Council Appoints Lloyd Tasch Acting Assessor. North Street Community Cuts Back

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. December 20, 2006: As reported by WPCNR this morning, in Executive Session this evening, the Common Council did indeed consider the appointment of Deputy City Assessor Lloyd Tasch to the position of Acting Assessor and approved it in resolutions offered at the conclusion of the Executive Session. Councilmembers would not comment on other matters discussed, or whether a search for an Assessor was continuing while Mr. Tasch filled in. Last week, the city choice for Assessor, a high profile candidate who had been offered the job, turned it down citing commuting issues.


 



North Street Community OLD Parameters in Red outline, New configuration of North Street Community in Dark, as outlined by Alfred Caiola of North Street Community Wednesday evening.


In other action this evening, the council heard a new proposal from North Street Community which trims the  number of luxury condominium units from 390 down to 353, raising the minimum age of possible residents to 60, and eliminating 38,000 square feet of office rental in exchange for more “assisted living” units in the former St. Agnes Hospital building. The maximum heights of the four residential buildings have been trimmed from seven stories to a maximum of five stories and the four main residential buildings have been redesigned to be more “cornered” with multiple courtyards, and moved 75 feet farther away from the Wyndham Close property, substantially reducing the visibility of the project from the Bryant Avenue residential sites. All parking would be underground.



  Alfred Caiola, one of the four principals in the North Street Community property, said his costs had escalated substantially, and that they were fast approaching the point where more scaling down of the senior luxury condominium project would make it not feasible. Mr. Caiola told WPCNR the luxury condominium senior living units would still be offered from $450,000 to $900,000.


Manelaos Rizoulis, the President of the Wyndham Close Association remained resolute in his opposition to the project, which though the new design was better, he told WPCNR “it’s still too big. Too dense.”


Rizoulis has maintained since September  that Wyndham Close would be supportive of the project if it were scaled back by about half. “Half” to Mr. Rizoulis, he said, was defined as one half of the 390 independent condominium units proposed plus the 40 asssisted living units and 80 long-term care units proposed for the former St. Agnes Hospital building.  Rizoulis told the CitizeNetReporter his idea of “half” of this figure would make for 230 units.  Rizoulis said this would be acceptable to Wyndham Close.

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Amodio’s Bid for Protection as a County Agricultural resource is REJECTED.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Board of Legislators. December 19, 2006: Amodio’s the nursery the Saxon Woods neighborhood and the City of White Plains have been feuding with for years over soil reclamation projects on Amodio’s property and hours of work was denied inclusion in the County Agricultural District Monday. Chairman of the Board of Legislators Bill Ryan announced the rejection to WPCNR today, by a vote of 13-0.

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School Board Reports.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From Michele Schoenfeld, Clerk to the Board of Education. December 19, 2006:  Eighty-eight students from six Fall Varsity Teams which averaged grades of 90 or better were recognized as Scholar-Athletes.  Members of the Men’s and Women’s Cross Country, Field Hockey, Women’s Soccer, Women’s Swimming & Diving and Women’s Tennis teams were introduced by coaches.  In addition, three members of the Cheerleading Squad were recognized, along with six students with 90+ averages from teams which did not qualify.

 


     UPCOMING MEETINGS:   


 


January 8: Regular Meeting, Education House, 7:30 P.M.  Overview of Strategic Planning


 


January 17        Special Meeting, Education House, 7:30 P.M.


                                                                                    Executive Session — Collective Bargaining


 


January 24:      World Café, White Plains High School, 7:30 P.M.


                                                                                    Strategic Planning


 


January 29:       Special Meeting, Education House, 7:30 P.M.


                                                                                    2007-08 Budget Planning


 


                               February 12:    Regular Meeting, Education House, 7:30 P.M.


 


Other noteworthy events:   


As reported first in White Plains last week by The CitizeNetReporter, Dual Language instruction in Spanish and English is coming to White Plains next year at George Washington School. It is an opt-in program on a pilot basis.


