Friday, December 31, 2010

Howard Zinn Tribute Via DemocracyNow!


We pay tribute to the late historian, writer and activist Howard Zinn, who died [in January 2010] of a heart attack at the age of eighty-seven. Howard Zinn’s classic work A People’s History of the United States changed the way we look at history in America. It has sold over a million copies and was recently made into a television special called The People Speak. We remember Howard Zinn in his own words, and we speak with those who knew him best: Noam Chomsky, Alice Walker, Naomi Klein and Anthony Arnove.

  • Complete Article & Video


  • A major reason for government secrecy is to protect the government from its own population


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Sunday, December 26, 2010

    HOW THE CONNECTICUT YOUNG WRITERS PROGRAM BEGAN & Survived ...



  • Young Writers Trust Website




  • NEW:
    Christmas Day 2010 Coverage
    By New Haven Register


  • Writers trust finds donor just in time



  • LEO CONNELLAN, aka El Bardo The Legend
    'The Rock Upon Whom We Built
    The Young Writers Program'


    EL BARDO'S
    THOUGHT FOR THE DAY


    "I went to work but I wrote every day. Sometimes I didn't know what I was doing, but I just did it. I was like a ballplayer who bats a ball in a vacant lot and everybody wonders what he's doing. They wonder.

    "They wonder if he's crazy. One day they let him play in the game. He's been hitting that ball so long that when the guy throws it, he knocks it over the fence and everybody says, 'How did you do that?'

    "Because he got his swing, he got his motion, he knew what he was doing. And he practiced. That's the kind of life I've lived, I wrote poems from 1947 to 1974 before I got my first book."


    JIM IRWIN, EL BARDO
    COMBINE FORCES
    AND
    BILL CIBES
    JOINS THE PARTY


    By ANDY THIBAULT
    CT Young Writers Trust
    Reprinted From June 3, 2010 Program, page 19


    Jim Irwin pounded his fist on the table sometime in 1997 and said, "Let's start a young writers program."

    The first person I called was El Bardo The Legend, aka Leo Connellan. Leo knew any and all English teachers worth the title. He knew their classrooms. He knew their students.

    Mark Macomber, a community-minded banker, paid for a newspaper ad to announce the program. Attorney Peter Litwin did the legal work to get 501 (c)3 status pro bono and even paid the fees.

    El Bardo also knew all the great poets and writers in Connecticut and which ones were worth knowing. He helped generate the entries and recruit the judges.

    In June 1998, the Connecticut Young Writers Competition hosted its first annual dinner. Prizes of $1,000 each were presented to the Litchfield County prose and poetry champions.

    El Bardo inspired Bill Cibes, then Chancellor [now Emeritus] of the Connecticut State University System, to join the team.

    The CSU System then partnered in 2000 with Jim Irwin's IMPAC corporation to bring the awards competition statewide.


    Wally Lamb Delivers
    Keynote Address, 2000 Annual Dinner


    The current Chancellor, David Carter, and hundreds of volunteers, have kept the program alive the past few years.

    By June 3, 2010, the CT Young Writers Trust will have given nearly $200,000 to young poets and writers.

    Each of those hundreds of volunteers have been vital to keep the program going. As we convene June 3 at the Hartford Club for the 13th annual celebration, Leo's legacy is an inspiring notion to contemplate.

    Following is a Connecticut Magazine profile of El Bardo The Legend, published a short time before he became Connecticut's Poet Laureate.

  • The Life of the Poet



  • Jim Irwin @ Writers Workshop
    with Luanne Rice, the novelist


  • ANNOUNCEMENT: Young Writers Program Revived, Will Run 2011 Competition


  • twitter@cooljustice




  • Wtby Rep-Am: Writing to go right on with cash infusion


  • VIDEO: 6-3-10, Young Writers 13th Annual Celebration


  • Photos, 6-3-10, Hartford Club


  • Boxing & Poetry Event, 1-15-10


  • WNPR Preview of Triple KO Event


  • CT Young Writers 'Photos of Old'


  • Twain House Photos 2009
  • Friday, December 24, 2010

    ANNOUNCEMENT: Young Writers Program Revived, Will Run 2011 Competition

  • Young Writers Trust Website




  • CT Young Writers Trust
    231 Beach St. Litchfield, CT 06759
    * 860-567-8865 * Fax- 860-567-9119
    http://www.ct.edu/initiatives/ctyoungwriters/

    RON WINTER
    Executive Director, hjrwinter@comcast.net, 860-228-6803
    CAROL THIBEAULT
    Administrator, ctbeau@yahoo.com, 203-843-1423
    ATTY WILLIAM CROWE
    Legal Counsel, wcrowe@mayocrowe.com, 860-275-6801
    ANDY THIBAULT
    Chairman, tntcomm82@cs.com, 860-690-0211
    Dec. 24, 2010


    Holiday Rescue Donor Matt Daly
    With Son Jack Several Years Ago @ Marist College


    ANNOUNCEMENT:
    Young Writers Program Revived,
    Will Run 2011 Competition


    Connecticut's young poets and writers will be able to enter a streamlined competition in 2011 following pledged infusions of cash to the CT Young Writers Trust in recent days.

    The Trust's board received pledges totaling $20,000 on Wednesday from the Connecticut State University System and the family trust of a Glastonbury businessman. The CSU System donation of $10,000 is expected in early January and Matthew Daly's donation of the same amount from his family trust is expected in February. Before Wednesday, the Trust had no funding for the 2011 competition.

    Entry forms will be posted at the CSU System page http://www.ct.edu/initiatives/ctyoungwriters/
    in early January and mailed to all public, private and parochial schools. Home school students are also eligible.

    "This is a far too important program to see die because of lack of funds," Daley said. "We must continue to provide such writing exercises and contests to our young people. I am proud to support such an effort."

    The Trust board on Wednesday also hired an executive director and an administrator for the program, to be paid by the Daly family trust donation. Ron Winter, an author and a long-time judge for the competition, will serve as executive director. Carol Thibeault, a Realtor who managed the program for the CSU System in 2000 and 2001, will serve as administrator.

    "Matt Daly is our holiday rescue angel," said Andy Thibault, chairman of the Trust. "Without his support, we were facing an immediate shutdown."

    The Trust has given more nearly $200,000 to young poets and writers since 1998. About 6,000 students have participated in the competition.

    As the economy soured in recent years, the Trust lost upwards of $10,000 in funding from its corporate benefactor IMPAC. Jim Irwin, the IMPAC chairman and founder of the competition, died in September 2009.

    Since 2000, The Trust and the CSU System have organized four regional ceremonies and an annual dinner celebration. For the 2011 competition, there will be one event to be scheduled in the spring.

    Widespread community support has sustained the program over the years. Small businesses, banks, lawyers, real estate agents and others have donated upwards of $75,000 for expenses.

    Winter will manage operations and fundraising. Thibeault will manage the finances and maintain all records and filings.

