Saturday, October 31, 2009

RUMBLE @ THE HARTFORD CLUB: Gaby Versus The Iceman, A CT Young Writers Triple Knockout Event ...



ANNOUNCEMENT:

CT Young Writers
Triple Knockout Event
At The Hartford Club Jan. 15, 2010


  • CT Young Writers Trust Website



  • Eclectic Hartford Club Event
    Celebrates Young Writers Competition;
    Notes Entry Deadline

    Open Writing Workshops,
    Readings By Poets & Writers,
    Jen Allen Big Band & Live Boxing


    CEU Credits Granted For Teachers



    More Than $182,000 For Teenage Writers Since 1998
    CT Young Writers Trust
    Surges Into 13th Year
    With Strong Grassroots Support


    HARTFORD, Conn. Oct. 31, 2009 -- The Connecticut Young Writers Trust kicks off its 13th year with vigor and pizazz Jan. 15, 2010 at
  • The Hartford Club


  • "GABY VERSUS THE ICEMAN" is a CT Young Writers Triple Knockout Event: Prose, Poetry And Pugilism.

    The day begins at 11 a.m. with open workshops on the teaching and writing of poetry and the teaching and writing of sports stories. Continuing education credits will be granted to teachers for the workshops and other events including dialogue with poets, writers, musicians and boxers.

    The Jen Allen Big Band -- featuring vocalists including DominiQue Rivers and Laura McCabe -- will perform during lunch.

  • Jen Allen Big Band @ Twain House May 2009


  • Jen Allen Big Band @ Litchfield Inn June 2008


  • Well-known and highly-regarded poets and writers enter the ring after lunch.

    In the main event, poet Gabrielle "She Be Stinging" Calvocoressi and "Iceman" John Scully -- the trainer and former light heavyweight contender -- will read from their works. (A complete listing of poets and writers follows.)

    The evening will conclude with the singing of The National Anthem by Rivers -- a student at Hartford Conservatory -- and a boxing exhibition. The bouts are being organized by Scully; Sammy Vega, a seven-time national amateur champion now working as a paralegal; and Mike Mike "Machine Gun" Oliver, a reigning New England and Eastern Boxing Association Junior Featherweight Champion.

    Co-Masters of Ceremonies are: Rand "Blood" Cooper, the novelist and travel writer for Bon Appetit; "Irish" Ravi Shankar, the poet and Central Connecticut State University English professor; and attorney Jeffrey "No Dice" Dressler, a long-time advocate for education and boxing in Hartford and a boxing announcer.

    The Bookworm of West Hartford will serve as vendor for the event and will take advance orders with reasonable notice.

    Since 1998, the Young Writers Trust has awarded more than $182,000 to Connecticut teenagers. More than 5,000 young poets and writers have competed in the program.

    The Connecticut State University System is the primary donor for prize money. Prize money and expenses are also funded by banks, law and real estate firms, the Litchfield-Morris Rotary, numerous businesses including a construction firm, a wine merchant, a publishing firm, restaurants, bookstores, an art gallery, a tree care firm and a printing company. Sponsors are noted via display ads in the annual program.

    Teenage writers, ages 13-18, are being encouraged to submit original entries to the annual literary competition which also offers state champions an opportunity to have their work published in the literary journal of the Connecticut State University System, Connecticut Review.

    Entry forms for the 2010 competition will be handed out at the Hartford Club event. Forms are currently available on line at the Connecticut State University System site, http://www.ct.edu/community/ctyoungwriters.htm

    During this academic year, two young writers from each of Connecticut's eight counties will win cash awards for either prose or poetry writing. Entries must be nominated by a teacher in a public or private school, and postmarked on or before February 1, 2010. Home school entries are also accepted. (In 2009, there were about 580 entries.)

    Central Connecticut State University in New Britain, Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic, Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven, and Western Connecticut State University in Danbury will receive the initial entries and host county award ceremonies in April 2010. Entries are sent directly to one of the universities, depending upon the county in which the student lives (see list at CSU System Young Writers website).

    From the select group of county winners, a distinguished panel of judges will select the state's top poet and writer at a dinner and awards ceremony held in late May or early June 2010. The 2009 event was held at the Mark Twain House & Museum. Winners are also interviewed by local media, and have their work highlighted on the website of the Connecticut State University System.

    A home-schooled student from Redding and a student at Westover School in Middlebury were awarded the top statewide prizes in prose and poetry May 31, 2009 in the 12th annual IMPAC-Connecticut State University System Young Writers competition.

    The competition highlights works of poetry and prose submitted by teenagers from throughout the state. A panel of judges selected works submitted by Emma Lowenberg,16, of the Lowenberg Home School in Redding, for her story, "Bernard," and Felicity Sheehy, 16, of Westover School of Middlebury, for her poem, "Evening Conversation."

    At the annual awards celebration, held at Hartford's Mark Twain House & Museum for the first time, both students received $1,000 for their efforts. Lowenberg and Sheehy also were awarded $500 in April after being named, respectively, prose and poetry winners in Fairfield and New Haven counties.

    A complete listing of all county and state champions since 1998 is included in the 2009 program.

    Poets and writers appearing at The Hartford Club Jan. 15, 2010:

    * Robert "The Breeze" Leuci -- Treat Williams played Leuci's character in the movie, "The Prince of the City." The former NYPD detective reveals the full range of his career in the memoir, "All The Centurions." Leuci's novels include "Doyle's Disciples," "Odessa Beach" and "Renegades." Leuci teaches at the University of Rhode Island.

    * "Merciless" Amy Ma -- Ma is the 2001 State Poetry Champion. She currently teaches for the Hartford Public Schools. Ma earned her undergraduate English degree from Wesleyan and a Masters from Central Connecticut State University. Ma has been a keynote speaker for two annual dinners.

    * Binnie "The Demon Barber" Klein -- Klein, a psychotherapist and lecturer at Yale Medical School, is the author of "Blows To The Head: How Boxing Changed My Mind." The book is a memoir including Klein's experiences in the ring and her observations of The Sweet Science. She hosts a weekly music and interview show on WPKN Bridgeport, CT and Montauk, NY.

    * Shouhua "Hard Rock" Qi -- Qi, a professor of English at Western Connecticut State University, is the author of "When the Purple Mountain Burns," "Red Guard Fantasies and Other Stories" and a dozen other books. "Red Guard Fantasies" is dedicated to his father, who was a middle school principal during the Cultural Revolution. Like many other so-called elites, Qi's father suffered intense physical degradation. He was forced to kneel on broken glass with a wooden chalkboard hung around his neck while being denounced by angry mobs. The volume has 14 stories about Chinese society transforming after the Cultural Revolution, including the signature Red Guard Fantasies.