NEW PROGRAM:  The Board approved a Dual Language pilot program at George Washington School.  This is a kindergarten program in which two teachers work collaboratively, with half the day’s instruction in English and half in Spanish.  K-5 ESOL Coordinator and Newcomer Center Director Suzanne Lasser gave a presentation on this research-based program, explaining its benefits for all students and noting its success in other districts.  Board Curriculum Committee member Peter Bassano added that the committee supports the program because it is a data-driven plan to address the issue of achievement, a top priority of the Board’s.


 



SUZANNE LASSER of The Newcomers Center. Photos, WPCNR News


 


     DONATIONS:The Board accepted the following donations: $10,000 from the White Plains High School Alumni Association for band uniforms;  chairs and desks from Congregation Kol Ami for George Washington School; a Mexican poncho from the Westchester Audubon Society for the Spanish Program at Eastview Middle School; computer equipment, books, artifacts and file cabinets from Barbara Schwarz for George Washington School; and musical equipment from Mort Silver for the Middle School bands.  Mr. Connors thanked these donors for their generosity.


 



                                                                                                                                               


                                 




     SUPERINTENDENT’S REPORT:  Superintendent Timothy Connors introduced several reports to the Board and community:


 


            Vicki Hertlein provided an overview of the Margaret’s Place program in which she serves as Counselor.  Funded by the Joe Torre Safe at Home Foundation, it provides students with a nonthreatening setting in which to discuss issues concerning violence in the home and community. Megan Flynn represented Westchester Jewish Community Services, which partners with the Foundation to implement the program.



             Ms. Hertlein (shown in her office at the high school, she is always open to see students who want to discuss relationship issues) related the story of one student who was referred to her whom Ms. Hertlein said turned out to have been beaten by her boyfriend, and is currently working with her through that issue. She also has determined through a survey of Hispanic children of certain controlling attitudes of boys towards young women  that she is attempting to work through with the Hispanic population.


 


Regents Scores at High School averaging 80% Passing.


 


         High School Principal Ivan Toper presented a report he gave before the Rotary Club recently, on initiatives for instructional improvement and results over the past three years.  Trends are positive, in terms of both test scores and in closing the achievement gap.


 


 



         Toper reported about 85%of students were passing on the ELA and Math Regents in 2004, 2005 and 2006, with 90% on the sciences  social studies while African-American and Hispanic students lagged about 20% behind performance of white students in scores, though that margin is narrowing. ( On chart above–grade range colors are indicated in small box.)


 



 


Math Regents results: Math improving slightly with 84% Passing the 2006 Math Regents.


 



Blacks and Hispanics Continue to Lag Behind whites by 22% in Passing Scores, But have shown improvement.


 



Hispanics are Outperforming Blacks on the English Language Regents on passing grades, averaging 84% to Blacks’ 70% BUT still lag 10% Behind Whites. However the Hispanic passing students are outperforming Blacks by 14 points.


 



Where the Seniors Went.


 


China visits


 


         Teacher Susan Altman updated the Board on visitors from the Suzhou High School in China. She and Mrs. Kass had been welcomed there and will now reciprocate with five Chinese educators who are expected here on February 4th.  They will discuss a sister relationship with the school and introduce them to the White Plains community in an effort to further cultural understanding.


 


Strategic Planning Starts


         Finally, on Strategic Planning, Mr. Connors said the Board will meet on January 8th with Stephen Barone, who is facilitating this process, and there will be a public forum on January 24th, called a “World Café,” to discuss future directions for the school district. 


 



 


Coordinator of Foreign Languages Joan Kass introduced scholarship winners in the Community Ambassador Program, through the Experiment in International Living.  Four students spoke about their meaningful experiences in different countries:  Molly Kellogg (shown speaking)  and Warne Goodman in China, Julia Rose in Ecuador (next to Mr. Goodman) and Naomi Shakerdge in Australia. 