    The annual entry deadline of Feb. 1 will be postponed at least a month. More announcements will be forthcoming.

    RON WINTER, CAROL THIBEAULT, MATT DALY
    SHORT BIOS
    FOLLOW BELOW.


    RON WINTER SHORT BIO

    Ronald Winter is an author, public relations executive, college professor and award winning journalist. He regularly writes and speaks on the military and politics.

    Ron is author of the book Masters of the Art, A Fighting Marine's Memoir of Vietnam published by Random House, and writes Winter's Soldier Story, his website, blog and column.

    His newest work of non-fiction is Granny Snatching, How a 92-Year-Old Widow Fought the Courts and Her Family to Win Her Freedom. A long-time journalist, Winter worked for newspapers including The Hartford Courant and Journal Inquirer of Manchester.

    Winter also was a team member of Poets &Writers For Avery, supporting free speech rights in the landmark case [aka The Famous Douche Bag Case] now before the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals.

    He has served as a judge for the Connecticut Young Writers Competition for six years.

    He was featured in 2004 in the Library of Congress' Veterans History Project; is an adjunct professor of communication at the University of Hartford; and is a director for Michael J. London &Associates Public Relations firm in Trumbull, CT.
    --
    CAROL THIBEAULT SHORT BIO

    Carol Thibeault, administrator for the CT Young Writers Trust, managed the young writers competition for the CSU System in 2000 and 2001. From 1996-2001, she managed the Office of the Chancellor, including budget preparation and supervision of part-time employees. Before that, she managed the operation of the office of the Chief Financial Officer.

    Thibeault, a Realtor, earned an accounting degree from Central Connecticut State University in 2000.

    She owned and operated New Haven's first wireless Internet café and Fair Trade espresso bar, Elm City Java, from 2002-2005.
    --

    MATT DALY SHORT BIO


    Matt Daly, a business consultant based in Glastonbury, was a defensive tackle for Marist College where he graduated in 1991.

    Born in Fairfield, he served on the Hebron Board of Finance from 2003-2006.

    Marist University
    Degree awarded: B.A.
    Major: Fine Arts

    Global Financial Services
    Business Efficiency Consultant

    Yankee Institute
    Policy Scholar
    2007-2008

    State of Connecticut Judicial Department
    Bail Commissioner
    1993-2007
    -------------
    news story
    in today's
    Register Citizen


    The Register Citizen (registercitizen.com,
    Serving Torrington, CT

    News

    Connecticut Young Writers Competition bounces back

    'We're delighted'- CSUS Senior Vice Chancellor for Academic and Student Affairs Louise Feroe


    Friday, December 24, 2010

    By RICKY CAMPBELL

    LITCHFIELD — It seems as if Christmas has come a few days early for the Connecticut Young Writers Trust.

    The non-profit organization which has held a competition for high school students in both prose and poetry since 1998 was facing its dissolution going into Wednesday’s board meeting because of a lack in funding. That isn’t the case any longer.

    Thanks to Glastonbury resident Matthew Daly, the Connecticut Young Writers Competition will live to see another day because of his financial donation of $10,000. The Connecticut State University System (CSUS) will match the donor’s gift, giving the competition enough fuel for another year.

    “It’s a terrific organization we can’t let die,” the former state congress candidate said. “Our young people are given such an enormous opportunity [through it].”

    Daly, son of a former Federal Justice T.F. Gilroy Daly, said he was approached by “an old friend” and given the mission of the fund. After hearing the purpose of the organization and its competition, Daly felt willing to help out the group’s monetary woes, saying he has always had a place in his heart for the literary arts.

    “I have a very strong passion for writing, myself,” he added.

    The “old friend” who approached Daly was six-year competition judge Ron Winter, who recently stepped up as the program’s executive director and said when he learned of the rut the organization was in, immediately thought of Daly.

    “I didn’t realize the program was in jeopardy,” Winter said. “[Daly] helped out a lot of programs before so I called him up and asked if he could help,”

    And Daly answered the call. Ten thousand times.

    Along with Daly, CSUS has once again thrown their hat into the ring, supporting the fund for the 11th straight year.

    “We were always willing to be a partner,” Senior Vice Chancellor for Academic and Student Affairs Louise Feroe said, adding that as long as the competition still has a breath left in it, “we’re delighted.”

    CSUS and the fund’s board members aren’t the only ones jumping with holiday joy. Former competitors know how much the prose and poetry limelight can mean to high school aged kids.

    “As a writer, it’s a great encouragement,” 2003 prose champion Lauren Hefferon said. “It encourages talent and proves there’s a network of writers out there.”

    Hefferon, a Yale University graduate and keynote speaker for the 2010 competition added that the donation by Daly is “a pretty nice Christmas present.”

    “I’m so glad to hear it’s getting another chance this year,” said Melanie Lieberman who won the prose championship four years following Hefferon. “Having the recognition can mean so much to a student. It’s such a great opportunity and I’m so thrilled.”

    That same thrilling feeling was felt throughout the Young Writers board, with trust chairman Andy Thibault mentioning how much it the donation meant.

    “It’s a renewed commitment,” said Thibault, who has witnessed the program’s growth and been a huge part of it since its inception. “It’s great and unexpected news to have a holiday donor. A rescue donor.”

    While the joyous news may have come as a surprise to many, everyone from top to bottom is aware the future of the competition will remain an uphill battle.

    “We’re going to do everything we can,” Winter said. “I’m going to do everything I can to keep this thing going.”

    “We have a lot of work do do right now,” he added. “That’s priority number one.”

    According to Thibault, the trust is trying to get the entry forms online as early as the first week of January and instead of the usual five annual ceremonies, the organization may have to combine into a single one.

    While the competition may see some changes in the near future, the program’s new favorite son says it still has what it takes to move forward.

    “It can grow exponentially,” Daly said. “Some of the people involved can really help it expand.”

    As long as contributors such as Daly are around, the competition which has seen over 6,000 students and has given nearly $200,000 in prizes can continue its support of hard-working competitors, giving the nod to those directly involved, providing the Young Writers Trust with a Christmas present its sure to remember for years to come.

    Ricky Campbell can be reached by e-mail at rcampbell@registercitizen.com and followed on Twitter at Twitter.com/rickycampbellRC. Follow us on Twitter at Twitter.com/registercitizen.

  • Marine Leads Charge To Revitalize Connecticut Young Writers Trust


  • twitter@cooljustice




  • VIDEO: 6-3-10, Young Writers 13th Annual Celebration


  • Photos, 6-3-10, Hartford Club


  • Boxing & Poetry Event, 1-15-10


  • WNPR Preview of Triple KO Event


  • CT Young Writers 'Photos of Old'


  • Twain House Photos 2009
  • Thursday, December 23, 2010

    Marine Leads Charge To Revitalize Connecticut Young Writers Trust

  • Wtby Rep-Am Today: Writing to go right on with cash infusion


  • Young Writers Trust Website




  • Winter also was a team member of Poets & Writers For Avery, supporting free speech rights in the landmark case [aka The Famous Douche Bag Case] now before the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals

    New Executive Director of CT Young Writers Trust,
    Ron Winter


    About Ronald Winter

    Ronald Winter is an author, public relations executive, college professor and award winning journalist. He regularly writes and speaks on the military and politics.

