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Suzanne Lummis : ウィキペディア英語版 | Suzanne Lummis
Suzanne Lummis is a poet, influential teacher, arts organizer and impresario in Los Angeles. She is associated with the poem noir, as well as the sensibility for which she was a major exponent, a literary incarnation of “performance poetry,” the Stand-up Poetry of the 80s and 90s. She is also grouped with “The Fresno Poets.” ==Family Background== Suzanne Lummis is originally from San Francisco. On her father’s side, Suzanne is the granddaughter of Charles Fletcher Lummis, first City Editor of The Los Angeles Times, a position he took on in 1885 after walking across the country from Ohio. He rose to fame as an Indian rights activist, early champion and preservationist of Southern California’s Spanish heritage, and author of several books defining and describing the American Southwest. Her parents, Keith Lummis and Hazel McCausland, met in the San Francisco office of the U.S. Secret Service, back when the agency was under the auspices of the Treasury Department. Keith was a Secret Service agent, and Hazel was the third woman ever to be hired into the office of the Secret Service in the position of secretary.()
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