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Brains and Brawn: CT Sun Players Read To Kids

Posted by Stephen Chupaska on May 28 2008, 04:35 PM

 On long road trips, Connecticut Sun point guard Jamie Carey gets a fair amount of reading done.
“I read 15 books last year,” she said. “That’s all I do on the road.
Carey, who just finished David Sheff’s addiction memoir Beautiful Boy, teamed up with teammate Ketia Swanier to promote literacy with an appearance last week at the Waterford Public Library.
Sponsored by Pitney Bowes, the WNBA’s Fast Break for Reading will raise money for literacy programs in six of the league’s cities, including New York, Seattle, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles, as well as eastern Connecticut.
“We’re excited about the program,” Kathleen Ryan Mufson, the director of corporate citizenship at Pitney Bowes said. “The company has a long tradition of helping communities. We want to help improve literacy and close the achievement gap in Connecticut.”
Carey and Swanier each took turns reading books about, no surprise here, basketball, to kids who signed up for Waterford’s Summer Reading Program.
Swanier, a rookie who played her college basketball at the University of Connecticut, read A Princess Gets A Ball, about hoops-playing royalty, and Carey narrated Swish, about a hotly contested match between the Blue Jays and the Cardinals.
The Sun announced that a section at the team’s home arena will be dedicated specifically to children who have participated in the program.
Throughout the season, Pitney Bowes will be holding events around the state to raise money to sponsor literacy programs.
Pitney Bowes will fund a “reading and learning center” at the WNBA city that has raised the most amount of money this season, which concludes in September.
Swanier, who just finished The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, said she was pleased to talk to the children, as she used to attend similar events as a child growing up in Germany.
Carey, a University of Texas alum, also demonstrated the trademark “hook ‘em horns” sign for the kids, but said that athletics should not be the only thing young people focus on.
“I grew up in a house that stressed reading and education,” she said.

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Staff writer Stephen Chupaska's work appears every week in print in The New London Times and The Waterford Times. He also blogs about local music for theday.com. He can be reached at 860-440-1021 or by email at s.chupaska@theday.com. Prior to joining The Times Weekly Newspaper Group Steve was a contributor to San Diego CityBeat in San Diego, California. Steve graduated from St. Bernard High School in 1994. He has a B.A. in English from Keene State College and attended San Diego State University where he was assistant arts editor and a sportswriter for The Daily Aztec. Steve resides in New London and does not care to leave it much.
© Copyright 2008-2009 The Day Publishing Co.
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