    Ron is author of the book Masters of the Art, A Fighting Marine's Memoir of Vietnam published by Random House, and writes Winter's Soldier Story, his website blog column.

    His newest work of non-fiction is Granny Snatching, How a 92-Year-Old Widow Fought the Courts and Her Family to Win Her Freedom.

  • Granny Snatching


  • Ron gave up an academic scholarship at the State University of New York at Albany in 1966 to join the Marines and fight in Vietnam as a helicopter crewman and machine gunner. He flew 300 combat missions and was awarded 15 Air Medals, Combat Aircrew Wings, and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry.

    After Vietnam he earned undergraduate degrees in Electrical Engineering and English Literature. In a two-decade journalism career Ron was the recipient of several prestigious awards and a Pulitzer nomination.

    He was featured in 2004 in the Library of Congress' Veterans History Project; is an adjunct professor of communication at the University of Hartford; is a judge for the annual Connecticut Young Writers competition; and is a director for Michael J. London & Associates Public Relations firm in Trumbull, CT. Winter also was a team member of Poets & Writers For Avery, supporting free speech rights in the landmark case [aka The Famous Douche Bag Case] now before the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals.


    ABOUT
    GRANNY SNATCHING


    Elder care is a serious issue as the American family faces the sometimes overwhelming strain that caring for aging parents creates. In generations before, the elderly were part of the family till the end. Today, they are often closed away behind institutional doors as their children participate in a growing trend called Granny Snatching.

    We anticipate a safe and secure retirement where we hold hands with our life's partner during leisurely strolls on golden sands...and suddenly, darkness falls upon us and our world is turned upside down as family members appear from nowhere, seizing us, dragging us toward an unanticipated and unwanted future, penniless, powerless, confined in the clutches of "elder care."

    Unlikely? Think again. It happens every day all over America and it can happen to you. Is your future reasonably well planned out; ensuring that when you reach retirement age you will live the independent life you envisioned? Do you have a good lawyer who will help you navigate the uncharted waters of life for America's elderly - including proper care in case of illness or injury? Will your financial plans remain intact? Will you live as you hoped and planned for all those years with your family lovingly by your side?

    Granny Snatching is an insidious creeping menace from which no one is safe. What nearly happened to Ella Winter can happen to you. Your life, like hers, can suddenly be thrown into chaos and disorder. Will you knuckle under or will you learn from her fight, and like Ella Winter stand tall and strong in the face of adversity.

    GRANNY SNATCHING provides thought-provoking information on the true symptoms of Alzheimer's disease, and how to respond if family members attempt to confiscate an elder person's assets.

  • Complete Announcement For New Ron Winter Book




  • Ron Winter Website / Blog


  • Courant Refugees Cite Winter Book


  • Ron Winter column 12-22-10 @ Connecticut WATCHDOG


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Wtby Rep-Am Today: Writing to go right on with cash infusion

  • Waterbury Republican-American




  • CT Young Writers Trust
    Reactivates operations


  • Young Writers Trust Website


  • The board agreed by consensus to hire past judge and writer Ron Winter as the new executive director, and board member Carol [I'm not related to him'] Thibeault, a Branford real estate agent, agreed to serve as administrator.

    BY JIM MOORE
    REPUBLICAN-AMERICAN
    Dec. 23, 2010

    HARTFORD — A statewide writing contest for teens is on track to survive its brush with insolvency.

    Volunteer directors of the CT Young Writers Trust, the nonprofit organization that runs the statewide high school writing contest in conjunction with the state university system, received word Wednesday that cash is on the way.

    Senior Vice Chancellor for Academic and Student Affairs Louise H. Feroe told board members the university system's annual $10,000 contribution to the cause had not been forthcoming because of uncertainty about whether the contest could survive.

    "We were under the impression that there were no other sources of funding this year," Feroe said.

    Uncertainty about the continued availability of volunteers to assist with fundraising and administration of the contest itself was another issue, she said, and three of the four state university presidents she recently surveyed were unwilling to "stick their necks out" for and dedicate significant resources, including staff time, to the contest.

    The contest has fielded about 6,000 submissions and awarded nearly $200,000 in prize money since it was founded in 1998 by the late James B. Irwin Sr., a Litchfield resident who created the contest and lent his company's name, IMPAC, to the program.

    The company's 2004 bankruptcy, and Irwin's subsequent death, created a hole in the contest's roughly $20,000 budget. Since 2008, the state university system has been the largest single sponsor.

    Litchfield resident Andy Thibault, who maintains an online news blog and serves as chairman of the contest board, said Wednesday another major donor has been identified, a philanthropist willing to donate $10,000 to cover the cost of hiring staff. The board agreed by consensus to hire past judge and writer Ron Winter as the new executive director, and board member Carol Thibeault, a Branford real estate agent, agreed to serve as administrator. Each will be paid $5,000 per year from proceeds of the still-anonymous donation.

    Entry forms for 2011, long delayed and recently thought impossible, will soon begin flowing to high school teachers around the state, pending agreement by the four college presidents. Feroe said she will confirm that detail quickly.

    Attorney Bill Crowe, who has served as both judge, legal advisor and sponsor of the contest, said his firm would be able to help with any funding shortfalls. Crowe pushed to keep the contest going in 2011.

    The contest may or may not continue in its previous scope for the coming year. Prizes of up to $1,000 have been awarded in years past, with county and statewide winners chosen. Organizers agreed they would delay that decision until the number of submissions and amount of available cash are known.

  • WE'RE NOT DEAD: Flock of Angels Saves CT Young Writers Trust


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Wednesday, December 22, 2010

    WE'RE NOT DEAD: Flock of Angels Saves CT Young Writers Trust



  • Young Writers Trust Website


  • BREAKING News Reports From:

    Waterbury-Republican-American
    Danbury News Times
    Litchfield County Times


    Young writer contest saved
    By JIM MOORE
    Republican-American


    HARTFORD – A statewide writing contest for teens is now on track to survive its brush with bankruptcy, and will likely begin seeking submissions for 2011 soon.

    A representative of the Connecticut State University system said the $10,000 that the schools have collectively contributed to the contest prize fund in each of the past several years should still be available, and payable soon. Louise H. Feroe, senior vice chancellor for academic and student affairs, said she expects to have word quickly once the continued interest of the individual schools, which have collected submissions and provided other logistical support in years past, is confirmed.