 


Other scholarship winners were Marcus Brown, Catherine Eichberg, Seth Kreielsheimer, Rose Liu, Ben Pasternack, Alyce Regan, Hannah Reiss, Abigail Rudow and Elsy Santizo-deLeon.  Mrs. Kass thanked Stephen and Nita Lowey who sponsor this program privately.


 



   


  TENURE:  Two teachers were awarded tenure:  Patricia Wahl, (Above– with Principal Joseph Cloherty of Eastview School — Joan Kass is at the podium) Foreign Language Teacher at the Eastview Middle School, was described by Mrs. Kass as a dedicated, energetic, creative teacher who is bilingual and bicultural. 


 



Tara Walsh, an Elementary Education Teacher at the Highlands Middle School, was presented by Social Studies Coordinator Lois Gordon, who said Ms. Walsh has a genuine love of children and her classroom is filled with eager and committed students. Diana Hyland, Principal of Highlands is at right.


     


 


 


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What Role Models? Knick-Knack Thugs Get Virtually Nothing in NBA Fight Rulings.

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By Bull Allen, “The Voice of  Old All-American Sports”. December 19, 2006:  The millionaire playground runners and gunners and “Ole’” defenders who pull down millions to play go-through-the-motions dirty basketball in The World’s Most Infamous Arena — home of the worst basketball team ever assembled, got a ringing endorsement for their brand of thug ball from NBA Commissioner David Stern Monday.


 



New NBA Sign to Come?


 





The insane inequity of the worst decision by a sports commissioner since the 1994 baseball strike, sent a message to every young hockey, basketball, softball, baseball, and football player that if you’re getting your feelings hurt, it’s OK to throw an opponent to the floor, throw a pitch at their head or stomach, spike them, kick them or cross-check them from behind just because you’re getting your little egos beat because you aren’t as good as they are.


 


It was time to send a message. Stern said, “boys, boys!”


 


Stern suspended league-leading scorer Denver Nugget Carmelo Anthony for 15 games primarily for a sucker punch. In a decision that leaves this sportscaster aghast, the head of the NBA Player Union questions the severity.


 


Meanwhile, Stern lets the instigator, Mardy Collins and the alleged mastermind, the Knick Coach off lightly. Stern suspends the instigator in the Saturday night garden gang fight – the Knickerbockers’ Mardy Collins for 6 Games. Collins threw the Nugs’ J.R. Smith to the floor to prevent a layup in the closing minutes.


 


Where’s the logic here, Mr. Stern? Are you endorsing a flagrant foul that could have torn  J.R. Smith’s A.C.L. and ruined his career?


 


Third Man In Rule?


 


Oh – Carmelo threw a sucker punch, Stern says – is this a hockey ruling, Mr. Stern? I say 15 games each for all of those millionaires with third grade boy mentalities. We used to see fights like this in the halls of White Plains elementary schools for the same reasons – they was dissed.


 


Then how about this for David Stern wisdom?  Denver’s Nate Robinson and J.R. Smith got 10 game suspensions. Jared Jeffries of the Knicks got 4 Games and  Jerome James and  Nene of the Nuggets got 1 lousy game. They were all fighting – suspend them all for 15 games. But of course nobody would come to Knick games at all…big problem.


 


But not many are coming now either the basketball is so bad. The White Plains Tigers and the Mount Vernon Knights could show the Knicks and the Nuggets a thing or two about poise under pressure and probably reacting to adversity, too.


 


Interesting, the Associated Press account does not ask Commissioner Stern why no fine for the Knickerbocker coach who – (unlike Pat Riley and Jeff Van Gundy who each left benches to prevent their players from fighting – remember Van Gundy holding onto Alonzo Mourning’s  leg?) – the Knick “coach” simply watched and rationalized that the Knicks were justified in the flagrant foul because they were being shown up. Poor babies!


