Monday, May 14, 2012

Southeast Maps - Redistricting Board Offers 5 Options

Below are the four [five] maps the Redistricting Board is proposing in response to the Supreme Court's order to use the Amended Proclamation Plan as the Interim Plan - with changes in Southeast Alaska districts.  I haven't had time to look at these closely.

[UPDATE 11:56am:  I looked too quickly this morning and didn't see the 5th option.  The Board adopted Option A.  Look for new post on the meeting soon.]


Alaska Redistricting Board Southeast Maps The Board meets today at 10:15. You can watch online here. Or, if you're in downtown Anchorage, you can stop in their office at 411 W. 4th, Suite 302.

Tenor John Nuzzo And Anchorage Children's Choir

I've learned that hearing opera singers in small venues is amazing, so Sunday we went to UAA's stunning little recital hall  - Michael Hood, wherever you are, thanks! - to hear John Ken Nuzzo sing a collection of songs in Italian and Japanese. (According to Wikipedia, Nuzzo's father is Italian-American and his mother is Japanese.)  After the first pause he came back without his bow tie and the audience loosened up a bit as well.

After Nuzzo's performance there was a brief break and the Anchorage Children's Choir came onstage.  He's been working with them this week and he and they seemed to be having a great time together.  Here's a brief excerpt of them singing Finiculi Finicula.  





 



 He's been spending a lot of time recently doing concerts in Japan and work related to Tsunami relief. 

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Mothers Day Gift That Keeps Giving for 50 Years







It was the late 1950s.  I was, maybe, 14 or 15.  I didn't have a drivers license yet.  I walked about a mile and a half to the big, block-sized nursery on National and Barrington.  (It's long gone and built up now.)  I found a cymbidium orchid plant with three blooming spikes.  It was spectacular.  It was stretching my budget - I have no idea any more how much it was - but I had enough money and bought it. 



Then I had to get it home.  It was in a 12 or 15 inch rubber pot full of dirt and lots of long green leaves hanging all over and three spikes of orchids.  I just hugged it to my belly and walked the mile and a half back home.  I can't say that I remember much, but it was hard to see.  This potted one below gives you a little idea of what I was carrying.  This one was just starting to bloom in my mom's backyard in February when we were there. 


And that's just one spike.

The one above was also from February.  My mom had cut the spike and brought it inside.

That trek back from the nursery was at least 50 years ago.  My mom has separated the plant a number of times over the years, plus she's received others.  But whatever month - this year it bloomed in February, not May - my mom lets me know 'your cymbidium' has a spike.  Then it's budding.  And finally, it's blooming. 

I have to give my mom a lot of the credit for the longevity of these plants.  Plus the fact that her L.A. near-the-beach location provides perfect moderate, damp weather.  This is probably is the best gift I've ever given in terms of its longevity and its role in the relationship between my mother and me. 

I did send my cards out early last week and when I spoke to my Mom this morning she said she'd gotten it.  But you can't wish your mom "Happy Mother's Day"  too often. 

Happy Mother's Day

Suppose Someone Found a Body . . .

Maybe in the bushes near a bike trail through the city.  It wasn't clear how the person died.  There were some bruises.  Did the person fall?  Was the person hit?  Was it hypothermia? Is our basic instinct that everyone is honest and no one would kill anyone?  No.  We know there are nasty folks out there. Maybe in the bushes near a bike trail through the city.  It wasn't clear how the person died.  There were some bruises.  Did the person fall?  Was the person hit?  Was it hypothermia? Is our basic instinct that everyone is honest and no one would kill anyone?  No.  We know there are nasty folks out there.
All the Anchorage Police department needs is "reasonable suspicion" to launch a criminal investigation.  Less than the higher level proof "probable cause" required to charge someone with a crime.  Which is less than the "proof beyond a reasonable doubt" for a murder conviction.

The Nitty Gritty:  This is a long post.  There are two key questions:
  • Does the Anchorage Assembly have the power to call a recount at an election?
  • Should it have that power?

Can you imagine the police department saying, "Well, there are some irregularities, but we'll only conduct an autopsy if a citizen is willing to pay for it"?   A group of citizens, concerned that foul play might be involved here, comes forward but they can only raise $1500.  So the crime lab says, "For $1500 we can check two internal organs, or we could examine the head, or we could check on the broken leg bone.  Which shall it be?"