    Board members of the Connecticut Young Writers Trust had anticipated a possible vote Wednesday to end the contest, which began in 1998 and has awarded nearly $200,000 in prizes, accepting about 6,000 entries over its history. Instead, an hour-long meeting at the law offices of Mayo Crowe LLC, marked a new beginning. Andy Thibault, chairman of the contest board, said another donor has agreed to provide another $10,000 to pay two part-time contest administrators. An announcement on submission deadlines for high school students across the state is expected later this month, or in early January, Thibault said.
    --

    High school writers contest saved from the brink

    By Eileen FitzGerald
    Staff Writer
    Danbury News Times


    Published:
    08:14 p.m., Wednesday, December 22, 2010

    DANBURY -- A statewide writing contest that rewarded prose and poetry writers from high schools around the state was saved from the brink Wednesday and will be held again in the spring.

    The Connecticut Young Writers Competition was on the verge of being eliminated after losing half of its funding this year. Then Glastonbury resident Matthew Daly agreed to share the costs with the Connecticut State University System so the program can continue.

    "A lot is still to be determined, but we will go forward,'' Andy Thibault, chairman of Connecticut Young Writers Trust, said Wednesday after a meeting on the program.

    More than 6,000 high school students have participated and nearly $200,000 has been awarded to the winners.

    Through the program, eight county winners in prose and poetry are selected, and from them a state winner in each category is selected.

    Ron Winter, an author, journalist and program judge from Hebron, has agreed to serve as executive director and administrator for the program.

    "We have a lot of legwork to do, but I want to get the applications out to schools. I want to continue this program with no interruptions. We can't let a project of this value to flounder," Winter said.

    "I've seen some terrific writing from contestants,'' he said, and the contest provides a way to reward them for their work.

    Winter said he called Daly last week when he realized the program was on its last legs. Daly agreed to supply $10,000 from a family trust to save it.

    "I'm just happy to be a part of it,'' said Daly, who works as a business consultant. "There is nothing more important than to provide some opportunities for these young people and to keep this going."

    Joanne Tolles, an English teacher at Danbury's Alternative Center for Excellence, was thrilled to learn the program would be saved.

    Danbury High School student Candi Deschamps was the state prose winner in 2001, and Tolles has had a student finalist every year but one since she began teaching in the city in 2001.

    "I believe in miracles. This contest just does so much for our young people. It levels the playing field,'' Tolles said. "It doesn't matter what school the student attends or what class they are in. It just matters what they are writing.''

    She called it a fair contest, well judged and open to everyone.

    "The creative writing process is important and yet it gets lost in the striving for higher test scores,'' Tolles said. "The creative process is higher-order learning."

    The Connecticut Young Writers Competition was started in Litchfield County in 1998 by James Irwin, who was then chairman of his firm, IMPAC.

    In 2000, William Cibes, retired chancellor of the Connecticut State University System, teamed up with Irwin, and IMPAC and CSUS each contributed $10,000 annually.

    IMPAC was unable to contribute its share of prize money after 2008 and Irwin died in 2009. The university system kept the program alive for those two years.

    Now Daly and the state universities will allow the program to continue.

    "We're not dead,'' Thibault said simply.

    Contact Eileen FitzGerald
    at eileenf@newstimes.com
    or at 203-731-3333.

    --

    Early Xmas Present:
    Contest for Young Writers Is Saved (Web Exclusive)


    Published:
    Wednesday, December 22, 2010

    By JACK CORAGGIO
    Litchfield County Times


    LITCHFIELD—At the beginning of this week, the future of the CT Young Writers Trust, which sponsors a 13-year-old statewide contest for aspiring young writers, was a matter of doubt.

    A Christmas miracle has arrived, however, and the trust is saved.

    “We’re not dead,” said a relieved Andy Thibault of Litchfield, chairman of the nonprofit’s board of directors, after a Wednesday afternoon meeting with a longtime financial contributor and collaborator, the Connecticut State University System, proved fruitful.

    According to Mr. Thibault, the state university system, which has long been a major sponsor of the annual event, pledged $10,000 to keep it going. Just as importantly, contest judge and author Ron Winter secured a private family trust fund commitment in the same amount.

    Now the competition can afford an executive director, in this case Mr. Winter, and an administrator, along with being able to meet various other logistical costs, such as prize money and infrastructure. With some adjustment, it should be enough to save the 2011 competition, which looked unlikely just a few days ago.

    “We’ll move back the deadline a month,” Mr. Thibault conceded. “Probably do just one ceremony instead of five; we’ll figure out the prize money after awhile.”

    Typically, each year hundreds of students from across the state submit their writing. Each county yields two finalists, and those 16 head to the ultimate showdown. Last year, the prize distribution equaled $10,000. Of that $10,000, $8,000 was divided among the county champions, half of whom earned it for prose, the other half for poetry.

    It likely won’t work that way this year. Still, Mr. Thibault offers a big thanks to Mr. Winter, who secured the money from the charitable family trust of Glastonbury resident Matthew Daly.

    “I heard from Andy that it might go under, and I was shocked about it, so I got a hold of Matt,” said Mr. Winter. “This is something I consider tremendously valuable and I’d hate to lose it.”

    So would all the young writers, and the various high school teachers who have advocated on their behalf. Some have even written letters on behalf of the revived trust, illustrating just how valuable it’s been for past students.

  • Young writers' program on the brink -- News Times


  • NEWS Brf: Young Writers trust to meet Wednesday to discuss award program's future


  • Final Days For CT Young Writers Trust?


  • VIDEO: 6-3-10, Young Writers 13th Annual Celebration


  • Photos, 6-3-10, Hartford Club


  • Boxing & Poetry Event, 1-15-10


  • WNPR Preview of Triple KO Event


  • CT Young Writers 'Photos of Old'


  • Twain House Photos 2009


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Young writers' program on the brink -- News Times

  • Young Writers Trust Website


  • Danbury News Times


  • HARTFORD -- The CT Young Writers Trust meets Dec. 22, at 1 p.m. to decide if it will re-constitute, dissolve or take other related action with regard to the annual statewide high school writers competition. The meeting will be held at the office of the trust's legal counsel, William R. Crowe, at 185 Asylum St., Hartford.

    Students from throughout the area have competed and been recognized for their prose and poems in the contest that is 13 years old. The program became a partnership with the Connecticut State University and a private sponsor, IMPAC. Since the private sponsor went bankrupt, the program faces dissolution.


  • NEWS Brf: Young Writers trust to meet Wednesday to discuss award program's future


  • Final Days For CT Young Writers Trust?


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Tuesday, December 21, 2010

    NEWS Brf: Young Writers trust to meet Wednesday to discuss award program's future

  • Young Writers Trust Website




  • By RICKY CAMPBELL
    Torrington Register Citizen
    http://www.registercitizen.com/
    Published: Tuesday, December 21, 2010


    LITCHFIELD — The Connecticut Young Writers Trust will be meeting tomorrow afternoon to decide its future.

    According to an e-mail from trust chairman Andy Thibault, the trust’s board is planning to meet at 1 p.m. at attorney William Crowe’s office, 185 Asylum St., Hartford, to “re-constitute, dissolve or take other related action,” about the fund and its annual competition, the Connecticut Young Writers Competition.

