Poets and Writers For Avery

Those of us for whom writing is a key part of our lives, hold a special reverence for our Freedom of Speech, so it is no surprise that a several notable poets and writers will be holding a special fundraiser for the Avery Doninger Appeal fund. Avery is the student at Lewis Mills High School who was barred from running for class office because of a blog post she had written at home.

The event will take place at 1 PM on Sunday, October 14th at The Bistro East, Litchfield Inn in Litchfield Connecticut. Noted writers include the novelist Wally Lamb as well as Ravi Shankar, Amy Ma, Franz Douskey, Rand Cooper, Jon Andersen, Ron Winter, Margot Schilpp, Oscar De Los Santos and Louis "The Coin" Colavecchio.

There will be several bands playing as well, including My Day As A Bear, Adrenaline, Young Vick, Accolade and The Positive Downside.

The suggested minimum donation is $25 and $10 for students, but I would encourage you to dig deep and give as much as you can. Checks can be made out to:

Atty. Jon L. Schoenhorn IOLTA Account
with "Avery Doninger appeal" written on the reference line.

Jon L. Schoenhorn &Associates, LLC
108 Oak Street
Hartford, Connecticut 06106-1514

Donations can also be made online at http://defendfreespeech.chipin.com/avery-doninger-appeal-to-2nd-circuit.

Please, give what you can, and if you can make it to this great event, please be there.

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Second Life Day Trading Strategies

JohnLight Raymaker over at Second Life Millionare was been talking about his experiences trading on the Second Life. His haven’t been all that successful, but over the past month I’ve taken about L$ 300 and turned it into L$ 3000. He has asked if I have any tips on day trading on Second Life. I have a few which I am writing up here.

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Rest In Peace, Bill Seeley

Bill Seeley died. My mother called and left a message on the machine. I don’t have a lot of specific memories of him, just that he was an important part of my family history. His son Wesley and I were classmates. We both went to the Congregational Church. He worked at Sprague Electric, like my father, and our families would often get together.

One early memory I have is of a summer get together at the Seeley’s house. Wes and I were probably about five years old at the time. I remember running around chasing fireflies in the dusk as our parents sat and talked. I had a speech impediment back then, and my parents got me Dr. Seuss books to read to help loosen up my tongue. Wesley’s parents had gotten him a math book. I really liked math, so Wesley and I arranged a trade of a math book for some Dr. Seuss books. My parents were not well pleased with the trade.

We live up near the top of Henderson Road. It was isolated there and there weren’t many people my age that lived within walking distance. The Seeley’s lived on Summer Street, in much more of a neighborhood. It was easy walking distance from Wes’ house to houses of other classmates. Sometimes, when my mother was busy, I would go to the Seeley’s house after school.

On special nights my mother would go out to gather with friends. I think Mrs. Seeley was part of that circle, as well as several other mothers in that neighborhood. My mother called it “Sewing Circle”. The women would gather, drink tea, eat some desserts, sew, and talk about their lives, perhaps not all that differently than how some mommy bloggers gather online today. My mother would make a “Tea Ring” for these occasions. It had cinnamon, brown sugar and nuts on the inside and was drizzled with a thin frosting made from confectioners sugar and milk. When we were lucky, she would make a second tea ring that we would have at home.

I believe that Mrs. Seeley was my Cub Scout den mother. My mother also helped with the Cub Scouts. Once, our Den went to North Adams State College where Mr. Seeley taught after he left Sprague Electric. I have vague recollections of wandering around the physics lab.

These memories are set in the 1960s and 1970s. From my perspective, it was a peaceful time, a good time, when families had dinner together, went to school, church and work together. It was a time of opportunity, hope and community. In my innocence, I didn’t know of the war in South East Asia, or the social unrest at home. I didn’t know of discrimination or urban blight. In many ways, I wish I could find my way back to a world like that.

Yet, knowing what I know now, I will be restless until the people of Bridgeport and of Baghdad also know of such peaceful hope, opportunity and community.

Rest in peace, Mr. Seeley, you, and my idyllic memories of childhood will be missed.

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Of Pitch forks and burning torches

So far, much of my writing about the Avery Doninger Civil Rights case has focused on the freedom of speech issues, or the educational issues. I haven’t touched the public relations aspect, and it seems like it is time to do so. When Avery’s mom was on Colin McEnroe’s show, Colin and his cohost talked about how this is the sort of case that needs to get solved with pitch forks and burning torches. When you look at the virtual pitchforks, it doesn’t look great for Region 10.

As I reviewed my access logs to find out what is bringing people to this site, a couple searches jumped out at me. The first was a Google Blog Search on “REGION 10 DUFFY PRESS RELEASE”. My Deconstruction of the press release came up as the top entry. Granted, Kevin Roberts article based on the press release is up on the Register Citizen site, as well as at Cool Justice, but still, if the top ranking of your press release is a deconstruction of it, maybe you’ve got some PR issues.

The second search term that caught me eye was Google’s “region 10 superintendent + ct”. I didn’t come up as the first item in that one. That honor went to an article in the Register Citizen about public hearing about Paula Schwartz allegedly failing to inform parents about an issue with pornography at school. (I do hope none of the pictures included a ‘douchebag’.)

The second article was from CTNewsJunkie about Attorney Christine Chinni, acting on Paula Schwartz’ behalf refusing to comply with an FOI request.

My article about Insurance and Building Contracts in Connecticut came in third, and it is only after all of these that an article about Region 10 seeking a new Superintendent from the Bristol Press showed up.

I cannot help but wonder if the person doing the search on “Region 10 Superintendent + CT” was a potential job applicant trying to figure out what they might be getting into by applying for the job. The first three stories perhaps aren’t the sort that you want job applicants focusing on.

All of this shows that the folks at Region 10 just don’t get the Internet. By trying to thwart criticism online, they have actually opened the flood gates and they need to rethink their Internet strategy.

Wordless Wednesday



Aug, originally uploaded by Aldon.

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