Sunday, May 30, 2010

TNT Tony / Mike Machine Gun Hartford Club Presser Pre-June 26 Mohegan Sun Card

PHOTOS BY
BOB THIESFIELD



-- TNT Tony Speaks


-- Machine Gun Mike Says He Is Ready For June 26. TNT Tony And Michael Parenti Of CES Look On During Press Conference @ The Hartford Club Thursday.



-- Mike Machine Gun Oliver With Promoter Jimmy Burchfield And TNT Tony. [In background, left, is Sammy Vega, the former national amateur champion and trainer for Oliver.]

ANNOUNCEMENT

Popular heavyweight prospect Tony ‘TNT’ Grano
ready to explode June 26
CES presents “Pride & Power” pro boxing card
at Mohegan Sun


PROVIDENCE, R.I. (May 28, 2010) – Heavyweight prospect Tony “TNT” Grano has his timer set to explode Saturday night, June 26, when he headlines “Pride &Power,” presented by Jimmy Burchfield’s Classic Entertainment and Sports, Inc. (CES), in the 10-round main event at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn.

The WBF All-Americas heavyweight champion, Grano (17-1-1, 13 KOs) – fighting out of Hartford – takes on Horace Ray “The Reeazon” Grant (15-2, 9 KOs) in the “Pride & Power” headliner.

“Grano is probably the most popular boxer in New England,” promoter Jimmy Burchfield said. “He has a growing legion of fans that support him whenever he fights. We’ve loaded this card with some of the best fighters in Connecticut like Mike Oliver, David Bauza and Chad Dawson’s older brother, Rick. Joe Smith, Jr. will be in action looking for his fifth first-round knockout in his fifth pro fight.”

Oliver, the reigning New England and EBA super bantamweight champion, faces former multiple title-holder Mauricio “Indio Boy” Pastrana (35-13-2, 23 KOs) in the co-feature. Oliver, another Hartford fighter, is rated No. 4 by the USBA. Pastrana has been world champion of the IBF, WBA, IBO, and IBA.

Long Island light heavyweight Smith (4-0, 4 KOs), a 2008 New York Gold Gloves Champion; Philadelphia welterweight (6-0, 2 KOs) Frankie Trader; Hartford middleweight Bauza (5-0, 3 KOs) and New Haven middleweight Dawson (1-0, 1 KO) are all slated to fight opponents to be determined in 4-round bouts.

Also on the undercard is Bridgeport (CT) super lightweight Carlos Hernandez (0-1) versus pro-debuting Jonathan Vasquez, of Fall River (MA), while another Springfield fighter, pro-debuting light heavyweight Jose Torres, faces Ahmad Mickens (1-0-1), from Stamford (CT).

Tickets for “Pride & Power,” priced at $40.00, $65.00 and $105.00, are available to purchase by calling CES (401.724.2253/2254), going online at www.cesboxing.com or at the Mohegan Sun Box Office. Ticketmaster customers may log on to www.ticketmaster.com, call Ticketmaster’s national toll-free charge by phone (1.800.745.3000) or visit any Ticketmaster outlet.

For more information contact CES (401.724.2253/2254/www.cesboxing.com) or Mohegan Sun (www.mohegansun.com). Doors open at 6:00 PM/ET, first bout at 7:30 PM/ET.

CONTACTS:

Bob Trieger, Full Court Press, 978.664.4482 (office), bobtfcp@hotmail.com

Greg Romeyn, Mohegan Sun, 860.862.8493, gromeyn@mohegansun.com

  • Action Photos / Background


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Cooljustice stories win state awards
  • Conan [The Barbarian] Larry Cohen Savages Teflon [Limp Needle Big Daddy], aka U.S. Sen. candidate Dick Blumenthal

    SEPARATED
    @
    BIRTH:



    -- Larry Cohen
    CHION WOLF PHOTO



    -- Conan The Barbarian

    Misspeaking Is An Art, Blumenthal No Artist
    By LARRY COHEN
    Hartford Business Journal


    EXCERPT:

    What to do? Some of his fellow Democrats slapped him around a bit — but they didn’t really mean it. They want Dick to win the Senate race. As for the military veterans, the reaction was mixed, but most seemed to give Dick a pass, because he was always very good about coming to funerals and VFW barbecues and American Legion events.

  • Complete Article


  • Cooljustice column: My Service, Like, IN Vietnam


  • NYT Public Editor: Blumenthal's Misrepresentations Matter


  • JIM SMITH: No Apology, Not Much Respect


  • NYT: Politicians And Their Fake War Stories


  • Cooljustice stories win state awards


  • twitter@cooljustice
  • Saturday, May 29, 2010

    this just in ... on a slow boat ... Wtby Paper Cites A Keynoter For Young Writers

    Waterbury Republican-American
    John McKenna column excerpt
    Thursday, May 27, 2010


    LITCHFIELD - Lauren Hefferon of Litchfield will be a keynote speaker at the 13th annual Connecticut Young Writers awards ceremony in Hartford on June 3.

    Hefferon, who graduated from Yale University this month, was the 2003 state prose champion in the Connecticut Young Writers competition, which is sponsored by the Connecticut State University system.

    The prose championship came when Hefferon was a freshman at Chase Collegiate School in Waterbury.

    "The competition inspired me to keep writing and to consider fiction as more than just a hobby," Hefferon said. "Since participating in the contest, I have sought out every opportunity to improve my writing skills."

    At Yale, Hefferon tutored in the Yale College Writing Center and wrote for the university newspaper.

    Among the students to be recognized at the Connecticut Young Writers awards ceremony will be Litchfield High School senior Carter Brown, the Litchfield County poetry champion.

  • Bob Leuci Interview, Litchfield County Times


  • Connecticut Network To Cover Young Writers Bash Thursday, June 3 @ The Hartford Club




  • Event Rundown And Last Call


  • twitter@cooljustice
  • Friday, May 28, 2010

    Connecticut Network To Cover Young Writers Bash Thursday, June 3 @ The Hartford Club



    Often, CT-N tapes for subsequent broadcasts. Coverage was planned at a meeting Thursday. Check the site next week or thereafter for scheduling.