 


Well, perhaps Mr. Stern does not want Madison Square Garden to be completely empty the rest of the season.


 


However why are Knick fans going anyway? Any Knick fan who goes to see another game should boo the coach roundly and demand his departure.


 


No Knickerbocker fan should show up at the garden for any more Knick games until their coach and these immature, untalented, no effort “ballplayers” are shipped out of town. The G-M, now coach who put together these gang of no talents, all bluster-no heart babies into town can leave with them. Who coached these guys before they were brought into town by this slick clown in the ill-fitting Pat Riley-wanna-be suits?


 


College coaching has sure gone downhill to turn out players with this little heart, effort and game savvy that play on the Knicks today.


 


The Knick Coach  has not inspired them to the effort needed to win – like playing defense for 48 minutes – not the last two when they are down by 20 points. More to the point he blames other teams for playing hard and not taking it easy on his team. Poor babies.


 


 How this man was ever considered a leader on the Detroit Piston Champs of the 90s is puzzling. It’s becoming more clear that Joe Dumars was the real man in the Motor City. Maybe our babyfaced coach was then – but he is not now. Leaders take responsibility. They don’t make excuses and they manage a game. He is in over his head. And no one calls him on it.


 


Take My Tickets Please!


 


Knickerbocker season ticket fans cannot give their tickets away this Knick team is so bad. Why they are bad is obvious.


 


I loved the not-so-good-Knick teams of the 50s with Harry Gallatin, Kennie Sears, Willie Nauls and Carl Braun and Dick McGuire with Nat Sweetwater Clifton. They could never beat the Celtics, but they’d never throw Bob Cousy or Bill Sharmon or Tommie Heinsohn  to the floor because they were being outplayed. That’s just dirty play. We loved them because they tried for us.


 


The present Knicks have not been taught how to play the game by their coaches of the past, let alone try.  They shame their coaches of the past by the way they play. From the “twin gunners” at guard who play defense when they feel like it, and cannot breakdown a defense in the half-court. To the failure to get back. Ahh, the Knicks are drek.


 


Now the Knick Coach and G.M. has to be given full credit for proving once and for all: He does not know talent. He can’t coach. He can’t lead. He can’t make players better. He has no class. He does not know how to act in a crisis.


 


The Knickerbockers used to have class. They do not even have that after Saturday night. They have nothing any more. Why? Because they lost their humility and poise and were instigated into it by their own coach.


 


 Saturday night was the sports equivalent of a gang member not liking the way someone was acting towards them and pulling out a knife/gun and shooting them or stabbing them. It was gang behavior.


 


Madison Square Garden should have fired their coach Sunday morning for his remarks remotely condoning the fight. It is the opening Cablevision needed to get rid of this guy. Releases should be dealt out to Mardy Collins,  Jared Jeffries and Jerome James.


 


Apologies don’t cut it.


 


Stern has got to get real. 15 Games Each for Everybody.


 


These children cannot play this game.


 


He is running a league that is out of control. The players play playground ball that shames playground ball – where there is respect for one another.


 


Stern is fining the franchises — the Nugs and the Knick-Knacks $500,000 each. That is chicken feed. That is only ¼ of the average Garden basketball crowd for  one night. How about a $10 Million fine, that’s what they pay some of their players?


 


Stern should have handed out even suspensions all around 15 games for everybody. And he should have suspended the Knick Coach for the rest of the season. No commissioner can condone a leader of a team for condoning a player to take down another player.


 


The younger players will think this behavior is O.K.


 


The Knick-Knack fiasco Saturday night is more the troubling because there have been two fights in high school hockey games in the last month, one of which I have seen, the other I read about between John Jay and Mahopac in which this macho mentality of respect has brought on big fights.


 


Coaches at the high school levels have to go back to teaching respect for opponents and playing hard – not dirty – not retaliating – retaining your poise – while protecting yourself at all times. And not playing players who think hurting the opponent is o.k.