    * Rich "Six Heads" Esposito - Esposito is the author of "Bomb Squad: A Year Inside The Nation's Most Exclusive Police Unit." Esposito is a winner of the George Polk Award for Television Reporting, is a reporter and producer on ABC News. He is the recipient of the Silurian and Deadline Club Awards, two Associated Press Awards, and shares in a Pulitzer Prize.

    * Chandra "Bonecrusher" Prasad -- Prasad is a writer and editor with an established track record in both fiction and nonfiction. Most recently, Prasad completed a novel based on the life of Amelia Earhart. It is called "Breathe the Sky." Wally Lamb, author of The Hour I First Believed," writes that "Breathe the Sky" is, "by turns, an adventure story, a love story, and a cautionary tale about the double-edged sword of modern American celebrity. From lift-off to landing, [it] is a novel that soars." Prasad is also the author of "On Borrowed Wings," a novel set in Depression-era Connecticut. On Borrowed Wings is about a quarryman's daughter who attends a prestigious university in 1936 in the guise of a boy. A graduate of Yale, Prasad is the originator and editor of, and a contributor to, "Mixed: An Anthology of Short Fiction on the Multiracial Experience." Her works have appeared in The New York Times, The New York Times Magazine, The Week, Teen Voices, and The Wall Street Journal, among others. In addition, her short stories have been printed in numerous literary forums, including Faultline, the University of California at Irvine's Pushcart prize-winning journal.

    * Kate "La Terrible" Rushin -- Rushin is the author of "The Black Back-Ups" (Firebrand Books). Her "The Bridge Poem" appears in "This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color," a ground-breaking feminist anthology edited by CherrĆ­e Moraga and Gloria E. AnzaldĆŗa. Recipient of the Rose Low Rome Memorial Poetry Prize and the Grolier Poetry Prize, her work is widely anthologized and has been published in such journals as Callaloo. A Connecticut resident, Kate currently teaches creative writing at the Greater Hartford Academy of the Arts. Previously, she taught at Wesleyan University, where she served as Director of the Center of African-American Studies, Associate Professor and Visiting Writer. She has read at Hill-Stead Museum's Sunken Garden Poetry Festival, the Geraldine Dodge Poetry Festival and Smith College Poetry Center, among many other places, and has led workshops for the Omega Institute for Holistic Studies and Cave Canem Foundation. She has served as a judge for the Connecticut Young Writers Award, the Connecticut Poetry Circuit Student Poetry Contest, and the NEA's/Poetry Foundation's Poetry Out Loud. Rushin received her B.A. from Oberlin College and her M.F.A. from Brown University. She is a former Fellow of The Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown and a graduate fellow of Cave Canem Foundation.

    * Franz "Onions Oregenato" Douskey -- Douskey teaches creative writing at Gateway Community College in New Haven. He has been published in more than 150 journals and magazines including the New Yorker, Rolling Stone and Yankee. A featured guest at New Haven's Festival of Arts &Ideas, Douskey's books include "Rowing Across The Dark" and "Indecent Exposure." He is a founding board member of the Connecticut Young Writers Trust and has served as a judge every year of the competition. Douskey is also the author of the forthcoming biography, "The Unknown Sinatra." He currently produces and co-hosts a weekly radio show with musician Bud Finch on 1220 am, WQUN, Quinnipiac University. The show, "Once Upon a Bandstand," is one of the station's most popular programs.

    * "Iceman" John Scully -- Scully is a prolific writer and a commentator for ESPN classic fights. Excerpts of Scully's manuscript -- The Iceman Diaries -- draw numerous comments in posts at his website IcemanJohnScully.com and on his Facebook page. Scully won numerous amateur championships including the Ohio State Fair in 1987. He defeated a national amateur champion, Darin Allen. Scully turned professional in 1988, just three years after graduating from Windsor High School. He fought for the International Boxing Federation world light heavyweight championship in Leipzig, Germany, in 1996, losing a 12-round decision to Henry Maske. In a controversial bout, Scully connected regularly against two-time world champion Michael Nunn for the World Boxing Organization - North American Boxing Organization super middleweight title, but lost by a decision that was roundly criticized. He racked up wins against Art Baylis, Billy Bridges and Alphonso Bailey in televised fights before retiring in 2001 with a record of 38-11, including 21 knockouts. Scully has served as a sparring partner with world champions including Vinny Pazienza, Roy Jones Jr. and James "Lights Out" Toney. Pros he has trained include Mike Mike "Machine Gun" Oliver, International Boxing Organization light heavyweight champion Chad Dawson, Pito Cardona, Scott "The Sandman" Pemberton, former Olympic team captain Lawrence Clay-Bey, Clay Bey's son Jarin and Matt Remillard, an undefeated featherweight contender.

    * Grabrielle "She Be Stinging" Calvocoressi -- Calvocoressi was born in Central Connecticut. She has been the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships including a Stegner fellowship in Poetry, a Jones Lectureship in Poetry at Stanford University and a Rona Jaffe Woman Writers' Award. Her poem "Circus Fire, 1944" received The Paris Review' Bernard F. Conners Prize. Her first collection, "The Last Time I Saw Amelia Earhart," was published by Persea Books in 2005 and won the Connecticut Book Award. It was shortlisted for the Northern California Book Award . Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in numerous journals and online publications including; The Paris Review, The New England Review, Gulf Coast and Guernica. A new multi-media piece is forthcoming online on The Owls. he lives in Los Angeles and teaches in the MFA program at California College of Arts in San Francisco and in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Warren Wilson College. She is serving as a visiting professor at Bennington College in the fall of 2009. Her second collection, "Apocalyptic Swing," is out now from Persea Books. Garrison Keillor read her poem, "Jubilee," on WNPR in October 2009. Calvocoressi's fight poems, including "Blues For Ruby Goldstein," "Boxers In the Key Of M" and "Prayer in the Name of Saint Thomas Hearns," are highly-regarded by boxers, academics and sports writers.

    Workshop leaders:

    EDITOR'S NOTE:

    Paul "Ding-a-Ling" Doyle has graciously agreed to take handoff from George "The Wolf" Kimball for sports writing workshop. Both guys worked the Dawson fight.

    Doyle has been a sports reporter and columnist at The Hartford Courant for 20 years. A member of the Baseball Writers Association of America, he has been a baseball beat writer and most recently a general assignment reporter. He has also written for the Boston Globe and The Sporting News.

    On the workshop:

    As a teenager, sports inspired me to write and led me to a career in journalism. We'll talk about how the imagery and emotions of the games -- the games we watch and play and debate -- provide such an ideal vehicle to teach writing to kids.