    Connecticut State University System (CSUS) Vice Chancellor Louise Feroe said she will be in attendance to brief the board about the university system’s efforts in regards to the competition and the board will “have some decisions to make.” She declined further comment on the briefing.

    CSUS has provided the fund with $10,000 every year and according to many sources on the board, may not be able to continue their funding this year, ending the 13-year competition which has provided state high school literary students with a platform to shed light on their work in both prose and poetry.

    The competition began in Litchfield, sponsored by former IMPAC chairman Jim Irwin and with the help of retired CSUS Chancellor William Cibes, went statewide in 2000. It has seen over 6,000 contestants and has awarded nearly $200,000 to state winners in their respective categories.

    Ricky Campbell can be reached by e-mail at rcampbell@registercitizen.com and followed on Twitter at Twitter.com/rickycampbellRC. Follow us on Twitter at Twitter.com/registercitizen.

  • Final Days For CT Young Writers Trust?


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Monday, December 20, 2010

    Stop! Criticizing St. Jim ... [Courant Reader]


    Please! Stop! I will not tolerate criticism of St. Jim, or reports of others criticizing St. Jim, or even any questioning of St. Jim. That awful awful Krayeske person must be banished from St. Jim's kingdom and not darken the doorstep of the UConn press room again! St. Jim is still getting over the shock (shock!) of learning his assistants have been sneaking around committing recruiting violations without his knowledge and must not be upset in any way!

  • BREAKING: Mad Dog Millionaire's Failed Suppression Attempt


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Sunday, December 19, 2010

    Dad on a Lark: Already Gone



    By Rand Richards Cooper

    I'm going to take a bit longer than usual, because this is my last entry in the Dad on a Lark saga. The column has acquired some truth-in-advertising issues: she isn't "baby Larkin" any more, not even "toddler Larkin;" and I'm not really a stay-at-home dad. Well, I'm at home, but she isn't. She's at school most of the day, in pre-K-3. Initially my plan was to pick her up at 12:30 every afternoon. But I ended up wanting to work more, she wanted to hang out longer in her new world, and so her school days stretched out bit by bit.

    Most change happens gradually in our lives, which is why we all have those "I-looked-up-and-suddenly" moments. When Larkin was born, my friends - whose kids were in high school or college already - wistfully advised me to pay attention, because before I knew it, she'd be half grown up. It goes so quickly, they'd say.

    It didn't seem that way at first. In fact, the first year or so went quite slowly. But then things speeded up. Larkin is four now. Summer is coming. And suddenly I look up and…

    She can do so much. She can write her name and read simple words. She has friends. She has a personal history, a past. "Remember the old days," she'll ask, "when I used to pee in a little potty?"

    And she engages with me, with adults generally, in complicated ways. Your relationship with a baby or an early toddler is wildly lopsided, the efforts and affections almost all one-way. No longer. Larkin understands motives and vulnerabilities and tactics; she engages in shameless manipulations. "Dad," she'll say, "I want to explain something to you." Invariably this means a request is coming. She makes her pitch, and then I say no to the candy bar/ extra half hour of video/ fifth cookie. "Remember the deal we made ten minutes ago?" I'll ask.

    "I know, Dad, but… See, sometimes my heart just seizes on something, and then I have to have it, and I'll be really really REALLY sad if I don't!"

    Yesterday, a Saturday, I had her for the afternoon while Molly was off elsewhere. We stopped by her cousin Matthew's to play; did a little shopping; went to a museum and looked at paintings; came home. These long afternoons-into-evenings can have their rocky moments. Toward evening I parked her in front of a favorite video, Spirit Horse, while I got dinner ready. First we argued over whether she could eat in front of TV. Then over how long she could watch before dinner. I went out to the kitchen and returned a few minutes later to find that she had taken the paper insert out of the DVD jacket and torn it up. Shreds and little rolled-up balls of paper lay everywhere. I turned off the video and, over her shriek of outrage, carted her upstairs to her room for a timeout.

    She wailed away for a while, then calmed down, and eventually called out: "I'm ready to talk about it!" (This is the well-established timeout routine: her transgression; our discussion; lessons learned; restoration.) So, I asked her, why did I have to bring you up here? "Because I tore up the Spirit Horse paper." And why did you do that?

    "Because I wanted to, but it was bad behavior."

    It looked as if we were back on track. Then she asked about dinner and whether I could make her mac and cheese.

    "Yes. We have mac and cheese."

    "But is it mac and cheese from today?"

    This is an annoying food fetish of hers - refusing leftover noodles, demanding fresh pasta every day. I explained, for the hundredth time, why we don't throw yesterday's food away.

    "But I don't WANT pasta from yesterday!" she wailed. "I want you to make it FRESH!" And now here we were, revving the fight engine all over again.

    "Larkin," I said, "you're obviously not ready to stop crying and come eat the dinner I've prepared for you, so I'm leaving you up here to think about it."

    This time it was a good fifteen minutes before I heard her call out, "I'm ready, Daddy!" I went up to find everything changed. She was composed, almost beatific, playing with her toys and singing quietly to herself. I took her hand and we went down to the kitchen and ate dinner together. "Yummy," she said, digging in. "It's delicious!" She was bending over backwards to make amends. Without prompting, she ate everything on her plate - a rare occurrence.
    Two hours later Molly returned and took over, putting Larkin to bed as I sat in the living room and watched the evening news. I was bone tired. After a while Molly reappeared. "She wants to say goodnight to you," she said.

    Larkin's room was dimly lit by her sunflower nightlight. She was lying on her back, blankets tucked in halfway up her chest, and held her arms out to me. "Daddy!" she whispered, in a hushed, ultra-affectionate tone.

    I gave her a hug, and she stared at me and stroked my face.

    "We had our ups and downs today, didn't we, beetle?" I said.

    She nodded. "With some bad behaviors," she said.

    "That's true. But the important thing is, we both came through it, right?"

    She stared at me earnestly. "That's because we know each other," she said.

    I left, smiling and shaking my head. It's strange, I told Molly, how adult it all seems sometimes. "We had a fight, and then we made up. The rancor and then the reconciliation. It's the whole package."

    Sometimes these days I find myself remembering the first months of Larkin's life, when we all slept together each night in our room. Molly and I had always seen ourselves as anti-family-bed people, and with Larkin we'd envisioned this tidy sequence of moves, leading to her healthy independence and our happy recapture of privacy within a couple of months. But it turned out to be a struggle at every step - a struggle for us, that is. And especially for me. I didn't want her to leave our bed, and then I didn't want her to leave the bassinette right by our bed. In the end, we mostly followed our plan, and by five or six months Larkin was sleeping in her crib, in her room. But it hurt, and it continues to hurt, these separations that begin with your child's birth: out of your wife's body, then out of your bed, your room, eventually out of your house and finally out of your lives. And that's the problem: each stage carries with it a premonition of the whole shebang. She's just down the hall… but… you miss her.

