from 10:30 a.m. until 7 p.m.  Howl's Grill, Starbucks, and other retail locations will be open from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. as staffing allows.

  • The Dean B. Ellis Library will be open from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. 

  • The Reng Student Union will be open from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m.

  • The Red WOLF Center will be open from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. 

Event Updates and Rescheduling:

  • If your department or organization has a scheduled event impacted by the recent inclement weather, email calendar@AState.edu to update the centralized campus calendar.

All campus residents are reminded to monitor official university media, including official social media accounts for updates. 

Emergency Contact
University Police
870-972-2093

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News Article

Writers Participate in Fall Retreat

11/29/2016

PIGGOTT — Eleven talented writers recently came together to hone their skills at the annual Fall Writers’ Retreat at the Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum and Educational Center (HPMEC). The HPMEC is the site where acclaimed novelist Ernest Hemingway penned much of his iconic novel A Farewell to Arms.

Andrea Hollander of Portland, Ore., was the mentor for the retreat.  Her focus for the week was “memory and imagination.”  Hollander is the author of four full-length poetry collections, including Landscape with Female Figure: New and Selected Poems, a finalist for the Oregon Book Award; Woman in the Painting; The Other Life; and House Without a Dreamer, which won the Nicholas Roerich Poetry Prize. 

Other honors include an Oregon Literary Fellowship, two Pushcart Prizes (in poetry and prose memoir), the D. H. Lawrence Fellowship, the Runes Poetry Prize, two poetry fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, and two from the Arkansas Arts Council. 

Her poems and essays have appeared in numerous anthologies, college textbooks and literary journals. For 22 years she served as the writer-in-residence at Lyon College, where she was awarded the Lamar Williamson Prize for Excellence in Teaching. She teaches workshops at the Attic Institute and Mountain Writers Series. 

Writers began each day with time to write and later came together to share and discuss their work. They enjoyed lunch together at the educational center and ended the afternoon with a group meeting to reflect, share and discuss the processes used by each writer.  The format allowed writers time to focus on their own creative interests, to receive feedback on their work and to form relationships with other writers.  

Writers’ retreats are held twice annually at the Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum in Piggott.  The next retreat is scheduled for June 5-9, 2017, with Craig Albin of Springfield, Mo., serving as mentor.  For more information, contact the museum at (870) 598-3487 or email the director of HPMEC, Dr. Adam Long, at adamlong@AState.edu.

2016 Fall Writers' Retreat.jpg


Fall Writers’ Retreat participants: (Left to right) Bottom Row—Kody Ford (Fayetteville), Pat Laster (Benton), Sandra Harrison (Fisk, Mo.). Second Row—Herb Sennett (West Palm Beach, Fla.), Fay Guinn (Jonesboro), Vicky Braden (Pollard). Third Row—Gloria Bridges (Paragould), Linda Wyss (Piggott), Andrea Hollander (mentor, Portland, Ore.), Back Row—Talya Tate Boerner (Fayetteville), Darla Haas (Maumelle), Ed Graves (Little Rock).