Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Two Indian-Americans Selected For Prestigious Poet Program

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Sep, 2016 01:43 PM
    Two Indian-American teens are among five students selected for the prestigious National Students Poets Program, the White House has announced.
     
    US First Lady Michelle Obama would welcome the budding poets, including Indian-Americans Maya Eashwaran and Gopal Raman, at the White House on September 8, an official announcement said.
     
    Eashwaran (17) is from Alpharetta in Georgia and Raman is from Dallas in Texas. The other three are Stella Binion from Chicago, Joey Reisberg from Towson in Maryland and Maya Salameh from San Diego in California.
     
    Since its inception in 2011, the National Student Poets Program has showcased the essential role of writing and the arts in academic and personal success for audiences across the country.
     
    Each year, the five National Student Poets are chosen from a pool of outstanding writers, grades 9-11, who have received a national Scholastic Art and Writing Award for poetry.
     
    A first generation Indian-American, Eashwaran writes about foreigners, often incorporating personal experiences dealing with assimilation in the modern age.
     
    For Raman, a senior at St Mark's School of Texas, poetry distills images and emotions into a form that brings people together. He cites poets like Billy Collins, Wallace Stevens, and Walt Whitman as his inspirations.
     
     
    This is the first time that Indian Americans have made it to the prestigious program.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Canadian Swimmer Oleksiak Says Rio Has Been A 'Weird, Unreal Experience'

    Canadian Swimmer Oleksiak Says Rio Has Been A 'Weird, Unreal Experience'
    RIO DE JANEIRO — Canadian teen swimming sensation Penny Oleksiak had a hard time getting some shut-eye after winning her second medal at the Rio Olympics on Sunday night.

    Canadian Swimmer Oleksiak Says Rio Has Been A 'Weird, Unreal Experience'

    Syrian Refugee Swimmer Wins Heat, Won't Advance In Butterfly

    Syrian Refugee Swimmer Wins Heat, Won't Advance In Butterfly
    Mardini's time of 1:9.21 put her 41st overall in the preliminary round, and only the top 16 swimmers moved on to the late-night semifinals. Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden had the top qualifying time of 56.26 seconds.

    Syrian Refugee Swimmer Wins Heat, Won't Advance In Butterfly

    Muslim Woman Fired From Work For Wearing Hijab In US

    Najaf said she would likely refuse an offer to return to the dental office.

    Muslim Woman Fired From Work For Wearing Hijab In US

    Pregnant Woman Burnt Alive In Pakistan By Former Fiance

    In a horrific incident, a 23-year-old pregnant woman was burnt alive by her former fiance in this Pakistan city after she married his younger brother.

    Pregnant Woman Burnt Alive In Pakistan By Former Fiance

    Keep It Simple: ISIS Tells Western Recruits On 'Spontaneous' Attacks

    Keep It Simple: ISIS Tells Western Recruits On 'Spontaneous' Attacks
    The dreaded ISIS has instructed its Western terror recruits to embark upon "simple and effective" spontaneous attacks rather than making "intricate" plans in the latest edition of its online propaganda magazine.

    Keep It Simple: ISIS Tells Western Recruits On 'Spontaneous' Attacks

    Suicide Bomber Kills 70 In Pakistan, Media Says 93 Dead

    A suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowded hospital here on Monday killing 70 people and injuring over 100 in one of the worst terror attacks in Pakistan this year, authorities said. The Quetta media, however, put the death toll at 93.

    Suicide Bomber Kills 70 In Pakistan, Media Says 93 Dead