  • CT-N


  • Producer Dominique Avery has supervised coverage of CT Young Writers state and regional events over the years.

    Diane Smith, Elections Coordinator at CT-N, is Co-MC with author Rand Richards Cooper for the 13th Annual CT Young Writers Celebration. Smith recently won another Emmy for CPTV. She spilled the beans on CT-N coverage during the Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists dinner Thursday in Wallingford.



  • chicken, veg or fish; LAST FREAKIN' CALL Young Writers Blast @ Hartford Club


  • twitter@cooljustice
  • chicken, veg or fish; LAST FREAKIN' CALL Young Writers Blast @ Hartford Club

    “It’ll be like
    a sports banquet,
    but with better music”




    BOB LEUCI, Young Writers Keynote,
    Interviewed By Litchfield County Times

    Arts & Culture
    Young Writers Competition Heading for Finale (Web First)


    Thursday, May 27, 2010
    By JACK CORAGGIO

    The competition is whittled down to 16, with two finalists to represent each of the eight Connecticut counties. The ultimate showdown comes to Hartford Thursday, June 3, when these teenage contestants match up for the 13th Connecticut Young Writers Competition crown.

    The brainchild of local journalist/analyst/professor/political watchdog Andy Thibault, with the assistance of the Connecticut State University System, the prize distribution equals $10,000. Of that $10,000, $8,000 is split between the county champions, half of whom made it on prose, the other half poetry. And that’s how the two winners will be divided: one for prose and one for poetry.

    In the county of Litchfield, 18-year-old Carter Brown of Litchfield High School earned the poetry slot for his “Icari.” Meanwhile, 16-year-old Claire Burch of New Milford High School will represent the prose side for her piece “The Neighborhood.”

    Perhaps one of these two, or maybe both, will be named the victors. If not, just getting to this spot is quite the honor, this year saw 795 applicants, the highest in the trust’s history. The previous record was 647.

    Along with 2003 prose champ Lauren Hefferon, Bob Leuci, a novelist and professor at the University of Rhode Island, will be one of the keynote speakers at the event. Quite a fast talker, in the literal not pejorative sense, he has an idea of what he’ll talk about: writing.

    “There’s an invisible link that connects all people who perceive themselves as writers,” he told The Litchfield County Times.

    And if you perceive yourself as a writer, you are a writer, he believes.

    “You look at the world through a special kind of prism…and I care about the people who concern themselves with everyday life,” he said. “I’ll be talking in those terms, to people interested in all forms of writing. Writing is writing. What is it about the craft of writing? How good can it be? I’m talking too fast, aren’t I?”

    The ceremony will include a couple of live bands, like the Bridgeport-based Latin rock band Cosmic Jibaros along with the Jen Allen Big Band, hors d’oeuvres, dinner, the works.

    “It’ll be like a sports banquet, but with better music,” said Mr. Thibault.

    The event is at The Hartford Club, 46 Prospect Ave., and there’s still time to get in, the ceremony and dinner are open to the public. Cost is $50. The reception begins at 5 p.m., the dinner an hour-and-a-half later. People can send a check to CT Young Writers Trust, 231 Beach St., Litchfield, CT 06759.

    Connecticut Young Writers Trust
    http://www.ct.edu/initiatives/ctyoungwriters
    231 Beach St.
    Litchfield, CT 06759

    * 860-567-8865 * Fax- 860-567-9119
    * tntcomm82@cs.com

    ANDY THIBAULT
    Chairman
    Cell: 860-690-0211
    -------------------



    The wild swan's death-hymn took the soul
    Of that waste place with joy
    Hidden in sorrow: at first to the ear
    The warble was low, and full and clear; ...
    But anon her awful jubilant voice,
    With a music strange and manifold,
    Flow'd forth on a carol free and bold;
    As when a mighty people rejoice
    With shawms, and with cymbals, and harps of gold...


    -- Alfred Tennyson



    YOUNG WRITERS STATUS UPDATE WED., MAY 19, 2010

    RSVPs and sponsor donations for the 13th Annual Young Writers Celebration, Thurs., 6-3-10, are coming in at a slow, but steady rate.

    Young writers will arrive prior to 4 p.m. @ The Hartford Club for a workshop led by Keynote Speakers Lauren Hefferon and Bob Leuci.

    Don't be late for the 5 p.m. SHARP reception featuring the Bridgeport-based Latin Rock Band Cosmic Jibaros.


  • Cosmic Jibaros


  • Parking for guests at this event is free underneath the club @ 46 Prospect St.

  • Hartford Club


  • Long-time friends of young writers Rand Richards Cooper and Diane Smith
    will serve as co-masters of ceremonies. Dinner music by The Jen Allen Big Band featuring vocalists DominiQue, Tamara Almai and Shannon Gunnip.

    RUNDOWN FOR THIS EVENT - WHICH COULD BE OUR LAST - FOLLOWS WITH INVITATION. CSU System Chancellor Dr. David Carter will host a meeting by September to explore continuation of the program.

    Special gratitude to all the hundreds of volunteer laborers and generous sponsors who have allowed us to process more than 6,000 entries and give away more than $192,000 since 1998.

    See you June 3 @ The Hartford Club.

    A.T.


    -- 2001 State Prose Champion Candi Deschamps, Colin McEnroe, 2003 State Prose Champion Lauren Hefferon & Diane Smith at the Litchfield Inn, June 2003



    ANNOUNCEMENT
    CT YOUNG WRITERS 13TH ANNUAL CELEBRATION
    NEWS RELEASE

    13th Annual Connecticut Young Writers Competition Awards Ceremony
    At The Hartford Club, Thursday, June 3, 2010


    The 2010 Connecticut Young Writers awards ceremony, which highlights works of poetry and prose submitted by teenagers from throughout the state, will be held at The Hartford Club, 46 Prospect, St., Hartford, CT, on Thursday, June 3, 2010.