    The first day of school last fall, Larkin didn't want to go. To bolster her resolve, Molly and I gave her a little blue glass bead, like a translucent pebble, to carry in her pocket. Our love was in the bead, we said, and if she needed it during the day she could reach in and feel it. With the bead stowed away in her pocket, Larkin literally took a deep breath, grabbed her brand-new bookbag, and said, "OK, I'm ready." So much has happened since then. She turned four and celebrated by eating so many cupcakes, she threw up. She memorized books and songs, learned to sit "crisscross applesauce" on her assigned square on the alphabet rug in her class. She acquired buddies, and now has both home and away playdates, sleepovers too, without us there.

    The pre-K-3 classroom is located in the basement of Larkin's school. It's the only classroom down there, and every school morning this past year she and I have walked the long, brightly-lit hallway to her room at the far end. The hall floor contains two downward inclined sections, like built-in ramps, and sometimes we run down those, picking up speed as Larkin shouts, "I feel the gravity!" At the start of the year, when she was still uncertain about the whole school thing, we developed a parting routine: I'd sign her in, and when I was ready to leave, she'd stand outside the classroom door to watch me walk back down that long hall. Twice along the way I'd turn, and we'd exchange a wave.

    At the door to the far stairway I would stop and wave one last time, calling out, "Bye-bye, beetle, have a good day!"

    "Bye Dad!" she'd call back. "I love you!"

    A few months ago she started skipping this little ritual, or rather forgetting about it, diving instead into the start of her day and the company of her classmates. The waving routine had begun in her need to be reassured by me, and she was growing out of it. The day before yesterday, though, something must have reminded her of it, because when I left, she raced to the door and called out to me. It had been weeks since we'd done this--since Larkin had needed to do it -- and with a smile I turned and waved, then kept walking down the hall. At the far stairway door I turned to wave a last time, and called out "Bye-bye, honey, have a good-"

    But she was already gone.

    Rand Richards Cooper is the travel correspondent for Bon Appétit, and is author of a novel, The Last to Go, and a collection of stories, Big as Life. Cooper is also a board member and judge for the Connecticut Young Writers Trust.

    Saturday, December 18, 2010

    * BREAKING: Mad Dog Millionaire's Failed Suppression Attempt



    Courant /
    Calhoun-Krayeske:
    Another Episode In A Never-Ending Story

    Latest Chapter Involves A Web Ad
    By The Green Party Candidate
    That Drew UConn's Objections


    By Jon Lender
    Government Watch
    Dec. 19, 2010


    It was only a brief verbal exchange nearly two years ago — so it's kind of amazing how big a source of fascination and controversy it continues to be: On Feb. 21, 2009, Green Party activist/free-lance journalist Ken Krayeske asked UConn men's basketball coach Jim Calhoun if he'd be willing to take a cut in his $1.6 million salary during tough financial times for the state.

    "Not a dime," Calhoun famously replied at a post-game press conference — and then the two went back and forth in video footage that made national sports news and has never completely disappeared. The incident remains available on YouTube and has been mentioned no fewer than 34 times in The Courant since it happened.

    And recently, it turns out, it was the subject of a heretofore-undisclosed bit of behind-the-scenes legal wrangling, according to e-mails obtained in a recent freedom of information request.


  • Complete Article


  • Mad Dog Millionaire Ad Highlighting Rich-Poor Gap


  • Op-Ed On Election Home Stretch: Breaking Down Barriers From The Back Of The Bus


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Thursday, December 16, 2010

    * Final Days For CT Young Writers Trust?

  • Young Writers Trust Website


  • BULLETIN

    12-17-10, 10:07 A.M.

    CSU System Working To Salvage
    CT Young Writers Program.

    Vice Chancellor Louise Feroe will brief us WED., 12-22-10 on efforts by the CSU System ...

    Miracle -- Though Unlikely -- Is Possible... Announcement To Follow Meeting 12-22-10




    Connecticut State University System
    kept program alive thru June;
    now, on last breath


  • VIDEO: 6-3-10, Young Writers 13th Annual Celebration


  • Photos, 6-3-10, Hartford Club


  • Boxing & Poetry Event, 1-15-10


  • WNPR Preview of Triple KO Event


  • CT Young Writers 'Photos of Old'


  • Twain House Photos 2009



  • Stories From Today's
  • Waterbury Republican-American

  • &
  • Torrington Register Citizen



  • Young writers' contest faces lack of funds, uncertain future

    BY JIM MOORE
    REPUBLICAN-AMERICAN


    LITCHFIELD — A statewide contest for young writers founded 13 years ago in Litchfield may have awarded its final prize.

    A meeting next week promises to spell either the end of the contest, or a new beginning: volunteer directors of the CT Young Writers Trust, an organization founded as the IMPAC Literary Awards for Young Writers, and state university system officials will discuss whether the state can continue to support the contest.

    Andy Thibault, chairman of the nonprofit organization's board of directors, said the outlook is bleak.

    "Basically, we have no plan, no money, no infrastructure," said Thibault, who is also a longtime local online journalist. "Other than that, we're doing great."

    High school students around the state have collected nearly $200,000 in prizes since the contest was founded in 1998, Thibault said. About 6,000 students have participated. The last set of awards was given in June, and applications for the 2011 contest would normally have been distributed by now. That has not yet happened.

    The contest's money trouble began in 2008, when the title sponsor ceased to pay.

    Integrated Control Systems, better known as IMPAC, founded and sponsored the contest in 1998.

    The company was built by James B. Irwin Sr., a local resident who also owned the Litchfield Inn for many years. Irwin bought IMPAC in 1972, and grew it from a firm of six employees into an international management consulting business with a work force that included 2,000 contract management specialists.

    In 2004, IMPAC filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and in 2008 the company ceased to sponsor the awards program. The Connecticut State University System continued to give $10,000 a year — the same amount provided in past years by IMPAC — through 2009, but has yet to cut a check this year.

    Thibault said various other businesses contributed another $6,000 to $10,000 collectively, but he is not soliciting private funds until learning whether the state funding will survive.

    The nonprofit group's 2009 tax return lists total year-end assets of $20,045, including $2,545 in savings, $1,000 in stock and $16,500 in prepaid expenses and deferred charges. Thibault said the group has enough cash left to pay an accountant to close the books, unless the state funding comes through.

    "I'd say we've got more than one foot in the grave," Thibault said.

    State university spokesman Bernard Kavaler said no decision has been made on funding for 2010, or the future. He declined to comment further for the record.
    --


    News
    Young Writers Trust: 'There's no money'
    Thursday, December 16, 2010

    By RICKY CAMPBELL
    Register Citizen


    LITCHFIELD — For 13 years, the Connecticut Young Writers Trust has held a competition for high school students in both prose and poetry, encouraging literary skills and recognizing the best in the state with outstanding awards and outward appreciation.