    * David "The Body Snatcher " Cappella -- Cappella is a professor of English at Central Connecticut State University. He has co-authored two books on the teaching of poetry with Baron Wormser: "Teaching the Art of Poetry: The Moves" (Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2000) and "A Surge of Language: Teaching Poetry Day to Day" (Heinemann, 2004). He is the winner of the 2004 Bright Hill Press Poetry Chapbook Competition, of which the first poem was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. He has published poems in The Connecticut Review, The Bryant Literary Review, Diner and other journals.

    * George "The Wolf" Kimball
    -- Kimball (born December 29, 1943 in Grass Valley, California) is an American author and journalist who spent 25 years as a sports columnist for the Boston Herald before retiring in 2005. Considered one of the foremost boxing writers of his era, he is the author of "Four Kings: Leonard, Hagler, Hearns, Duran, and the Last Great Era of Boxing." Since 1997 he has written the weekly 'America at Large' column for The Irish Times in Dublin, Ireland, and has contributed to a number of boxing websites. He lives in New York City. In 1980 he began a columnist for the Herald, and for the next quarter-century covered major sporting events around the world, including Super Bowls and World Series, NBA Finals and the Olympic Games, golf's four majors and Ryder Cups, Wimbledon and the America's Cup yacht races. He covered nearly 400 world title fights, and was the 1985 recipient of the Nat Fleischer Award for Excellence in Boxing Journalism. Kimball also received 'Best Column' awards from the Boxing Writers Association of America, the Golf Writers Association of America, Boston Magazine, and United Press International. Kimball served as a regular co-host for several sports talk radio programs in the Boston area, as a television analyst for boxing broadcasts on the Fox SportsNet and Comcast networks, and as a panelist for several PBS programs produced by WGBH-TV. He appeared (as a boxing writer covering a fight between Woody Harrelson and Antonio Banderas) in Ron Shelton's 1999 film "Play it to the Bone." In a ceremony officiated by former heavyweight champion George Foreman, Kimball married New York psychiatrist Marge Marash in 2004.

    Efforts are being made to keep the price of admission for the Hartford Club event to under $40.

    As we begin our 13th year, we face daunting challenges.

    The Trust incurred a $10,000 shortfall of annual funding for the last cycle. But, we were able to continue the program for youngsters in all eight of Connecticut's counties. Many poets, writers, business people, university administrators and board members stepped up to fill the void.

    Sadly, our founding donor suffered an untimely death last month.

    We are bouncing back with vigor, confidence and a clear focus. The CSU System -- led by the Chancellor, Dr. David Carter, and supported by literally hundreds of volunteers -- has ensured the continuation of the program.

    Our 2010 entry form has been mailed to all public, parochial and private secondary schools in Connecticut. To highlight the entry deadline of Feb. 1, 2010, The Hartford Club has agreed to host the Jan. 15, 2010 event.

    Sponsorships remain available as follows:

    $1,000
    Heavyweight Champion

    $500
    Middleweight Champion

    $250
    Golden Gloves

    $100
    Fan


    Checks should be made out to CT Young Writers Trust and sent to 231 Beach St., Litchfield, CT 06759. Sponsorships are noted on the poster and in the event program. We hope all sponsors can attend this event so they can enjoy all the festivities and accept our thanks and gratitude in person.

    RSVP @ tntcomm82@cs.com or 860-690-0211.


    Connecticut Young Writers Trust
    231 Beach St.
    Litchfield, CT 06759


    * 800-814-6931 * Fax- 860-567-9119
    * tntcomm82@cs.com
    http://www.ct.edu/community/ctyoungwriters.htm

    ANDY THIBAULT
    Chairman
    Cell: 860-690-0211

  • Retired CT State Trooper Jerry Longo Reviews NYPD Bomb Squad Book



  • -- Photo By Bob Thiesfield
    For The Connecticut Young Writers Trust,
    Courtesy Of The Hartford Club


    GABY TUNES UP FOR JOHN ICEMAN SCULLY, 9-24-09, WITH 7-TIME FORMER NATIONAL AMATEUR CHAMPION SAMMY VEGA (left) AND MIKE MACHINE GUN OLIVER, A REIGNING PROFESSIONAL FEATHERWEIGHT CHAMPION, AT THE HARTFORD CLUB. Gaby, aka Gabrielle Calvocoressi, the poet / ring enthusiast, and Iceman, the former light heavyweight contender / trainer, also got together.


    -- Photo By Bob Thiesfield
    For The Connecticut Young Writers Trust,
    Courtesy Of The Hartford Club


    GABY LETS ICEMAN KNOW WHO'S THE BOSS



    -- Photo By Bob Thiesfield
    For The Connecticut Young Writers Trust,
    Courtesy Of The Hartford Club


    SHE LETS UP, GIVING ICEMAN
    A FALSE SENSE OF SECURITY

    Thursday, October 29, 2009

    Retired CT State Trooper Jerry Longo Reviews NYPD Bomb Squad Book



    Bomb Squad:
    A Year Inside the Nation's Most Exclusive Police Unit
















    Richard Esposito
    Ted Gerstein
    * Hardcover: 352 pages
    * Publisher: Hyperion
    * Language: English
    * ISBN-10: 1401301525
    * ISBN-13: 978-1401301521



    I appreciate the hard work that went into getting a special squad like this to open up ..

    By JERRY LONGO

    The Cool Justice Report
    www.cooljustice.blogspot.com
    Oct. 29, 2009


    EDITOR'S NOTE: This review is available for reprint courtesy of The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com. Rich Esposito will be appearing in Connecticut along with many other authors Jan. 15, 2010 as part of a Connecticut Young Writers event at The Hartford Club. The Bookworm of West Hartford will be the vendor.

    I worked up on the second deck of Troop K in Colchester, Connecticut. I was the Resident Trooper Sergeant with four towns in the state to cover.

    My office was across from the Emergency Services Unit -- "The Bomb Squad."

    In charge of the Bomb Squad at the time was a sergeant I still converse with -- via email mostly -- named Dan. He and his crew were torn from the pages of Rich Esposito and Ted Gerstein's book. They were always training, always ready. Many of them had military backgrounds.

    I am a huge fan of the short chapter as employed by Esposito and Gerstein. The point is made and they move on. I have always liked the flashback / flashforward style when describing historical events, which they also use well. This device gives me a deeper perspective.

    The sentiments in the squad rooms, the squalor that most good cops tolerate and come to love with regard to their surroundings is covered very well. My old desk in Colchester was broken in half when someone stepped on it to hang a picture and we put it back together with duct tape. There were just enough photos in the center of the NYPD Bomb Squad book. I really like the vintage stuff.