  • The Hartford Club


  • The competition has inspired the participation of more than 795 students this year -- the highest number of entries in the competition's 13 years. It is sponsored by the Connecticut State University System and many generous private donors including bookstores, bankers, lawyers, real estate firms, restaurants, an art gallery, a construction company, a publisher, an eye surgeon, an art gallery, a wine shop, educators and poets and writers.

    The ceremony and dinner are open to the public. Cost is $50. Check to CT Young Writers Trust, 231 Beach St., Litchfield, CT 06759. Invitation follows.

  • YOUNG WRITERS TRUST WEBSITE



  • Young writers will gather for a workshop at 4 p.m. led by Lauren Hefferon, the 2003 state prose champion and a recent graduate of Yale University; and Robert Leuci, the former NYPD narcotics detective who is now a novelist and English professor at the University of Rhode Island. Cash bar will be available for parents, friends and teachers.


    -- At 5 p.m. sharp, the Bridgeport-based Latin rock band Cosmic Jibaros will greet the young writers and guests for a reception with hors' d'oeuvres.

  • Cosmic Jibaros




  • Pre-dinner festivities will begin about 6:30 p.m. Co-Masters of Ceremonies are Diane Smith, the author, CPTV producer and Connecticut Network anchor; and Rand Richards Cooper, the author and Bon Appétit travel writer.






    As a freshman at Chase Collegiate School in Waterbury, Hefferon won the New Haven county and state prizes for prose. Her work was published in Connecticut Review, the literary journal of the Connecticut State University System.

    "The competition inspired me to keep writing, and to consider fiction as more than just a hobby," said Hefferon, a Litchfield resident. Since participating in the contest, I have sought out every opportunity to improve my writing skills."

    Hefferon worked as a copy editor for a non-governmental organization in Madrid during her Yale studies. She also served as a tutor at the Yale College Writing Center. In addition, she wrote newspaper editorials and website copy. Among her favorite creative assignments: one-page narratives for Yale's legendary Daily Themes course. She intends to study English at the graduate level.



    The 2003 CT Young Writers State Prose Champion will be the pre-dinner speaker. Dinner music will be provided by the Jen Allen Big Band with vocalists.











    -- Vocalists DominiQue, Laura McCabe, Shannon Gunnip and Tamara Almai with The Jen Allen Big Band, Hartford Club, 1-15-10

  • Quick Compilation: Videos, Jen Allen Big Band, Hartford Club 1-15-10


  • Leuci will speak after dinner. He will be introduced by James O'Neil, the former Rhode Island attorney general.

    Then, the sixteen county champions in prose and poetry will be presented certificates as state finalists. Each of the county champions received $500 checks in April during regional ceremonies at Central, Southern, Western and Eastern Connecticut state universities.

    They are:

    NEW LONDON COUNTY POETRY CHAMPION
    Grace Beggins, 17,

    "Cloud Gazing"
    The Williams School, New London
    TEACHER: John Becker

    NEW LONDON COUNTY PROSE CHAMPION
    Gloria Creamer, 16,

    "Old Glory"
    Montville High School
    TEACHER: Ted Richmond

    WINDHAM COUNTY POETRY CHAMPION
    Josh Bryer, 17,

    "A Number of Thoughts"
    Kilingly High School
    TEACHER: John Fulco

    WINDHAM COUNTY PROSE CHAMPION
    Anna Nassiff, 18,

    "Mrs. Warren In Color"
    Arts at The Capitol Theater, Willimantic
    TEACHER: Barbara Greenbaum

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY POETRY CHAMPION
    Julia Albano, 18,

    "Red In The Shade Of Salsa Diane"
    Danbury High School
    TEACHER: Deborah Casey

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY PROSE CHAMPION
    Zeena Advani, 17,

    "Universal Rhythms"
    Westhill High School, Stamford
    TEACHER: Robin Denninger

    LITCHFIELD COUNTY POETRY CHAMPION
    Carter Brown, 18,

    "ICARI"
    Litchfield High School
    TEACHER: Deborah Dove

    LITCHFIELD COUNTY PROSE CHAMPION
    Claire Burch, 16,

    "The Neighborhood"
    New Milford High School
    TEACHER: Cheryl Morosko

    MIDDLESEX COUNTY POETRY CHAMPION
    Olivia DelGiudice, 17,

    Old Saybrook High School
    "Recovery"
    TEACHER: Susan Murphy

    MIDDLESEX COUNTY PROSE CHAMPION
    Chelsea Melanson, 17,

    The Morgan School, Clinton
    "Come Home"
    TEACHER: Leslie Chausse

    NEW HAVEN COUNTY POETRY CHAMPION
    Mary Margaret Meehan, 17,

    [Redding resident]
    Westover School, Middlebury
    "Equine"
    TEACHER: Bruce Coffin

    NEW HAVEN COUNTY PROSE CHAMPION
    Noah Perito, 15,

    Branford High School
    "Dead Card Players Tell No Tales"
    TEACHER: Wendy Grehl

    HARTFORD COUNTY POETRY CHAMPION
    Morgan Finn, 16,

    Bristol Central HS
    "Where I Come From"
    TEACHER: Sophia Gintoff

    HARTFORD COUNTY PROSE CHAMPION
    Sheldon Gaskell, 16,

    [Suffield resident]
    Greater Hartford Academy of the Arts
    "Kineo"
    TEACHER: Maureen O'Brien

    TOLLAND COUNTY POETRY CHAMPION
    Timothy West, 18,

    Rockville High School
    "In Homage To M.C. Escher"
    TEACHER: Victoria Nordlund

    TOLLAND COUNTY PROSE CHAMPION
    Kyle Kneeland, 17,

    Rockville High School
    "Colors Of A Dream"
    TEACHER: Victoria Nordlund



    Leuci was a writer for the TV shows 100 Centre Street and Precinct Hollywood. He is an adjunct professor in the University of Rhode Island English department.


    He has written more than half a dozen crime novels, translated into four languages and most recently published a memoir with Harper Collins, All The Centurions. He has also written a play for German radio, Brooklyn Roofs.

    His crime novels feature characters on all sides of the law -- inside and outside law enforcement -- and boast an edge and a substance found in the better political thrillers.