    Now, existence of that same competition is hanging in the balance, staring at what many believe is its untimely death.

    The Connecticut Young Writers Competition, which has seen over 6,000 contestants and has bestowed nearly $200,000 in awards, is finding itself in what could be its last days if something doesn’t change drastically, many sources have said.

    “There’s no money,” said trust chairman Andy Thibault. “We don’t know if we still exist.”

    From its humble beginnings in Litchfield County in 1998, the competition has relied on funding from generous donors, such as founding father Jim Irwin, during his tenure as chairman of his global productivity firm, IMPAC. After two years of success in the Litchfield area, retired Connecticut State University System (CSUS) Chancellor William Cibes teamed up with Irwin and brought it statewide, with IMPAC and CSUS each contributing $10,000 [annually]. Irwin passed away in 2009, and when he was gone, so was half of the assets, leaving CSUS to carry the once-sharable load.

    CSUS did the best it could, cutting the prize money in half from $1,000 to $500 for the champion in each group. With the state and its university system in the financial state it is, the future may look grim for the non-profit organization, yet those in governing positions are trying to stay positive.

    “We’re hopeful,” said Assistant Vice Chancellor for Public Affairs Bernard Kavaler. “It’s too soon to tell if it’s over. We would like for it not to end.”

    Trust board members appear to be much more concerned. “We cannot think of a way to keep this going,” said founding member Franz Douskey. “I’m very sorry to see such a positive thing affecting high school students have to end.”

    “There should be a way of intelligent people to come up with a solution,” he added.

    “It looks very much like it’s not getting done this year,” said prose judge and board member William Crowe. “We don’t have the funding.”

    Vicky Nordlund, a creative writing teacher at Rockville High School, has witnessed 18 of her students become contest semi-finalists and even a prose winner. She believes the contest is not only important to the writers, but to their peers.

    “It’s a big part of our school culture,” she said in a recent phone interview. “People really look up to the former champions.”

    For one of those champions, the end of the competition would conclude something great for so many teenagers.

    “This competition is huge,” said former Nordlund student and 2007 state prose champion Melanie Lieberman. “It’s amazing. It’s really a way for students to get some recognition. It would be a shame for it to end.”

    Another former competitor had no idea the fund was facing problems. When told about it, now-St. John freshman Carter Brown said “That’s awful.”

    “It’s a great overall experience,” he said. “To hear that it might end, it’s discomforting.”

    Cost estimates needed for the competition to continue range anywhere from $15,000 to $50,000 and Thibault says the future of the event is completely up to CSUS. “The university has a proposal it hasn’t responded to, in which a professor has offered taking on the task in exchange for course relief,” he said. “The ball is in the university’s court.”

    Douskey suggested that instead of a financial reward, the system could offer scholarships to any one of its universities.

    For the years of hard work Thibault has poured into the Young Writers Competition, he hates to see it end this way.

    “I’ve gotten to know a lot of young writers and seen them flourish. It’s been phenomenal,” he said.

    Ricky Campbell can be reached by e-mail at rcampbell@registercitizen.com and followed on Twitter at Twitter.com/rickycampbellRC. Follow us on Twitter at Twitter.com/registercitizen

    --

    Memos to board members,
    CT Young Writers Trust


    CT Young Writers Trust
    Meeting Scheduled Wed., Dec. 22, 2010, 1 p.m.


    Agenda:

    Re-constitute, dissolve or take other related action.

    Meet at offices of our legal counsel,

    William R. Crowe
    Mayo Crowe LLC
    CityPlace II
    185 Asylum Street, Hartford


    thanks much, Andy


  • Connecticut Young Writers Trust

  • 231 Beach St.
    Litchfield, CT 06759

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

    ANDY THIBAULT
    Chairman
    Cell: 860-690-0211


    --
    Sent: Mon, Dec 13, 2010 12:03 pm
    Subject: * MEETING: Young Writers Trust Is Dead Long Live Young Writers Trust

    Monday, Dec., 13, 2010, High Noon

    Hi folks,

    I will be calling a meeting soon at the conference room of our legal counsel, Bill Crowe:

    William R. Crowe
    Mayo Crowe LLC
    CityPlace II
    185 Asylum Street, Hartford

    This is to press the issue of whether we are alive or dead.

    You will recall from prior memos since our 13th annual event on June 3, 2010 that other than having no money, infrastructure or plan, we are doing great.

    Recently I have received a steady stream of inquiries from young writers, parents and teachers regarding the competition. I have forwarded many of these to Bernard Kavaler @ the CSU System.

    Below please see:


    Letter from Danbury teacher received today.
    My Nov. 13, 2010 memo to the board.


    Dear Andy,

    As a writer, educator, and advocate for at-risk teenagers, I am so saddened to hear that there will not be a Young Writers Contest for 2011. I have been a high school English teacher for the past 10 years and have seen this contest bring out the best in my young writers. Since 2002 I have been teaching at Danbury’s Alternative Center for Excellence – an academic program for at-risk teenagers. I use writing as a tool for self-awareness as well as an academic accomplishment. Every year, I had my writing students submit an entry to the contest as a Fall semester final product. The CT Young Writers Competition gave my students motivation to write the best piece of fiction or poetry that they could. They knew that the contest was authentic and fair since the classes before them participated in the event. The Young Writers Contest has become part of the culture of writing here at the Center.

    In my 10 years of high school teaching (there’s one year at Rogers Park Middle School in there), I had finalists nine of those 10 years. I cannot tell you the impact that being a finalist had on each of these students. It was an accomplishment far above anything they could dream of. To sit in an awards ceremony, with high school student from all the “better” districts in the state, and to be praised by noted writers and officials of the State University system, was a moment in each young person’s life that was truly priceless. Of these finalists, I know of three young people who are pursuing a career in writing after college.

    The Young Writers Competition leveled the playing field for my at-risk students. It took away the label of “bad kid” or “lost cause” and it gave them a fair and unbiased platform from which to excel. The contest was a dream builder. It made dreams possible. It was a magical event and I truly hope the contest can find a way to survive.

    I thank you Andy for your passion for this event and for all your years of hard work. If there is anything I can do to help the cause of young writers here in CT, please let me know. As I said in my earlier e-mail, I do believe in miracles and I am believing that there must be a way to keep this contest alive.


    Sincerely,

    Joanne Tolles
    English/Guidance Teacher
    Alternative Center for Excellence

    ---
    IS IT TIME TO SHOVEL DIRT
    ON THE COFFIN
    OF CT YOUNG WRITERS TRUST?

    Sat., 11-13-10

    Dear folks,

    I asserted – in the latest of a series of conversations with Bernard Kavaler of the CSU System this week – that it is indeed time to shovel dirt on the coffin of the CT Young Writers Trust.

    Bernard responded No. however, he could not say why we would have any reason to think otherwise at this time.