 


I believe if players fight in high school sports or break the team rules they should be thrown off the team. Of course, the parents will never condone that. Maybe if that happened once or twice to the hapless youngsters Saturday night in the past – they would not have snapped.


 


Fighting solves nothing. It forever diminishes the fightees.


 


I am always reminded of Lou Fontinato, the old New York Ranger – the first “policeman” of hockey. In 1957-1958, Bad Boy Louie Fontinato created a sensation in the Old Garden by piling up penalty minutes and picking fights with other teams’ leading scorers, intimidating them. One night in the garden in 1958, Louie picked on the Great Gordie Howe, the legend of the Detroit Red Wings, once too often.  Gordie put Louie in the hospital and Louie was never the same player again. The Rangers weren’t either.


 


False toughness and bravado are no substitute for skill, effort, and hard work. Something that the Knickerbockers and their “smooth” coach for all their money and contracts, muscles and bruised egos, and jive talk know nothing about.


 


Neither do the Media


 


Perhaps the worst thing about this fight is that the media has decided to nostalgize about old fights in sports! This is incredulous to me. It is not part of the entertainment. Fighting is what it is: it has nothing to do with skills or playing the game — it is all about me-myself-and I — excused by the “I need to defend my teammate philosophy.”


 


Well, here’s what you do. I as manager or coach of that team pull my team off the ice or the court after a dirty play. That might get some attention on TNT or NBC — I mean who watches the NBA or the NHL anyway?


 


Or how about the NFL owner or coach, next time one of their “heroes” is arrested for felony involvement — why not suspend that player without pay for the rest of the season? Gee — that might send a message.


 


But running pix and video of famous fights of the past in sports — the media love them.


 


Well glorifying fights is not good for the youth growing up playing sports today — and the media should not do that.


 


Neither do the owners.


 


But it is the owners’ league. Stern has to eliminate the drafting out of high school and leaving early for the NBA draft – even if his league is sued.Just as the NFL has to do the same. Children are coming into the NBA who do not know how to behave, channel emotion and dedicate themselves to improving. They have way too much money. Surround themselves with unsavory influences. It is way sad.


 


At least the NBA does not have illegal guns and knives on the bench — yet.

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Caution: Read Those Parking Meter Bags To Make Sure On Street Space is Free

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS CONFIDENTIAL. Special From a White Plains CitizeNetReporter. December 18, 2006: In an earlier story today, WPCNR broke the glorious news that the Scrooges of the White Plains Department of Parking have declared a Holiday Truce in their never-ending vigilance that White Plains “parkers” do not exceed their time limits at on street parking meters. The city had declared “Free Parking through Christmas” on certain on-street parking meters along Mamaroneck Avenue and East Post Road, using red bags saying “Happy Holidays from the City of White Plains.”


The Free Spaces are denoted by Red meter bags, however, a WPCNR “street reporter” says there are other “bagged meters” which say “No Parking” — such as on Martine Avenue adjacent the City Center.


The sudden jump in traffic in downtown today after 2 P.M. was very noticeable thanks to the CitizeNetReporter’s breaking of the “Free Parking Story” . WPCNR advises our worldwide and tri-state readers to be careful to read the “Bagged” meter space they park at to make sure it is indeed “Free Parking!”

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White Plains Says Happy Holidays With Free Parking at the Meters in Red!

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WPCNR THE PARKING NEWS. From The Mayor’s Office. December 18, 2006: The City of White Plains is saying “Happy Holidays” this week, beginning today to motorists by offering Free 2 Hour Parking in the downtown at onstreet parking meters with the cheery red bags on them. The “Free Parking” is for up to two hours between the hours of 9 AM and 9 PM, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday all this week. Only on-street,  metered spaces dressed up in the red holiday “Free Parking” bags are “included in this initiative.”