    This is what students are saying about Leuci on the site RateMyProfessors.com

    * Leuci is the funniest freaking man ever. Really cares about YOU and what YOU want to learn / write. He is willing to let you write ANYTHING …

    * Make sure you sign up for his classes quick as they fill up fast.

    * He's hilarious and he bought us pizza at the end of the year because he swore so much …

    * Great teacher! will help you through everything … be honest with him he appreciates it more. He is funny go to his classes you wont regret it.

    * Prof. Leuci is a great teacher and person. He truly cares about his students, and if he gets to know you, he will not hesitate to help you academically and / or professionally. He has an unconventional style, but you can learn a lot of useful information. I can guarantee that you will walk away from his class a more knowledgeable person.


    Leuci's 20 years as a New York City police officer dovetailed with the career of another cop memorialized in film and print, Frank Serpico.

  • FRANK SERPICO BIO


  • In his memoir, All The Centurions, Leuci reports that many in the NYPD literally cheered upon learning Serpico was shot in the face in what by most persuasive accounts was a set-up by fellow cops. Serpico was an oddball: He wouldn't take money.

    Leuci and Serpico shared that tag: Leuci was not a manicured or well-dressed guy like his peers in the elite Special Investigative Unit. Even over time, he did not quite fit in.

    Serpico's revelations about police corruption led to the formation of the Knapp Commission, which documented low levels of corruption -- "grass eaters" -- and high levels of corruption - "meat eaters."

    Leuci, troubled by what he saw on the job, ultimately came forward and cooperated with prosecutors. As The New York Times reported:

    For years, on the well-founded assumption that his life was in danger, Detective Leuci had to travel with bodyguards [as many as nine]. His investigation had implicated not only his fellow officers; organized crime figures, lawyers, bail bondsmen and an assistant district attorney had become involved, too. Detective Leuci had been undercover 16 months; the trials had gone on more than four years. Then the bodyguards were gone ...

    In addition to the memoir, All The Centurions, that era in Leuci's life is documented by the book Prince of the City , by former New York City Deputy Police Commissioner Robert Daley; and by the film of the same name, directed by Sidney Lumet. Lumet also directed Serpico and All The President's Men. Treat Williams played the Leuci character, Danny Cielo.

    "Frank Serpico wasn't like Bob Leuci at all,'' Lumet told The New York Times." Frank would have ended up going off to Europe alone with his dog whether he was a stockbroker, a flutist with the Philharmonic or a cop. Bob is a cop, all cop, and then comes everything else -- the charm, the guilelessness, the naivete ... "

  • A COP IS A WRITER: NO ONE IS SAFE


  • Following Leuci's address on June 3, the state finalists will be recognized. Then, at the conclusion of the evening, the state champions will be announced. They will receive additional checks for $1,000 each.

    The Connecticut Young Writers competition affirms the work of young poets and writers and celebrates their accomplishments. The late IMPAC Chairman Jim Irwin and retired CSUS Chancellor William Cibes expanded the Young Writers Program from Litchfield County to cover the entire state in 2000.

    By June 3, the CT Young Writers Trust will have given more than $192,000 to young poets and writers. About 6,000 students have participated in the program.



    Chancellor David Carter has helped to keep the program alive since 2006 as overseer of the CSU System.

    Prior to being named chancellor, Carter served as the fifth president of Eastern Connecticut State University. Appointed in April 1988, he was the first African American president of a four-year institution of higher education in Connecticut.

    The Connecticut State University System consists of four comprehensive universities: 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. With more than 36,000 students and 180,000 alumni, CSUS is the largest public university system in Connecticut.

    Book vendor for the event will be Rainy Faye of Bridgeport.



    Among Leuci's titles:

    All the Centurions: A former New York City narcotics detective discusses his work on such film-inspiring cases as the French Connection and Serpico, and shares his disillusionment in the face of corruption, and the criminal justice system's dark side.

    Fence Jumpers: As kids, they took on New York's mean streets. As men, they're on opposite sides of the law. Dante O'Donnell and Jimmmy Burns took up the oath, the badge and the gun of the police force. Jo Jo Paradiso took a different path as a rising player in the Paradiso crime family. Today the three friends are trapped in an ever-more-vicious game of betrayal -- one that threatens to break much more than the bonds of their youth.

    Odessa Beach: A Russian and the American mob make strange bedfellows in a brilliantly plotted masterpiece of cross-cultural criminality. The book is set in Brighton (renamed Odessa) Beach, Brooklyn, where Nikolai Zoracoff has defected from Moscow -- not seeking political asylum but escape from the KGB. A charming hedonist and a criminal only because in Moscow luxury is bought by crime, Zoracoff's assimilation into America includes cowboy hats, Dolby stereo and a drug connection which, in New York, means an alliance with the Mafia -- and a game which is harder than Zoracoff can bear.

    Blaze: A rising star in the NYPD, Captain Nora Riter has a private life that threatens to torpedo her career. A streetwise actor/conman Nicky Ossman faces prison for assaulting a vice cop. Nora needs Nicky to help her re-establish personal and professional control as she takes on a case that leads her to taking down a psychopathic criminal kingpin known as "Blaze."

    Captain Butterfly: This is a riveting thriller about police corruption and the labyrinth of the human heart.

    The Snitch: A highly-principled police detective is chosen to infiltrate the notoriously corrupt Organized Crime Control Bureau. When the OCCB raid a nightclub, leaving seven people dead, the powers that be decide a major bust would look better than a police corruption case -- only the detective refuses to compromise his principles.

    Renegades: A thriller about three friends who grow up together on the tough streets of New York. Their friendship, loyalty and courage are tested when two become policemen and the other becomes a mafia boss.

    Double Edge: A tough, all-too-human police drama set on the dangerous streets of Washington, D.C. Cotton is a crack dealer who's seen it all. Scot Ancelat is a detective who's seen too much. In a vivid, brutal tale, their stories intertwine, as Ancelat struggles to solve the senseless murder of a young boy.