That's pretty much what has happened in Anchorage over the last five weeks. Despite many election irregularities, the only way to get a recount was if citizens paid.  In an email to the ten citizens who called for a recount, and ponied up the $1500 necessary to recount 15 precincts, Assembly Chair Ernie Hall wrote:
I deeply thank you and the other nine outstanding citizens who filed the application for the recount. Without your successful application, Municipal election code would not have permitted a recount.  [emphasis added.]
There was an election with many (we don't know how many exactly) voters turned away from the polls because there weren't enough ballots.  There was at least one voting machine with a broken seal. When the election commissioner said at an Assembly meeting that there were no broken seals , and the election worker who had reported the broken seal  stood up to protest, she was removed from the meeting. [At Tuesday night's Assembly meeting the chair of the Assembly apologized to the election worker who had been ejected last week.]

The technical review board, made up of IT experts, that used to test the machines before and after the election, was disbanded a few years back.  There was a religious group that knowingly sent out false information encouraging people to register to vote on election day.  Why do I say knowingly? Because they had previously informed their people that they had to register 30 days in advance, which is what the law says.

There are other clues that suggest that the voter counts may be funny.  A poll taken less than a week before the election found a controversial proposition on the ballot leading with 50% yes to 41% no.  It lost 58% to 42% and the pollster acknowledged he couldn't recall a poll that was that far off from the actual outcome.  Parks and Recreation bonds that normally just squeak by or lose, won with large majorities.

Was the city going to do an autopsy of the election?  The election chief defended the electronic voting machines on the grounds that you can check them by counting the ballots.  But unless a group of citizens put up $100 per precinct, the city was not going to count any ballots.  They would have a retired judge check out irregularities after the election was certified and there was no guarantee the ballots would survive 30 days after the certification.

And in Wednesday's ADN, Kyle Hopkins reports that Ernie Hall said that the judge's investigation would not look into "the technical performance of the voting machines."  He did say that might be pursued by the Assembly's Ethics and Election committee with the State of Alaska.

OK, this is not black and white.  When the police find a body, they don't necessarily know if it was natural causes, an accident, or murder.  And with the recent election, we don't know if the problems were incompetence, lack of resources, or intent to disrupt or to corrupt the election.  But there's enough evidence that something(s) serious has occurred.  But unlike when we find a dead body and people immediately wonder about foul play, with the election, people's assumption (at least the officials) seem to be to dismiss the possibility of foul play.

However this turns out, there are several issues involved here:


1.  Certification of the election

The legal opinion the Assembly got from a private, contracted attorney, Tim Petumenos, basically said that unless any wrong doing could have affected the outcome of the election, the Assembly was required to certify the election.
Errors in conducting the election which are not targeted to bring about a particular result are treated differently than those which appear to be aimed at affecting the outcome. Outright corrupt or criminal conduct which may have been aimed at affecting the outcome of  an election is insufficient ground to invalidate an election unless the conduct reasonably had the potential for changing the outcome.
The rationale the Assembly made was that none of the contests on the ballot were close enough to be affected.  This is probably true.  But can you actually know before you investigate?  Unless tampering with the voting machines was at the serious number level, combined with disenfranchising of the people who didn't vote because of the shortage of ballots.  The Assembly did certify the election, but conditionally, depending on the result of the recount.

2.  Questions about how the election was administered

This would look at the procedures that led to the shortage of ballots and the inadequate response when the clerk's office began to hear about the shortages.  It would be looking at other administrative ways to make future elections problem free.

3.  Questions about the security of the voting machines. 

There are two levels of questions here:
A.    Local Issues.  How are the machines and ballots handled in Anchorage?  There were reports of broken seals and that the election chief told election officials not to worry about that.  There are questions about where the machines were stored and the security of the ballots from the moment they left the, assumed, safety of the Clerk's office until they are used by the voters, and until it is certain that they are no longer needed to confirm that the voting machines counted the votes properly.
B.    National Issues.  Nationally, voting machines have had problems.  There are security issues about people tampering with the hardware and software.  Brad Friedman is an expert on election fraud and voting machine problems, who writes Bradblog. He has been watching the Anchorage election closely.  Reports on past national voting machine problems can be found at the Center For Voting Technology Research. 
Or you can watch the video Hacking Democracy.