    All in all, based on my experience and training, I appreciate the hard work that went into getting a special squad like this to open up -- even if they had been ordered to do so. I am going to recommend the book to the guy who ran our bomb squad.

    My observations in Connecticut were both on scene and off. I had one bomb call at a high school which fell under my area of responsibility -- the suspicious package. It was just a cardboard box with some electrical tape. The message scribbled on it said there were multiple bombs and they would go off this Wednesday. Wednesday was misspelled.


    -- Connecticut Trooper Approaches Suspicious Package

    I snuck up on the package and snapped a couple of pictures. I caught holy hell from the responding techs and rightfully so.

    Turns out it was a hoax which was perpetrated by one of the kids I was mentoring in a Public Safety Explorer Post. We both learned a lesson that day. He got expelled and arrested. I got my ass chewed off.

    The stupid kid was just trying to get out of a scheduled test. It was one of the toughest arrests I ever made. He graduated to auto theft from there.

    The guys hassled me big time about the photos. They threw that "If you can see the [----ing] bomb, then the [----ing] bomb can see you" quotation at me.

    I still remember the expression changes on the faces of these men when the call would come in. They snapped into crinkled foreheads and precise movements. The trucks would roll out and I always wanted to see them roll back in again, in the same condition -- the men that is, not so much the trucks.

    This was a tough job and one of the men in the squad who had been a Marine and nearly killed in the barracks bombing in Beirut told me that he had his Social Security number tattooed on various parts of his body to make his I.D. easier.

    The only thing I don't like in the NYPD Bomb Squad book -- and the guys in the book may have gotten some crap over -- were their descriptions. You know, the sandy haired, blue eyed guy chiseled body stuff. Hey, these are tough guys, you know!

    There is nothing easy about what these guys do and I am glad this book was written. I give it an A.


    Jerry Longo, a contributor to several police history books, is working on a chronology and photo history of the Connecticut State Police. Longo has been a guest lecturer at state and private universities. He is a board member and lecturer for the International Organization of Asian Organized Crime Investigators and Specialists and was a featured speaker this year for that group in Hawaii. Currently, Longo is assisting in the planning of regional meetings in London and Montreal He is president of the Connecticut State Police Alumni Association as well as chairman of its Museum and Education Foundation. Longo served the Connecticut State Police for more than 20 years and now works as a senior investigator for the Gaming Commission at Mohegan Sun Casino.

  • Unsung Bomb Squad Heroes: Volunteered to Die to Disarm Rumored Nuke in New York


  • Rich Esposito's Bomb Squad


  • Bomb Squad Website


  • Dance Card Filling Up For January 2010 Young Writers Event
  • Santana, Soul Sacrifice, Woodstock (1969)


  • Video
  • Thursday, October 22, 2009

    Site Of The Day



  • The Lions Den


  • 1385 Newfield Street, Middletown, Connecticut

    Home For Many
    Of Connecticut's
    Best Boxers & Trainers



    HOW YOU GUYS DOIN?
    Left to right: Tommy Trotta, Terrence Palmer, John Scully and Curtis Grady would like to know.





  • Instructors



  • Joey Spina To Fight Lou Del Valle




  • Iceman Scully [left] spars with Lou “Honey Boy” Del Valle.






  • Champions Of Life



  • Johnny Callas, highly-regarded referee and instructor.

    Glen Johnson Talks Trash About Bad Chad Dawson



    Via
    Doghouse Boxing

    By ROB TIERNEY

    Throughout his entire career, Glen Johnson has been upsetting Boxing's balance of power. Whether he's upending a promoter's plans for a megafight between more marketable opponents or painting blemishes on a rising upstarts career, the "Road Warrior" is notorious for playing the role of the spoiler. On November 7th, Johnson faces [judgment] day once more in front of what he hopes will be an unbiased jury in Hartford, CT.

    On October 14th, I was afforded an opportunity to pick Glen's brain about next month's return bout with Chad Dawson. Here is what the former IBF champion had to say about his upcoming fight.

  • Complete Article


  • Las Vegas Sun Interview With Chad Dawson




  • Dawson Wikipedia


  • Video, Dawson V. Johnson





  • Photo via Boxnews.com
    Antonio Tarver, right, another former champ
    who said Dawson was not at his level.
    Tarver was right.

    Wednesday, October 21, 2009

    LET THE BOOK BURNING BEGIN



    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."

    -- Variously attributed to Voltaire, Evelyn Beatrice Hall, aka Stephen G. Tallentyre, and anyone who believes in the Bill of Rights.

    Cheshire, CT Book Censorship




    By RICHARD MEEHAN

    The Cool Justice Report
    www.cooljustice.blogspot.com
    Oct. 21, 2009

    EDITOR'S NOTE: This column is available for reprint courtesy of The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com



    "Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press ... "

    The First Amendment has fostered debate since its inception among legal scholars, academics, journalists and now a legion of bloggers.

    The publication of a book based on the interviews with one of the suspects in the Cheshire murder case, Joshua Komisarjevsky, has further incensed that community. Cheshire residents have submitted a petition to the local library seeking to ban the book.

    The objections are numerous.

    Many are concerned that the book denigrates the memory of the Petit family and heightens the tragedy for for the survivor, Dr. William Petit. Others decry the perceived violation of a court-imposed gag order. Still others castigate the author as an unfeeling opportunist, insensitive to the impact this book may have on the community and the impending trials.

    The myriad of comments following the various news stories and reviews on booksellers' sites show just a hint of the firestorm. Opinions range from thoughtful comments about the danger of banning books, to visceral, "hang 'em high" comments.

    The latter appear to be the most prevalent, citing frustration with the years taken to bring sensational cases to trial. Some bloggers, convinced of guilt, want a swift public execution. Forget the trial and due process. To these writers the obviously guilty should not be afforded the fair trial rights guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. They cry that no one provided due process to the victims, why should it apply to the accused killers? In such a sensational case it is difficult to argue with these emotions.

    The Cheshire Library Advisory Board has set a special meeting Thursday at Town Hall to hear complaints.

    The outrage of the community is understandable. However, outrage does not justify imposing limits on the First Amendment. The remedy for Komisarjevsky’s hubris or tactics is simple:

    Don’t ban the book;

    Don’t burn the book;

    Just don’t buy the book!


  • Colin McEnroe: The lonely job of Ramona Harten


  • A gag order was issued by the court prohibiting the lawyers, police and the Correction Department from making any comment on the case. Certainly that order should apply to Komisarjevsky.