    *

    YOUNG WRITERS 2010 ANNUAL CELEBRATION
    INVITATION
    Seating Limited


    You are cordially invited to attend the

    13TH Annual CT Young Writers
    Statewide Ceremony & Dinner

    CHOICES
    Frenched Chicken Breast
    Wild Mushroom Port Sauce
    Grilled Salmon Filet
    Lemon Caper Sauce
    Vegetarian Entree

    Thursday, June 3, 2010
    The Hartford Club

    4 p.m. Workshops
    5-6:15 p.m. Reception
    6:30 p.m. Dinner

    Special Guests

    Lauren Hefferon, 2003 State Prose Champion,
    Yale, 2010; Chase Collegiate School, 2006
    Robert Leuci, novelist, URI English Prof,
    Author of memoir, All The Centurions


    Introduction of Robert Leuci by James O'Neil,
    Former Rhode Island Attorney General

    Co-Masters of Ceremonies
    Rand Richards Cooper, Author,
    Bon Appétit travel writer
    Diane Smith, Author,
    CPTV Producer/Host of Positively CT


    Reception Entertainment
    Cosmic Jibaros, Latin Rock

    Dinner
    $50 per person

    Dinner Music by The Jen Allen Big Band With Vocalists
    RSVP by May 28, 2010

    ANDY THIBAULT
    CT Young Writers Trust
    231 Beach St.
    Litchfield, CT 06759

    860-567-8865 or 860-690-0211
    tntcomm82@cs.com
    http://www.ct.edu/initiatives/ctyoungwriters/

    Checks to CT Young Writers Trust
    County Champions Complimentary, everyone else $50



    NOTE TO SPONSORS
    TY 4 KEEPING THIS PROGRAM ALIVE
    FOLLOWING THE DEATH
    OF OUR FOUNDING / PRIMARY SPONSOR LAST FALL

    -- 2010 PROGRAM SPONSORSHIPS R AVAIL AS FOLLOWS:

    * biz card in program, $250

    * county champion sponsor, $500

    * state champion sponsor, $1,000

    all donations greatly appreciated and publicly acknowledged

    --------------plz send checks 2

    CT YOUNG WRITERS TRUST
    231 Beach St.
    Litchfield, CT 06759

    thank you thank you thank you

  • Bristol Press Editorial: YOUNG WRITERS FIND JUST THE RIGHT WORDS


  • Norwich Bulletin Cites County Champions & Finalists In Prose & Poetry


  • YOUNG WRITERS TRUST WEBSITE


  • twitter@cooljustice
  • Punch Drunk Poetry Mag Story & Free Speech Essay Win Top CT SPJ Awards



    The Hartford Club’s Prospect Magazine
    And
    Litchfield County Times [and various dailies]
    Published The Items


    Punch Drunk Poetry won first place as Magazine Sports Feature in the 2010 Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists annual excellence in journalism contest. WHERE IT’S OK TO STEAL AN ELECTION AND BAN FREE SPEECH T-SHIRTS won first place as regional non-daily op-ed column.

    All entries were judged by professional journalists outside of Connecticut – in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Washington State.

    The awards were presented by Kenn Venit of Quinnipiac University and Al Terzi of WFSB TV3 at the annual dinner Thursday night at Fantasia in North Haven.

    The Online Feature Frog mating season: An under-reported phenomenon; and Breaking News Coverage, Calhoun numbers shocker, were finalists in their respective categories. Those stories were published in the Cool Justice Report. Calhoun Numbers Shocker was also posted by The New York Times.

    Jim Smith won the First Amendment Award for a series of columns published in the Bristol Press and New Britain Herald, including essays on the Avery Doninger Free Speech Case.

    Punch Drunk Poetry

    And

    WHERE IT’S OK TO STEAL AN ELECTION AND BAN FREE SPEECH T-SHIRTS


    Follow
    along with links
    to the online items ...

    GABY, PAGES 30 & 31

    YOUNG WRITERS, PAGE 29

    HARTFORD BOXERS, PAGE 26





    Matt Remillard hitting the pads with John Scully
    -- Photo by Larry Williams, courtesy of The Hartford Club's Prospect Magazine


  • Download The Prospect, Hot Off The Presses






  • Cool Justice Editor's Note: Worth checking out -- Larry Smith's photo of Manchester pro boxer Matt Remillard punching out a headline / cool layout by Editor & Publisher Vince Valvo. Remillard's home gym is Richardson's Kickboxing of Rocky Hill. Also featured -- Iceman John Scully, Mac Buckley, Felix Nance, Papo Figueroa, Johnny Duke, Mike Mike Machine Gun Oliver, Pito Cardona, Tony Grano, Chad Dawson. Special thanks to Sammy Vega for vital research and assistance. Tagline incorrectly states the author is a referee; text of story notes service as a judge. Any other errors are the sole responsibility of the author. A.T.





  • Gaby's Fighting Words


  • Let's Get Ready To Rumble


  • JAN. 15, 2010 @ THE HARTFORD CLUB:
    CT Young Writers
    Triple Knockout Event: Prose, Poetry & Pugilism;
    Open Writing Workshops In Poetry & Sportswriting;
    Jen Allen Big Band With Vocalists




  • Registration For Jan. 15 Event @ The Hartford Club


  • Registration Form pdf




  • The Hartford Club



  • Via
    Litchfield County Times

    Cool Justice Report Editor's Note: This op-ed appeared Fri., Aug. 14, 2009, PAGE a5, in the
  • Litchfield County Times.
  • OK for reprint.




    "Laws are like spider webs. They hold the weak and delicate who are caught in their meshes, but are torn to pieces by the rich and powerful."
    -- Anarcharsis, Athenian citizen, 6th century B.C.

    "In the halls of justice, the only justice is in the halls."

    --Lenny Bruce, author, "How To Talk Dirty And Influence People"


    By ANDY THIBAULT


    It doesn't matter what the First Amendment says.

    What matters -- as in any amendment of the Bill of Rights -- is who has the power to enforce it or ignore it.