4.  Questions about what looks like an attempt to disrupt the election.  
Jim Minnery of the Alaska Family Council sent emails out to his list telling people to register 30 days before the election or they couldn't vote.  Then just before the election he sent another email telling people they could register and vote on the day of the election.  I don't claim to know what his intentions were, but the more ineligible voters to come to the polls and take up the time of election officials, the harder it would be for regular voters to vote.  This should certainly be on the investigator's list of issues to investigate.  And it appears, from the ADN article to be on the list. 




Back to the autopsy-vote count analogy.

Remember what Ernie Hall said in the email cited at the beginning?
Without your successful application, Municipal election code would not have permitted a recount.
Really?  Is it true the Code wouldn't permit a recount?  The Assembly got advice from the Municipal Attorney and from a privately contracted law firm. 

The Petumenos  Report (the contracted report) said that the Assembly had to certify the election unless there were issues that could change the result.  Much of it focuses on the responsibility of the Assembly to certify the election, unless there was evidence to suggest that the election outcome would have changed.
"Inconvenience to voters is not sufficient.  Errors in conducting the election which are not targeted to bring about a particular result are treated differently than those which appear to be aimed at affecting the outcome.  Outright corrupt or criminal conduct which may have been aimed at affecting the outcome of an election is insufficient ground to invalidate an election unless the conduct reasonably had the potential for changing the outcome.  This is true even when people may go to jail for their wrongful conduct."

If the Petumenos Report,  discusses whether the Assembly can, on its own, call for a recount, I didn't find that part.  The Municipal Attorney's Memorandum to the Assembly addressed the following questions:
A.  When voters are denied the opportunity to vote because of a lack of ballots, what are the standards and remedies applied by the courts in determining whether a new election is required?
B.   May the Assembly call for a special election  even if the failure is not sufficient to change the outcome? 
A quick review of the report didn't turn up a prohibition on the Assembly calling for a recount.  It's not clear to me why Ernie Hall said there could not be a recount unless the citizen group called for one.  The Municipal Code does not explicitly say the Assembly may or may not call for a recount.  It does give three situations which require a recount.

The Municipal Code allows for defeated candidates and groups of ten citizens to call for a recount.  It also says that the Clerk 'shall' initiate a recount if there is a tie.

From the Municipal Code Chapter 28: Elections




A.
Within five days after the election commission has adopted its report of the results of the election, a defeated candidate or ten qualified voters may file an application with the municipal clerk for a recount of the votes from any particular precinct, or for any particular office, proposition or question. The date on which the municipal clerk receives an application rather than the date of mailing or transmission determines whether the application is filed within the time allowed under this subsection.
B.
If two or more candidates tie in having the highest number of votes for the same office, to which only one candidate is to be elected, the municipal clerk shall initiate a recount.


The Code above does not explicitly give the Assembly the power to order a recount.  Nor does it prohibit the Assembly from initiating a recount. 

Changing Times, Changing Needs  -   From deciding close races to testing voting machine integrity

The recount ordinance comes from the pre-voting machine era.  The intent of this part of the ordinances was to resolving close elections.  It gives a losing candidate or citizens the right to call for a recount, at their expense, to double check that the votes were counted right.

But another reason to recount by hand in 2012 is to check the accuracy of the voting machines.  There were revisions to the ordinance in 2001.  Although the 2001 revisions came after Florida election fiasco in the 2000 presidential race, the amendments to the much older basic law  were to add language necessary to accommodate the introduction of voting machines to Muni elections.

Under Ernie Hall's interpretation, if the election is not close, the Assembly couldn't order a recount, even if there were a Youtube of people tampering with the machines.  The assumption was made in this election that the margins of victory were so large that the outcome of an election wouldn't change, even with a recount.  But that, I think, was based on the paradigm in place before voting machines and their vulnerability to tampering were widely known.  (Actually that vulnerability still isn't widely known which is why I recommend you watch the movie Hacking Democracy.)  But today, when hackers could reprogram the voting machines to, say, give every fourth vote for Party X to Party Y, it's possible that there could be significant deviations in the actual count.

Since the Assembly is the body that makes the law, it would seem, in this case, they could choose to interpret the  existing code, given its ambiguity here, to allow them to recount the ballots.  It would take as many votes to approve recounting the votes as it would take to amend the ordinance to explicitly allow it.  And since elections are the Assembly's responsibility, a mayor is probably wise not to veto such an ordinance.