 



Happy Holidays! All Week Long From The White Plains Department of Parking! Photo, WPCNR StreetCam

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Ebersole Stars on Ice Skate Traditional Holiday Show.

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WPCNR Press Box. December 17, 2006: Fourteen years ago, I like many young parents took my daughter to learn to skate at Ebersole Ice Rink for the first time, and when I could not teach her how to stop, I turned her over to The Ebersole Rink Figure Skating School. That year she was in the Ebersole Holiday Show. Saturday was the last Holilday show I would be going to and I saw many of the young ladies my daughter grew up with skating their last Holiday Show. It was memories, and the future all coming together on one magic afternoon. And it was cold too! Like winter? Remember Winter?


 



From Skating Tots Great Skaters Grow! The Tots 1,2, and Special Alphas Open the Holiday Show at Ebersole Rink Saturday.It all had an end-of-an-era melancholy-softened with a glimpse into the future as the show began with the Tots  in Pajamas – featuring a very young skater on a sled — being towed on the ice. You never know what you’re going to see in a Kristen Fierst Ice Show. All Photos WPCNR Sports


 



Jenna!


Jenna Bisignano Member of the White Plains Figure Skating Club On the Edge! she took it from one edge(above) to the other (below) in her sophisticated solo, including an axel,  Saturday

 




This year many of the senior skaters were skating in their last Ebersole Holiday show and having see them all grow up through Tots, Gamma, Delta and then the ultimate, getting what used to be considered the ultimate: the black “Ebersole  Advanced Figure Skating Club” jacket when you graduated to that coveted White Plains Figure Skating Club icetime on Tuesdays, Fridays and Sundays, it was a poignant and proud occasion.



Emily Boschi Skated her First Solo Ever Saturday afternoon and nailed it. You never forget your first solo.


 


 


Ebersole Ice Rink is a White Plains tradition, it’s old, it’s homey, it’s musty,  it’s outdoors, it’s got great burgers cooked in really good grease the way they should be! It gives you the feel of what skating used to be and still is (since ponds in Westchester County never freeze for skating any more). Skating at your hometown rink is a way for young boys and girls to acquire a skill that is aerobic, requires courage, skill, thought, training.  You learn that practice counts. You learn to keep emotions under control (perhaps the Knicks should try figure skating) You acquire a circle of friends older and younger, creating unique bonds across class ages, that last through the years.


 



The Gammas, Deltas Serve up “HOT CHOCOLATE”


 


 


 The instructors have been there a long time and every year the younger parents bring their youngsters into the program while the senior hockey players and figure skaters skate their last games and last ice shows at good Ol Ebersole. You know the staff and they know you from Rose, and Mr. Peck, to Matt and it’s the safest place you can be in White Plains on a Friday night.


 



Laura Hollahan Executes the only Shoot-the-Duck of the Show in her elegant skate.


 



Laura in a spin.


 


 


Saturday afternoon we saw the skating of another Kristen Fuerst (Director of the Ebersole Figure Skating School) Ebersole Holiday Show…from Tots to Teens, from Kristi/Michele/Tara/Sarah/Sasha-to-be’s to Teenage Princesses All Grown-up. Like running and cross country, figure skating is a sport that makes you better as you get better at it, from mastering that first nifty shoot-the-duck, to the layback spin, to that first axel, Wally and Flip, well calc, and physics just don’t seem that hard anymore — and you have something that you can do that many others cannot.


 



Bethany Herrmann skating first of the afternoon with speed precision and energy and executed terrific. (It’s very hard being the first soloist of the show and kudos to the kid for delivering a great keynote skate!)


 


I’ll never forget during a public session when my daughter was like around 6 or 7 years old and when one of her boy classmates challenged her to a race around the rink, the lad barely beat her. Then he skated up and stopped short showering her with ice chips. He asked her if she could do that. She cocked her head, skated backwards and eased into a waltz jump in the air, and asked him if he could do that. He slowly skated away. Skating better and better builds confidence in yourself.