    I got this perspective from my teacher, Howard Zinn, author of "A People's History of the United States." Howard taught me that history should be written not from the point of view of the president, senator, CEO, bond trader, mayor, police chief, shift supervisor, school superintendent or high school principal. Rather, stories should be told from the point of view of the citizens or other human beings who all too often are at the mercy of those in power.

    As I began a career in journalism writing about the cover-up of a hit-and-run death in New London, CT in 1973, I learned that civil rights, truth and justice have no standing in a corrupt regime. The power of the cop on the beat, the teacher in the classroom, the mayor behind closed doors, the oblivious judge on the bench or the boss on the job supersedes any theoretical document. Seldom are abuses corrected and when they are, it might be too late.

    I think about this often.

    Those in the government class -- school official, judge, prosecutor,cop, legislator -- tend to protect themselves at the expense of others. It is only when citizens rise up, organize and take action against abuse of power, that there is any hope of justice.


    Standing up for all of us in Northwestern Connecticut is Avery Doninger, now a veteran of AmeriCorps, the domestic Peace Corps. Many readers know something about "The Famous Douche Bag Case" in which election results were suppressed and free-speech t-shirts were confiscated and banned at Lewis Mills High School in Burlington. As the case goes back to the U.S. Second Circuit of Appeals in New York this fall, readers are learning more about the essence of the free speech case.

    Doninger, while a junior at Lewis Mills in 2007, followed a suggestion from her student council adviser and, with several other students, engaged the community in a dialogue about use of the school auditorium. The students knew it was the job of school officials to listen and respond to such communication. If only the administration and board of education had known as much, they would not have so many legal bills.

    The students tried to change a decision about the cancellation of a popular music event known as Jamfest. For this, Avery Doninger was punished. It's really that simple.

    Anyone who ever visited a town hall or school superintendent's office understands this. Some public officials actually believe in public service and accountability. They realize they work for taxpayers. Others, like former Region 10 Superintendent Paula Schwartz and Karissa Niehoff, work for themselves.

    "Mrs. Schwartz wasn't happy with all the phone calls and was very annoyed," Niehoff told Avery Doninger.

    "You can imagine how upset she was when parents started calling her," Niehoff told a colleague in an email.

    Gee, a public official gets phone calls and emails from constituents and is outraged. In this context, it is easy to see why Schwartz and Niehoff banned Avery Doninger from running for school office and then hid the write-in votes that elected her by a plurality. While they were busy banning free-speech t-shirts and suppressing an election, Schwartz and Niehoff also found time to honor another student for citizenship. This student called Schwartz a"dirty whore" in the same blog post where Avery Doninger, writing on her home computer, referred to officials as "central office douchebags."


    New Haven U.S. District Court Judge Mark Kravitz, while refusing to grant an injunction recognizing Doninger's election and revoking her punishment, observed: "The [court] agrees with Ms. Doninger that there is evidence in the record -- particularly when viewed in the light most favorable to her -- that suggests that Ms. Niehoff may have punished Ms. Doninger because the blog entry was offensive and uncivil and not because of any potential disruption at school … The timing of Ms. Doninger's punishment in this case, together with Ms. Niehoff's testimony, creates a disputed issue of material fact as to the [defendant's] true motivation for punishing Ms. Doninger."

    "Rallying students and the community to petition the government is good citizenship," Doninger said in a widely-circulated essay. "I failed at vocabulary, not citizenship."

    Indeed, Schwartz never acknowledged Doninger's apology for rudeness until she was confronted about it in federal court. Who failed citizenship and good manners?

    Whether in Iran, China, Russia or Burlington, despots who squelch free expression have a lot to hide.

    Kravitz had scheduled a trial on the seizure of free-speech t-shirts this summer. Region 10 lawyers appealed. Doninger's lawyer, Jon Schoenhorn of Hartford, followed up with a wide-ranging appeal focusing on punishment for protected free speech. The U.S. Second Circuit agreed on July 23 to hear Schoenhorn's arguments. No date has been set for a hearing, but advocates of parental rights are lining up behind Doninger. They are incensed by the intrusion of government into the home.

    "We are in this together fighting abuse of authority," said Judy Aron, a home-school activist from West Hartford.

    Marine Corps veteran Ron Winter of Hebron, a member of the fundraising group "Poets & Writers For Avery," noted his interest in both the First and Second Amendments, saying, "You can't have one without the other."

    To mention yet another Amendment -- The Fourth -- I should note the travails of another member of Poets & Writers For Avery, the poet and Central Connecticut State University Professor Ravi Shankar. Shankar, a tall Indian-American, was wrongly arrested and held for 30 hours recently after a literary event in New York. The police were looking for a shorter white man, but that didn't matter.

    Shankar has been meeting with lawyers this week. Those citizens among us who understand that only vigilance keeps the Bill of Rights alive will be following these cases closely.

    Andy Thibault, author of "Law & Justice In Everyday Life," lives in Litchfield and blogs at
  • The Cool Justice Report


  • BULLETIN: Landmark Free Speech Case Back @ U.S. Second Circuit Court Of Appeals


  • AmeriCorps Field Hand Avery Doninger Cited For Work In Mississippi Refuge


  • Poets & Writers For Avery 07 Flyer


  • Poets & Writers For Avery 07 Announcement


  • Texas, Florida Papers Pick Up Ravi's Racial Profiling Column


  • Background on Free Speech Case: DON'T EAT THE BROWN ACID


  • --
  • Frog mating season: An under-reported phenomenon


  • Calhoun Numbers Shocker


  • Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists


  • Find the Book:
    Law & Justice In Everyday Life by Andy Thibault at Amazon.com

    Barnes & Noble


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  • Thursday, May 27, 2010

    CAN YOU SEE IT?



    BOB LEUCI,
    Young Writers Keynote,
    Interviewed By Litchfield County Times



    Novelist Bob Leuci:
    “There’s an invisible link that connects all people who perceive themselves as writers.”


    By JACK CORAGGIO
    Litchfield County Times


    The competition is whittled down to 16, with two finalists to represent each of the eight Connecticut counties. The ultimate showdown comes to Hartford Thursday, June 3, when these teenage contestants match up for the 13th Connecticut Young Writers Competition crown.

