From Funds for Writers:
LATINO U! – http://www.icaramba.com/magazine—The mission of this magazine is to “provide an entertaining, informative and educational resource for Latino college and high school students.” Pays but negotiates figure.
COLLEGEBOUND TEEN – http://www.collegeboundteen.com – Advises high school teens about college life and life decisions. Pays $70 – $100 for features.
GUIDEPOSTS SWEET 16 – http://www.guidepostssweet16mag.com/guidelines.html – General interest magazine for girls ages 11 to 17. True stories pay $300-$500. Shorter manuscripts of 100 to 750 words pay $100-$300. Pays on acceptance. Buys all rights.
LISTEN MAGAZINE- http://www.listenmagazine.org/ � Encourages development of good habits and is used primarily in public high schools. Pays on acceptance from $80 -$150. Accepts simultaneous submissions.
CAMPUS LIFE- http://www.campuslife.net – Dedicated to high school and early college-age teenagers. Editorial slant is not overtly religious. Pays 15 � 20 cents/word minimum. Pays on acceptance.
SEVENTEEN – http://www.seventeen.com – “Seventeen is a young women�s first fashion and beauty magazine.” Accepts articles of interest to young women on relationships and personal potential. Pays $1/ word on acceptance.
***
STONE QUARRY HILL ART PARK ARTISTS-IN-RESIDENCE
http://www.stonequarryhillartpark.org/artists_artistinresidence.htm
—
Stone Quarry Hill Art Park offers residencies of up to four weeks, without pre-determined deadlines or terms. Applicants may be visual artists working in any discipline, or artists working in other creative fields, including writing, poetry, dance, music or theatre. Set on more than one hundred acres of woods, meadows, ponds and wetlands, the Art Park�s mission is to showcase and provide for emerging and established artists whose work focuses on the relationships between art and nature. Accommodation costs may be waived in exchange for work left on loan(pending Exhibition Committee approval) or facilitation of a workshop or other community dialogue/collaboration. Location Cazenovia, NY.
=====
AMY CLAMPITT RESIDENCY FUND
http://www.berkshiretaconic.org/pdf/Clampitt%20Application.pdf
—
Seeks to “benefit poetry and the literary arts by convertingAmy Clampitt’s prior residence into a facility which wouldprovide for a place to foster the study and promotion ofpoetry or a poet in residence” through six-to-twelve-monthresidencies. Location Lenox, MA. Grants for travel to andfrom the house are available based upon need. A monthlystipend of $2,500 is paid to the resident. Will be asked to give a reading locally. Deadline June 30, 2006.
=====
PT MAGAZINE
http://www.apta.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Author_Guidelines
—
PT-Magazine of Physical Therapy is the professional issues magazine of the American Physical Therapy Association Inc (APTA). Articles considered for publication in PT Magazine typically address practical issues (e.g., management techniques, documentation, the patient-therapist relationship, professional development, education, and the changing health care environment). Pays over $500.
=====
SEATTLE MAGAZINE
http://www.seattlemag.com/writers.asp
—
The average department length story (1,200 words) pays about $250 and the average feature length story (2,000-3,000 words) pays from $400-$1,000, depending on the story. Seattle magazine is the voice of the city�an “owner�s manual” for urban residents of the Puget Sound area. From humorous essays on life in the Northwest to signature pieces such as “Top Doctors” to hard-hitting, investigative stories that offer insight into a local issue, Seattle magazine covers everything that makes our city unique, cosmopolitan�and uniquely Northwest.
=====
CHILE PEPPER
http://www.chilepepper.com/about/
—
Published six times per year, each issue contains the latest on flavorful products, restaurants, recipes, events and celebrity chefs. Articles are 1,000 to 3,000 and pay $600 and up. Accepts postal or email.
======
MONTANA ARTS COUNCIL
Professional Grants
http://www.art.state.mt.us/artists/artists_pdgrant.asp
—
Professional Development Grants are given throughout the year to enable the Council to respond to artists’, teachers’, or organizations’ professional development needs. Grants will not exceed $1,000 for organizations and $750 for individuals, and decisions will be dictated by the availability of funds and the nature of the request. Grants must be matched dollar-for-dollar in cash and in kind goods and services.
======
EWW FEST AWARDS
http://ewwfest.com/contestsawards.html
—
Eugene Walter Award for Best Novel
First Place � $1,000
Second Place � $150
Third Place � $75
Termite Hall Screenplay Award
First Place � winning screenplay will be read by a Hollywood
producer.
Vivian Smallwood Poetry Award
First Place � $100
Second Place � $50
Third Place � $25
William March Short Story Award
First Place � $100
Second Place � $50
Third Place � $25
Novel: $30 per entry; submit the FIRST 25,000 words of a completed manuscript, double spaced, standard margins, black ink against white paper, no fancy script fonts. Short story: $15 per entry; entry not to exceed 7,250 words; double-spaced, standard margins. Screenplay: $25 per entry; entry must be complete in 25,000 words or less. Poetry: $5 per entry; each poem not to exceed 30 lines. First-place winners’ entries will be published or excerpted in Oracle, a literary journal available at the conference.
=====
SIENA COLLEGE INTERNATIONAL PLAYWRIGHTS COMPETITION
http://www.siena.edu/theatre/playwrights.asp
—
NO ENTRY FEE
Seeks submission of previously unproduced, unpublished scripts for production during the college�s 2006-2007 academic year. A cash prize of $2,000 plus expenses for a campus residency will be awarded to the winning playwright.Deadline June 30, 2006.