    To recap:

    * IMPAC has been unable to pay its $10,000 annual contribution since 2008. CSUS – for the first time since 2000 – was unable to pay its $10,000 contribution for the fiscal year ending in June.


    * CSUS has not responded to a professor’s offer to run the program in exchange for normal and customary course relief as given to Connecticut Review editors. The 2011 entry forms have not been mailed to schools. Normally, they are mailed any time from August – October.

    * We have no money, no infrastructure and no plan.


    As you know, The Trust has given nearly $200,000 to teen-age poets and writers since 1998.

    We ran the last two years on fumes, but were able to host annual events at Twain House and The Hartford Club following regional ceremonies @ CSUS campuses with reduced prizes [$500 rather than $1,000 for county champions.]

    Elaine Clarke of IMPAC is unable to continue her pro bono work as administrator of the program. If we were to pay someone to do her job, it would cost at least $20,000 per year.

    We are out $20,000 in prize money / expenses. Traditionally, I have raised $6,000 - $10,000 per year for expenses.

    In my estimation we would need at least $50,000 per year to keep the program going. That would be contingent on continued pro bono work by dedicated CSUS staff @ the four campuses and the central office.

    We have enough money in the checking account to have our accountant file a tax return before April. By that time, the program must shut down or be revived as additional costs will be incurred [another tax return cycle].

    That is all.

    Andy
    --

  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Wednesday, December 15, 2010

    Poet Ravi 'I Don't Play The Sitar' Shankar Luncheon Speaker For Litchfield-Morris Rotary Thurs., 12-16-10



    Poet and professor Ravi 'I Don't Play The Sitar' Shankar will be the guest speaker for the Litchfield-Morris Rotary Thursday at noon at The Forman School.

    Rotary members and guests are welcome.

    Shankar grew up in Virginia; he received a BA from the University of Virginia and a MFA from Columbia University. He is founding editor of the online journal of the arts Drunken Boat. Shankar teaches at Central Connecticut State University where he is poet-in-residence. He is also a faculty member at the Stonecoast Writers Conference and the MFA program at City University of Hong Kong.

    His first book, Instrumentality, was published by Cherry Grove in May 2004,and was a finalist for the 2005 Connecticut Book Awards. He co-wrote Wanton Textiles (No Tell Books, 2006) with Reb Livingston, selections of which were published in Fringe Magazine and Beltway Poetry Quarterly. His chapbook Voluptuous Bristle, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2010.

    His critical work has appeared in The Iowa Review, among other publications. He co-edited an anthology of contemporary Arab and Asian poetry, along with poets Tina Chang and Nathalie Handal, published by Norton in Spring 2008.

    To RSVP, write to tntcomm82@cs.com or call 860-690-0211.

  • Litchfield-Morris Rotary website


  • Drunken Boat


  • BREAKING NEWS: Poet / CCSU Prof Ravi Shankar Wins Settlement From NYC In Racial Profiling Case


  • VIDEO: Ravi Live @ Szechuan Tokyo October 2010


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Friday, December 10, 2010

    Video: Ellsberg On Colbert Report 12-9-10



  • Video Via Colbert Report


  • Ellsberg Preview


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Matt Remillard Hunting Championship Belt


    MATT REMILLARD LANDS LEFT
    AGAINST RAFAEL LORA
    -- photo by Bob Thiesfield


    MANCHESTER, Conn. – America’s leading American featherweight, unbeaten NABF and NABO champion Matt “Sharp Shooter” Remillard, has targeted a 2011 world title fight.

    The 24-year-old Remillard (23-0, 14 KOs), currently a promotional free agent, won all three of his 2010 fights by knockout. He has climbed the ratings systems to No. 3 in the WBO, No. 6 in the WBC, and No. 7 in the WBA.

    “Ratings do mean something because I’m eligible in three major boxing organizations to fight for the world time,” Remillard said. “At No. 3 in the WBO, I’m so close that I need to stay ready in case I get a call. If either one of the two fighters rated higher than me (No. 1 Daniel Ponce De Leon and No. 2 Chonlatarn Piriapinyp) fight for another title, lose, or get injured, I move up and then I’m even closer to a mandatory shot.

  • Complete Article



  • MATT WITH TRAINER ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY
    -- photo by Bob Thiesfield


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Finally: A Political Party Stands Up Against The Government Class On WikiLeaks

    Green Party:
    Attacks on Wikileaks threaten
    freedom of the press,
    enable government officials
    to commit crimes with impunity



    Green Party leaders called the attacks on Wikileaks by the US government a direct and deliberate assault on the First Amendment's guarantee of freedom of the press.

    "The war on Wikileaks may set a precedent for the treatment of journalists who expose government wrong-doing," said Carl Romanelli of the Pennsylvania Green Party. "While the US government has increasingly operated outside of US constitutional and international law, Wikileaks' actions would not be called a crime in a free and open society."

    Greens expressed dismay and outrage over the decision of companies like Amazon, Pay Pal, MasterCard, and Visa, as well as several Internet hosting companies, to cooperate with US government demands for censorship.

  • Complete Article


  • Ellsberg On Colbert 12-9-10


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Thursday, December 09, 2010

    Public Service Announcement: Daniel Ellsberg on Colbert Report tonight - WikiLeaks



    Daniel Ellsberg will be appearing on the Colbert Report tonight, on the Comedy Central channel, defending WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, and Bradley Manning. This will air 11:30pm EST tonight (Thursday) and at the same time across the nation (i.e., 8:30pm PST).

    It should also be available on the Net tomorrow--we'll post it on Ellsberg.Net as soon as it's available.

  • Ellsberg Website


  • As you can imagine, this has been a very busy time for Daniel. With Assange in custody and unable to give interviews, Daniel has been seen by the media as one of the preeminent sources and authorities on the events and has been doing nonstop interviews with major media across the nation and the globe.

    Here is a
  • joint press release
  • Daniel co-signed with other prominent whistleblowers, and here is Daniel's
  • Open Letter to Amazon
  • about their censorship of WikiLeaks.

    We'll keep you posted on the latest news here, and to follow Dan's activities and views around WikiLeaks as stories break,
  • follow him on Twitter here


  • Thank you for your support,
    --Michael Ellsberg


  • A major reason for government secrecy is to protect the government from its own population


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Friday, December 03, 2010

    Amazon’s cowardice and servility generate boycott



    By DANIEL ELLSBERG

    So far Amazon has spared itself the further embarrassment of trying to explain its action openly. This would be a good time for Amazon insiders who know and perhaps can document the political pressures that were brought to bear — and the details of the hasty kowtowing by their bosses — to leak that information. They can send it to Wikileaks (now on servers outside the US), to mainstream journalists or bloggers, or perhaps to a site like antiwar.com, which has now appropriately ended its book-purchasing association with Amazon and called a boycott.


  • Complete Article


  • Glenn Greenwald: Joe Lieberman emulates Chinese dictators


  • A major reason for government secrecy is to protect the government from its own population


  • twitter@cooljustice