  • Complete Article




  • Video Of Cosmic Jibaros -- Appearing June 3, 2010 @ The Hartford Club For 13th Annual Young Writers Celebration


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  • Tuesday, May 25, 2010

    TNT Tony & Machine Gun Mike Back In Action


    TNT Tony in action 3-12-10
    -- photo by BOB THIESFIELD



    Mike Mike In Action 3-12-10
    -- photo by BOB THIESFIELD


    PRESS CONFERENCE WILL BE THIS FRIDAY, May 28
    at The Hartford Club on 46 Prospect Street, Hartford, CT
    (860-522-1271) beginning at 1 p.m.
    to announce "Pride & Power,"
    which will be held Saturday, June 26
    at Mohegan Sun Arena.


    In addition to Mike Oliver, Tony Grano, Rick Dawson and David Bauza will also be in attendance.

    --

    Plus Special Guests…..


    VINNY PAZ
    5-Time World Champion
    Cranston, RI

    MARLON STARLING

    2-Time World Champion
    Hartford, CT

    --

    Hartford's own Tony ``TNT´´ Grano returns to the ring as Classic Entertainment & Sports presents ``Pride & Power,´´ an eclectic showcase of the Granite State's elite boxing talent on Saturday, June 26 at the Mohegan Sun Arena.

    Fresh off a victory over colorful heavyweight Mark ``Oak Tree´´ Brown, Grano (17-1-1, 13 KOs) will challenge the dangerous Horace Ray Grant (15-2, 9 KOs) in the 10-round main event.

    ``Machine Gun´´ Mike Oliver (22-2, 7 KOs) of Hartford is also back as he battles former super bantamweight world champion Mauricio Pastrana in the exciting co-feature.

    The undercard includes Long Island, N.Y., light heavyweight Joe Smith Jr. (4-0, 4 KOs), Philadelphia, Pa., super lightweight Frankie Trader (6-0, 2 KOs), unbeaten Hartford middleweight David Bauza (5-0, 3 KOs) and New Haven's Rick Dawson (1-0, 1 KO).

    Also, two future standouts from New England will be making their pro debuts, including Fall River, Mass., super lightweight Jonathan Vasquez against Bridgeport's Carlos Hernandez (0-1), and light heavyweight Jose Torres of Springfield, Mass., against Stamford's Ahmad Mickens (1-0-1).

    FOR TICKETS PLEASE CONTACT SAMMY VEGA
    (860) 978-7412




  • BOB THIESFIELD FRIDAY NIGHT FIGHT PHOTOS, FOXWOODS, 3-12-10; Live Twitter Coverage @ cooljustice




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  • Solution To Oil Leak

    Experts Propose Plugging Oil Leak with BP Executives
    Submerging Execs Could Be 'Win-Win'


    By ANDY BOROWITZ
    www.borowitzreport.com

    WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report ) – At a conference of oil leak experts in Washington today, attendees proposed plugging the massive oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico with executives of BP, the company responsible for the catastrophic spill.

    “We’ve tried containment domes, rubber tires, and even golf balls,” said William Cathermeyer of the National Oil Leakage Institute, a leading consultancy in the field of oil leaks. “Now it’s time to shove some BP executives down there and hope for the best.”

    Submerging the oil company executives thousands of feet below the ocean’s surface could be a “win-win” situation, Mr. Cathermeyer said.

    “Best-case scenario, they plug the leak,” he said. “And at the very least, they’ll shut the fuck up.”

    But even as the oil leak experts proposed their unorthodox solution, environmental expert Marilyn Sufranski warned of the possible negative consequences of plugging the oil leak with BP executives.

    “The Gulf of Mexico is slimy enough already,” she said.

    Andy Borowitz's Books at Amazon.com

    Bob Dylan -- Hurricane



  • Video


  • Wiki Hurricane


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  • Sunday, May 23, 2010

    CT DEM SENATE Rx: Lamont

    It didn’t take long for possible replacements to surface in Connecticut’s Blumie-Nam Senate Fiasco.

    As reported @ HuffPo: [Norah] O'Donnell says that knowing that Richard Blumenthal possibly getting replaced by Rosa DeLauro or Ted Kennedy, Jr. will make [Chris] Matthews’ “head explode” …

    What about Ned Lamont? He should have been in the Senate already.

    Democrats gain nothing in the Dan Malloy – Ned Lamont – Nancy Wyman – Mary Glassman Circular Firing Squad, other than a new Republican governor.

  • Cool Justice COLUMN: My Service, Like, IN Vietnam


  • Cokie Roberts: Not A Year for Phonies


  • Kevin Rennie column


  • Walter Shapiro column


  • Colin's Winners & Losers List AND Allusion To Rennie Story To Come


  • Village Voice Reader Comment On Blumie-Nam


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  • Village Voice Reader Comment On Blumie-Nam

    Richard Blumenthal walked on the Moon, climbed Mt. Everest, brought down the Berlin Wall, wrote the finale to 'The Sopranos' ...
    ---

    Cool Justice Analysis
    Of Village Voice Take
    On NYT Public Editor Analysis:

    Blumie In An Uncomfortable Box

    Village Voice Post
    By JOE COSCARELLI

    Hoyt, in his very first paragraph, basically chides the Dems for their weakness in the upcoming midterms: "Predictably, in an election year with control of Congress in play, the report sparked plenty of outrage -- much of it directed at The Times."

    He also does well to summarize much of the controversy surrounding the piece:

  • Complete Article


  • Cool Justice COLUMN: My Service, Like, IN Vietnam


  • JIM SMITH: No Apology, Not Much Respect


  • NYT: Politicians And Their Fake War Stories


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  • Diane Smith's Living Modern in Connecticut Wins Emmy Award

    Documentary Profiles the State’s
    Extraordinary and Endangered Examples
    of Mid-Century Modern Architecture

    A Co-production of Diane Smith Media and CPTV


    BOSTON, Mass. (May 22, 2010) – Living Modern in Connecticut has been honored with a Boston/New England Emmy award in the category of Historical/Cultural Program. The 33rd Boston/New England Emmy Awards were presented at Gillette Stadium at Patriot Place on Saturday, May 22, 2010.