    The co-defendant's lawyers want him arrested for criminal contempt. That would be little more than a symbolic gesture. He is already being held on a $15 million dollar bond for capital murder.

    Most importantly, the book controversy highlights the rift that exists between the two defense camps.

    The gag order was an attempt to stem the flow of inside information that could pollute the jury pool. It does not apply to the author of this book, in the same way that the gag order does not prohibit the legion of bloggers from making whatever comments they wish.

    Courts can only impose orders on those subject to their jurisdiction.

    Judge Richard Damiani was concerned about the ability to select a jury given the glut of pre-trial publicity and defense claims that details about the case were being leaked to the press. The Hartford Courant opposed the order, citing the First Amendment. The judge said he was more concerned that the ability to provide a fair trial outweighed the public interest argued by the Courant.

    Komisarjevsky's participation has now injected new legal challenges that will only serve to prolong the case.

    Lawyers for Steven Hayes have now subpoenaed Correction Department records trying to determine how the author, Brian McDonald, gained access to Komisarjevsky, and whether the department or prosecutors were aware that he was submitting to these interviews.

    Prisoners have no privacy rights. Incoming and outgoing mail, not marked "legal mail," is read and phone conversations are monitored and recorded. The new legal debate will focus on how this author could have gathered this information without it being detected. Lawyers will debate whether the state, by extension, bears some responsibility for this.

    In a case that has put the system on trial as well as the defendants, this added debate has only fueled the criticism.


    Bridgeport,CT attorney Richard Meehan Jr. was the lead defense counsel for former Bridgeport Mayor Joseph Ganim's corruption trial. Meehan is certified as a criminal trial specialist by the National Board of Trial Advocacy since 1994 and serves on the organization's Board of Examiners. He is a Charter Fellow, Litigation Counsel of America -- Trial Lawyer Honorary Society. Meehan has also obtained multi-million dollar verdicts and settlements in complex medical and dental malpractice and personal injury litigation. He is a past president of the Greater Bridgeport Bar Association and appears regularly on TruTv. His column also appears in the Sunday Norwich, CT Bulletin. Website, www.meehanlaw.com


  • Meehan law firm
  • Tuesday, October 20, 2009

    Johnny Duke Ceremony In Hartford Saturday, October 24



    -- JOHNNY DUKE HALL OF FAME SHOT, courtesy of Ice.

    Former amateur champion Sammy Vega, former NABF 175-pound champion Eric Magic Man Harding and former light heavyweight contender Iceman John Scully in 2005 photo with legendary Hartford trainer Johnny Duke at Duke's induction ceremony into the Connecticut Boxing Hall of Fame at the Mohegan Sun. Duke died in March 2006.

    By ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY


    Johnny Duke plaque ceremony is a go for THIS SATURDAY, the 24th at 11 a.m. in Hartford at the site of his former gym in Bellevue Square (now known as Mary Shepard Place).

    If you need directions, you can mapquest to Wooster St. in Hartford's North End.

    Several of Duke's former boxers are expected to attend including Mike-Mike Oliver, Hector Rosario, Julio Acosta, Tommy Rivera, Anthony Taylor, Herbie Cox, Robert Perez, Akwan Shabazz, Antonio and Santos Luyanda and others. I am also working on getting 1970's era Duke protege' Stevie Hilyard to attend. Members of the Connecticut Boxing Hall of Fame (responsible for a generous monetary donation to the cause i.e. payment of the plaque) will also attend.

    So if you can get the word out to the public it would be much appreciated as I am sure there are many relatives of former Duke boxers/Bellevue Square residents who would see it and let the proper people know to attend.

    So Saturday is the day ... see you there.

  • Sherman Cain JI Story On Johnny Duke


  • "The wait in the dressing room before a professional boxing match -- that last hour -- could be enough to strip a man who never boxed before of whatever pride, desire and heart he THOUGHT he had."
    -- Iceman John Scully, April 2002


  • ICE
  • Saturday, October 17, 2009

    Thornton Talks Race, Drugs And Politics At Central Connecticut State University



    Time: 1 - 3 p.m.
    Date: 10/20/09
    Torp Theatre-Welte Hall
  • Central Connecticut State University





  • Cliff Thornton Short Bio


  • Thornton's Solutions / YouTube Interview



  • What Is The Pinky Show?


  • Pinky Show Transcript



  • In An Email Sent To The Cool Justice Report,
    Thornton Offered The Following:

    White Kids Are Much More Likely
    To Be Using (And Selling) Drugs!


    According to the federal Centers for Disease Control, he's 4 times more likely than his African- American classmate to be a regular cocaine user. According to the Justice Department, if he's arrested on drug charges, he's 1-½ times more likely than his white classmate to be sent to prison.

    White high-school students who are current users of cocaine: 4.1%

    Chance of a white person ever trying an illicit drug in their lifetime: 42%

    Percent of felony drug defendants in state courts who are white: 37%

    Percent of white drug felons given probation or nonincarceration sentence by state courts: 32%

    Percent of white drug felons sentenced to prison by state courts each year: 27%


    Yet,
    Black Kids
    Are More Likely
    To Go To Prison!


    African-American high school students who are current users of cocaine: 1.1%

    Chance of an African-American person ever trying an illicit drug in their lifetime: 37.7%

    Percent of felony drug defendants in state courts who are black: 37.7%3

    Percent of black drug felons given probation or non incarceration sentence by state courts: 25%

    Percent of black drug felons sentenced to prison by state courts each year: 43%

    Note:

    According to the US Justice Department and the Office of National Drug Control Policy, drug users typically buy their drugs from sellers of their own racial or ethnic background. For research on Ethnicity & Race of Drug Sellers and Users, see: US Dept. of Justice National Institute of Justice &the US Office of National Drug Control Policy, "Crack, Powder Cocaine, and Heroin: Drug Purchase and Use Patterns in Six U.S. Cities," December 1997, pp. 1, 16, and p. 15, Table 16.

    Data on drug use by high-school students: Youth Risk Behavior Survey 1999, Centers for Disease Control, reported in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Vol. 49, No. 22-5, p. 66, Table 24.

    Data on lifetime prevalence of drug use: US Dept. of Health and Human Services Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, "Summary of Findings from the 1999 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse," August 2000, p. G-13, Table G-13.

    Demographic data on felony drug defendants in state courts: US Dept. of Justice Burueau of Justice Statistics, "Felony Defendants in Large Urban Counties, 1996," October 1999, p. 4, Table 3.

    Demographic data on felony drug defendants in state courts: US Dept. of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics, "State Court Sentencing of Convicted Felons, 1996," February 2000, p. 13, Table 2.5.

