![]() |
Mariano Barbacid, who leads the Experimental Oncology Group at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), developed a treatment that has successfully and completely eradicated pancreatic tumours in mice, without any major side effects. The discovery was hailed as a potentially significant turning point in the fight against this disease. However, a segment of social media users mocked a birthmark on Barbacid's face and made numerous offensive and superficial comments, rather than recognizing the scientific achievement. —Money Control, January 31, 2026 |
TheNewVerse.News
Today's News . . . Today's Poem
The New Verse News
presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
Guidelines
Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com. No simultaneous submissions. Use "Verse News Submission" as the subject line. Send a brief bio. No payment. Authors retain all rights after 1st-time appearance here. Scroll down the right sidebar for the fine print.
Sunday, February 01, 2026
JUDGEMENT
TO THE REPUBLIC
holds together inside its borders.
Four decades ago, every school day,
I asked one of the twelve-year-olds
in my charge to lead us in the Pledge
of Allegiance. It was the law, this recital.
As good a way as any, I thought, to begin.
Words, words, slippery as jello cubes,
hardly join, now, to anything real.
My heart beats, my hand firms itself
to my chest—this friction, this viva—
but my tongue dare not lift, my lips
not open, my body not burst
with air, with light. America, where
have you gone?
You are in Minneapolis,
America, handing out scarves and hats,
standing beside your neighbors, lifting
whistles to your lips because your lips
have power, your breath has power,
you are teaching us how to be Americans.
AUTHORITARIANISM
by Scott Lowery
No point appealing to the heart
or soul it doesn’t have, so save
your breath. It needs its namelessness,
but name it with too many syllables
and it wins again, the goon squad’s
tracks wiped clean by grocery lists, snow,
football scores. Just four words
on my sign: Breathe Easier—Join Us!
Hah! Not really! jokes the nervous
young marshal in his or her
neon vest at the busy crosswalk—
too cold to breathe easy here today!
It’s what we do at these things—
wry smiles, weather complaints,
bits of chatter to pass around
like balm for our deeper shivering.
Most of us have paid our protest dues
before, are dressed for bitter wind,
giving motorists our cheerful best
reflected back by honks and hand
waves, leaning our way behind unshattered
windshields. Faces like or unlike
ours, bright momentary smiles—
running to Target for toothpaste or beer,
some Happy Meals on the way home,
trying not to see those prices rising like
flood water, halfway up the basement steps.
Give us a good old
disaster any day of the week,
we all know how to pitch right in,
wade through mud and wreckage
in our rubber boots. Same kind
of summons is why we’re here,
boots, signs and all. So, thanks
for the wave but next week join us,
please—all of us breathing easier,
warm bodies out in the cold to say
it plain and clear. Name it Wrong.
Name it Not While I Can Breathe.
JANUARY BOUQUET
The only antidote for America
is to go outside in the freezing cold winter
and dream of the most beautiful city on earth
or even this universe (there may not be any other).
This city is Granada. Inside my house
I think only of Minneapolis, of winter.
Outside my house I dream of Grenada and spring
on the slope leading towards the white limestone caves
where the pink dusk hovers over the Alhambra and the Sierra Nevada.
By day I once walked through the summer palace of the kings of Spain.
By night I listened to flamenco and the percussive shoes of dancers.
By day the stained glass of the cathedral blossomed
like the roses in the summer palace. Beauty softened the blow
of the inquisition six hundred years before
just as a memory of joy softens the blow of the shootings,
and the military on the streets of Minneapolis. Nothing
is more consoling than the dream of a beautiful ruin,
for the ugliness happening to America. I lay memory
like a wreath on the roadside
where Alex Pretti and Renee Good died.
Katherine Smith’s poetry publications include appearances in Southern Review, Boulevard, North American Review, Ploughshares, Mezzo Cammin, Cincinnati Review, Missouri Review, and many other journals. Her first book Argument by Design (Washington Writers’ Publishing House) appeared in 2003. Her second book of poems Woman Alone on the Mountain (Iris Press), appeared in 2014. Her third book, Secret City, appeared with Madville Press in 2022. She works at Montgomery College in Maryland.