 



Sheree Geller’s Spiral.


 


When I arrived Saturday afternoon the traditional Saturday morning skating lessons


were ending up, prior to the show. In past years, I used to know most of the parents, but now the parents of the younger skaters I do not know and they were there picking up their young skaters from the Ebersole Figure Skating School lessons that are taught Saturday morning. Slowly the parents I do know came on in as it was time to start the show. These were the older parents whose daughters and young boys learned to skate at Ebersole, took skating classes with my daughter, and skated with her in the Advanced Figure Skating Club.


 



The Skating Smaydas: Kate and Kristen delivered their last skating pairs program!


 


Like Mousketeers on Ice – the young soloists showed off their skills skating to music of the season. I was very impressed with the determination and poise and professionalism of the younger skaters – this was their moment – for some their first big solo on ice. Few sports other than gymnastics and boxing have the situation where you alone determine the outcome of your performance. Figure Skating solo is just that.  It is all yours, baby.


 



Katie Irmler


 


The younger skaters I saw Saturday afternoon at Ebersole all demonstrated ice-feel  where the ice accepts them and pushes them up and they move with the confidence that here on the ice is where I belong. There were only a couple of falls and that is remarkable. All skaters were so prepared for their skate, which is a tribute to the Ebersole Figure Skating School of instructors from the way their charges skated Saturday afternoon. The instructors prepare them mentally for those “life solos” as well.



Nadia Abdulwahab going into a jump


 


 



Lisa Tompkins’ spiral


 


Those who did fall, do not be discouraged, figure skating is where you pick yourself up off the ice and keep on skating. Many in life do not have the courage to risk a fall.


 


As skater after skater showed their stuff the legacy of the Ebersole Rink Tradition demonstrated itself for all parents, and relatives, boyfriends and older brothers and sisters back from college alike.


 


There’s no place like your hometown rink to grow up.


 


 



Ally Fuerst Skates to The Nutcracker demonstrating “A Bielman”


 



Santa Bursts Through the Gauntlet of his “Reindeer” performed by the Delta Class.


 



 



Santa draws a crowd with Frosty the Snowman at the traditional skatearound after the show.


See you next year!


 


Mentoring, Community Service Makes Ebersole Special.


 


The friendships, mutual respect, and tradition of growing up skating at Ebersole Ice Rink is unlike any other rink in Westchester County. Both the boys who learn to skate and play hockey with the White Plains Plainsmen, and the little girls who learn to skate at ages 4 and 5, and go up through the Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, and finally earn their Ebersole Black “Advanced Figure Skating Jacket” look fondly back on their growing up at Ebersole.


 



Past Mentors and Graduates of the Ebersole Rink Figure Skating School, March 2002. The young ladies in the second row graduated in 2004, during their last two years many taught lessons under the tutelege of the Skating School Instructors, setting examples for the younger students of the school. Kristin Fierst, the director of the Figure Skating School is at the fart left in the yellow slicker. Photo, WPCNR News Archive.


 


Part of that is the staff does not change, and they are taught by teen idols just a few years older whom they want to be like. For the 13 years my daughter has been skating at Ebersole, she has made fast friends with older girls, simply because the mentoring program is there, and the community service program is there.


 


The little girls see the big girls doing axels, and loops and walleys, and they want to be like them. They look up to them. That’s what the tradition of inviting the older girls down to help out, volunteer in community service time with the younger skating classes fosters. The older girls learn how to be mentors and role models. The little girls see what it takes to be great skaters.


 


So when you see an Ebersole Rink Show, it’s not just another show — it’s the future being created.

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Remember The Wrights –103 Years Ago Today — 2 American Guys From Dayton Flew

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WPCNR The Flying News. December 17, 2006: One-hundred three years ago today, the Wright Brothers flew the first powered aircraft.  Livingston Taylor the pop-folk singer, and a pilot in his own right, wrote a song in 2002 celebrating The Wright Brothers achievement. With Mr. Taylor’s permission we celebrate The Wright Brothers’ achivement today with the lyrics of Kitty Hawk, December, Nineteen-Three. For more on “the First Flight,” WPCNR invites you to visit www.firstflight.org.