  • Efficacy


  • PO Box 1234
    860-657-8438
    Hartford, CT 06143
    efficacy@msn.com

    “The only people who think journalism is dying are newspaper reporters embedded in the funeral parlor”



    h/t Paul Stern,
  • Courant Refugee


  • Via
    Yale Daily News

    Local papers confront modern obstacles
    By Natalia Thompson


    Despite circulation and advertising problems plaguing newspapers nationwide, three small, local news ventures — the New Haven Independent, La Voz Hispana and the New Haven Advocate — are, for the most part, surviving the recession. How is each one staying afloat? Contributing reporter Natalia Thompson investigates.

  • Complete Article
  • Friday, October 16, 2009

    Dance Card Filling Up For January 2010 Young Writers Event




    Poster / Lineup Evolving

    [click on poster for larger image]

    FEATURES
    INCLUDE


    Workshops, Open To Teachers [CEU credits granted],
    Writers, Other Guests:
    * Teaching / Writing Poetry – David Cappella
    * Teaching Sports Writing / Sports Writing -- George Kimball


    Set[s] By Jen Allen Big Band With Vocalists

    Undercard Of Top Contenders, aka Poets & Writers

    Food And Drink

    Gaby And The Iceman Rumble

    Star Spangled Banner By DominiQue

    Boxing Exhibition Coordinated
    By Sammy Vega, Iceman John Scully
    And Mike Mike Machine Gun Oliver,
    The Reigning Featherweight Champion

    ---
    Connecticut Young Writers Trust
    231 Beach St.
    Litchfield, CT 06759

    * 800-814-6931 * Fax- 860-567-9119
    * tntcomm82@cs.com
    http://www.ct.edu/community/ctyoungwriters.htm

    ANDY THIBAULT
    Chairman
    Cell: 860-690-0211

    The Bookworm,
    West Hartford,
    Will Be The Vendor;
    SPECIAL THANKS
    To The Hartford Club
    For Hosting This Event


  • Young Writers 2010 Entry Form Posted By Connecticut State University System


  • Sports Writer George Kimball Talks About Four Kings


  • Look Out Iceman, Gaby Reading Keillor Poem


  • More About Gaby, Iceman & the Entire Lineup
  • Thursday, October 15, 2009

    Young Writers 2010 Entry Form Posted By Connecticut State University System


    “The talent and creativity of a new generation of Connecticut writers is clearly evident, and the inspiration that Mark Twain’s example provides is especially fitting as we recognize their excellent prose and poetry,” said Dr. David G. Carter, chancellor of the Connecticut State University System, prior to the 12th annual celebration May 31, 2009 at Mark Twain House & Museum. Link to Dr. Carter's invitation to teachers and school staff for the 2010 competition follows the 2010 entry form link.

  • 2010 Entry Form


  • Letter From The Chancellor, Dr. David Carter, To Teachers / School Staff



  • PHOTOS BY CHION WOLF
    For the Connecticut Young Writers Trust



    Emma Lowenberg, 16, of the Lowenberg Home School in Redding, accepts $1,000 check and other items Sunday [May 31, 2009]at the Mark Twain House & Museum in Hartford as she is proclaimed State Prose Champion in the 2009 Connecticut Young Writers competition. With Lowenberg, L-R: Franz Douskey, poet and board member of the Young Writers Trust; Dr. Louise Feroe, Vice Chancellor, Connecticut State University System; and Co-Masters of Ceremonies Ravi Shankar, the poet and Central Connecticut State University Professor and Rand Richards Cooper, board member, author and travel writer for Bon Appetit. Lowenberg, one of eight county champions, won for her story, "Bernard."


    Felicity Sheehy, 16, of the Westover School of Middlebury, accepts $1,000 check and other items Sunday [May 31, 2009]at the Mark Twain House & Museum in Hartford as she is proclaimed State Poetry Champion in the 2009 Connecticut Young Writers competition. With Sheehy, L-R: Franz Douskey, poet and board member of the Young Writers Trust; Dr. Louise Feroe, Vice Chancellor, Connecticut State University System; and Co-Masters of Ceremonies Ravi Shankar, the poet and Central Connecticut State University Professor and Rand Richard Cooper, board member, author and travel writer for Bon Appetit. Sheehy, one of eight county champions, won for her poem, "Evening Conversation."

  • Poster


  • Connecticut Review Literary Journal



  • Keynote Speaker Melanie Lieberman, 18, the Rockville High School Senior & 2007 State Prose Champion


    DIANE MADE ME DO IT -- Colin McEnroe, the columnist, author and WNPR radio host, reads proclamation from Gov. M. Jodi Rell declaring Sunday [May 31, 2009] YOUNG WRITERS DAY in the state of Connecticut. McEnroe and Smith, the author and Connecticut Public Television host, also served as Co-Masters of Ceremonies. Along with Shankar and Cooper, they also served as judges for the competition. Smith also serves on the board of the Young Writers Trust.

  • Young Writers Website



  • DominiQue Rivers, lead vocalist for The Jen Allen Big Band


    FROM WARMUP TO ENCORE -- The Jen Allen Big Band warms up with series of tunes: Blue Skies [Tamara Almai], Say A Little Prayer and Respect. Their performance generated audience demand for an encore of those three songs, and they graciously complied to thunderous applause. L-R: Geoff Brookes, Peter McEachern, Stephen Brookes, Kris Allen, DominiQue Rivers, Ben Bilello, Chris DeAngelis, Katelyn Lewis, Keith Gibson, Shannon Gunnip [Jen Allen on keyboard behind Shannon Gunnip] and Tamara Almai.


  • As Seen In Connecticut Magazine, August 09, page 15: Emma Lowneberg, State Prose Champion
  • Wednesday, October 14, 2009

    Let the Ambulance Chaser Beware



    By RICHARD MEEHAN


    The Cool Justice Report
    www.cooljustice.blogspot.com
    Oct. 14, 2009

    EDITOR'S NOTE: This column is available for reprint courtesy of The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com


    Oct.1 marks the effective date of most new legislation in Connecticut. There is probably some sound reason somewhere in the annals of our legislature that explains why that date has been used. It may just be that they have to start sometime.

    This fall the news centers on the anti-ambulance chasing bill, politely called "An Act Concerning Solicitation of Clients, Patients or Customers." Now, any individual who acts as a "runner", uses a runner or solicits, directs, hires or employs a runner can be arrested and charged with a Class A Misdemeanor, punishable up to one year in jail and fined up to $5,000. "Runners" are defined as procurers employed by lawyers or doctors to signup clients for insurance claims.