WANDERING INTO A DREAM WORLD
by Susan Cornelis
![]() |
| Art by the poet. |
. . .and I’ve wandered into
a dream world I no longer recognize,
teeming with shapes,
twisted
gone
out of bounds
dangerous,
like a cell phone
mistaken for a gun.
So many ways
to get it wrong,
to step where a trap is set.
Too much for this little guy
who sees a featureless white shape,
which seems to be slumbering,
like Fox, who is warm around his neck,
but where is the thing’s head
where is the mouth
where the teeth?
Too much for this little guy
who knows not yet
the art of hiding.
Too much for me
and for you too,
even as we stand here
learning the shape of fear,
trying not to turn away.
Susan Cornelis is an Olympia, WA mixed media artist, workshop teacher and art blogger. Her ekphrastic poetry is an exploration of the emotional content of her paintings. She refers to these as Conversations with the Muse, which are regularly posted on her blog by that name at http://susancornelis.
Saturday, January 31, 2026
AFTER READING "MINNESOTA BRIEF: THINK OF THE CHILDREN" BY BREE DONOVAN
this morning i read this poem
so sad it feels like a stab
to my heart i think
maybe this could move
the right people…
but the ones who need to be moved
are heartless with nothing to stab
and empty of any passion
for reading poetry
| "They Are All Responsible" cartoon by Ann Telnaes |
Laurie Rosen is a lifelong New Englander. Her poetry has appeared in One Art: a journal of poetry, Gyroscope Review, Oddball Magazine, The New Verse News, Minyan Magazine, The Inquisitive Eater: New School Food, Zig Zag Lit Mag, and elsewhere. Laurie was nominated for a 2025 Pushcart Prize.
THE DYING BREATH
In a new image taken by the James Webb Space Telescope, the dying breaths of the star at the heart of the famous Helix Nebula are exposed in wonder and radiance. —Good News Network. Photo: NASA, January 20, 2026
"As above, so below," the famous aphorism by a mythical teacher and a mythical text.
In the Emerald Tablet the ancients already knew about the relationship between the macrocosm and the microcosm. So, as a star dies and we see its dying breath pushing outward like a cloud of seeds to form new stars when their time has come, so the humble dandelion’s delicate umbrella-equipped seeds go with the wind to settle on another meadow and become new dandelions when their time has come, the spiders die soon after producing their egg sacs, and the spiderlings disperse into the world by ballooning: using the breeze and sometimes atmospheric electric fields to travel far, settling, mating, and laying egg sacs when their time has come.
"As above, so below"—instead of neurons sending electrical signals through axons, stars use magnetic field lines. Trees connect through the complex mycelia network, and we have more than 86 billion neurons in the brain, and a more or less equal number of other cells. Neurons and neurotransmitters are our mycelia.
When my grandfather died, I saw a small silver cloud leaving his open mouth.
A German-born UK national, Rose Mary Boehm lives and works in Lima, Peru. Author of two novels, eight poetry collections and one chapbook, her work has been widely published mostly by US poetry journals. A new full-length poetry collection is forthcoming in 2026.
Friday, January 30, 2026
THINGS YOU CAN DO IN 85 SECONDS
| The Doomsday Clock was set at 85 seconds to midnight, the closest the Clock has ever been to midnight in its history. —Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, January 27, 2026. Photo: Jamie Christian |
MINNESOTA BRIEF: THINK OF THE CHILDREN
If you cannot see this as an occupation,
but you do wince about the children
(because after all, at heart, you’re kind), please know:
hundreds of adults in Minnesota are training
as DOPAs—meaning “Delegation of Parental
Authority” designees—so in the event children’s parents
are kidnapped and detained who knows where or
deported who knows where, and their children
no longer have mami, hooyo, pa, they do have,
some have, a DOPA. A someone, DOPA, if not papi.