The ballots are the body of the election

In a sense, the marked ballots are the corpse. It's difficult to prove the intent of a criminal. The ballots are the forensic evidence of the integrity of the voting machines.  If the ballots demonstrate that the voting machines were highly inaccurate, then suspicion shifts toward misdeeds.   But, if the hand count of the ballots matches the count of the machines, distrust can be more easily dispelled.  But if the ballots aren't kept securely, are allowed to deteriorate,  or are destroyed, it's much harder to identify criminal intent.


So where are we now?

1.  There were a number of irregularities in the election, some identified above
2.  There's a recount going on now of 15 precincts which should tell us if there is a significant discrepancy between the machine count and the hand count of the ballots in this sample of precincts.  This sample wasn't scientifically chosen, so it's not clear whether no serious problems in this sample can be seen as an indicator that the other 106 precincts were also without serious problems.
3.  There will be an investigation by retired Judge Daniel Hensley.  It's unclear whether he will have the time or inclination or resources to do a comprehensive investigation.  As mentioned above already, according to the ADN story "the judge's investigation would not look into "the technical performance of the voting machines."

Given the broken seal report, the loss of the technical review board, and the general concerns about security that have surfaced around the country, it would seem appropriate that someone is looking into the kinds of precautions the necessary to prevent hacking into the Anchorage (actually the State of Alaska's) voting machines.  Even if the recount does not indicate evidence of hacking this time (a likely outcome in my mind) that doesn't mean they couldn't have been hacked.  This is a good opportunity to review their security.


Almost to the end (if you're tired from reading this far, think how I feel)

This post covers a lot of ground.  Not too many people will get this far.  Perhaps it will be of use to the investigator.  There were lots of problems in the election.  A key one I focused on here is the inability of the Assembly to call for a recount on its own.  The integrity of our elections shouldn't be dependent on 10 citizens coming forward with enough money to call for a recount.  If there are enough suspicious circumstances, the Assembly should know it has the power to order a recount to check the integrity of the machines.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Petoskey Project - Reading of New Play - Sydney Laurence - Tonight 7:30pm Free

So if you're still wondering what to do on this grey and chilly Saturday evening, let me offer some options.  

Long time friend and participant, Richard Benavides, recommends in the Petoskey Project.  I know nothing else about it, but I really like the poster.
It's free, as you can see, but you can donate to Alzheimer's Resources of Alaska.

[UPDATE:  Here's an audio YouTube interview with Ann Reddig and David Haynes about the Petoskey Project from KONR (106.1fm).  I just listened to enough to know it was about this play.  I prefer to be surprised.]

OR

Out North shows The Brits and their Telly - award winning British television commercials.  In past years this was a collection of quirky, mostly funny, and original ads.  Last year I was put off by the number of McDonald's and other international corporate ads in the collection.  But I decided to give it another try last night, which was better than last year.  But there were several packages of ads that looked like they were put together by an advertising firm that described the whole advertising campaign.  Perhaps if they had really described the campaign instead of making a slick short that was basically promoting their products I'd have been more interested.  I would say the whole evening for me was worth it just to see a very neat public service ad that was made up of  animated graffiti people walking along walls.  7pm tonight and again next Friday and Saturday.

Potter Marsh Break - Terns Have Returned




Sometimes I need a break from things like redistricting and recounting.  Went for a short looksee at Potter Marsh the other day.  It was windy and chilly, but the sun was out and so were a few birds. 

The ice is gone, but the grasses aren't green yet.





Arctic Terns nesting


Canada Geese also nearby with white trash

Friday, May 11, 2012

Supreme Court Orders Amended Proclamation Plan With SE Changes as Interim Plan

Attorneys Walleri (l,plaintiffs) and White (r, Board)
The Alaska Supreme Court wasted no time at all in ruling after yesterday's hearing on why they should not use the Amended Proclamation Plan as the Interim Redistricting plan until the Board can use the "Hickel Process" to develop a final plan.  

The Board will have to adjust the four house and two senate districts in Southeast Alaska to make them more compact before the Interim Plan is finalized. 

The Superior Court judge had found that they were 'compact enough' originally, but not after the Supreme Court's decision that the Board should have first configured the plan only with the Alaska Constitution in mind. 

The Southeast districts were drawn with the Voting Rights Act in mind and reflect Board's belief at that time, that they needed a 'Native Influence' district in Southeast.  That caused them to reshape the districts differently than had they only considered the Alaska Constitution.  Later, because of changing Department of Justice interpretations and definitions, 'Influence' districts are no longer relevant.