 



The First Flight. Photo by John T. Daniels, December 17, 1903


KITTY HAWK, DECEMBER, NINETEEN-THREE
By Livingston Taylor
©2002 L. Taylor/Morgan Creek Music (ASCAP)


We can fly
We can soar into the air
Look into forever
And find the future there
Spread your wings
You’re about to be free
Kitty Hawk, December, Nineteen-three


(More) 


 

What a time for human kind
What an era to be in
Electric light to push back night
Einstein in Berlin
Edison and movies
Fords rolling wheels
Rockafellas energy
Morgan’s ruthless deals
Big men chewing big cigars
And chewing through the land
Destiny was manifest
Fate was in their hands



Add to this mix
Two earnest quiet men
With their sister Katherine
The adventure did begin
In the hubrus that was the time
They decided they could try
To build a heavier than air machine
And climb into the sky


And they could fly……….





They read the work of Lilienthal
Langley and Chanute
But the theories of these pioneers
In test did not compute
So they cleaned the table to the wood
And started in again
To answer twisting riddles
So the sky would let them in
They found a place to test their thoughts Off the coast of Caroline
Private and remote
Windy all the time
They learned of lift and drag and thrust
And wind-tunneled everything
The delicate pitch of the canard
The roll of warping wings
And the rudder was the final piece
That late one night they saw
The triad that became flight
Pitch, roll, yaw


And they could fly………..


 




The morning comes the wind is right
The plane is on the rail
And Daniel’s camera sees the moment pass
For twelve small seconds
They fly across the sands
And the end of an ancient dream
Is here at last


 




It’s a hundred years later
But imagine what’s in store
As we tug on God’s great beard
And tap upon his door
To the truth that lives in space
We have set our sights
Standing on their shoulders
Wilbur and Orville Wright




And we can fly……………





 

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Open House at WJCS Autism Center

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WPCNR ISSUES & INITIATIVES. From Westchester Jewish Community  Services. December 16, 2006: The Autism Family Center, a new program of Westchester Jewish Community Services, will hold an Open House on Thursday, December 21 from 4 – 7 PM.  The Center is conveniently located off I 287 at 845 N. Broadway in White Plains.

Families are encouraged to tour this new Center, learn about the programs and services offered, participate in activities for children and enjoy refreshments.

RSVP suggested.  Please call 761-0600, X228. For more info contact Pat Grossman, LCSW, Program Director, at 914-949-7699 ext. 355 or pgrossman@wjcs.com.




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New CNA Co-President Thanks Associations

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WPCNR CNA NEWS. December 16, 2006: Charles Lederman, the new Co-President of the White Plains Council of Neighborhood Associations, has released this statement to WPCNR:



 


 


 


                                                                                                                             December 16, 2006


John Bailey


BY EMAIL


 


                                                                                   


Dear John:


 


I am overjoyed at my friends’ bolstering me to the co president’s position at the Council of Neighborhood Associations.  I would like to thank you and the others who have listened to some of my issues in the past, and look forward to keeping the issues that effect our daily lives in the public eye. 


 


What we really need, however, is even more participation by our neighbors and their associations throughout the city.  My own neighborhood association, Gedney, can boast approximately 500 dues paying member households. 


 


There are too many neighborhoods, however, that are under represented and unheard from . . . It is a shame, because we could use the input of all our neighbors and neighborhoods.  Please come to our meetings and contact us if your neighborhood association wants to participate.  And thanks again to those who have asked me to continue participating . . .at least you can all look forward to some interesting ABC meetings with the school district.


 


Yours,


Charles O. Lederman


(Chasowen@optonline.net)


 


 

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