If children are your occasional concern, because of course
the children of the hunted could be innocent until proven
guilty, please know: the ones in children’s hospice
(in case you’ve thought of them, yes there are
hospices just for children), each have a nurse,
so far not deported, enfermera, kalkaalisada,
and a DOPA on file in case they die
without their waalidka, their Pa-Moe
If children are a now and then concern, pro tip:
a DOPA can be an aunt, npawg, grandfather,
pu, neighbor, pii chai, or attorney. As long
as DOPA papers are signed, the npawg,
neighbor, auntie has the legal right (temporarily
but who actually knows) to decide about schools,
medical care, care in general (will they know
of allergies, asthma, bedwetting, things only parents
know?). Pii chai become waalidka, attorney
If children cross your mind—if—carry on:
parents of disabled children, of children still at home
ages 3 days to 17 years, parents who must keep
working and worry some night as they walk
to their car out the service door they will be taken,
dread this vividly, continuously, while feeding, holding,
tucking in their children, their deepest concern, seeing
their own abductions play out behind their children’s stories
of dinosaurs and flying tigers and apps and places
where it’s always warm and ice cream is free on trees,
these parents have pre-erased themselves with DOPAs.
DOPAs mean their children, their abiding broken-hearted
concern, might continue to be cared for somehow for some time.
Thursday, January 29, 2026
FOR MINNEAPOLIS
you will die by noon
driving in your car
walking on the street
after you are gone
you see a picture of the gun
flesh as good as ashes
blood as good as painted pain
But in that morning you just know
yesterday your neighbor was brave
so today you must be too
The boundary between trust and fear
torn open
We are all ash
We are all brave.
Ruth Lehrer is a sign language interpreter and Pushcart-nominated poet living in western Massachusetts. She is the author of the young adult novel Being Fishkill.
WHAT WORDS MEAN
For Alex Pretti, Nurse Executed by ICE Agents
They say “domestic terrorist.”
We say “citizen.”
They say “violent radical.”
We say “peaceful protestor.”
They say “he brandished a gun.”
We say “he had a phone.”
They say “absolute immunity.”
We say “first amendment.”
At the end of each sentence a life is at stake. It’s how
words form in the mouth. Some unfold like a flower
scenting the air with an aroma
reminding you of a summer day
when you knew your mother and father
loved you and time seemed
endless, full of light and warmth.
But other words form like an ache
where the bullet entered
and a pain where it blew out
the other side, red
not just with the usual blood,
but with speech and every other right.
Michael T. Young's fourth collection, Mountain Climbing a River, was just published by Broadstone Books. His third full-length collection, The Infinite Doctrine of Water, was longlisted for the Julie Suk Award. He received a Fellowship from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts and the Jean Pedrick Chapbook Award. His poetry has been featured on Verse Daily and The Writer’s Almanac. It has also appeared in numerous journals including Chiron Review, The Journal of New Jersey Poets, Mid-Atlantic Review, and Vox Populi.
HOW MUCH CAN WE TAKE?
by Lynne Kemen
after viewing “Continuous Form” by Nishimura Yuko (Japan) 2020—washi paper
The paper is impossibly twisted, pleated
like skirts used to be. How is it possible
that this is paper? Nishimura Yuko's washi
folding into itself, holding a shape
it shouldn't hold.
On the wall behind, faces
also impossibly shaped, bearing witness,
watching.
Tensile strength. The word makes me think
of tension, how it translates to my own body
squirming to get comfortable, no longer able
to hold erect posture. Two total knee replacements.
Back pain. Neck pain. I'm so tired.
Pretti is our conscience. One of the helpers
who always shows up, who cares about others,
who refuses to look away. His phone
documenting what shouldn't be happening,
what we need to see.
I used to protest the Vietnam war. Kent State
terrified me—that girl kneeling, her mouth open,
screaming over the body. Some photographs
are that raw, that perfectly horrific.
Once I see them, they're in my DNA somehow,
in my body.
I can't stand for long periods now.
And I know I cannot look away.
So many do. They don't think it affects them—
until it does.
The sculpture before us, still whole.
Those circular faces, still watching.
We know fabric tears.
Lynne Kemen is the author of Shoes for Lucy (SCE Press, 2023) and More Than a Handful (Woodland Arts Editions, 2020). Her work has appeared in One Art, The Ekphrastic Review, MacQueen's Quinterly, and elsewhere. She received a 2024 Pushcart Prize nomination and serves as Editor/Interviewer for The Blue Mountain Review. She is currently working on two full-length poetry volumes. Lynne lives in rural Delaware County, New York.