Below is the Court's short order. Order May10

The Amended Proclamation Plan is the second plan that the Redistricting Board came up with after the first plan was remanded to them to follow the "Hickel Process." They essentially kept most of the original plan submitted last year, and changed the districts around Fairbanks and the Interior that goes around Fairbanks, to create the Amended Proclamation Plan.

 The Board website has maps here of the Amended Proclamation Plan. It includes statewide map, regional maps, and individual district maps. The four house and two senate districts in Southeast Alaska are subject to change. The others should remain the same.


The board scheduled a meeting Monday May 14, 2012 at 10:15am at their office at 411 W. 4th Avenue, Suite 302. Additional meetings have been tentatively scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday at the same time.

Redistricting Options Narrow At Supreme Court

When the Redistricting Board appealed Judge McConahy's order to follow the Hickel Process and show that each district was constitutional, the Supreme Court's response was to tell the parties: to argue why the Amended Proclamation Plan (not the Interim Plan) should not be used as the Interim Plan.   That sounded like they were leaning toward using the Amended Proclamation Plan.  But while that Amended Proclamation Plan was mentioned frequently, they moved on to new questions. 

This morning (Thursday) the Redistricting Board's attorney, Michael White, seemed to be arguing with the court.  The Fairbanks' plaintiff's attorney, Michael Walleri seemed to be having a conversation with them.  It looked like the court had little sympathy for White's position in his first opportunity on Thursday morning.  It seems to me kind of daring to try to tell the court what their intent was - especially when they are challenging your arguments and they would seem to know it better than anyone else.

The court wanted to know why the Board hadn't fixed the Constitutional problems in District 32 that Judge McConahy had pointed out.  The Justices wanted to know, based on their Hickel Process instructions, why the Board wouldn't have to choose a third party plan if, as Walleri contended, it deviated less from the Alaska Constitution than the Board's plan.  White had trouble with this one.  His basic response, as I understood it, was if it was constitutional it met the test and that you could quibble forever about which was more constitutional.  Redistricting was, he said, like squeezing a water balloon.  If you squeeze one place, it bulges somewhere else. 

But while the judges' tone with Walleri was decidedly friendlier, Walleri didn't seem to be able to offer them straightforward answers to their basic questions. When White had some time again at the end he argued that Walleri's contention that the Court was flying blind because none of the plans have been pre-cleared by the Department of Justice was a red herring.  The district in question - HD 38 - had been pre-cleared in the original plan.  And the plans Walleri wanted had never been pre-cleared for VRA complaince. 

[Note:  For people unfamiliar with the Voting Rights Act and Retrogression, you can go to  Alaska Redistricting for the Masses Part I - which looks at the background information needed to understand the process - the Voting Rights Act and Alaska Constitutional requirements particularly.]

Basically, here are the questions they needed answered.

1.   Was the Division of Election's May 14 deadline for a plan (so candidates can know their districts by the June 1 filing deadline) a drop dead date or could things be put off a bit more?

Both sides seemed to agree that there was some wiggle room.  Federal law now requires 45 days before the election absentee ballots need to be sent to military overseas.  If you work back from there, ballots need, according to Walleri, to be mailed July 2.  White said the date could be pushed back, but you still wouldn't get a new plan out until July, because of the need for pre-clearance from the Department of Justice (DOJ.) 

2.   Which plan should be adopted as the interim plan?

Walleri offered the benchmark plan because it couldn't be retrogressive since it literally is the benchmark for measuring retrogression.  The benchmark plan is the one adopted in 2002 and the plan the current legislature is based on and against which they measure retrogression (or whether Alaska Natives have lost voting strength.)  He argued that neither the Board's Amended Proclamation Plan nor its proposed Interim Plan have been  pre-cleared by DOJ.

Walleri also argued that the Rights Coalition and Calista 3 plans were both in better compliance with the state constitution than the Board's plans.

White responded that the Board's Amended Proclamation Plan and the Interim Plan both were very close to the original plan that the DOJ had pre-cleared and that their VRA expert had said the two plans were good.

He blasted the benchmark plan as having huge deviations in district size violating the critical one-person-one-vote principle.  (This is undisputed.]


3.  What should the court do next?  Give it back to the Board to fix, adopt one of the plans, or appoint a master to fix the plan? 

White argued for adopting one of the Board's plans. If necessary, the court should give it back to the Board to fix the constitutional problems with Southeast. Walleri pointed to the Rights Coalition plan, the Calista 3 plan.  If they didn't like that, he wanted a master.  But it was clear that he knew there was no easy answer.