    The law targets lawyers and health care providers, as well as the runners they employ. Lawyers have been the butt of jokes about ambulance chasing; most of it undeserved. While many personal injury lawyers are aggressive advertising their services, a seamy side to the profession has developed. Runners troll hospital corridors and respond to broadcasts over police scanners, preying on unsophisticated accident victims. Unscrupulous doctors have been known to use runners to dissuade the injured from seeking legitimate emergency care, and instead offering to treat accident victims in therapy mills, designed for profit -- not necessary medical needs.

    Every ethical lawyer has heard stories about some unscrupulous member of the bar rumored to have some doctor in his hip pocket, churning out phony medical reports, inflating claims. Periodically, someone gets indicted for fraud.

    We represented a young chiropractor whose boss was running a phony treatment mill, trading patients back and forth with a particular lawyer. Claims would be inflated and settled without the scrutiny of a trial. His boss and the lawyer were indicted and served time. One lawyer would actually pay the claimant in cash, in advance, then have the "client" sign a blank release form. The conspiratorial doctor would issue a phony report about treatment and the lawyer would settle the cases for a greater value than the cash paid out, pocketing the money.

    In one instance where there were multiple deaths in a tragic accident, runners approached many of the victims families and signed them as clients before the bodies had all been recovered.

    Accident victims were injured twice; once in the collision, and a second time by those they trusted to get them adequate compensation. The fallout from these practices also reinforced the view that many people hold of the tort system and plaintiffs' lawyers. We came to be viewed as greedy profiteers. Lost in that were the overwhelming majority of injury lawyers who truly care about their clients and work long hours to make sure that their clients' lives are rebuilt with the hard fought proceeds of their cases.

    Because of this the bar has endorsed the new bill, welcoming it as a means to rid both the legal and medical profession of these parasites.

    Accident victims are always better served by engaging competent counsel as early as possible. It is a battle to secure the right compensation for the injured.

    Insurance companies aren't the beneficent and generous benefactors that little lizards and bright-eyed sales people gush about. Too many injured parties have nowhere to turn for immediate relief while the family provider is homebound, recuperating. False promises by runners of instant money too often led to these desperate people not only signing on, but settling their cases for far less value than that to which they were entitled, pressured by the unethical lawyer or doctor for the quick buck.

    Bridgeport, CT attorney Richard Meehan Jr. was the lead defense counsel for former Bridgeport Mayor Joseph Ganim's corruption trial. Meehan is certified as a criminal trial specialist by the National Board of Trial Advocacy since 1994 and serves on the organizations Board of Examiners. He is a Charter Fellow, Litigation Counsel of America -- Trial Lawyer Honorary Society. Meehan has also obtained multi-million dollar verdicts and settlements in complex medical and dental malpractice and personal injury litigation. He is a past president of the Greater Bridgeport Bar Association and appears regularly on TruTv. His column also appears in the Sunday Norwich, CT Bulletin. Website, www.meehanlaw.com


  • Meehan law firm
  • Sunday, October 11, 2009

    2009 Latino de Oro Awards - - Program Magazine Deadline Nears



    Contact: Elaine Rosales
    860-798-4881
    elaine@identidadlatina.com


    Hartford, Conn. - It is with great pleasure that Identidad Latina Hispanic Newspaper in Connecticut invites you to the 5th Annual 2009 "Latino de Oro" Awards Ceremony. This year, the event will be held on Saturday, November 7, 2009 at 6:00 pm in the Theater of the Performing Arts at the Learning Corridor, on 359 Washington St. Hartford, CT 06106.

    The awards are designed to recognize men and women in the state who have made a significant contribution to our community and have shown outstanding background in their field. The event ceremony will start with a reception including a buffet of typical Latin-American foods; live Latin musicians will also be providing entertainment prior to the ceremony.

    Back for its second year in a row will be Identidad Latina's own "Golden Carpet," conducted by Joyce BolaƱos & Jose Vega. Attendees will be able to walk through it and experience the glamour of Hollywood with photographers in hand. The main ceremony will be conducted by Luz Ramos and Darvin Garcia.

    Please find below the list of winners that were selected by a special panel of community leaders, who reviewed the nominations very carefully and after a very difficult decision came together to present their final decision:

    *Politics -- Jim Himes, Congressman Connecticut's 4th District

    *Education -- Agnes Quinones, Education Consultant of CT Dept. of Education






    *Sports -- Jorge Morales, Roberto Clemente League Coach
















    *Arts & Culture -- Balam Soto, Modern Art Master Artist











    *Music -- Lorena Garay, Classical, Spanish and Latin Guitarist















    *Health -- Juan Figueroa, President of the Universal Health Care Foundation of CT








    *Media -- Raffi Mendoza, Radio Host of LATINA 1230 AM

    *Student of the Year -- Roberto Cruz, Mastery Student of Public Health at Connecticut University







    *Community Service Lcdo -- Jeffrey Dressler, Attorney and Founder of Mega Education Program












    *Lifetime Achievement -- Francisco Donis, Professor of CCSU and President of the Latin American

    As part of the event, we prepare a Commemorative Magazine, which will be distributed during the event and thru all our sponsored events in 2010. This full-color magazine is something which you should consider using as a great opportunity to publish your advertisement or to send out congratulations to the winners. The deadline to submit your ad is October 16, 2009.

    If you are interested to learn more about this event, including the selection criteria for the winners, please go to www.latinodeoro.org or contact Adelia Santa-Cruz, Director of Sales and Public Relations at 860-231-9891 or 860-965-5646 by the stated deadline.

    The event is open to the public and has a cost of $45.00 per ticket. There are student group discounts available for the event. For more information and confirmation of your assistance, please call (860) 231-9891 or (860) 965-5646.

  • Identidad Latina Hispanic Newspaper


  • Mega Education Program
  • Friday, October 09, 2009

    Marine Medic / Poet / Essayist Doug Anderson @ Millrace Book Shop Sunday, Oct. 11, 2009



    SUNDAYS BY THE RIVER
    featuring Doug Anderson,




    author of Keep Your Head Down, and








    the award-winning poetry collection, The Moon Reflected Fire. Open Mike follows
    .


    Millrace Book Shop
    40 Mill Lane
    Farmington, CT


    KEEP YOUR HEAD DOWN
    Vietnam, the Sixties, and a Journey of Self-Discovery W.W. Norton &Co. – July 13, 2009 An award-winning poet highlights the vibrant history of his generation in a farewell to Vietnam, the chaotic sixties, and their long aftermath. Doug Anderson’s education in American manhood began in the pre–civil rights South, around the kitchen sink. There he listened as his uncles told war stories in between drafts of Wild Turkey and drags on their cigarettes.