    In the half-hour documentary, host and producer Diane Smith tells the story of notable buildings, erected in the middle of the Twentieth Century. They range from the Glass House in New Canaan, to the Phoenix Companies’ “boat building” in Hartford, to a hockey rink shaped like a whale in New Haven, and a “floating tower” on Long Wharf. The world-renowned architects who designed these buildings took advantage of new technologies and materials to reshape our cities and suburbs. But, just 50 years later, many of these landmarks are threatened. As the documentary makes clear, historic preservation has progressed far beyond saving that colonial home on the town green.

    In a stunning review of the bold and innovative designs that set modern buildings apart, Smith tracks the history of the modernist movement in Connecticut. From New Canaan to New Haven to Main Street in Suffield, Smith examines the increasing threat to modern buildings now considered ‘gems’ in the world of architecture, through interviews with Robert A.M. Stern, the dean of Yale University’s School of Architecture, modernist architect Kevin Roche, architect and preservationist Jared Edwards, architect John Johansen, the last surviving member of the “Harvard Five” and others.

    Living Modern in Connecticut is a co-production of Diane Smith Media and CPTV, made possible with support from the Connecticut Commission on Culture & Tourism.

    An Emmy award-winning television journalist, Diane Smith has been on the air in Connecticut since 1982. For ten years, she produced and hosted "Positively Connecticut ™ on CPTV as well as the Positively Connecticut segment on CPTV’s All Things Connecticut magazine series. Her fifth book "Seasons of Connecticut," will be published in June. She is the Elections Coordinator at CT-N, a former co-host of the WTIC News-Talk 1080 Morning Show and former news anchor at WTNH-TV. Diane Smith recently received the Governor’s Award for Excellence in Culture and Tourism.



  • Diane Smith Co-MC For CT Young Writers 13th Annual Celebration June 3 @ Hartford Club



  • Norwich Bulletin: STATE CHAMPIONSHIP FEVER FOR YOUNG WRITERS




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  • CT Watchdog Cites Cool J Nam Blumie Post




    Cool Justice Report
    Has Its Own
    Vietnam Blumenthal Blog





  • CT Watchdog


  • Direct Link To My Service, Like, IN Vietnam


  • NYT Public Editor: Blumenthal's Misrepresentations Matter


  • JIM SMITH: No Apology, Not Much Respect


  • NYT: Politicians And Their Fake War Stories


  • twitter@cooljustice
  • Saturday, May 22, 2010

    NYT Public Editor: Blumenthal's Misrepresentations Matter

    The Candidate and the War
    By CLARK HOYT


    THE Times reported last week that Attorney General Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, the bright hope of Democrats to retain a critical seat in the United States Senate, has sometimes falsely claimed to be a Vietnam veteran. Predictably, in an election year with control of Congress in play, the report sparked plenty of outrage — much of it directed at The Times.

    The paper cited several instances when Blumenthal made “plainly untrue” statements about his service, and posted a video excerpt of him saying in 2008, “We have learned something important since the days that I served in Vietnam.” The article at the top of Tuesday’s front page said that on other occasions he used ambiguous language that could have left the wrong impression. In fact, The Times said, after receiving five deferments and finally facing the prospect of being drafted, Blumenthal joined the Marine Corps Reserve and avoided combat.

  • Complete Article


  • Column: My Service, Like, IN Vietnam


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  • STATE CHAMPIONSHIP FEVER FOR YOUNG WRITERS



    THE FINAL 16
    @
    THE HARTFORD CLUB



    County writing champs now go for state title:
    Norwich Bulletin 5-21-10

    Young Writers awards are June 3

    By SHARMA HOWARD

  • Norwich Bulletin

  • Posted May 21, 2010 @ 11:32 PM

    A range of subjects were contemplated in the poems and prose of four New London and Windham county champions of the Young Writers Competition.

    The annual competition is sponsored by the Connecticut State University System and the Connecticut Young Writers Trust.

    An awards ceremony, which is open to the public, will be held June 3 at The Hartford Club. Out of 795 entries from Connecticut teenagers this year, a pool of county champions were selected. From that group, two writers from each of Connecticut’s eight counties will be named state champions at the awards ceremony. Those students will have the opportunity to have their work published in CT Review. Both county and state champions receive cash prizes.

    About the student[s]:


    Josh Bryer: The son of Michael and Cheryl Bryer, this 17-year-old student who attends Killingly High School is a resident of Killingly. He is a finalist for his poem “A Number of Thoughts.” The one-page poem expresses Bryer’s sentiments about education and was crafted in a classical way. “It was modeled on John Edwards, a Puritan writer, and follows a certain meter and writing pattern,” Bryer said. The poem points out that grades don’t reflect what a student truly knows and understands, he said.

    Gloria Creamer, 16: The daughter of Terry and David Creamer, this Montville High student from Oakdale is a finalist for her 10-page short story, “Old Glory.” The story is about a boy who has returns from college and reflects on childhood. As he rummages through memories, he realizes childhood was more idyllic.

    “He takes a look at himself and decides he can change how he’s living to make life resemble those days more and how life doesn’t have to be bad,” Creamer said.

    Anna Nassiff, 18: The daughter of Tracy Duenzel, this student attends both Windham High School and the Arts at the Capitol Theater and lives in Columbia. Her short story, “Mrs. Warren in Color,” is about how a young girl who cares for an elderly woman begins to understand that age doesn’t separate them. “Writing is a way to express myself and the things that need to be expressed are going to be delved into further,” Nassiff said.

    Grace Beggins, 17: The daughter of Anne and Tom Beggins, of Guilford, the Williams School student won for her poem, “Cloud Gazing,” which she described as an observation poem. With references to classics, she both created a poem that paid homage to the Greek classics as well as “looked at the clouds in a different way,” Beggins said.





  • Young Writers Status Report & Complete Rundown, 13th Annual Celebration June 3


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