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| PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENTS 30 seconds Entering the competition is easy. Just submit an essay of 750 words or less by April 1, 2011 (postmark date). You may send your essay in one of three ways: through the mail to Great American Think-Off, New York Mills Regional Cultural Center, P.O. Box 246, New York Mills, MN 56567 or email to nymills@kulcher.org (no attachments), or enter through our online form at www.think-off.org. Finalists will be selected on May 1, 2011 and the great debate will be held before a live audience in NY Mills on Saturday, June 11th. 60 seconds America’s premier amateur philosophy contest, The Great American Think-Off, releases its 2011 essay and debate question: "Does Poetry Matter?" The New York Mills Regional Cultural Center in rural northwest Minnesota will host this 19th annual Think-Off with live debate (June 11th, 2011). The debate follows an essay contest with entry deadline of April 1st, 2011. Four finalist essay writers will be selected and invited to participate in the debate in June. A $500 cash prize is awarded to each finalist as well as travel and lodging. Entering the competition is easy. Just submit an essay of 750 words or less by April 1, 2011 (postmark date). You may send your essay in one of three ways: through the mail to Great American Think-Off, New York Mills Regional Cultural Center, P.O. Box 246, New York Mills, MN 56567 or email to nymills@kulcher.org (no attachments), or enter through our online form at www.think-off.org. Finalists will be selected on May 1, 2011 and the great debate will be held before a live audience in NY Mills on Saturday, June 11th. New York Mills Regional Cultural Center is a non-profit rural art and culture organization committed to encouraging a dialogue among all Americans that considers important values and questions for our time. This year the focus is on poetry (and the broader field of all the arts). Essayists and debaters may wish to address the role of the poet (artist) in society, whether poetry (and art) can be a vehicle for change either personally or in the larger world, and in what way poetry may play a role in the creation of community, beauty, and creating new ways of perceiving the people and world around us.
90 seconds America’s premier amateur philosophy contest, The Great American Think-Off, releases its 2011 essay and debate question: "Does Poetry Matter?" The New York Mills Regional Cultural Center in rural northwest Minnesota will host this 19th annual Think-Off with live debate (June 11th, 2011). The debate follows an essay contest with entry deadline of April 1st, 2011. Four finalist essay writers will be selected and invited to participate in the debate in June. A $500 cash prize is awarded to each finalist as well as travel and lodging. Entering the competition is easy. Just submit an essay of 750 words or less by April 1, 2011 (postmark date). You may send your essay in one of three ways: through the mail to Great American Think-Off, New York Mills Regional Cultural Center, P.O. Box 246, New York Mills, MN 56567 or email to nymills@kulcher.org (no attachments), or enter through our online form at www.think-off.org. Finalists will be selected on May 1, 2011. New York Mills Regional Cultural Center is a non-profit rural art and culture organization committed to encouraging a dialogue among all Americans that considers important values and questions for our time. This year the focus is on poetry (and the broader field of all the arts). Essayists and debaters may wish to address the role of the poet (artist) in society, whether poetry (and art) can be a vehicle for change either personally or in the larger world, and in what way poetry may play a role in the creation of community, beauty, and creating new ways of perceiving the people and world around us. Successful contestants have grounded their argument in personal experience. The judges are looking for essays that address the value and usefulness of poetry by speaking about personal experience rather than abstract philosophical reasoning. Tell a good story that shows a firm standing on one side or the other of the question, “Does poetry matter?”
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