  • Complete Article


  • Millrace Book Shop


  • Doug Anderson Photography
  • Wednesday, October 07, 2009

    Tai Chi Robitis Rx



    There is a delicate balance for the lawyer who is being unfairly chided by a judge

    By RICHARD MEEHAN




    The Cool Justice Report
    www.cooljustice.blogspot.com
    Oct. 7, 2009


    EDITOR'S NOTE: This column is available for reprint courtesy of The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com



    How does a lawyer deal with a contentious judge during a trial?

    This question was posed to me during a recent appearance on TruTv's with Ashley Banfield.


    We reviewed a televised trial in which the defense lawyer was constantly fighting with the judge over the manner in which the attorney was stating objections. The judge became inpatient and his intolerance of the lawyer's approach became obvious to the jury. This was always a lecture topic when I taught trial practice in law school.

    Our judicial system is like a medieval fiefdom. Judges are the lords demanding respect from the commoners -- including the lawyers.

    Generally, lawyers and judges share a mutual respect. Lawyers avoid familiarity with judges, even when engaged in informal discussions in chambers or meetings in a hallway. Rarely do you overhear a lawyer address a judge by first name. Even in social situations, most lawyers will always call a judge by his or her title or as "Your Honor."

    In the medical world or the business world there are hierarchies as well, but the social compacts that exist in those worlds don't demand such formality. In the legal world judges don't make "requests," they issue "orders" which lawyers are required to obey. The consequence of failing to adhere to a judicial order can involve sanctions imposed on the litigants and even referral to the Statewide Grievance Committee to discipline the disobedient lawyer.

    In the televised trial the lawyer was engaging in what judges call "speaking objections." Courtroom protocol requires that a lawyer objecting to evidence should stand and simply state, "objection." The judge may then ask the basis of the objection. This should be done succinctly, without a speech in the presence of the jury. If further argument is needed the judge will either invite the attorneys to a sidebar conference outside the hearing of the jury or excuse the jurors from the courtroom. With "speaking objections" lawyers attempt to inject their view of the facts into the objection, generally to get a point across to the jury rather than advance an argument to the judge.

    Each judge has a different tolerance level for lawyers in these exchanges. Generally, experienced judges and trial lawyers find a balance during trials and avoid confrontation. Ultimately, the judge has the upper hand, possessing the power to rule on the objection.

    Occasionally, as in the TruTv trial, the lawyer keeps pressing the point, inviting a stern rebuke. The impression left with the jury can subtly influence the outcome of a case. Some jurors trust the judge as their protector in the courtroom. The judge ostensibly represents fairness and due process of law. When the judge and the lawyer begin to battle, often the lawyer is perceived as disrespectful.

    There is a delicate balance for the lawyer who is being unfairly chided by a judge. My father had a saying he shared with me as a fledgling lawyer: "You can't try cases on your knees." Sometimes you have to stand up to the contentious judge to bring the atmosphere in the courtroom back to neutrality.

    "Respect the robe even if you don't respect the person," was my father's way of expressing proper courtroom demeanor. We honor the men and women wearing the judicial robes, not necessarily for who they are but what they represent. If the jury perceives that the judge is being unfair in his or her comments the lawyer becomes the underdog and jurors start to feel empathy. Learning how to do this takes years in the courtroom. Some lawyers figure this out.

    Bridgeport, CT attorney Richard Meehan Jr. was the lead defense counsel for former Bridgeport Mayor Joseph Ganim's corruption trial. Meehan is certified as a criminal trial specialist by the National Board of Trial Advocacy since 1994 and serves on the organizations Board of Examiners. He is a Charter Fellow, Litigation Counsel of America -- Trial Lawyer Honorary Society. Meehan has also obtained multi-million dollar verdicts and settlements in complex medical and dental malpractice and personal injury litigation. He is a past president of the Greater Bridgeport Bar Association and appears regularly on TruTv. His column also appears in the Sunday Norwich, CT Bulletin. Website, www.meehanlaw.com

  • TruTv


  • Meehan law firm
  • Tuesday, October 06, 2009

    Criminalizing Communication




    Busted Protester:
    `We weren’t doing anything clandestine, weren’t expecting the police to come in ... '





    Via
    DemocracyNow!

    Essentially, what Elliot is charged with is using the computer or the cell phone to put up an announcement that said that the police had issued an order to disperse. Having done that and having informed people that the police had issued the order, then it is claimed that that announcement hindered prosecution somehow by, I guess, having people avoid being arrested. It would seem to me that that is something that provides some benefit to the police department, in terms of saving them the expenditure of resources in processing people. But they’ve decided to criminalize that communication ...


  • Complete Article
  • Sportswriter George Kimball Talks About "Four Kings"



    Jan. 09 Interview
    With Binnie Klein




  • Podcast


  • Binnie Klein's book, "Blows to the Head: How Boxing Changed My Mind" (SUNY Press) will hit the bookstores in January 2010. She hosts a weekly music and interview show on WPKN Bridgeport, CT and Montauk, NY and is a Lecturer in Yale's Dept of Psychiatry.


  • Binnie Klein


  • WPKN


  • Binnie Klein Radio Show On Facebook




  • Kimball Appearing In CT Jan. 2010
  • Monday, October 05, 2009

    Sunday, October 04, 2009

    Bold, Intense Delicate: California Teacher / Poet Raves About Shankar Poems



    By MEHNAZ TURNER


    This past week I've been reading poet Ravi Shankar's collection of poems, Instrumentality. The book was published by Cherry Grove Collections in 2004. I'm about two-thirds of the way through this superbly crafted book. The poem's are linguistically sharp, lucid, and engaging. The language is bold and intense, yet also delicate. My favorite pieces include, "Returning from Hell's Kitchen" and "Shaking Free of Epiphany." There's something both intellectually and spiritually affirming about reading his work.
  • Complete Article


  • Mehnaz Turner was born in Pakistan and raised in southern California. She is a 2009 PEN USA Emerging Voices Fellow in Poetry. She is also a 2003 fellow of the South Coast Writing Project's Summer Institute. She holds degrees from the University of Arizona, The University of Texas at Austin, UC Santa Barbara, and Cal State Channel Islands. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in publications such as The Journal of Pakistan Studies, Cahoots Magazine, The Pedestal Magazine, Desilit Magazine, and An Anthology of California Poets. She has been teaching at Moorpark High School Since Fall 2006.

  • Ravi Co-Host For Upcoming Event


  • Ravi In CT Magazine, August 09


  • NY Post Story On Poet-Prof's $10M Lawsuit For NYPD False Arrest / Incarceration