That's my take on what happened in court today.   For the redistricting obsessed or for those who can't sleep, below are my very rough notes.  USUAL DISCLAIMER - these notes leave out a lot, but will give those not there a sense of what went on.


Alaska Supreme Court Redistricting 5:10:12



 I then had time to get a sandwich and spend the afternoon observing the recounting of the Municipal election at City Hall.  So I was tired when I got home and my brain was full.  That's why this is going up so late.  But if the court turns out their decision as fast as last time, it could be announced tomorrow (Friday) or Monday.  So this needs to get out. 

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

Jacqueline Duke, Elections Chief, Fired by Assembly Chair this Morning, Meanwhile in Moscow

I got email reports this morning that Jacqueline Duke showed up at the vote recount this morning at City Hall.  Then the report came in that she was fired by Assembly Chair Ernie Hall about 10:30am.   Get a bit more from this report from  Channel 2[11].   Hall dropped into the ballot counting room and thanked some of the folks who have put up the money and called for the recount. 

People at the election recount were trying to stream live from City Hall.  I can't find that, but if you want to see the anti-Putin protests in Moscow live, go to ustream.com. 
[UPDATE 3:18pm: It turns out they keep changing what's on.  The Russians are long gone.]
[UPDATE 6:43pm:  Here's a link for the Anchorage Election Recount at Upstream.  It's not on as I post this, but they are scheduled to be counting again Thursday from 8:30 - 12noon and 1:00 pm to 4:45pm.  I've also found the Russian live stream - they are back on - and changed to link above.  Or you might want to watch the cam from the International Space Station.]

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Ex-CIA Man Cooks For Out North Fundraiser



Out North is a tiny (seats about 90) theater in Anchorage that has regularly brought often edgy, sometimes beautiful performances that usually challenge my stereotypes, assumptions, and even my world view.

It’s what art is supposed to be - blasts of blasphemy piercing through the facades society  constantly creates to hide the uncomfortable by-products of how we live. Not every event is great, but if you aren’t making mistakes now and then, you aren’t pushing the limits.


So, when we were invited to a fundraising dinner for Out North, we said yes. 
It was a little pricy, but the tickets at Out North are usually much less than the more proper venues and we’ve gotten far more stimulation than we’ve paid for.  And we want to make sure that Out North is here a long time.  It’s one of the parts of Anchorage that sustains my brain and soul. 

Entering the Green Connection from a decidedly ungreen early May Anchorage was already a treat.  We were treated like VIP’s - creative name tags, a glass of bubbly, and hors d'oeuvres tucked away amongst the greenery. 

And there was music.  I’m pretty sure they were part of the group Super Sweet Sugar Strings. 





And then we were called to take our seats for a gourmet dinner.  Yeah, I can hear you saying, “What do you know about gourmet food?”  And you’re right.  As a mostly vegetarian who also east fish, but rarely meat, I do now and then stray from my normal diet.  But if I’m going to eat meat, it better be really, really good.  (It was.)

Our dinner was a lot of very fresh local and wild treats, combined in unexpected ways, cooked by chef Carlyle Watt, a graduate of the CIA (Culinary Institute of America), Napa Valley branch.  Some people we already knew.  Others we know now.  

OK, I thought I better check the criteria for gourmet food.  From Ask.com:
"Gourmet food is of the highest quality and flavor, prepared well and presented in an artful manner."

I forgot the artful manner part, but you can judge for yourselves.  Click the pictures to enlarge if the text is too small.















Since it was a fundraiser, there were some auction items between courses.  We ended up with two punch cards to the Spenard Jazz Festival. 

Someone else bought this Out North poster with Out North founders Jay Brouse [Brause] and Gene Dugan demonstrating their willingness to provoke some folks in the community for the sake of not self-censoring their work.  It made their lives and Out North's existence more difficult, but it also made it more real.  And they attracted true artists up here. [I know that some people will look at the poster and wonder what I'm talking about.  But remember, just last month 58% of the voters turned down an amendment to the local non-discrimination ordinance to add LGBT folks to the list.  This wasn't about marriage, it was just equal rights to not be turned down for a job or an apartment or loan because they're gay.]

Check out their website.  Sign up for their email alerts.  If you don’t want to become mentally and spiritually lazy, monthly visits to Out North are highly recommended.